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Community without Community in Digital Culture [Hardcover]

Dr Charlie Gere

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Book Description

7 Aug 2012 1137026669 978-1137026668
The word 'digital' refers to both digital data, as used in computers, and also the digits, fingers, of the hand, and thus by extension touch, which has long been a trope for connectivity, community, and participation. Thus, in its drive towards greater connectivity, our culture is digital in more than one sense, in that it increasingly encourages such contact (from the Latin, 'com', together, and 'tangere', to touch). But at the same time such technologies always involve separation, gap and distance. Community Without Community in Digital Culture suggests that networks always involve this other aspect of touch, separation, distance and gap, as a necessary concomitant of our fundamental technicity. Thus, against the prevailing presumptions that new technologies involve greater contact, relationality and community, this book proposes that they exemplify the gap inherent in touch, the 'inconceivable, small, 'infinitesimal difference'' that separates us from each other in time and space. In this such technologies are part of the history of the death of God, the loss of an overarching metaphysical framework which would bind us together in some form of relation or communion. This can be understood in terms of contingency, which has the same root as contact.

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Book Description

The author presents the view that our digital culture is determined not by greater connection, but by the separation and gap that is a necessary concomitant of our fundamental technicity

About the Author

CHARLIE GERE is Professor of Media Theory and History at Lancaster University, UK. He is the author of Digital Culture and Art, Time and Technology, and with Michael Corris, Non-Relational Aesthetics, as well as being co-editor of White Heat Cold Logic: British Computer Art 1960-1980, and many papers on questions of technology, media and art.


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