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<nettime> re: Wolfgang Schirmacher: Media Aesthetics in Europe |
re: Wolfgang Schirmacher: Media Aesthetics in Europe Frank Hartmann <frank.hartmann@chello.at> Florian Cramer <paragram@gmx.net> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Frank Hartmann" <frank.hartmann@chello.at> Subject: RE: Wolfgang Schirmacher: Media Aesthetics in Europe Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2000 10:21:36 +0100 Ahh, finally. The continental media discussion has just seen a revival of heavily speculative media philosophy (Peter Sloterdijk's indigestable "Sphaerologie", three volumes) and while some academics, including Martin Burckhardt, Manfred Fassler or more conservative, Martin Seel actually are addressing media aesthetics issues for serveral years now, the theory community is just waiting for another dinosaur of the Gutenberg-Galaxy to hop on the train. Sigrid Schade and Georg Tholen recently published the reader "Konfigurationen" (plus CDrom) on the arts and media, including an essay by Hans Dieter Bahr on philosophy and the media. The whole Kittler-camarilla is dealing with media aesthetics. There are aesthetic experiments beyond the text, for example the interesting Deleuze-Project by Marc Ries and others (http://thing.at/immedia/indexxli.htm), etc. The problem we can observe is "canonisation", since nothing counts as "Philosophy" unless an academic departement honours it to be so (this is why non of the above quotes Flusser). There is the indispensable condition of relating to one of the classical authors. The guild principle is what counts. Further, are philosophers still searching for a "worthwhile topic"? Even farts proved to be one (Deleuze/Guattari, and Sloterdijk again). And now "THINK MEDIA", hey, are they going for funds here or what. Let us skip criticism, let's go aesthetics? Yes Geert, it is an odd text, and you know why: traditional philosophy not only denied its own social sources, but also its own mediality as embedded in a book-culture. This is why it is so hard to apply traditional philosophy on the new media situation - or when someone does, why it is so boring within a discourse which becomes more and more intertwined. Frank Hartmann Some philosophy resources from my new book ("Medienphilosophie", published at UTB, Jan.2000) are added below: As we may think -- http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/flashbks/comp uter/bushf.htm Benjamin, Passagenwerk-- http://art.derby.ac.uk/~g.peaker/arcades/passage nwerk.html Boole, George -- http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Math ematicians/Boole.html Californian Ideology -- http://www.wmin.ac.uk/media/HRC/ci/calif1.html Cassirer, Ernst -- http://www.cassirer.org/ Cyberculture Studies -- http://vos.ucsb.edu/shuttle/cyber.html Debord, Guy -- http://www.nothingness.org/si/debord/index.html Deleuze, Gilles -- http://www.imaginet.fr/deleuze/ Deleuze, Gilles / Guattari, Félix -- http://www.uta.edu/english/apt/d&g/d&gweb..html Descartes, René -- http://www.epistemelinks.com/Pers/DescPers.htm Flusser, Vilém -- http://www.equivalence.com/labor/flusser.htm Frege, Gottlob -- http://home.t-online.de/home/wstelzner/ Giesecke, Michael -- http://www.ifgb.uni-hannover.de/extern/kommunika tionslehre/giesecke/index.htm Hamann, Johann Georg -- http://www.weltkreis.com/mauthner/hist/hama2.htm l Herder, J.G.: Abhandlung -- http://www.gutenberg.aol.de/herder/sprache/sprac he.htm Heidegger, Martin -- http://people.delphi.com/gkemerling/ph/heid.htm Humboldt, Wilhelm von -- http://www.weltkreis.com/mauthner/humb.html Husserl, Edmund -- http://sac.uky.edu/~rsand1/husserl.html Husserl, Krisisschrift -- http://www.jyu.fi/~rakahu/kirjat/krisis_kleine.h tml Innis, Harold -- http://kali.murdoch.edu.au/~hopehume/innis.html Kant, Immanuel -- http://www.gutenberg.aol.de/autoren/kant.htm Kittler, Friedrich -- http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/inside/aesthetics/lo s49/index.htm Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm von -- http://www.gutenberg.aol.de/autoren/leibniz.htm Manovich, Lev -- http://jupiter.ucsd.edu/~manovich/ Mauthner, Fritz -- http://www.weltkreis.com/mauth_99.html McLuhan, H. Marshall -- http://www.mcluhanmedia.com/ Media Studies -- http://vos.ucsb.edu/shuttle/media.html Nelson, Ted -- http://www.sfc.keio.ac.jp/~ted/ Peirce, Charles S. -- http://www.peirce.org Philosophy pages -- http://people.delphi.com/gkemerling/index.htm Turing, Alan -- http://www.turing.org.uk/turing/ Weltrevolution nach Flusser -- http://www.snafu.de/~klinger/flusser/ Winkler, Hartmut -- http://www.uni-paderborn.de/~winkler/index.html Wittgenstein, Ludwig -- http://www.phil.uni-passau.de/dlwg/ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2000 17:23:18 +0100 From: Florian Cramer <paragram@gmx.net> Subject: Re: <nettime> Wolfgang Schirmacher: Media Aesthetics in Europe Am Wed, 05.Jan.2000 um 10:43:05 -0800 schrieb geert lovink: > Wolfgang Schirmacher, a prominent German philosopher, based in New York, You think he is so prominent? (I haven't heard of him yet. You didn't happen to confuse him with the literary critic Frank Schirrmacher?) > Day and night, as private persons and as citizens we are surrounded by > media. It has become increasingly rare to communicate without the help of > media-generated forms, role models and channels. What does Schirmacher define as 'media' here? I.e., to be more precise: _When_ in the history of literacy has it _ever_ been possible to communicate without the help of media-generated forms, role modles and channels? If you compare the impact of the Christian Bible on communication in the Western middle ages and renaissance with the impact of the mass media on communication today, one could even argue that the influence has become much more diversified. But after all, I can see nothing in Schirmacher's observation that would add anything new to the observations of mass media-triggered communication made, for example, in Cervantes' Don Quixote and Goethe's Werther (whose protagonists say "Klopstock" - the name of a 18th century poet whose odes on nature were crucial prototypes for the sentimental style in German literature - when they see a thunderstorm). > examples: The telephone answering machine has changed our style of > personal communication as lastingly as the computer changed the flow of > writing. I think he grossly underestimates the impact of the computer on writing. > the Zen masters put it. And the ease with which we can alter and expand > the text already written into the computer eliminates the "voice of > authority" in us and allows us to play with thoughts. No new insights; Michael Heim described all this in the late 1980s. > Of course, one could describe both events very differently, call the > answering machine a pest and the end of meaningful communication and word > processors the source of text pollution as they tempt even the serious > person to babble on like a child. You find a very similar critique in Plato's remarks about writing _as such_ (i.e. as a technique that corrupts memory and fosters falsification). It's astonishing that a philosopher wouldn't reflect upon the history of philosophical media critique in order to flesh out what _new_ questions electronic/digital media _actually_ pose. > Few people feel excited about the prospects of an age shaped by > media, most feel threatened. If Schirmacher would cling to basic semiotics or linguistics, it would be clear that there is no such thing as communication without a medium. It's a pity that even academics who should be precise in their language do not differentiate between 'media' in general and 'electronic mass media' in particular. > other way around. But the harsh critique of media, fashionable in Europe, > can rarely boast a foundation in an experience of the media itself since > it resists their authenticity. Instead, all experiences with media have > been held up to a value system not found in media itself. This biased view > of media stems from a want of media aesthetics, creating the odd situation > where, in terms of media, the blind and deaf are those whose criticism is > most outspoken and widely received. The less they watch television, the > better they know it will destroy critical thinking! Is it possible that is has been a _very_ long time since Schirmacher saw a European (or German) university? This and the following paragraphs strike me as an echo of third-hand banalizations of 1960/1970s Frankfurt School scholarship. Everyone who is familiar with 'Kulturwissenschaft' as the major trend in German humanities of the 1990s knows that Schirmacher's description is without any reality today, although German 'Kulturwissenschaft' remains, in its large indeptedness to Aby Warburg, Ernst Cassirer and cultural anthropology, quite different from Anglo-American 'Cultural Studies'. German Ph.D. candidates will most certainly get funding if they work on leading topics like performance/'performativity', anthropology, the body, gender studies, mass media/media history or theories of cultural memory. Both the research projects ('Graduiertenkollege' and 'Sonderforschungsbereiche') funded by the state reseaarch foundation DFG and