. left | coast | lurker . on Tue, 2 Nov 2010 09:20:33 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Weekly Standard: Shirkyism |
Hi, I would just like to say that as someone educated and employed in the rank and file of Communication Studies (and Philosophy) in Canada, it is not necessary to default directly to the old horse of Marshal McLuhan, whose theories require a human body untainted of technics from which the "extensions of man" will protrude. This is another way of saying that technology is an external actor which can be me moralized and judged as an appendage (rather than an implicated or enfolded tendency), and which all you remade Freudians out there should have no trouble in grasping, hands-on, as the phallogocentrism of Canada's good ol' media mogul Catholic. There are better, more intriguing thinkers today, from the conversations around Bernard Stiegler's work (including the fascinating work of Mark Hansen) to the continuing disssections of Andrew Feenberg (carrying the torch of Marcuse) to where philosophy of technology and speculative realism have encountered each other (such as in the work of David Wills and Graham Harman). And for what it's worth, McLuhan got all his good bits from Harold Innis and George Grant (WHO? -- nevermind, we'll keep our Canuck gold). Me, I still like Lewis Mumford and Jacques Ellul, as well as good ol' Ivan Illich. If you'd like a contemporary technotheism without resorting to McLuhan (yet again), have a look at John Durham Peters, who does an interesting bit talking Derridean dissemination and Christological communication in the same breath. Unlike McLuhan, at least he's upfront about it. yrs from the frozen North, tV. > > Dave: > > Well said -- however, the real problem lies in the absence of a > COMMUNICATIONS theory on the part of both Clay Shirky and his critics. > After all, this is why he gets away with what he does. Nobody involved > really knows what they are talking about. # 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://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org