Digital memory and the archive /
Wolfgang Ernst ; edited and with an introduction by Jussi Parikka.
- Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, c2013.
- 265 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm.
- Electronic mediations ; vol. 39 .
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contenidos: Introduction
Archival Media Theory: An Introduction to Wolfgang Ernst’s Media Archaeology — Jussi Parikka
Media Archaeology as a Trans-Atlantic Bridge
Part I: The Media Archaeological Method
Let There Be Irony: Cultural History and Media Archaeology in Parallel Lines
Media Archaeography: Method and Machine versus History and Narrative of Media
Part II: From Temporality to the Multimedial Archive 3. Underway to the Dual System: Classical Archives and Digital Memory 4. Archives in Transition: Dynamic Media Memories 5. Between Real Time and Memory on Demand: Reflections on Television 6. Discontinuities: Does the Archive Become Metaphorical in Multi-Media Space?
Part III: Microtemporal Media 7. Telling versus Counting: A Media-Archaeological Point of View 8. Distory: 100 Years of Electron Tubes, Media-Archaeologically Interpreted vis-à-vis 100 Years of Radio 9. Towards a Media Archaeology of Sonic Articulations 10. Experimenting Media‑Temporality: Pythagoras, Hertz, Turing
Appendix
Archive Rumblings: An Interview with Wolfgang Ernst — Geert Lovink
Then: Acknowledgments, Notes, Publication History, Index
Digital Memory and the Archive presents a groundbreaking shift in media studies, placing archival mechanisms and infrastructure at the core of how we understand memory and digital culture. Wolfgang Ernst, through essays edited by Jussi Parikka, argues that understanding archives—and their influence—requires focusing on machine time, logging systems, and micro-temporal interfaces. He and Parikka explore how classical archival concepts evolve—or resist—in the face of cloud storage, streaming media, and continuous digital preservation, reshaping how society remembers.
9780816677665 9780816677672
2012027714
Mass media--Philosophy. Digital media--Social aspects. Mass media--Archival resources.