The Marvelous Clouds: Toward a Philosophy of Elemental Media by John Durham Peters (review)

IF 0.8 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Timothy H. B. Stoneman
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In the twentieth century, the term became synonymous with mass media (TV, cinema, newspapers, magazines). Yet the advent of digital media in the early twenty-first century has marked a profound shift \"from mass media to cultural techniques,\" while planetary-level climate change poses new questions and challenges about our relationship with the natural environment as an instrumentalized medium (p. 325).</p> <p>In response to radical contemporary changes, Peters proposes revising our conception of media in two principal ways: by linking media studies with ontology and encompassing nonhuman species as well as nature itself in its most elemental forms. Media \"was connected to nature long before it was connected to technology\" (p. 46). For the author, \"at the dawn of the Anthropocene we need an elemental philosophy of media,\" in large part because the \"ship\" of our natural environment is sinking (p. 104).</p> <p>Peters organizes the six main chapters of his work to differentiate the main human and nonhuman protagonists in their elementary media domains. In chapter 2, he explores aquatic media, probing how the sea acts as a liquid environment that resists permanent shaping for cetaceans and that demands \"radical dependence on technics\" by humans (ships). In chapter 3, Peters addresses fire, \"our most radical environmental shaper,\" which allows humans to dwell on land and provides the \"precondition for almost all human-made media.\" The following two chapters focus on twin functions of sky media: timekeeping, or <em>chronos</em> (duration), through \"punctual or fractal sky media\" (towers, bells, weather, clouds) and cyclical and linear sky media (clocks and calendars), and <em>kairos</em> (opportunity), which entails the observation of weather and seasons. Chapter 6 addresses the earth and inscription media, which provide the \"matrix of all other human media\" and encompass bodily infrastructures (such as skulls, teeth, feet, and faces), as well as writing, the inscription media par excellence. Chapter 7 addresses dematerialized media, including cloud infrastructure and internet search; following other authors, Peters here links Google with God. Although he keys his analysis to elemental media, Peters concludes his study in \"The Sabbath of Meaning\" by making a case for the meaningfulness of nature, including the eponymous clouds, as the product of cosmic history and independent of human subjectivity. <strong>[End Page 735]</strong></p> <p>Historians of technology have much to gain from <em>The Marvelous Clouds</em>. Peters provides new insights into the operation of infrastructure and logistical media. He distinguishes cogently between the materiality and durability of media, intertwines human culture and nature organically through ecological media activity, and reorients stale debates over technological determinism. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reviewed by:

  • The Marvelous Clouds: Toward a Philosophy of Elemental Media by John Durham Peters
  • Timothy H. B. Stoneman (bio)
The Marvelous Clouds: Toward a Philosophy of Elemental Media By John Durham Peters. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015. Pp. 416.

John Durham Peters's The Marvelous Clouds provides an entrée into media and an invaluable field guide for the contemporary state of media studies. Peters details a historical shift in the dominant conception of media. Traditionally, our idea of media was linked with the nineteenth-century telegraph and the human sending of signals/messages. In the twentieth century, the term became synonymous with mass media (TV, cinema, newspapers, magazines). Yet the advent of digital media in the early twenty-first century has marked a profound shift "from mass media to cultural techniques," while planetary-level climate change poses new questions and challenges about our relationship with the natural environment as an instrumentalized medium (p. 325).

In response to radical contemporary changes, Peters proposes revising our conception of media in two principal ways: by linking media studies with ontology and encompassing nonhuman species as well as nature itself in its most elemental forms. Media "was connected to nature long before it was connected to technology" (p. 46). For the author, "at the dawn of the Anthropocene we need an elemental philosophy of media," in large part because the "ship" of our natural environment is sinking (p. 104).

Peters organizes the six main chapters of his work to differentiate the main human and nonhuman protagonists in their elementary media domains. In chapter 2, he explores aquatic media, probing how the sea acts as a liquid environment that resists permanent shaping for cetaceans and that demands "radical dependence on technics" by humans (ships). In chapter 3, Peters addresses fire, "our most radical environmental shaper," which allows humans to dwell on land and provides the "precondition for almost all human-made media." The following two chapters focus on twin functions of sky media: timekeeping, or chronos (duration), through "punctual or fractal sky media" (towers, bells, weather, clouds) and cyclical and linear sky media (clocks and calendars), and kairos (opportunity), which entails the observation of weather and seasons. Chapter 6 addresses the earth and inscription media, which provide the "matrix of all other human media" and encompass bodily infrastructures (such as skulls, teeth, feet, and faces), as well as writing, the inscription media par excellence. Chapter 7 addresses dematerialized media, including cloud infrastructure and internet search; following other authors, Peters here links Google with God. Although he keys his analysis to elemental media, Peters concludes his study in "The Sabbath of Meaning" by making a case for the meaningfulness of nature, including the eponymous clouds, as the product of cosmic history and independent of human subjectivity. [End Page 735]

