a few weeks back I started reading Sadie Plants' Zeros and Ones, after originally dismissing it as another breathless, impenetrable Internet rave when the review copy came my way in 1997.
now I'm quite enjoying it. she has a referential, sweeping style that doesn't try to explain where she's going, but does try to make it fun as you go; the connections emerge as you read (though I'm probably not getting them all).
she's on about the female side of computing, the influence of female ways and means in the development of networks, the secret influences and implications of the switch from linear to hypertextual, the impact of the zero itself in the binary world. it's all slightly trippy, but I am starting to get something from it.
at about page 130 (my hardback copy) she moves from the secretive nature of viruses (pointing out that the most successful computer viruses are probably ones we don't find) to multiple personality disorders, often suffered by women.
and I wonder about the Web and the Net and their potential for hosting multiple personalities. Plant quotes one personality of a multiple personality, complaining about how everyone wants them to "Integrate", protesting that would be a kind of death: "It means my (any of our) individuality doesn't count."
this is sort of what my Ratava idea is about; that the Web, by supporting multiple selves for a single body (ratava), actually increases/changes the possibilities for that ratava. A ratava isn't just a body, it's a body in relation to a set of digital identities (avatars).
in the way that photography changed painting, electronic identity is changing what it is to be.
whew. all tired now from that big think. might go cross-post this at ratava. really feel I'm getting close to working out what it is I want to say/study/learn/teach.