RESETTING THEORY.

CTheory Interview

Archaeologies of Media Art

Jussi Parikka in conversation with Garnet Hertz

Introduction

Media archaeology is an approach to media studies that has emerged over 
the last two decades. It borrows from Michel Foucault, Walter Benjamin, 
and Friedrich Kittler, but also diverges from all of these theorists to 
form a unique set of tools and practices. Media archaeology is not a 
school of thought or a specific technique, but is as an emerging 
attitude and cluster of tactics in contemporary media theory that is 
characterized by a desire to uncover and circulate repressed or 
neglected media approaches and technologies. Its handful of proponents 
-- including Siegfried Zielinski, Wolfgang Ernst, Thomas Elsaesser, and 
Erkki Huhtamo -- are primarily interested in mobilizing histories and 
devices that have been sidelined during the construction of totalizing 
histories of popular forms of communication, including the histories of 
film, television, and new media. The lost traces of media technologies 
are deemed important topics to be excavated and studied; "dead" media 
technologies and idiosyncratic developments reveal important themes, 
structures, and links in the history of communication that would 
normally be occluded by more obvious narratives. This includes tracing 
irregular developments and unconventional genealogies of present-day 
communication technologies, believing that the most interesting 
developments often happen in the neglected margins of histories or 
artifacts.

http://www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id=631
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