Nmherman on 7 Nov 2000 05:40:04 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> (S)end//////October was Derrida month at NYU |
In a message dated 11/6/2000 7:33:30 PM Central Standard Time, dteh@arthist.usyd.edu.au writes: > Hence, we have seen that the apocalyptic tone, at once diagnosed and > practiced by Derrida, may be present in every act of communication, from > the once rigid disciplinary realms of academic discourse to the intricate > and hidden movements of the information economy. If it has in fact been > embedded in even the most 'rational' forms of writing, if only on the level > of linguistic structures, it would nevertheless seem to be now encroaching > upon the very means of communication themselves, creating a system of > exchange in which some intimation of the end, and with it an entirely > questionable authorship, attach to every single transaction of meaning or > 'information'. In marketing itself as an infinite plurality, the new > medium realizes, in itself, an apocalypse of knowledge. In the era of the > internet, not only does every utterance say the end of correspondence, but > the system itself is both an exemplary model of apocalyptic mystagogy, and > a sign of the end. > > > david teh, 1999. David, I liked this post. I think it is very much about Genius 2000 and the endings of things. You might be interested to look at the Walker's Shock archive at walkerart.org; a bunch of Rhizome people and I talked about similar ideas. (The archive can be found at the Walker's "Shock of the View" page which links to Artsconnected. You have to advance to about December 1998 before I start posting much.) Best Regards, Max Herman The Genius 2000 Network Genius 2000: Works on Paper http://www.geocities.com/~genius-2000 PS--the following is from my own Master's Thesis on E.L. Doctorow's Book of Daniel. The only missing analogue is the email; I think Doctorow might say the whole book (published 1972) is an email. ++++