Media Genealogy: Back to the Present of Digital Cultures

Chapter

Authors

Clemens Apprich , Götz Bachmann

Editor

Gertraud Koch

Publisher, Location, Date

Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, United Kingdom, 23 June 2017

Keywords

media genealogy, digital cultures, Cultural studies, Digital media, media

ISBN/ISSN/ISMN, DOI

Abstract

The central metaphor for research is the branching family tree: media genealogy looks for past divergent lines and hidden relationships that point towards the present in critical ways; this includes the dead ends lost to the present. The genealogical method itself becomes a component part of the truth games being examined: it brings into focus not only the history and present of digital cultures but also the positions of the person investigating these cultures. This chapter identifies three basic traits of media genealogy: the use of multilinear tree structures that branch off towards the top and the bottom with a view to alternative, the collection of multifaceted and reciprocal relationships of influence with the aid of an eclectic theoretical and methodical toolbox; and an intuitive 'swimming' (Turner) in complex contexts of the past, and from there back into the present.

Volume/Issue, Pages

293 – 306

Language, Format, Material, Edition

English

Activity List

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Published By: Clemens Apprich | Universität für Angewandte Kunst Wien | Publication Date: 07 July 2022, 09:59 | Edit Date: 24 November 2022, 09:11