" Materialist Media Theory is much more than just an introduction. Instead, Bollmer's book is an attempt, and a very successful one, to reshape the domain of media studies by defending a special take on the major issues and stakes of the field as well as by critically rereading a large number of its foundational and contemporary thinkers." -- Leonardo Reviews "The book will be especially useful for those interested in media theory. Nonspecialists will appreciate the survey of the major ideas in media theory and the compelling description of the interconnections between scholars. Advanced scholars will find the book helpful context for recent works in this field, for example, Daniel Reynolds's Media in Mind (2019). Summing Up: Recommended." -- CHOICE "Grant Bollmer's Materialist Media Theory is a deceptive book: on the surface, it appears to draw a straightforward map of materialist media studies. Through Bollmer's accessible style and relatable case studies, he takes what is a rather abstract concept and makes its implications for the study of media refreshingly concrete and tangible.
But beneath this surface, something far more complex is afoot, as Bollmer establishes the core tenets of a materialist approach to media, while subjecting these foundational theories to a rigorous and sustained skepticism. What emerges is an intellectually ambitious and politically urgent manifesto for the methodological and analytical utility of a materialist media studies." -- David Parisi, Associate Professor of Emerging Media, College of Charleston, USA, and author of Archaeologies of Touch: Interfacing with Haptics from Electricity to Computing (2018) "Grant Bollmer's Materialist Media Theory is a crystal clear pathway into and a direct response to how 20th- and 21st-century media studies is defined by a distinctly materialist turn. He provides us with succinct yet sophisticated introductions to some of the most opaque theories about the so-called hard materialisms built into our everyday technologes. At the same time, Bollmer always counter-balances his overviews with interventionist reminders of how social, cultural, and political power establishes and perpetuates itself through the material structures of these same technologies. He performs the best kind of pragmatic criticism insofar as he continually reminds us that matter and materiality don't simply extend from technologies to their human users; instead, humans and media technologies are bound together by way of complex assemblages of material forces bouncing back and forth between the one and the other. In short, if you've ever wondered about the place of people and politics in materialist media theory, this book is a must-read." -- Lori Emerson, Associate Professor and Director of the Media Archaeology Lab at University of Colorado Boulder, USA "[Emphasising] the intrinsic power of materiality itself and mak[ing] it compatible - quite successfully.
" -- MEDIENwissenschaft (Bloomsbury Translation).