Professorship for Theory and History of Media

Organisational unit: Professoship

Organisation profile

Media Theory and Media History at the ICAM researches the media-related possibilities and conditions of cognition, representation and research, or, more generally, of cultural practices—with a special interest in technological interconnections.

Main research areas

This perspective stands in the tradition of technologically informed discourse analyses following Michel Foucault and Friedrich Kittler. Aware of the limitations and in part justified critique of the techno-deterministic forms of this approach, we conduct research and teach in the frame of theoretical further developments of cultural studies-oriented media research. In exchange with other disciplines, we not only place a greater focus on aspects such as actors, concrete locations or networks, it is also important for us to reflect upon the historical genealogy of concepts and methods applied in media studies themselves. This results in an orientation one can best designate with the term of media-historical epistemology.

The aim is not to advance an own type of “media philosophy,” but to conduct historical studies on (media) technologies that are of interest from a media-theoretical point of view in that they lead to epistemological consequences. We therefore grasp the Media Theory and Media History not as two separate fields that are to be researched and taught at the university independently of each other. Instead, we find that grasping media theory and media history as a dynamic relationship of exchange leads to much more productive ideas and questions in research and teaching. For us, media-historical epistemology is therefore not a discipline in the classical sense. To speak with Ludwik Fleck, it is a form of a “thinking collective” or “style of thinking” chosen for quite pragmatic reasons. Such a style of thinking enables second-order observations that aim at retracing misunderstandings, disruptions, breaks, caesuras, or, in short, “epistemological obstacles” (Bachelard) that characterize the history of media. The strengths of a media-historical epistemology understood in this way lies in its compatibility with other current approaches in cultural studies, e.g., the research of cultural technologies, the research of laboratories and science, or the history of science.

To this end, a media-historical epistemology must be well informed not only about the disciplines whose media-related methods it addresses, but also about the current methodological standards of neighboring approaches, such as science studies, musicology, Science, Technology and Society (STS), visual studies, or technological and cultural history. For the purpose of a specific media epistemology, they are taken up, examined, and reformulated in view of their subject matter. Such a combination of media theory and media history makes no problem-solving promises of enhanced media technologies or more successful conveyance of science, but offers itself as a method to problematize science, society, and culture.

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  1. Art and Civic Media

    Beyes, T. (Project manager, academic) & Pias, C. (Project manager, academic)

    01.11.1101.05.15

    Project: Research

  2. Affect- and Psychotechnolog Studies. Emergent Technologies of Affective and Emotional (Self-)Control

    Pias, C. (Project manager, academic) & Schrape, N. (Project manager, academic)

    German Research Foundation

    01.11.1530.03.17

    Project: Research

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Researchers

  1. Anita Kliemann

Publications

  1. Freie Berufe im Wandel der Arbeitsmärkte
  2. Nachahmung
  3. A Longitudinal Study of Great Ape Cognition
  4. Anleitung zum Perspektivenwechsel
  5. Common opossum population density in an agroforestry system in Bolivia
  6. Реформировать Болонскую реформу Интервью с профессором Люнебургского университета, писателем Пьеранжело Масетом Проведение
  7. Hollis Frampton: Photographs
  8. Жизнь вне изоляции.
  9. Affect is King
  10. glUV
  11. Editorial
  12. Coming late for dinner
  13. Working time preferences and early and late retirement intentions
  14. The effect of voters’ economic perception, Brexit and campaigns on the evaluation of party leaders over time
  15. Die Landung
  16. Ordo-Responsibility
  17. Extensive Margins of Imports and Profitability
  18. Complexity cost management
  19. Characterization of dissimilar friction stir welded lap joints of AA5083 and GL D36 steel
  20. Who is responsible for corruption?
  21. Bo-NO-bouba-kiki
  22. Attention and Information Acquisition
  23. Taxonomic and functional changes in mountain meadow communities four years after transplantation to a lowland environment
  24. A stakeholder theory perspective on business models: Value creation for sustainability
  25. Web-Based and Mobile Stress Management Intervention for Employees
  26. Nachhaltigkeitsmanagement in Unternehmen
  27. The Serious and the Mundane
  28. A Cross-Industry Analysis of the Spillover Effect in Paid Search Advertising
  29. Students’ genre expectations and the effects of text cohesion on reading comprehension
  30. Mexican school students’ perceptions of inclusion
  31. Teaching about sustainability through inquiry-based science in Irish primary classrooms
  32. Correction to