Centre for Digital Cultures

Organisational unit: Institute

Organisation profile

Contemporary culture is characterized by the ubiquity of digital media technologies and infrastructures, which are constantly configuring our techniques for processing, storing, and transmitting data. As a result, our everyday practices of connecting, relating, reading, writing, perceiving, sharing, competing, and communicating are undergoing significant changes. At the same time, these technologies are closely tied to major societal challenges such as climate change, global conflicts, digital divides and social unjustness. In this dynamic context, the Centre for Digital Cultures (CDC) directly addresses the emergence of new and complex qualities of vernacular socio-technical life. This involves the development of advanced theory and innovative study programmes. We are concerned with the question of how we can understand and shape digital cultures today​​​​​​​.

Main research areas

The digital shift re-shapes the cultural sectors, and, indeed, everyday life, politics, law, and economics. the Centre for Digital Cultures (CDC), affiliated to Leuphana University of Lüneburg, examines this shift through a range of interdisciplinary methodologies, including media, cultural and social studies, through knowledge creation and transfer, as well as by developing experimental and interventionist media practices. Established in 2012, as one of the first research centres in Europe to research the emergence of digital cultures, the CDC continues to produce cutting-edge research on socio-technical regimes of inclusion and exclusion. Since its inception, the CDC has built an innovative network and research environment, where academic institutions, practitioners, and civil society stakeholders engage with new concepts, formats, and applications within digital cultures.

Current Research Areas

  • Climate Futures
  • (B)Orders, Identities and Belonging in the Digital Age
  • Cities, Infrastructures, Logistics, Platforms 
  1. 2011
  2. After the Tears: Victimhood and Subjectivity in the Melodramatic Mode

    Beyes, T. (Speaker)

    11.11.201112.11.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

  3. Extension extended. A genealogy of nerves and cables

    Sprenger, F. (Speaker)

    26.10.201128.10.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

  4. Don't Hate the Business! Become the Business!

    Bazzichelli, T. (Speaker) & Cox, G. (Speaker)

    14.09.201121.09.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

  5. A different Lefebvre: the everyday production of organizational space

    Beyes, T. (Coauthor)

    11.07.201113.07.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

  6. Ghosts of the past, chimeras of the future: Snapshots from the Berlin State Library

    Beyes, T. (Coauthor)

    08.07.201109.07.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

  7. The Politics of Urban Cultural Interventions

    Beyes, T. (Speaker)

    07.07.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

  8. Visual Archives in the Digitale Age

    Warnke, M. (Speaker)

    15.06.2011

    Activity: Participating in or organising an academic or articstic eventConferencesResearch

  9. Princeton-Weimar Summer School for Media Studies 2011

    Conrad, L. (Participant)

    05.06.201111.06.2011

    Activity: Participating in or organising an academic or articstic eventExternal workshops, courses, seminarsResearch

  10. Kunst und Öffentlichkeit

    Beyes, T. (Speaker)

    03.06.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

  11. Kreativ fördern und unternehmerisch handeln

    Beyes, T. (Speaker)

    12.05.2011

    Activity: Talk or presentationtalk or presentation in privat or public eventsResearch