Re: [Foucault-L] Foucault v. Web 2.0

Mark Poster has a piece on itunesu, foucault deleuze and the new media. he
believes foucault never referred to computers, or perhaps only once, and
that in general foucault was silent with regards to the media. but he also
seems to believe this silence can be filled in. to be honest i'm not sure
why foucault would have been expect to foresee the impact of the new tech -
he was also relatively silent on feminism and post colonialism, but one
could assume the nature of a tool box is that it has multiple functions.

On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 5:47 PM, Erik Hoogcarspel <jehms@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> But something was going on, there was the Spectrum, the Commodore 64,
> the Sinclair QL and even the first Amiga and Atari computers and the
> Apple. People held high hopes for the future. The implications of
> communication networks were not yet discusses, but the automatisation
> and the processing of data by computers was already an item. Perhaps
> Foucault didn't foresee the far reaching consequences of the oncoming
> technology.
>
> erik
>
> Op 27-05-10 23:37, David McInerney schreef:
> > Given when he died I imagine there wasn't much to say.
> >
> > Back in 1984 people were still getting excited over the new AT MS-DOS
> > machines with two 5.25" floppy disks and even in 1987 I was informed
> > in hushed tones as a new employee about the amazing 20MB hard drive
> > that the big insurance company I worked for had installed and which
> > they were hoping to eventually scan and store all of the insurance
> > policies on! Even in 1994 the internet was a huge deal and only a
> > few people I knew had access to it, generally academics using
> > university infrastructure. I didn't know any undergrad students who
> > had used it.
> >
> > Back in 1984 it was people posting modem addresses in magazines and
> > communicating one-to-one as far as I can remember.
> >
> > So no I wouldn't expect anything in Foucault's work itself, but I'd
> > be interested to see what people have done with his work since to
> > discuss the matter
> >
> > D
> >
> >
> > On 28/05/2010, at 6:53 AM, Thomas Lord wrote:
> >
> >
> >> Did Foucault write anything about computing,
> >> software, networking, and so forth? His mode
> >> of analysis seems to have a lot of relevance
> >> to today's Internet but I'm wondering what he
> >> might have written directly about such technology.
> >>
> >> -t
> >>
> >>
> >>
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> >>
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> >
> >
>
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Folow-ups
  • Re: [Foucault-L] Foucault v. Web 2.0
    • From: Chathan Vemuri
  • Replies
    [Foucault-L] Foucault v. Web 2.0, Thomas Lord
    Re: [Foucault-L] Foucault v. Web 2.0, David McInerney
    Re: [Foucault-L] Foucault v. Web 2.0, Erik Hoogcarspel
    Partial thread listing: