ABSTRACT

Drawing on a range of methods from across science and technology studies, digital humanities and digital arts, this book presents a comprehensive view of the big data phenomenon.

Big data architectures are increasingly transforming political questions into technical management by determining classificatory systems in the social, educational, and healthcare realms. Data, and their multiple arborisations, have become new epistemic landscapes. They have also become new existential terrains. The fundamental question is: can big data be seen as a new medium in the way photography or film were when they first appeared? No new medium is ever truly new. It’s always remediation of older media. What is new is the medium’s re-articulation of the difference between here and there, before and after, yours and mine, knowable and unknowable, possible and impossible.

This transdisciplinary volume, incorporating cultural and media theory, art, philosophy, history, and political philosophy is a key resource for readers interested in digital humanities, cultural, and media studies.

chapter |13 pages

Prologue

Why ask the question?

part I|46 pages

Patterning knowledge and time

chapter 1|15 pages

Big data and/versus people knowledge

On the ambiguities of humanistic research

chapter 2|14 pages

Simulated replicants forever?

Big data, engendered determinism, and the end of prophecy

chapter 3|15 pages

“Visual hallucination of probable events”

On environments of images, data, and machine learning

part III|47 pages

Patterning cultural heritage and memory

chapter 7|15 pages

Data to the Nth degree

Zooming in on The Smart Set

chapter 8|15 pages

Intellectual autonomy after artificial intelligence

The future of memory institutions and historical research

chapter 9|15 pages

BeHere:

Prosthetic memory in the age of digital frottage

part IV|60 pages

Patterning people

chapter 10|14 pages

Surfaces and depths

An aesthetics of big data

chapter 13|15 pages

Epilogue: Telepathic exaptation in late cognitive capitalism

A speculative approach to the effects of digitality