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The Comedy of Computation

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In this cultural history of the computer, Benjamin Mangrum shows that comedy has been central to how we've made sense of the technology's sweeping effects on public life and private experience. Fro...
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  • 29 July 2025
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In this cultural history of the computer, Benjamin Mangrum shows that comedy has been central to how we've made sense of the technology's sweeping effects on public life and private experience. From the first Broadway play to include a computer in the 1950s to popular films like You've Got Mail and joke-telling digital assistants, Mangrum assembles an extensive archive of work by writers, filmmakers, programmers, engineers, and other technologists who have coupled comedy with computation. Many have used comedy to make the computer seem ordinary. Others have tried to stage the assimilation of computers within corporate life as a kind of comic drama. Mangrum describes these and many other ways in which comedy and computation have come together as a new genre of experience: the comedy of computation.

  The modern world exalts advances in technology, but we are constantly haunted by the specter of falling behind and becoming obsolete. Mangrum examines how comedy serves as a stage for working out these conflicted modes of experience in writing by Dave Eggers, Curtis Sittenfeld, Ishmael Reed, and Kurt Vonnegut Jr., among others, arguing that when we look at the comic forms that shape the cultures of computing, we come to better understand the tensions and contradictions internal to the social world we inhabit.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 276
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 29 July 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503643109
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Essential for understanding the technological world in its complexity, absurdity, and vibrancy. Never satisfied with cheap laughs, Mangrum reads across culture in the widest sense, and knows exactly when to take his subjects seriously—for their sake and our own." —Mark Goble, University of California, Berkeley
Benjamin Mangrum is Associate Professor of Literature at MIT and author of Land of Tomorrow: Postwar Fiction and the Crisis of American Liberalism (2019), winner of the Louis I. Bredvold Prize in 2019, awarded by the University of Michigan.
The One at the Beginning
1. The One about Race and Robots
2. The One about Being Generic
3. The One about Authenticity
4. The One about Couples
5. The One with All the Absurdity
The One after the End
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index