Orrin N. C. Wang is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Maryland, College Park. He is the author of Fantastic Modernity: Dialectical Readings in Romanticism and Theory (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996) and Romantic Sobriety: Sensation, Revolution, Commodification, History (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011), which won the 2011 Jean-Pierre Barricelli Prize, and editor of “Frankenstein” in Theory: A Critical Anatomy (Bloomsbury, 2021). He is the General Editor of Romantic Circles and recipient of the 2020 Keats-Shelley Association of America Distinguished Scholar Award.
Techno-Magism is an incisive intervention in the growing conversation about the relevance of Romanticism to media studies and media theory. Wang's book is finely attuned to those latter disciplines' go-to theoretical touchstones (from Hegel to Adorno and Benjamin to Kittler and Guillory), as well as to the usual histories it paints. But it is equally alive to what Romanticism-as historical period, a constellation of literary texts or modes, and a still-developing set of theoretical and philosophical commitments-has surreptitiously brought and might yet bring to the broader discussion of what media is and does. -- Andrew Warren, Harvard University