New Media in the 70s - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 13
About This Presentation
Title:

New Media in the 70s

Description:

1972 -- Requiem for the Media, Jean Baudrillard, pp. 277 ... Requiem for the Media. Which brings us to more concrete questions: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:134
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 14
Provided by: jamesjs1
Category:
Tags: 70s | media | new | requiem

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: New Media in the 70s


1
New Media in the 70s
  • 1970 -- Constituents of a Theory of the Media,
    Hans Magnus Enzensberger, pp. 259-260
  • 1972 -- Requiem for the Media, Jean Baudrillard,
    pp. 277-
  • 1974 -- The Technology and the Society, Raymond
    Williams, pp. 289-290
  • 1974 -- From Computer Lib / Dream Machines,
    Theodor H. Nelson, pp. 301-302
  • 1975 -- From Soft Architecture Machines, Nicholas
    Negroponte, pp. 353
  • 1976 -- From Computer Power and Human Reason,
    Joseph Weizenbaum, pp. 367-368
  • 1977 -- Responsive Environments, Myron W Krueger,
    pp. 377-378
  • 1977 -- Personal Dynamic Media, Alan Kay and
    Adele Goldberg, pp. 391-392
  • exercise 4

2
Hans Magnus Enzensberger
Germanys most influential poet and writer
3
Constituents of a Theory of the Media
  • In his essay Enzensberger is taking aim at the
    media businessthe consciousness industry.
  • This industry operates to perpetuate an unjust
    society by convincing us to accept that society.
  • the media is a big business where capitalists
    hope to make a lot of money
  • Enzensberger argues that turning away from the
    media is a poor strategy for effecting change.
  • one should work at the point of the media, where
    the unjust culture is vulnerable both in terms of
    consciousness and income and reverse the roles of
    producer and consumer (e.g., the way that the
    Internet has been used to organize and provide
    information about protests against the World
    Trade Organization.)

4
Jean Baudrillard
5
Requiem for the Media
  • Jean Baudrillard's response to the previous
    selection, Enzensbergers 'Constituents of a
    Theory of the Media' is a discussion of a
    different conception of media production that
    might be called interaction.
  • Baudrlard argues strongly against one position of
    Enzensherger that there is an inherent structure
    to media technologically.
  • Baudrillard argues that media serve a social
    functionthe reduction of all they reproduce to
    pale models, foreclosing any possibility of
    genuine reciprocity. (It is in this sense that
    Baudrillard rereads McLuhan's maxim that "the
    medium is the message?)
  • Baudrillard's position is that the situation will
    not get any better simply by making everyone a
    producera point of view that Enzensberger
    shares.
  • Baudrillard goes on to say that even the
    organized reversible circuits Enzensherger
    discusses would not be enough. He
    writes.reversibility has nothing to do with
    reciprocal exchange

6
Requiem for the Media
  • For Baudrillard the problem lies not in who
    transmits, or how turn-taking is arranged, but in
    our very underlying model of communicationwhich
    is reproduced in the media, in political life,
    and in economic life.
  • This model, described by Ferdinand de Saussure,
    is that of "transmitter-message-receiver."
  • As Baudrillard points out in this model there is
    no place for the ambiguity of true exchange,
    'This scientific' construction excludes the
    reciprocity and antagonism of interlocutors, and
    the ambivalence of their exchange"
  • An alternative to this semio-linguistic concept
    ion (in which one is the transmitter and one the
    receiver, with the message always going from one
    to another) is that of joint production through
    genuine interaction.
  • In this, argues Baudrrillard, lies the true
    potential for changein the refusal to accept a
    model of producers and consumers, even one in
    which these positions can be reversed.

7
Requiem for the Media
  • Which brings us to more concrete questions
  • How would one taking Baudrillards posit ion look
    upon the examples of media from the introduction
    to the previous selection (018?? l lov, would
    this position view Enzensherger's ideas of
    Netvorklike communications models newspaper,
    written and distributed by its readers, a video
    network of politically active groups or the uses
    of media in relation to the protests against the
    World 'Wade Organization?
  • Baudrillard's reaction to Enzensbergers mass
    newspaper and video network is not to declare
    them inappropriate. he treats them somewhat
    positively. Baudrillard does not see them as
    demonstrating the reversibility of
    producer/consumer but as transgressing these
    categories.
  • This might make our other examples "a start" from
    a Baudrillardian point of view as well. Yet
    examples of a phenomenon that Baudrillard
    critiquesthe absorption of response into
    meaninglessness via reversible mediaare
    significantly more plentiful. Consider how those
    who were once solely media consumers, and
    suddenly are included in production, have served
    only to cement their irrelevance on reality based
    TV on game shows, and on corporate run Web
    message boards.

8
Raymond Williams
http//sunsite.queensu.ca/memorypalace/parlour/Wil
liams02/
9
Technology and Society
  • the social processes that bring technologies
    innto widespread use, as well as those embodied
    in technologies, may not always be those that are
    most admirable or just.
  • None of those who worked to perfect the
    technology of television in its early years and
    few of those who brought televsion sets into
    their homes ever intended the device to become
    employed as the universal babysitter.

10
Technology and Society
  • Similarly. if anyone in the 1930s had predicted
    people would eventually be watching seven hours
    of television each day the forecast would have
    been laughed away as absurd. But recent surveys
    indicate that we Americans do spend that much
    time. roughly one third of our lives staring at
    the tube.
  • Those who wish to reassert freedom of choice in
    the matter sometimes observe 'You can always turn
    off your TV In a trivial sense that is true....
    But given how central television has become to
    the content of everyday life. how it has become
    the accustomed topic of conversation in
    workplaces, schools. and other social gatherings
    it is apparent that television is a phenomenon
    that, in the larger sense, cannot be "turned oft
    at all.

11
Theodor H. Nelson
12
Computer Lib
  • Computer Lib /Dream Machines is the most
    important book in the history of new media
  • Nelson argued that computer experiences were
    media to be designed and that this design should
    be both a creative process and undertaken with
    the audience (users) in mind.
  • Nelson proposed that these new designed media
    experiences be placed in a radical, open
    publishing network

13
Exercise 4
  • What do you believe are the dangers of new media?
    (Consider the ways in which the new media that
    was in development before you were born now
    presents a danger to you.)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com