Electric Dreams turns to the past to trace the cultural history of
computers. Ted Friedman charts the struggles to define the meanings of
these powerful machines over more than a century, from the failure of
Charles Babbage's "difference engine" in the nineteenth century to
contemporary struggles over file swapping, open source software, and the
future of online journalism. To reveal the hopes and fears inspired by
computers, Electric Dreams examines a wide range of texts, including
films, advertisements, novels, magazines, computer games, blogs, and
even operating systems.
Electric Dreams argues that the debates over computers are
critically important because they are how Americans talk about the
future. In a society that in so many ways has given up on imagining
anything better than multinational capitalism, cyberculture offers room
to dream of different kinds of tomorrow.