Memory in motion : archives, technology, and the social /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, [2017]
©2017
Description:1 online resource (331 pages) : illustrations
Language:English
Series:Recursions : theories of media, materiality, and cultural techniques
Recursions: theories of media, materiality, and cultural techniques.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11399167
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Røssaak, Eivind, editor.
Blom, Ina, editor.
Lundemo, Trond, editor.
ISBN:904853206X
9789048532063
9462982147
9789462982147
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary:How should we understand social memory in the age of new media? Classic sociology described the ways in which social memory was enacted through ritual, language art, architecture and institution - phenomena whose persistence over time and whose capacity for a shared storing of the past was contrasted with fleeting individual memory. Society is memory, Émile Durkheim stated. However, today's new time technologies compel us to rethink this concept of memory and its emphasis on a shared past. For in the age of digital computing, instant updating and transfer functions and interconnection through real time networks give an unprecedented priority to the present and the future, while challenging the very distinction between individual and collective memory. New media technologies raise the question of the temporalities of memory to a principle, challenging not just the classic description of social memory, but also the social ontology that it presupposes. 'Memory in Motion: Archives, Technology and the Social' discusses the new technologies of memory from perspectives that explicitly investigate their impact on the very conceptualization of the social.
How should we understand social memory in the age of new mediaClassic sociology described the ways in which social memory was enacted through ritual, language art, architecture and institution - phenomena whose persistence over time and whose capacity for a shared storing of the past was contrasted with fleeting individual memory. Society is memory, E⁺ѓmile Durkheim stated. However, today's new time technologies compel us to rethink this concept of memory and its emphasis on a shared past. For in the age of digital computing, instant updating and transfer functions and interconnection through real time networks give an unprecedented priority to the present and the future, while challenging the very distinction between individual and collective memory. New media technologies raise the question of the temporalities of memory to a principle, challenging not just the classic description of social memory, but also the social ontology that it presupposes. 'Memory in Motion: Archives, Technology and the Social' discusses the new technologies of memory from perspectives that explicitly investigate their impact on the very conceptualization of the social.
Other form:Print version: 9789048532063
Standard no.:40027044306