Mastering MySQL Database Architecture: Deep Dive into MySQL Shell and MySQL R...
Hpm2010seminar1
1. Venus of Willendorf c. 24,000-22,000 BCE, Oolitic limestone, 43/8 inches (11.1 cm) high
100-583 History and Philosophy of Media
PART ONE: MEDIA HISTORIOGRAPHY
ONE: Problems of periodisation 1: colour
A: periodising
2. Cubeiform script, Sumer,
c.26th century BCE (2600)
detail of tablet measuring 9.2×9.2×1.2 cm.
Inscriptions on tomb in Yang he, Uixian County, Shan
dong Province
c.2500 BCE
6. The Great Eastern arriving in Heart’s Content, Newfoundland in 1866 with first successful transatlantic telegraph cable (after failures in 1858 and 1865)
7.
8. some basic periods:
prehistory: rock art and carving,
ritual and dance, cities and ar-
chitecture . . .
writing, the alphabet and mathe-
matics; tablets, scrolls and books
printing
global telecommunications
broadcast media
network media
20. The abyss of total freedom experienced as nightmare rather This is the context in which we must understand what has
than liberation, a nightmare which is as irrefutable as the happened to colour, for colour, that most sensuous of opti-
Bomb and in so many ways shares its derivation from that cal effects, once removed from its position in hierarchies of
imbrication of economy and politics which was in those days meaning, is exiled to the realm of taste, which itself has be-
described as the military-industrial complex: this is the situ- come increasingly individuated. Fundamentally, the direction
ation of colour after digitisation. The general accident which of capital is inimical to the construction of meaning. Politics is
Virilio sees implicit in every technology has not spared the a way of squaring the circle, making it possible to carry on as
technologies of light. if meaning were still available. Ideology is only part of the pro-
cess, the ideology of choice. The management of populations
The mathematicisation of colour, which lies so close to the is equally significant. Meaning is the undergirding of the social,
origins of modern science and industry, lies also near the the particular mode of mediation required to create sociality,
heart of modern social order, and most of all to the challenge collectives, groups. Without it, other means have to be found,
of meaning in a fragmented world. Fashion here is vitally sig- from sovereignty to discipline to control and now the reduc-
nificant. The fashion for a specific colour or range of tones (as tion of mathematics to the enumeration of experiences, the
in 'brown is the new black') can produce the sense of com- numbering of colours on the basis of a statistical norm of per-
munity to the extent that it produces a statistically significant ception, averaged samples, the unit grid, privatised and increas-
shift in behaviour, at the scale of populations. Independent of ingly monopolistic systems, and the shrinkage of the spectrum
both individuals' idiosyncratic tastes and of a shared grammar to what can be shown on a screen or printed.
from which colours might derive meanings, fashion in colours
operates at the level of biopolitics, of shifts in behaviour but
not shifts in meaning. Subjectively, such fashionable changes
may be experienced with a sense of belonging to a community
of taste, but it is a community tied together by the slenderest
of threads, more a tribute to our longing for community than
our ability to build one. The way each generation mocks the
fashions of the one before and the one after it proves the fick-
leness of drifts in the performance of taste, the randomness of
arbitrary difference without the structuring rule of a syntax.