Florian Cramer on Sun, 25 Jan 2009 04:47:32 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Digital Humanities Manifesto |
On Friday, January 23 2009, 18:57 (-0700), inimino wrote: > The meat of text is in the sequence of letters; the actual analog > details of those letters are irrelevant. To me, the capacity for > lossless copying is the hallmark of digital information. > > Can we extend Florian's remark to all written language? Hand- > written manuscripts seem as digital in this sense as printed > texts. Even orally-transmitted stories, arguably... Quick answer: We cannot extend it to all written language because for some texts, those analog details - the calligraphy or typography - are essential. This is true, above all, for visual poetry since the antiquity and across languages and cultures. In philology, there have been controversies about the hand-written manuscripts of authors like Dostoevsky and Kafka, and to which extent their strike-through corrections and doodling should be preserved in text editions. (A hardcore respective stance is been taken, since the 1980s, by the French "critique génétique".) A technically literate "digital humanities" could greatly benefit from such differentiations since it could reconstruct how for example for most epics, religious works, academic treatises and later for pamphlets, novels and journalism the analog text information was nonessential, and that they were digital precisely to facilitate their own reproduction. So, in this example, techno-terminological precision and a historical reflection beyond anecdotal "first" and "second waves" of "digital media" go hand in hand. Florian -- http://cramer.pleintekst.nl:70 gopher://cramer.pleintekst.nl # 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: [email protected]