the publications of the leading academics like Aleida Assmann - on 'trash' in cultural memory - and Elisabeth Bronfen - on Hollywood movies - may serve as clear evidence. Just as in Schirmacher's paper, much consideration is given to film, television and performing arts with frequent, but short general references to the Internet, while there rarely is informed scholarship in the humanities about computers and computer networks. His critique of alleged media-phobia in German/European humanities doesn't seem much better to me than the third-hand banalizations of Frankfurt school media critique because it just negatively affirms it. To mix television and computers in the same bag is a mistake many media theorists (like, in Germany, Dietmar Kamper at the second "Softmoderne" conference) made in the early 1990s because their views and vocabulary had been shaped by Baudrillard and Virilio. Schirmacher is fighting battles that are over in my opinion. I guess many Nettime subscribers share my view of TV as an old-fashioned mass medium which, since the mass availability of computer networks, has hardly developed any interesting visual/symbolic forms lately. Television may be on a crossroad between (a) a smart medium integrated into the Internet as a view-on-demand service embedded into (database-retrievable) text information and (b) a dumb, linear medium, formatted to death with sitcoms, talk shows and commercials, a medium for which the old Frankfurt School critique might be of striking new relevance even to those who don't share Adorno's views on movies and jazz music. > media go uninterrupted by our smart interpretations. What is missing is an > unbiased sensual experience with media, a ten-thousand hour treat with > film and video, sound studio and computer graphics, multiple television > channels and a working remote control. Missing is living with fax and > laser printer, with notebook computers and High Definition Television > Screen, being at home in computer conferencing, missing are legal hackers > riding the waves of cyberspace. Hyperreality and Virtual Reality are > concepts which only pretend to have experienced what they describe, but > they are no more convincing than the Pope advocating gay couples. Again, his keywords/buzzwords ("remote control", "hyperreality", "HDTV" etc.) sound _very_ old-fashioned early-90s to me. Quite on the contrary, I have the impression that there is an exaggerated attention for Hollywood blockbusters and TV sitcoms in the contemporary European humanities. I am sure, younger scholars will have noticed the decline of Hollywood blockbusters in the 90s - from a quite sophisticated period with films like "Pulp Fiction" and "Total Recall" to the boredom and irrelevance of today's movie theater programs - and adjust their papers accordingly. [... Schirrmacher continues with a summary of aesthetics which I find impressive - and very recommendable as a brief general-purpose introduction into the term 'aesthetics'! Yet he concludes:] > Concerning language, Western philosophy of the 19th and 20th century has > explored its communicative potential but at times missed a crucial point. > There is communication beyond written or spoken language which is as > powerful as it is silent. And it can be increasingly observed that in > communication a language based on words is a part, and not the whole. > Pictures and sounds, silence and performances, an art-filled space, and > body language speak their own mind. Two remarks: [1] At least the structuralist tradition of modern language thinking begins with Saussure who, in his 'Cours de la linguistique générale', clearly states that (a) linguistics is only a part of a more general science called semiotics, (b) the linguistic rules he observed are only valid in written language ('langue'), not in spoken language ('parole') and that they wouldn't be applicable to the larger science of semiotics. Later structuralists like Roland Barthes have disregarded these warnings, nevertheless the awareness of semiotics as a larger discipline than linguistics has always existed. [2] Again it seems that Schirmacher is out of touch with the European humanities. In contrast to Anglo-American cultural studies with their mix of poststructuralist and postmarxist theory, the German 1990s discourse of 'Kulturwissenschaften' has been characterized by attempts to replace the 'linguistic turn' with an 'anthropological turn' and, at least in the case of some scholars, do without analyzing language and without referring to structuralist concepts at all! > that perception and media become interchangeable. Such an