Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Pg. 99: R. John Williams's "The Buddha in the Machine"

Featured at the Page 99 Test: The Buddha in the Machine: Art, Technology, and the Meeting of East and West by R. John Williams.

About the book, from the publisher:
The famous 1893 Chicago World’s Fair celebrated the dawn of corporate capitalism and a new Machine Age with an exhibit of the world’s largest engine. Yet the noise was so great, visitors ran out of the Machinery Hall to retreat to the peace and quiet of the Japanese pavilion’s Buddhist temples and lotus ponds. Thus began over a century of the West’s turn toward an Asian aesthetic as an antidote to modern technology.

From the turn-of-the-century Columbian Exhibition to the latest Zen-inspired designs of Apple, Inc., R. John Williams charts the history of our embrace of Eastern ideals of beauty to counter our fear of the rise of modern technological systems. In a dazzling work of synthesis, Williams examines Asian influences on book design and department store marketing, the commercial fiction of Jack London, the poetic technique of Ezra Pound, the popularity of Charlie Chan movies, the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, and the design of the latest high-tech gadgets. Williams demonstrates how, rather than retreating from modernity, writers, artists, and inventors turned to traditional Eastern technĂȘ as a therapeutic means of living with—but never abandoning—Western technology.
Learn more about The Buddha in the Machine at the Yale University Press website.

The Page 99 Test: The Buddha in the Machine.

--Marshal Zeringue