Tung-Hui Hu is Associate Professor of English at the University of Michigan. A former network engineer and a published poet, he is the author of A Prehistory of the Cloud (MIT Press), praised by the New Yorker as "mesmerizing" and by the Guardian as "witty, sharp and theoretically aware." He was awarded the Rome Prize in Literature in 2022.
“The acclaimed professor outlines his concept of digital lethargy —
a state of exhaustion and listlessness under digital capitalism —
through a collection of works by contemporary artists.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“In Digital Lethargy, the academic and poet Tung-Hui Hu quotes from
the scholar Anne Anlin Cheng when discussing the German writer
Heike Geissler’s novel, Seasonal Associate, set in an Amazon
sorting facility: “How do we take seriously the life of a subject
who lives as an object?” Hu’s point, essentially, is to ask how art
can best approach the flattening, depersonalizing effects of the
internet. It’s a good question, one that I’m unsure if many novels
have yet answered.”
—The Baffler
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