Can today’s society, increasingly captivated by a constant flow of
information, share a sense of history? How did our media-making
forebears balance the tension between the present and the absent, the
individual and the collective, the static and the dynamic—and how do
our current digital networks disrupt these same balances? Can our
social media, with its fleeting nature, even be considered social at
all? In Friending the Past, Alan Liu proposes
fresh answers to these innovative questions of connection. He explores
how we can learn from the relationship between past societies whose
media forms fostered a communal and self-aware sense of history—such
as prehistorical oral societies with robust storytelling cultures, or
the great print works of nineteenth-century historicism—and our own
instantaneous present. He concludes with a surprising look at how the
sense of history exemplified in today’s JavaScript timelines
compares to the temporality found in Romantic poetry.
Interlaced among these inquiries, Liu shows how extensive “network
archaeologies” can be constructed as novel ways of thinking about
our affiliations with time and with each other. These conceptual
architectures of period and age are also always media structures,
scaffolded with the outlines of what we mean by history. Thinking
about our own time, Liu wonders if the digital, networked future can
sustain a similar sense of history.
Les mer
The Sense of History in the Digital Age
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226452005
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter