Christian Fuchs on Tue, 20 Jan 2015 16:51:16 +0100 (CET)


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

<nettime-ann> CAMRI seminar 28/1: Clint Burnham on Slavoj ÅiÅek and the Internet


.
CAMRI seminar
Clint Burnham: The Subject Supposed to LOL: Slavoj ÅiÅek and the Event of the Internet
Wed, 28/1, 14:00
Univ of Westminster
Harrow Campus
Room A7.01

Registration is possible by e-mail to christian.fuchs@uti.at

http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/clint-burnham-the-subject-supposed-to-lol-slavoj-iek-and-the-event-of-the-internet

Is the Internet an Event? Does it constitute, as ÅiÅek argues an Event should, a reframing of our experience, a retroactive re-ordering of everything we thought we knew about the social but were afraid to ask Facebook?
In this talk Clint Burnham will engage with ÅiÅekâs recent work (Less 
than Nothing, Event, Absolute Recoil) as a way to argue, first, that in 
order to understand the Internet, we need ÅiÅekâs âimmaterial 
materialism,â and, in turn, to understand ÅiÅekâs thought and how it 
circulates today, we need to think through digital culture and social 
media. ââAs regards the Internet, then, no cynical disavowal, no 
Facebook cleanses, no shutting off the wifi: les non-dupes errent, or 
those who distance themselves from social media and the like are the 
most deceived. Next: the Internetâs two bodies: digital culture is both 
the material world of servers, clouds, stacks and devices and the 
virtual or affective world of liking, networking, and the mirror stage 
of the selfie. And here we must confront the âobscene undersideâ of 
digital culture: not only the trolls, 4chan porn, and gamergate broâs, 
but also the old fashioned exploitation of labour, be it iPhone 
assembly-line workers at Foxconn, super-exploited âblood coltanâ miners 
in the Congo, âlike farmersâ in India, or social media scrubbers in the 
Phillipines, who ensure your feeds are âcleanâ of porn, beheadings, and 
other #NSFW matter. These last concerns, then, mean we also have to 
think about what ÅiÅek calls the âundoing of the Eventâ of the Internet, 
the betrayal of the Internet, its diseventalization.
Clint Burnham teaches in the department of English at Simon Fraser 
University, Vancouver, Canada. He is the author of more than a dozen 
books of criticism, poetry, and fiction, including The Jamesonian 
Unconscious: The Aesthetics of Marxist Theory (1995), The Only Poetry 
that Matters: Reading the Kootenay School of Writing (2011), editor 
(with Lorna Brown) of the public art catalogue Digital Natives (2011), 
and editor (with Paul Budra) of From Text to Txting: New Media in the 
Classroom (2012). His essay âSlavoj ÅiÅek as Internet Philosopherâ is in 
the recent Palgrave collection ÅiÅek and Media Studies (eds. Matthew 
Flisfeder and Louis-Paul Willis), and he is currently writing a book on 
ÅiÅek and digital culture called Does the Internet have an Unconscious? 
In the winter of 2014-15 he is living and working in Vienna as part of a 
residency with the Urban Subjects collective.
Forthcoming talks (open for registration)

Feb 4: Marisol Sandoval - From Corporate to Social Media: Critical Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility in Media and Communication Industries
http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/marisol-sandoval-from-corporate-to-social-media-critical-perspectives-on-corporate-social-responsibility-in-media-and-communication-industries

Feb 11: Justin Lewis - Beyond Consumer Capitalism: A Movie Screening and Q&A with Justin Lewis
http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/justin-lewis-beyond-consumer-capitalism-a-movie-screening-and-q-and-a-with-justin-lewis


_______________________________________________
nettime-ann mailing list
nettime-ann@nettime.org
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ann