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previous | 6 December 2005 | next
I just googled Norman Bryson and found this awesome essay: Books, Too, Have Their Destinies: Wenyon & Gamble's Bibliomancy. "Why," you might ask, "is it awesome?" Because, among other things, Bryson asserts:
There is something about holography that is essentially untimely; it was born too late, or too soon; in a sense its time has never come. Unlike the Victorian stereoscope--or, today, the Internet--the holographic image has been curiously unable to forge any kind of serviceable pact--in order to sustain and generalize itself--with the pornographic impulse.

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