observation is > bound to be misunderstood as long as media is defined as a sender for > which we are the receiver. What a strange definition. I thought a 'medium' is a 'medium' because it is in the middle between sender and receiver. > Media aesthetics in Europe is preaching in the desert. Teachers and > students are used to a talking head, the professor, and an audience taking > notes. A discussion after the master's long talk gives future masters the > opportunity to deliver their own talk, mimicking the professor's attitude. Should only be the case at very conservative departments or in the French educational system -- or, oddly enough, in the classes and lectures of somea professors who are cutting edge in the humanities and hence have very eager, sometimes epigonal students. Unfortunately, the same is frequently true for 'star' scholars and their students at ivy league universities in the U.S.. > There is a disregard for the form of the delivery - as long as the > sentences pour out of a significant mouth - because the pre-media > academics believe strongly in the traditional dichotomy of form and > content and the dominance of content over form. At least in literary studies this would be seen as an unreflected, pre-critical position, but it's true that academics frequently fall back behind their own premises when they speak about mass media. > define playfully the mood of the times, will be forever incomprehensible > to intellectuals who were never "In Bed with Madonna". In my opinion, Madonna has gained _way_ too much attention in 1990s cultural studies everywhere in the world. I rather find it a problem that almost no academic in the humanities has ever heard of - or could tell anything intelligent about -, say, Luciano Berio, John Coltrane, Olga Neuwirth or, speaking of films, Stan Brakhage or Lars von Trier. > by dubbing them? The mostly state run or state influenced European media > is boringly serious: in movies the actors talk for the talk of it, on TV > celebrities chat for hours on end, and even the weather people are dead > serious - with a few exceptions. Answering machines are not an opportunity > for a re-defined communication but a technological and social problem, and > computers are still considered a different kind of typewriter. The gap > between philosophy and media has consequences for the media, too. Without Again, this reminds me of the type of polemics people like Norbert Bolz or, in journalism, Gundolf S. Freyermuth, made in the early and mid-1990s; two people who started as die-hard Frankfurt School academics at Freie Universität Berlin and then switched sides without revising their patterns of thought: "old media" vs. "new media", "high culture" vs. "mass culture", "Europe" vs. "America", etc. They tend to remind me of fierce atheists from jesuit schools (who remain faithful catholics for the rest of their life without being aware of it). As Bolz and Freyermuth, Schirmacher fails to ask whether networked cultures (be it in net art or, for example, Free Software) tend to dynamically displace the borders; whether one has to think today of cultures as migrant entities. > leading edge of media. Not enough experience has been made with the new > media of information technology such as computer conferencing and > electronic libraries, and the computer itself is completely misunderstood. One might refer to the geographical origins of the World Wide Web in Geneva and Linux in Finland as counter-examples; at the same time, they signify how irrelevant their origin has become and their superstructures are continually shifting. ... I am tired to comment upon the rest - generally, it strikes me that Schirmacher's attempt to criticize European thinking is so old-fashioned European itself - maybe somebody else on the list will continue? Florian Postscript: Before sending this off, I checked the web and hit upon this book title: The Frankfurt School Edited by Wolfgang Schirmacher Horkheimer: On the Concept of Philosophy; essays on Adorno; Ben-jamin: Theses on the Philosophy of History; Marcuse: On Hedonism, Solidarity, and The Catastrophe of Liberation; Habermas: essays on Adorno, Benjamin, and Marcuse; and other works by Norbert Elias and Leo Löwenthal. 324 pages0-8264-0966-0 hardcover $39.50 0-8264-0967-9 paperback $19.95 This explains a lot! -- Florian Cramer, PGP public key ID 6440BA05 <http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/index.cgi> Institut für Allgemeine und Vergleichende Literaturwissenschaft Freie Universität Berlin, Hüttenweg 9, D-14195 Berlin # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net