Title: TIMES OF TECHNOCULTURE
1TIMES OF TECHNOCULTURE
- The Discourse of Convergence
- A political perspective of the new media
revolution
2The Discourse of Convergence A political
perspective of the new media revolution
3lecture and seminar
- THE PROCESS OF DIGITISATION
- POLITICAL IDEOLOGY OF CONVERGENCE
- Californian ideology
- THE POLITICAL DISCOURSE OF CONVERGENCE
- Impact on our media experience
- SEMINAR QUESTIONS
- WHAT IS CONVERGENCE?
- WHAT ARE THE DISCOURSES BEHIND CONVERGENCE?
- WHAT ARE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN IDEAS AND THE
PARTICULAR CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH THEY ARISE? - IS CONVERGENCE A RETHINKING OF THE HISTORY OF
MEDIA? - WHAT HAPPENS TO THE MEDIA AS WE KNOW IT?
4THE PROCESS OF DIGITISATION
5THE PROCESS OF DIGITISATION
- Physical process of digitisation
- Shift from analogue to digital technology
- Media undergoes a physical change defined by the
computer logic of 1s 0s - Binary logic
698 expressed in binary
7definition
- The conversion of images and sounds to numbers,
making them amenable to manipulation by a
computer (Wise, 2000 p. 2)
8numerical representation (see Manovich, 2000)
- Media as mathematically described
- Media elements discrete and quantified
- digital value of media
- 8-bit 256
- 16-bit 65,536
- discrete levels of sound or colour
9numerical representation
- Media elements become programmable
- As a whole
- Converged
- Separately
- Pixel position
- Dimension
- 3D space
- Customisation
- Distribution
- Networked media
- Compression
- Psychoacoustics
108bit image 256 colours
An 8-bit sound file can have one of 256
values Clearly more bits give more accuracy, and
inherently a greater dynamic range
11Popular assumption about new media
- analogue technologies successful at separating
media - Radio
- TV
- Print
- computer has enabled a convergence of the media
form - Multimedia
- New media
12How does all this effect our everyday lives?
13The big switch over
- The government intends to convert the country
region by region between 2006 and 2010 but would
only switch off the analogue signal when more
than 95 of the population in a given area has
access to digital TV. - Matt WellsGuardian Unlimited Tuesday June 17,
2003
14CONVERGENCE
15- Convergence occurs at many levels
- At the technological level
- capacity of digital production to draw together
previously disparate analogue forms
16Industrial level (added value)
- telecommunications
- computer
- broadcast
- motion picture
- print
- publishing industries
17Industrial level (added value)
- market value of digital innovation
- reconstruction of commercial activities in the
production and marketing of cool technologies
- offer the consumer a variety of interactive
experiences. - The big switch over
18convergence
- The convergence of media forms is simply a
- constituent part of a larger scale technological
development referred to as the information
revolution (Dewdney and Boyd, 1995).
19Convergence buzzword of information age
20the ideology behind convergence
- THE CALIFORNIAN IDEOLOGY Barbrook and Campbell
(1995) - Published in Ludlow (ed), 2001 Crypto Anarchy,
Cyberstates and Pirate Utopias MIT Press
- A convergence of
- counter-culture radicalism
- neo-liberalism
- technological determinism
21THE CALIFORNIAN IDEOLOGY http//www.alamut.com/sub
j/ideologies/pessimism/califIdeo_I.html
- At the end of the twentieth century, the long
predicted convergence of the media, computing and
telecommunications into hypermedia is finally
happening
22THE CALIFORNIAN IDEOLOGY
- Once again, capitalism's relentless drive to
diversify and intensify the creative powers of
human labour is on the verge of transforming the
way in which we work, play and live together.
23Barbrook and Campbells argument
- Californian Ideology promiscuously combines
- the free-wheeling spirit of the hippies (social
liberals) - the entrepreneurial zeal of the yuppies (economic
neo-liberals)
24Barbrook and Campbells argument
- Bizarre fusion of
- the cultural bohemianism of San Francisco
- Hi-tech industries of Silicon Valley
25Counter-culture radicalismof hippies
- liberals in the social sense of the word
- They championed rational and progressive
ideals, such as democracy, tolerance,
self-fulfilment and social justice.
(Campbell and Barbrook, 1995)
26Information wants to be free
- Information wants to be free
- Hacker ethic
- Networks as utopia (digitopia)
-
- Emboldened by over twenty years of economic
growth, they believed that history was on their
side.
27Convergence with neo-liberalism (see Gidens,
1998 pp. 11-14)
- Thatcher in UK
- Civil society self-generating mechanism
- Free market rules Hostility to big centralised
government - American neo-conservatism (Reagan/Bush)
28Neo-liberal civil society (see Gidens, 1998 pp.
11-14)
- Welfare state as destructive
- Markets are perpetual motion machines
- Markets linked to family and nation
- Social inequality naïve and implausible
29Technological determinism and liberalism
- The convergence of media, computing and
telecommunications would inevitably create
the electronic agora
- a virtual place where everyone would be able to
express their opinions without fear of censorship
30Technological empowerment
- In the 1960s McLuhan preached the radical
message that the power of big business and big
government would be imminently overthrown by the
intrinsically empowering effects of new
technology on individuals
31A contradictory mix of
- technological determinism
- hybrid libertarian individualism
- become the orthodoxy of the information age?
- the social liberalism of New Left and the
economic liberalism of New Right have converged
into an ambiguous dream of a hi-tech
'Jeffersonian democracy'.
32THE DISCOURSE OF CONVERGENCE
- The end of public service television?
33The end of public service television?
- The Discourse of Convergence
- A Neo-Liberal Trojan Horse
by Sampson Lugo - Â
- An article published in Broadcasting
Convergence New Articulations of the Public
Remit 2003 (Eds) Lowe and Hujanen Nordicom
34New media regulation
- Does the big switch over mean the end of public
service broadcasting - BBC
- Free-to-air viewing
- Does the big switch over mean that corporations
will control our television - Sky
- Pay-per-view
35What is public service?
- Regulated Media
- BBC and ITV companies are regulated
- The European tradition media regulation limits
- media concentration
- guarantees partial and political pluralism
- content diversity
36What is the discourse?
- The discourse of convergence argues that
regulation obstructs effective commercial
decision-making
- New Labour and the end of public service
television? - Convergence
- slippery term used to deploy a political
adjunct to neo-liberal economic policy
37The discourse
- removes the term convergence from its technical
context - use it to present an ideological assumption
- to politically facilitate and justify
- Media de-regulation
- Reduce laws on ownership concentration
- Increase corporate participation in the sector
38Technological determinism
- Technologies have emerged in a culture of
marketization.
- Technological determinism frees the media
corporation from the history of policy - Justifies corporate demands for more freedom of
action
39- But it has also allowed the State to retreat from
the defence of the public interest - (cited in Murdock, Wieten and Dahlgren (eds),
2000 pp. 35-58)
- The discourse assumes a technological determinant
- open up the media to
- market forces
- promotes
- free market values
40Technology as driving force of policy change
- The Labour government under the premises of New
Labour has intended to link the concepts of
convergence and market together in a single
discourse
41SEMINAR QUESTIONS
- WHAT IS CONVERGENCE?
- WHAT ARE THE DISCOURSES BEHIND CONVERGENCE?
- WHAT ARE THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN IDEAS AND THE
PARTICULAR CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH THEY ARISE? - IS CONVERGENCE A RETHINKING OF THE HISTORY OF
MEDIA? - WHAT HAPPENS TO THE MEDIA AS WE KNOW IT?