Difference between revisions of "Magic Time"

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(Created page with "'''Reed, Kit. ''Magic Time.''''' New York: Berkley, 1981. Category: Fiction High-tech surveillance and a "once human machine-housed consciousness" (quoting Mary Kay Bra...")
 
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'''Reed, Kit. ''Magic Time.''''' New York: Berkley, 1981. [[Category: Fiction]]
 
'''Reed, Kit. ''Magic Time.''''' New York: Berkley, 1981. [[Category: Fiction]]
  
High-tech surveillance and a "once human machine-housed consciousness" (quoting Mary Kay Bray in "''Nineteen Eighty-Four'' Is Only the Beginning: Media Technology and the Annihilation of Privacy in Wilhelm, Compton, and Reed," a paper at the 13th Annual Convention of the Popular Culture Association. Wichita, April 1983). See in this Category, K. Wilhelm's "Baby, You Were Great!" and D. G. Compton's ''The Unsleeping Eye''.[[Category: Fiction]]
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High-tech surveillance and a "once human machine-housed consciousness" (quoting Mary Kay Bray in "''Nineteen Eighty-Four'' Is Only the Beginning: Media Technology and the Annihilation of Privacy in Wilhelm, Compton, and Reed," a paper at the 13th Annual Convention of the Popular Culture Association. Wichita, April 1983). See in this Category, K. Wilhelm's "[[Baby, You Were Great!]]" and D. G. Compton's ''[[The Unsleeping Eye]]''.[[Category: Fiction]]

Revision as of 01:15, 16 January 2020

Reed, Kit. Magic Time. New York: Berkley, 1981.

High-tech surveillance and a "once human machine-housed consciousness" (quoting Mary Kay Bray in "Nineteen Eighty-Four Is Only the Beginning: Media Technology and the Annihilation of Privacy in Wilhelm, Compton, and Reed," a paper at the 13th Annual Convention of the Popular Culture Association. Wichita, April 1983). See in this Category, K. Wilhelm's "Baby, You Were Great!" and D. G. Compton's The Unsleeping Eye.