Thinking about technological changes or ‘revolutions’ is often marked by a presentist, ahistorical mode of thinking and debate. The tropes mobilized in contemporary discussion about ‘digitalization’ and its technologies are usually technicist, innovation- or even disruption-oriented, both in their affirmative and in their critical guises. Little attention is given to historical precursors of technologically driven social change and almost none to concepts and theories from other historical periods that might help investigate and understand the current predicament.
Is the presentism of ‘digital cultures’ in itself a media-technological effect? To what extent are these cultures characterized by a fundamental restructuring of modern semantics and experiences of time? In particular, do they eliminate the ‘surplus and surprise potential’, that is, the eminent reference to an open future Koselleck found to be essential for modern historical thought? The aim is to discuss what this entails for the humanities as an eminently historical cluster of disciplines in terms of epistemology and science policy.
Marisa Galvez is Professor of French, Italian, and German Studies at Stanford University
Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht is Professor emeritus of Comparative Literature, German Studies, and Iberian and Latin American Cultures at Stanford University
Fred Turner is Professor of Communication at Stanford University
Sigrid Weigel is Professor emeritus of Literature and Cultural Science and former director of the Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung Berlin
Wolfgang Hagen is Professor of Media Studies at Leuphana University and former programme director for culture and music at DeutschlandRadio Berlin
In English
With
Marisa Galvez
Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht
Fred Turner
Sigrid Weigel
Moderated by Wolfgang Hagen
Organized by
Centre for Digital Cultures of Leuphana University Lüneburg in cooperation with the ICI Berlin
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Image Credit © Claudia Peppel