Digital Memory Studies Media Pasts in Transition

Digital Memory Studies: Media Pasts in Transition by Andrew Hoskins, published by Routledge on September 22, 2017, is a comprehensive exploration of the intersection between digital media and memory. This edition spans 314 pages and is presented in English. The book delves into various aspects of digital memory, examining how connectivity and digital culture influence our understanding of the past, as well as the implications of memory in the digital age.
Readers will find a collection of essays that address themes such as the impact of digital connectivity on collective memory, the role of digital afterlife agencies, and the evolving nature of memory institutions in the face of technological disruption. Contributions from various authors discuss topics like the economic dimensions of memory in a digital context and the challenges posed by digital archives. This scholarly work offers insights into the social aspects of mass media and digital memory, making it a valuable resource for those interested in the complexities of memory in contemporary society.
Official synopsis Publisher
Andrew Hoskins: The restless past: an introduction to digital memory and media — Connectivity. Martin Pogacar: Culture of the past: digital connectivity and dispotentiated futures — Amanda Lagerkvist: The media end: digital afterlife agencies and techno-existential closure — Andrew Hoskins: Memory of the multitude: the end of collective memory — Wulf Kansteiner: The holocaust in the 21st century: digital anxiety, cosmopolitanism on steroids, and never again genocide without memory — Archaeology. Wolfgang Ernst: Tempor(e)alities and archive-textures of media-connected memory — Jussi Parikka: The underpinning time: from digital memory to network microtemporality — Timothy Barker: Television in and out of time — Matthew Allen: Memory in technoscience: biomedia and the wettability of mnemonic relations — Economy. Joanne Garde-Hansen and Gilson Schwartz: Iconomy of memory: on remembering as digital, civic and corporate currency — Anna Reading and Tanya Notley: “Globital”‘ memory capital: exploring digital memory economies — Archive. Michael Moss: Memory institutions, the archive and digital disruption? — Debra Ramsay: Tensions in the interface: the archive and the digital
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