2022-2023 / COMU0439-1

Digital media archeology

Duration

30h Th

Number of credits

 Master in multilingual communication (120 ECTS) (Digital media education)5 crédits 

Lecturer

Ingrid Mayeur

Language(s) of instruction

English language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the first semester, review in January

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

Description of the teaching unit:

This teaching unit addresses the theoretical elements and applications of media archaeology as a method of investigating media objects, clarifying its relevance to the understanding of contemporary digital media.

Table of Contents

Introduction: What is (Digital) Media Archaeology?

PART 1 : Benchmarks. Mapping (Digital) Media Archaeology: Pieces of an intellectual background

PART 2: Time and Materiality. Archives, Memory, Mechanism and Processes in the Culture of Software: Digital Culture Memory - Interpreting computational Processes - Art and Zombie Media

PART 3: Senses. Haptic Vision and Embodiment: New Film Theory, Digital Cinema and Media Archaeology of the Senses - Archaeology of the Screen.

Conclusion

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

At the end of this teaching unit, the student will be able...







  • to identify, to explain and to illustrate with concrete examples the key elements of a media-archaeological approach and to identify how it could be relevant for understanding digital media (i. e. what it can bring from a critical point of view);
  • to define the theoretical notions covered in the teaching unit (eg. mediarchy, nalog vs. digital; technogenesis; affordance; surveilliance capitalism, etc.) and to illustrate them by examples (that could be drawn within the case studies encountered in class;
  • to use these concepts to develop a critical understanding of digital media;
  • Taking a mediarchaeological look at the environmental impact of digital technolog.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

oral lectures with note-taking by the student; explanation and discussion of texts from a reading portfolio
 

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Face-to-face course


Additional information:

face-to-face (subject to adaptations imposed by the sanitary context)
 
 

Recommended or required readings

Reading portfolio (the texts will be available on ecampus)

Introduction



  • Citton, Yves. 2019. "8. Archeologizing Mediarchy". In Mediarchy. John Wiley & Sons, pp. 145-156.
PART 1 : Benchmarks. Mapping (Digital) Media Archaeology





  • Kittler, Friedrich A. (1986) 1999. "Introduction" in Gramophone, Film, Typewriter. Writing Science. Stanford: Stanford university press.
  •  Citton, Yves. 2019. "9. Stratifying Mediarchy". In Mediarchy. John Wiley & Sons, pp.161-174;
  • Zielinski, Siegfried. (2006) 2008. "Introduction: The Idea of a Deep Time in the Media". In Deep time of the media: toward an archaeology of hearing and seeing by technical means. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press. (optional)
PART 2: Time. Archives, Memory, Mechanism and Processes in the Culture of Software



  • Citton, Yves. 2019. "12. Digitizing mediarchy"; "13. Inhabiting Mediarchy". In Mediarchy. John Wiley & Sons, pp. 223-259.
  • De Kosnik, Abigail. 2016. « Memory Machine Myth: The Memex, Media Archaeology, and Repertoires of Archiving ». In Rogue Archives: Digital Cultural Memory and Media Fandom, 41-61. MIT Press.
  • Hertz, Garnet, and Jussi Parikka. 2012. « Zombie Media: Circuit Bending Media Archaeology into an Art Method ». Leonardo 45 (5): 424-30.
PART 3: Senses. Haptic Vision, Embodiment and Technogenesis



  • Elsaesser, Thomas. 2018. « Media Archaeology: A Viable Discipline or a Valuable Symptom? » Artnodes, no 21 (juillet).
  • Huhtamo, Erkki. 2016. « The Four Practices? Challenges for an Archaeology of the Screen ». In Screens, édité par Dominique Chateau et José Moure, 6:116-24. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Exam(s) in session

Any session

- In-person

written exam ( open-ended questions )


Additional information:

Written examination, open questions (instructions and weighting specified) designed to assess the achievement of pre-defined learning objectives (knowledge of the concepts covered in the course, ability to provide relevant illustrations, etc.).
 

Work placement(s)

Organizational remarks

Contacts

Ingrid.Mayeur@uliege.be
 

Association of one or more MOOCs