Thinking Further: Fragments of Communicology: Electronic Mediations
Autor Vilém Flusser Editat de Aaron Jaffe, Michael F. Miller, Silvia Wagnermaier, Siegfried Zielinski Prefață de Friedrich A. Kittler Traducere de Andrew Battaglia, Daniel Raschkeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 ian 2026
In summer 1991, shortly before his death, Vilém Flusser gave a series of lectures as guest professor at Ruhr University Bochum at the invitation of Friedrich Kittler. Flusser intended for these lectures to be the definitive introduction to his “communicology,” the study of human communication and the means by which acquired information is saved, processed, and passed on. In Thinking Further, Aaron Jaffe and Michael F. Miller have curated “fragments” from these lectures—first published in German in 2008—to present the most exciting and timely parts of Flusser’s foundational contributions to what is now known as media studies.
These fragments capture Flusser’s engagements with a wide range of theories, approaches, and interventions, including ecocriticism, posthumanities, game theory, cybernetics, and translinguistic exchanges. Offering sustained engagements with the ideas of Walter Benjamin, Michel Foucault, Michel Serres, and Jean Baudrillard, Thinking Further models possibilities for thinking through and clarifying the most obscure and obdurate implications of technology and modernity.
As they demonstrate Flusser’s contextual positionality and antiuniversalism, the writings presented here also underscore the pleasures and the power of his aphoristic style. Focusing less on Flusser-as-philosopher and more on his role as wry sage at the end of history, Thinking Further is a comprehensive but approachable introduction to his boundary-transcending exploration of the possibilities for communication, writing, and the human condition.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781517919191
ISBN-10: 1517919193
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 127 x 203 x 6 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Electronic Mediations
ISBN-10: 1517919193
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 127 x 203 x 6 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Electronic Mediations
Notă biografică
Vilém Flusser (1920–1991) was a Czech-born Brazilian philosopher, writer, and journalist. The University of Minnesota Press has published translations of a dozen of his works, including Into the Universe of Technical Images, Does Writing Have a Future?, Gestures, and What If?.
Silvia Wagnermaier is cocreator, with Siegfried Zielinski, of the Vilém Flusser archive at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne. She lives and works as a motoring journalist in Austria.
Siegfried Zielinski is Michel Foucault Professor for Techno-Culture and Media Archaeology at the European Graduate School in Saas Fee and visiting professor at Tongji University Shanghai.
Friedrich A. Kittler (1943–2011) was professor and chair of aesthetics and media history at Humboldt University, Berlin and author of Discourse Networks 1800/1900 and Gramophone, Film, Typewriter.
Aaron Jaffe is Frances Cushing Ervin Professor of American Literature at Florida State University.
Michael F. Miller teaches literature and literary theory in the Department of English Language and Culture at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Andrew Battaglia is a translator and independent scholar. He has taught at Rice University, the University of Montana, and Seattle University.
Daniel Raschke is visiting assistant professor of English at Bethel College, Kansas.
Silvia Wagnermaier is cocreator, with Siegfried Zielinski, of the Vilém Flusser archive at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne. She lives and works as a motoring journalist in Austria.
Siegfried Zielinski is Michel Foucault Professor for Techno-Culture and Media Archaeology at the European Graduate School in Saas Fee and visiting professor at Tongji University Shanghai.
Friedrich A. Kittler (1943–2011) was professor and chair of aesthetics and media history at Humboldt University, Berlin and author of Discourse Networks 1800/1900 and Gramophone, Film, Typewriter.
Aaron Jaffe is Frances Cushing Ervin Professor of American Literature at Florida State University.
Michael F. Miller teaches literature and literary theory in the Department of English Language and Culture at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Andrew Battaglia is a translator and independent scholar. He has taught at Rice University, the University of Montana, and Seattle University.
Daniel Raschke is visiting assistant professor of English at Bethel College, Kansas.
Cuprins
Contents
Note on the Translation
Preface — Friedrich A. Kittler
Editorial Preface: Toward Vilém Flusser’s Bochum Lectures — Silvia Wagnermaier and Siegfried Zielinski
Inaugural Lecture: Before the Board of Trustees
Note on the Translation
Preface — Friedrich A. Kittler
Editorial Preface: Toward Vilém Flusser’s Bochum Lectures — Silvia Wagnermaier and Siegfried Zielinski
Inaugural Lecture: Before the Board of Trustees
Motives/Motifs
Natural and Human Sciences
Communication Theory
Lecture 1: On the Communicological Art of DefinitionKultur/Kritik
Processing: Dialogue
Transmitting: Discourse
Transmitting: Discourse
Saving
Mythical: Oral Culture
Magical: Material Culture
Magical: Material Culture
Standpoints
Phenomenological
Informatical
Scientific-Critical
Informatical
Scientific-Critical
Cultural Revolutions
From Work to Waste
After the Communication Revolution: Bundling versus Networking
After the Communication Revolution: Bundling versus Networking
Lecture 2: Of Spaces and Order
Publicizing I
Publicizing III
Publicizing III
Virtual Space
Alternate Worlds
Alternate Worlds
Calculable Freedom, Intersubjective Creativity
Proxemics
Responsibility
Proxemics
Responsibility
Lecture 3: Abstractions and Feedback
Numerical Code
From Culling to Counting
Arithmetic
Geometry
Geometry
Antirationalism: Intuition and Nazism
Programming
Lecture 4: On Science, Art, Politics, and Technology
On the Decline of the Aura and the Death of the Author
Work II: Soft and Hard
The Practice of Writing
From Homo universale to Teamwork
The Unemployed as Avant-Garde
The End of Politics I
The Practice of Writing
From Homo universale to Teamwork
The Unemployed as Avant-Garde
The End of Politics I
Lecture 5. On the Death of Images and the End of History
Video: Instant Philosophy
Mirrors: Reflection and Speculation
Bundling Instead of Networking—At the End of All Structures
Networking
Bundling Instead of Networking—At the End of All Structures
Networking
Games and Art
Spiele, Jogos, Games
Lecture 6: About Chance and the Freedom to Play with and against It
Coincidence
On Freedom I: Refraining From
On Freedom II: Anticipating
Concerning Lost Freedom I: Sin
Concerning Lost Freedom II: Technics and Will
Concerning Lost Freedom III: To Accept
On Freedom I: Refraining From
On Freedom II: Anticipating
Concerning Lost Freedom I: Sin
Concerning Lost Freedom II: Technics and Will
Concerning Lost Freedom III: To Accept
Lecture 7: On Leisure
Unemployment and Interface
On the Suffix “-matic”
On the Prefix “Tele-”
On the Prefix “Tele-”
Pathos
Epilogue: Flusser’s Planet — Aaron Jaffe and Michael F. Miller
Notes
Notes
Recenzii
"Vilém Flusser was among the first to understand that the shift toward a digital world would not only change the way we communicate but alter our fundamental understanding of what communication is. This elegantly curated collection of some of Flusser’s last lectures is an ideal introduction to one of the most seductive, stimulating, omnivorous, and incandescent minds of the second half of the twentieth century."—Dominic Pettman, coauthor of Metagestures
"In these selections from his final lectures of 1991, in which he pulls out the implications of the ‘communicology’ toward which he had been working all his writing life, Vilém Flusser shows no sign of coming sedately to rest. Exhibiting all his signature fluency and audacity, and oscillating restlessly between a view of the ‘general stupefaction’ arising from a world of ‘cretinized information’ and the freedom of play made available through technology, Flusser offers a new image of the human, whirled out of the ‘hurricane that is the communication revolution.’"—Steven Connor, King’s College London
"In these selections from his final lectures of 1991, in which he pulls out the implications of the ‘communicology’ toward which he had been working all his writing life, Vilém Flusser shows no sign of coming sedately to rest. Exhibiting all his signature fluency and audacity, and oscillating restlessly between a view of the ‘general stupefaction’ arising from a world of ‘cretinized information’ and the freedom of play made available through technology, Flusser offers a new image of the human, whirled out of the ‘hurricane that is the communication revolution.’"—Steven Connor, King’s College London