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Deep Time of the Media

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This title embarks on a quest to uncover new insights by exploring the "deep time" of media development, connecting models, technologies, and accidents that have previously been overlooked. It delves into the hidden layers of media evolution, focusing on dynamic moments of intense activity in media design that have largely escaped historical attention. The author argues that media history does not follow a linear path from simple tools to complex machinery. Instead, it highlights significant turning points that reveal the new within the old. Drawing on original sources, the exploration spans two thousand years of cultural and technological history, featuring a theater of mirrors in sixteenth-century Naples, an automaton for musical composition by Jesuit Athanasius Kircher, and Joseph Mazzolari's eighteenth-century electrical tele-writing machine, among others. By uncovering these pivotal moments in the media-archaeological record, the narrative fosters a renewed relationship with contemporary media. These discoveries from "deep time" illuminate today’s media landscape and may guide us in navigating the future of media.

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Deep Time of the Media, Siegfried Zielinski

Langue
Année de publication
2006
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Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
MIT Press
Publié
2006
Format
rigide
Pages
389
ISBN10
0262240491
ISBN13
9780262240499
Séries
Titre original
Archäologie der Medien
Évaluation
4,05 sur 5
Description
This title embarks on a quest to uncover new insights by exploring the "deep time" of media development, connecting models, technologies, and accidents that have previously been overlooked. It delves into the hidden layers of media evolution, focusing on dynamic moments of intense activity in media design that have largely escaped historical attention. The author argues that media history does not follow a linear path from simple tools to complex machinery. Instead, it highlights significant turning points that reveal the new within the old. Drawing on original sources, the exploration spans two thousand years of cultural and technological history, featuring a theater of mirrors in sixteenth-century Naples, an automaton for musical composition by Jesuit Athanasius Kircher, and Joseph Mazzolari's eighteenth-century electrical tele-writing machine, among others. By uncovering these pivotal moments in the media-archaeological record, the narrative fosters a renewed relationship with contemporary media. These discoveries from "deep time" illuminate today’s media landscape and may guide us in navigating the future of media.