d.garcia on Tue, 11 Mar 2014 12:20:44 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Post-digital |
Felix Wrote > Where the terms makes no sense, in my view (and also in Florian's), > is sociologically. The most powerful forces that transform globalized > societies, are all dependent on, and amplified by, digital > technologies. If anything, we are in the middle of the historical > run of this development rather than at the end. The idea that the > digital is just one dimension of society and that we can abandon it, > is ludicrous. Along with Sociology might it also be a worth including "psychology" in the mix. Particularly in those spaces where digital management tools such as gantt charts and other popular workflow apps along with their digital jargon have shaped influential forms of pop psychology, such as the Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) (whose very name is self incriminating) In turn these 'instruments' insinuate themselves in to the working day of most organisations becoming the default argot of neo-manegerial audit culture with its positivistic lexicon of 'solutions' . This landscape is described in rich and entertaining detail in Evil Media by Mathew Fuller and Andrew Jofey who have done us a great service of mapping and describing this domain of what they have dubbed 'grey media'. A range of connections linking computing, and digital management and business applications with NLP type psychology and management self help books. Collectively this digitally inspired constellation has metastasised into a weirdly seductive language (seductive because it suggests the possibility of controling our events) that is all the more powerful BECAUSE it is unspectacular. As the term 'grey media' suggests it fades into background becoming the social and psychological infrastructure of the grey media age. In a weird inversion of the Debord, Grey Media deploys digital culture to bring us the 'society of the unspectacular' David ------------------------ d a v i d g a r c i a new-tactical-research.co.uk # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org