Edward Shanken on Sun, 3 May 2009 06:36:27 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Debating German Media Theory in Siegen |
Until recently from the other side of the pond, I have a different view of these matters. First, Geert isn't the only one using the term "German" media theory or capitalizing Media Theory. "New German Media Theory" was the theme of a fairly recent issue of the US journal, Grey Room, no 29 (Winter, 2008), edited by German scholar Eva Horn, and including essays by youngish scholars including Claus Pias, Bernhard Siegert, and Cornelia Visman/Markus Krajewski. While I can understand the argument for a German "Sonderweg" and am interested in understanding what that could be and how it is being historicized, Gumbrecht's assertion that there are no "media studies faculties in other countries," is not a "fact," and it's odd that Geert agrees with this fallacy, since we teach together in the Media Studies department at the University of Amsterdam and there is another Media Studies program just 40 kilometers away at Utrecht University. In the 1990s, as the German "Sonderweg" was arguably taking shape, my cohorts in the US were so few and widely dispersed both departmentally and geographically that we barely knew of each other. For example, Alex Galloway and I overlapped at Duke but we studied in different departments with different supervisors, bibliographies, methods, and agendas, and didn't meet until years later in New York. Everyone read Kittler of course, and my mentors led me to English translations of Schivelbush and Asendorf's fascinating Batteries of Life, though without any awareness of a special "German" approach to media theory. Zielinski had been translated into English by the mid 1990s but was not a key figure in US discourses and the term media-archaeology was not part of our vocabulary, even though some of us intuitively found ourselves doing it. Given the Germanic roots of modern art historical practice, perhaps German media theory does not seem so "sonder" to my discipline, in which questions pertaining to the relationship of form and content have been an integral and long-standing part of our discourses and in which it is standard practice to draw parallels across historical periods. We also were reading Benjamin, Heidegger, and McLuhan and "les suspects habituels": Barthes, Foucault, Derrida, Baudrillard, Virilio, Deleuze, etc. And we were also very engaged with the history, philosophy, and sociology of science, especially Latour but also Oyama, Varela and Maturana, and Stengers. Those of us with a more historical bent were on a recovery mission, resuscitating Shannon, Wiener, Bateson, Bense, Ascott, Burnham, E.A.T., Engelbart, Nelson - anything that could help provide a helpful foundation for understanding the flood of new media tools and effects. As noted in an earlier post, media studies in the US has tended to be focused on mass media and often connected to departments of sociology or journalism; or, if it has its own department, has tended to be either professional/practice-based (journalism/television) or social-science-based (or both). In my experience, the humanities have generally not been part of the equation and a deep chasm has persisted between disciplinary camps and practitioners/theorists, with tensions mounting as the old "mass" media departments are forced to reconfigure themselves in light of technological and theoretical changes. Key US scholars participating in media-theoretical discourses in the 1990s included Michael Heim (whose Metaphysics of Virtual Reality, was widely discussed in the US but remains under-recognized in Europe), Jonathan Crary, Douglas Kellner, Jay David Bolter, Katherine Hayles, Barbara Stafford, Andrew Feenberg, and others, coming from diverse disciplinary backgrounds representing a wide range of methodological and ideological commitments. In particular, Crary's Techniques of the Observer compellingly connecting science and popular culture, technological media, epistemology and ontology. As such it remains a vital model for scholarship that analyzes not only the materiality of media but its effects at the level of human perception and self-awareness. Clearly, the diversity of the US media theory scene defies the assertion of any "Sonderweg." None of these scholars has spawned an identifiable "school." This is perhaps not a bad thing. And while Stefan Heidenreich seems to bemoan the disintegration of the Kittler school, perhaps that's no loss either, particularly if, as Heidnereich claims, the litter wasn't brave enough to apply the model to the present (but in fact, Oliver Grau's book, Virtual Art, did just that - and was translated into English.) One must also remember that the media art scene - which has played such an important role in the development of media theory in Europe - emerged under very different circumstances in the US. In Europe, large festivals, conferences, annual exhibitions, and publications - with particular concentration in Germany and Austria - helped stimulate discourse and disseminate important scholarship. In this regard, it is also important to note that in the US the arts are not as highly esteemed as in continental Europe, and humanists are not considered scientists. On the continent, scholars like Flusser and Hartmann have argued against the Saussurean plague of reducing everything to a text, and in support of non-textual forms of theoretical exegesis. Despite Joseph Kosuth's assertion in 1969 that every work of art implicitly embodies a theory of art, there are only a handful of American art historians/critics who seriously assert that works of art, as well as artists' writings, are central modes of theoretical practice. Indeed, I would go as far as to claim that the work of artists such as Ascott, Anderson, Hershman, Kac, Stelarc, and Mongrel is as conceptually sophisticated as any written treatises of media theory. Few people seem to know how to perform the act of translating these theories from their concretions in aesthetic forms to compelling exegeses in other, more generally comprehensible, forms. The challenge of translating from one mode of expression to another is joined by the challenge of language translation, which is a major impediment to the flourishing of larger international discourses on media theory. Sloterdijk's Sphere trilogy has not been translated into English and only in bits and pieces of Flusser can be found. In 2004, Geert published on Nettime a wonderful and oft-cited email exchange with Hartmann, entitled, "Discipline Design: The Rise of Media Philosophy" http://amsterdam.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0401/msg00042.html I just re-read this inspirational piece, which makes me yearn to learn Korean, so I can read the translation of his classic work, Mediaphilosophie. Ed Shanken On Sat, May 2, 2009 at 9:26 AM, Armin Medosch <armin@easynet.co.uk> wrote: > I am not sure if the world really needs 'German' media theory right > now. First of all the term 'German media theory' does indeed suggest a > focus on the German nation, whilest leaving out or forcibly connecting > to it (Anschluss) other works in the German language by authors from > Switzerland and Austria, or Czech/Brasil as in the case of Flusser. <...> -- Edward Shanken Universitair Docent, New Media University of Amsterdam New Media MA Blog: http://mastersofmedia.hum.uva.nl/ My personal webpage: http://artexetra.com *** Newly published! Art and Electronic Media (Phaidon, 2009) http://artelectronicmedia.wordpress.com *** # 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: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org