posted on 2024-11-23, 15:27authored byJenny Weight
This exegesis questions and explores the types of identities that are emerging as a result of human engagement with contemporary communications and media technology. These identities are communicated, shaped and defined by the way we appropriate and engage with a smorgasbord of communications and media consumption technologies which merge in our imaginations to form a technosocial mediascape. As artist and teacher, consumer and prosumer, I participate in the technosocial mediascape, along with colleagues, students, artists, friends and family members. <br><br>As we produce, communicate and ultimately co-create that technosocial environment, how are we changed by this experience? We contribute to a diverse and globally circulating, but paradoxically transient parade of data and media that apparatuses and humans together bring into existence. How does this mediascape impact on human ontology and sociology? What are the different ‘positions’—relationships with the mediascape—that emerge?<br><br>My method derives from analysis of my own experience as an engaged and flexible ‘position-taker’ within the technosocial mediascape. I analyse my own creative practice with reference to a range of modernist, postmodernist and media theories. The technosocial enshrines the idea that technology and human behaviour are not separable, and draws on many theoretical sources, including phenomenology, the philosophy of language, design theory and digital media theory. All media, and mediums, are technosocial, because they impact on the praxis of identity. However, a range of contemporary media and mediums are more explicitly technosocial, and that is where my focus lies. <br><br>I will suggest that the role of language in technosocial contexts is peculiar, important and under-theorised. Our ‘linguistic apparatuses’ offer an alternate concept of technology to the ‘heavy modernism’ of Martin Heidegger. <br><br>I will explore ways in which technosocial engagement privileges fluid identities which drift in and out of different but co-existing realities. Various types of ‘immersion’—some neo-baroque and some neo-romantic—contribute to technosocially-engaged identity construction. Thus, our engagement with the technosocial mediascape challenges received ideas about personal identity, and indeed, the nature of the real.
History
Degree Type
Doctorate by Research
Imprint Date
2007-01-01
School name
Media and Communication, RMIT University
Notes
To open the two RL Microsoap .zip files - 1. Right click on .zip file to open 2. Select 'Extract All' 3. Choose file location to put extracted files 4. Go to file location (if different from the one already in use) and double click on zipped file 5. Click on the index.html file to start. To open the Concatenation .zip file - 1. Right click on this file 2. Select 'Extract All' 3. Choose file location to put extracted files in 4. Go to file location (if different from the one already in use) and double click on zipped file 5. Click on the concatenation2.html file or the semtexts2.html files to view. make sure they are viewed using Internet Explorer. 6. Use the Director software to view the concatenation.dcr and semtexts.dcr files