ABSTRACT
How do new media affect the question of social memory? Social memory is usually described as enacted through ritual, language, art, architecture, and institutions ? Phenomena whose persistence over time and capacity for a shared storage of the past was set in contrast to fleeting individual memory. But the question of how social memory should be understood in an age of digital computing, instant updating, and interconnection in real time, is very much up in the air. The essays in this collection discuss the new technologies of memory from a variety of perspectives that explicitly investigate their impact on the very concept of the social. Contributors: David Berry, Ina Blom, Wolfgang Ernst, Matthew Fuller, Andrew Goffey, Liv Hausken, Yuk Hui, Trond Lundemo, Adrian Mackenzie, Sónia Matos, Richard Mills, Jussi Parikka, Eivind Røssaak, Stuart Sharples, Tiziana Terranova, Pasi Väliaho.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |46 pages
Oralities
chapter Chapter Two|24 pages
Can Languages be Saved? Linguistic Heritage and the Moving Archive
part |42 pages
Softwares
chapter Chapter Three|16 pages
Big Diff, Granularity, Incoherence, and Production in the Github Software Repository
chapter Chapter Four|24 pages
The Post-Archival Constellation: The Archive under the Technical Conditions of Computational Media
part |84 pages
Lives
chapter Chapter Five|24 pages
Planetary Goodbyes: Post-History and Future Memories of an Ecological Past
chapter Chapter Seven|28 pages
FileLife: Constant, Kurenniemi, and the Question of Living Archives
part |74 pages
Images
chapter Chapter Eight|24 pages
Mapping the World: Les Archives de la Planète and the Mobilization of Memory
part |42 pages
Socialities
