Amygdalatropolis

Amygdalatropolis by B. R. Yeager, published by Createspace Independent Publishing Platform on January 17, 2017, is a 200-page work of literary fiction. This book presents a unique exploration of a city conceptualized as a computer, characterized by a blend of neurorealism and themes of cyberutopia. The narrative delves into a landscape devoid of meaning, where the interplay of software and human emotion creates a vivid backdrop of sexual fear and aggression.
Readers will encounter a haphephobic protagonist navigating a world influenced by online culture, snuff porn, and the complexities of modern existence. Amygdalatropolis reflects on the implications of a post-truth society, offering a critical lens on contemporary issues through its distinctive narrative style. This edition invites readers to engage with the text’s intricate themes and the unsettling realities it portrays.
Official synopsis Publisher
From Schism[2] Press
Amygdalatropolis is a work of brilliant neurorealism in which the city is a Computer, a libidinal pornutopia voided of all bedeutung other than the residual, electronic prickling of sexual fear and auto-autistic aggression where software and synapse flicker in an endless algorithmic loop. Norburt Wiener’s apocalyptic steersman leads directly here: a psychopathological cyberutopia heading straight into the lake of fire.
Scott Wilson, author of Great Satan’s rage: American negativity and rap/metal in the age of supercapitalism
Yeager’s haphephobic protagonist /1404er/ has got over reality, family or the social and moved on – to a somewhat more tenable amnion of snuff porn, clickbait and casual online scapegoating. Amygdalatropolis inhabits our post-truth heterotopia like some virulent new literary life form, perfectly tooled for the death of worlds.
David Roden, author of Posthuman Life: Philosophy at the Edge of the Human
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