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  1. Successful Paranoia: Friedrich Kittler, Lacanian Psychoanalysis, and the History of Science.Henning Schmidgen - 2019 - Theory, Culture and Society 36 (1):107-131.
    With studies like Discourse Networks 1800/1900 and Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Friedrich A. Kittler contributed significantly to transforming the history of media into a vital field of inquiry. This essay undertakes to more precisely characterize Kittler’s historiographical approach. When we look back on his early contributions to studies of the relationship between literature, madness and truth – among others, his doctoral dissertation on the Swiss poet and writer Conrad Ferdinand Meyer – what strikes us is the significance that Jacques Lacan’s structuralist (...)
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  • Zwei oder drei Dinge, die ich von der Technikphilosophie weiss.Wolfgang Pircher - 2009 - Revue de Synthèse 130 (1):133-146.
    Im Schatten der „offiziellen‟ Technikphilosophie sind in der jüngeren Vergangenheit Arbeiten entstanden, welche sich verschiedenen Techniken zuwenden und deren konkrete geschichtliche Entwicklung philosophisch aufarbeiten. Nach einem kurzen Abriß der Technikphilosophie in Deutschland seit dem Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts, wird auf eine kleine Auswahl solcher Arbeiten naher eingegangen. Hierbei stellt man eine überraschende Nahe zu den Literatur- und Kulturwissenschaften fest.
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  • Operative Media Archaeology: Wolfgang Ernst’s Materialist Media Diagrammatics.Jussi Parikka - 2011 - Theory, Culture and Society 28 (5):52-74.
    Media archaeological methods for extending the lifetime of new media into ‘old media’ have experienced a revival during the past years. In recent media theory, a new context for a debate surrounding media archaeology is emerging. So far media archaeology has been articulated together with such a heterogeneous bunch of theorists as Erkki Huhtamo, Siegfried Zielinski, Thomas Elsaesser and to a certain extent Friedrich Kittler. However, debates surrounding media archaeology as a method seem to be taking it forward not only (...)
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  • Friedrich Kittler: E-Special Introduction.Jussi Parikka & Paul Feigelfeld - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (7-8):349-358.
    This e-Special Issue of Theory, Culture & Society focuses on the German media theorist Friedrich Kittler’s (1943–2011) impact across the field of humanities. By including Kittler’s own texts and other scholars’ articles that continue or comment on Kittler’s work, the editors have sought to address the core aspects of Kittler’s provocative insights into how media technologies underpin our cultural formations. The editorial introduction sets out key sections on technology, aesthetics, ontology and epistemology, identified as the significant axes where Kittler opens (...)
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  • The Digital Body: Telegraphy as Discourse Network.Kate Maddalena & Jeremy Packer - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (1):93-117.
    This article considers the use of flag telegraphy by the US Signal Corps during the Civil War as it functioned as a proto-technical medium that preceded wire telegraphy as a military communications technology. Not only was flag telegraphy a historical step towards contemporary technical media, it was also an early iteration of the digitization of communication. Our treatment ties together three main theoretical threads as a way of seeing ‘the digital’ in material communication practices: (1) Friedrich Kittler’s concept of technical (...)
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  • On collegiality: Kittler models Derrida.Peter Krapp - 2011 - Thesis Eleven 107 (1):21-32.
    Kittler was among the first to invite Derrida to lectures in Germany, and to translate Derrida’s texts into German. Yet a cursory tally in his references does not always do justice to what Kittler’s media theory owes to deconstruction. Discourse Networks credits Derrida with a mere ‘rediscovery’ of grammatology, although Wellbery’s foreword labors mightily to identify the deconstructive traits in Kittler’s work. Gramophone, Film, Typewriter reduces The Post Card’s complex networks to an allegation that ‘voice remains the other of typescripts' (...)
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  • Towards an Ontology of Media.Friedrich Kittler - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (2-3):23-31.
    This paper addresses the exclusion of physical and technical media from questions of ontology. It is argued, first, that from Aristotle onwards ontology has dealt with the matter and form of things rather than the relations between things in time and space. Second, it is argued that because the Greeks did not distinguish between speech elements and alphabetic letters there has been a tendency for philosophy to neglect writing as its own technical medium. This paper traces these tendencies through a (...)
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  • Philosophy as anti-religion in the work of Alain Badiou.Justin Clemens & Jon Roffe - 2008 - Sophia 47 (3):345-358.
    The Heideggerian rupture in the history of philosophy in the name of a phenomenological and poetic ontology has provided an opening which many of the key figures in twentieth century continental thought have exploited. However, this opening was marked by Heidegger himself as an ambiguous one, insofar as metaphysics was perhaps integrally ‘onto-theology,’ that is, ultimately continuous with the world-historical capture of the thought of being. This piece argues that the philosophy of Alain Badiou, which departs from the recognition that (...)
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  • On Friedrich Kittler’s ‘Authorship and Love’.Geoffrey Winthrop-Young - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (3):3-13.
    This article provides a short introduction to Friedrich Kittler’s 1980 essay ‘Authorship and Love’ by showing how it fits into the development of Kittler’s thought. The stark contrast between superficially similar scenes in Goethe’s Werther and Dante’s Divine Comedy, each of which is said to represent fundamentally different conceptualizations of authorship and love, is a revealing instance of Kittler's distinctive and polemical appropriation of French post-structuralism as well as of his subsequent switch from discourse analysis to media theory. Ultimately, ‘Authorship (...)
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