David Parisi

Professeur ― University of New York

Biographie

David Parisi is the Dibner Family Chair of the History and Philosophy of Technology and Science in the Department of Technology, Culture, and Society at New York University’s Tandon School of Engineering. His research investigates the past, present, and future of touching with digital technologies. Parisi’s book Archaeologies of Touch: Interfacing with Haptics from Electricity to Computing (University of Minnesota Press, 2018) explores the technological transformations of touch necessary for the invention of touch-based computer interfaces. Opening with an examination of touch’s role in apprehending the mysteries of eighteenth century electrical machines, and closing with an analysis of new computing technologies that digitally synthesize haptic sensations, Archaeologies of Touch traces the iterative development of a technoscientific haptics across four centuries. Parisi’s work has been published in venues such as Real LifeLogicOpen!ROMchipNew Media & Society, Journal of Games Criticism, Convergence, and Game Studies. His perspectives on the intersection of touch and digital media have been featured on Flash ForwardThe Haptics ClubInternet of the SensesAll in the Mind, and INIT. He coedited the Haptic Media Studies issue of New Media & Society and currently serves as an editor for ROMchip: A Journal of Game Histories