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Phillip Thurtle

Professor, Comparative History of Ideas (CHID)
Phillip Thurtle

Contact Information

425 610-9795

Biography

Phillip Thurtle is associate professor in Comparative History of Ideas and History. He received his PhD in history and the philosophy of science from Stanford University. He is the author of Life in the Grid: Envisioning a Political Aesthetics of Life in the 21st Century (in publication, University of Minnesota Press), The Emergence of Genetic Rationality: Space, Time, and Information in American Biology 1870-1920 (University of Washington Press, 2008), the co-author with Robert Mitchell (English, Duke University) and Helen Burgess (English, University of Maryland) of the interactive DVD-ROM BioFutures: Owning Information an Body Parts (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008), and the co-editor with Robert Mitchell of the volumes Data Made Flesh: Embodying Information (Routledge, 2003) and Semiotic Flesh: Information and the Human Body (University of Washington Press, 2002). His research focuses on the material culture of information processing, the affective-phenomenological domains of media, the role of information processing technologies in biomedical research, and theories of novelty in the life sciences. His most recent work is on the cellular spaces of transformation in evolutionary and developmental biology research and the cultural spaces of transformation in popular culture and the arts.

Affiliations

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