Preface “A Day Made of Glass” Macbeth Minority Report Microscopic Vision Telescopic Vision Earrings and Landscapes Photography Shakespeare’s Sonnets “Heart of Glass” Sea Glass Google Glass Trademark Microsoft HoloLens Strange Days A Glass, Darkly Surfaces “A World of Glass” Postscript: What’s in My Pocket? Further Reading Acknowledgements Notes Index
Explores an object that is all round us, from windows to iPhone screens, and the fascinating and strange ways it reflects our inherent desire for connection.
John Garrison is Associate Professor of English at Carroll University, USA. Prior to teaching, he helped develop technology and marketing innovations for leading companies such as Sony Electronics, Marvel Entertainment, Yahoo!, Panasonic, and Warner Brothers Pictures.
[Glass] distills the essence of a substance that offers itself as
something to be looked through, giving a shine to its contents, and
as something that occupies our view, as something we have to take
note of and interact with.
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
[A] book that can be read in a fascinated hour, but will influence
your reading and your looking for the next month.
*Times Literary Supplement*
This brilliant book takes us through the looking glass, allowing us
to see an everyday material in a whole new light. Glass, no matter
how transparent it may seem, is always coated with many layers of
meaning. In this scintillating account, John Garrison shows how the
cultural framing of glass has repeatedly opened windows to other
worlds, from the microscopic depths to the far reaches of the
cosmos, from the imagined futures of science fiction to the
bizarro-worlds of our own bathroom mirrors.
*Colin Milburn, Professor of English and Science and Technology
Studies, University of California Davis, USA*
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