Marianne van den Boomen on Wed, 28 Jan 2009 23:28:15 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> Digital Humanities Manifesto |
Thanks Florian, for your precise criticism of this indeed rather sloppy manifesto. Regarding your definition of what is 'digital' as opposed to analog, I have the impression that there are two definitions of 'the digital' circulating: one equals digital to 'build up by discrete entities' - then indeed also celluloid film frames are digital, just as numbers, typewriting, printed letters and even speech (as set of phonemes). The other definition is to conceive the digital stricty as computable numbers (after all, digits means 'numbers', besides 'fingers'). And computable here means 'computable only by a computer', that is a hardware machine running software by which these numbers can be processed, modified, calculated, translated etc. I prefer the last definition, it enables us to talk about celluloid film frames and printed letters as non-digital as long they are not translated into computable and computed numbers which make sense in a specific program running. Not any number my kid brings home from school is digital, and not any discrete entity is digital. The documents coming from my printer are analog representations of digital material. I would even claim that such a definition of the digital would have the same political significance as you are aiming at. It foregrounds the concrete materiality of the digital, and prevents the kind of digital mysticism ('digital equals immaterial, disembodied, metaphysical, virtual etc') still present in new media studies. Such a definition would also foreclose the easy dichotomy of the digital vs the analog as immaterial vs material - both types of information are profoundly material inscriptions (Though of course the materiality of computable numbers differs from the materiality of iron, energy, or human bodies, but no more or no less than that iron differs from the human body.) Why do you think it is fruitfull to define digital as any discrete entity? I agree that anything build up by discrete entities can be translated into digital matarial by assigning numbers to to these entities, but countable in itself does not make something computable (by computers). Marianne # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org