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C792: Mediation,
representation, form, meaning, communication: these terms,
and perhaps a handful of others, comprise a conceptual core
for (humanistic) media studies. In the last 50 years or so
they have helped to gather disparate researchers together
as a field and have facilitated the proliferation of rigorous,
politically engaged media scholarship. Inasmuch as these concepts
have proven useful both institutionally and analytically,
however, their givenness has gone more or less unquestioned.
The rapidly shifting media landscape and the emergence of
new modes of thought suggest that the time has come to asses
the capabilities and limitations of these concepts and, as
necessary, to imagine how to do media studies otherwise.
The individual and collaborative writings of Gilles Deleuze
(1925-1995) and Félix Guattari (1930-1992) provide
a powerful frame of reference for beginning this inquiry.
Their philosophy consists in part of a sustained critique
of forms of mediation, logics of representation, and structures
of signification, which in turn opens up a host of urgent
questions to which media researchers ought to be responding:
other than signifying, what do media do? what’s at stake
in conceiving of mediated sounds, words, and images not as
representations but as original presentations in their own
right? is the primary function of media to communicate, and
if not, what then is their main purpose? what would it mean
to study “media” without presuming that they indeed
mediate? This class explores these and other questions about
the future of media studies through an intensive engagement
with key writings by Deleuze and Guattari and those of media
scholars whose research has been inspired by their work.
Required texts by Gilles Deleuze: Cinema 1: The Movement-Image;
Cinema 2: The Time-Image; Difference and Repetition; Francis
Bacon: The Logic of Sensation; Nietzsche and Philosophy; and
Proust and Signs: The Complete Text.
Other required texts: Félix Guattari, The Three
Ecologies; Brian Massumi, Parables for the Virtual:
Movement, Affect, Sensation; Jennifer Daryl Slack
(ed.) Animations [of Deleuze and Guattari]; McKenzie
Wark, A Hacker Manifesto; J. Macgregor Wise, Exploring
Technology and Social Space.
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