Historians of technology have much to gain from The Marvelous Clouds. Peters provides new insights into the operation of infrastructure and logistical media. He distinguishes cogently between the materiality and durability of media, intertwines human culture and nature organically through ecological media activity, and reorients stale debates over technological determinism. Peters articulates a view of media that travels well beyond the antiquated nineteenth-century view as human-centered information. The Marvelous Clouds provides welcome opportunity for historians of technology to rethink the identity and place of media in a digital world dominated by Big Tech and increasingly defined by global planetary environmental issues.

As an ambitious work, The Marvelous Clouds can be critiqued on several fronts. The book's sheer length and encyclopedic coverage can prove exhaustive for the reader. At times, the reach of the book certainly exceeds its grasp (p. 28). By the author's own confession, every major topic he covers warrants a lifetime's study (p. 280). Nor does a single, overarching argument or clear elaboration of elemental media tie the work together, helping the reader to navigate. Yet such critiques, appropriate for historical monographs, mistake the nature of the volume, which the author intends as a synthesis and work of reference—a magisterial summation of a life's work in media studies. And Peters, a natural prosaist, is delightful to read. His pages brim over with philosophical wisdom and...

奇妙的云》:约翰-达勒姆-彼得斯(John Durham Peters)的《迈向元素媒体哲学》(评论
评论者: 奇妙的云》:约翰-达勒姆-彼得斯(John Durham Peters)的《迈向元素媒体哲学》(Toward a Philosophy of Elemental Media by John Durham Peters Timothy H. B. Stoneman (bio) 奇妙的云:迈向元素媒体哲学(The Marvelous Clouds:约翰-达勒姆-彼得斯著。芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社,2015 年。Pp.416.约翰-达勒姆-彼得斯的《奇妙的云》为读者提供了进入媒体的入口,也为当代媒体研究现状提供了宝贵的实地指南。彼得斯详述了主流媒体概念的历史性转变。传统上,我们对媒体的概念是与 19 世纪的电报和人类发送信号/信息联系在一起的。二十世纪,媒体一词成为大众媒体(电视、电影、报纸、杂志)的代名词。然而,21 世纪初数字媒体的出现标志着 "从大众媒体到文化技术 "的深刻转变,而地球级的气候变化则对我们与作为工具化媒体的自然环境之间的关系提出了新的问题和挑战(第 325 页)。为了应对当代的剧烈变化,彼得斯建议从两个主要方面修订我们的媒体概念:将媒体研究与本体论联系起来,并将非人类物种以及自然本身的最基本形式纳入其中。媒体 "早在与技术相连之前就与自然相连"(第 46 页)。在作者看来,"在人类世来临之际,我们需要一种基本的媒体哲学",这在很大程度上是因为我们的自然环境这艘 "船 "正在下沉(第 104 页)。彼得斯在其著作的六个主要章节中区分了人类和非人类在其基本媒体领域中的主角。在第 2 章中,他探讨了水生媒体,探究了海洋是如何作为一种液体环境,抵制鲸目动物的永久塑造,并要求人类 "彻底依赖技术"(船只)。在第 3 章中,彼得斯谈到了火--"我们最根本的环境塑造者",它使人类能够在陆地上居住,并提供了 "几乎所有人造媒体的先决条件"。接下来的两章重点讨论了天空媒体的双重功能:通过 "准时或分形天空媒体"(塔、钟、天气、云彩)以及周期性和线性天空媒体(钟表和日历)来计时,或称 chronos(持续时间);以及 kairos(机会),这包括对天气和季节的观察。第 6 章讨论大地和铭文媒介,它们提供了 "所有其他人类媒介的基体",包括身体基础设施(如头骨、牙齿、脚和脸)以及卓越的铭文媒介--文字。第 7 章讨论了非物质化媒体,包括云基础设施和互联网搜索;彼得斯效仿其他作者,将谷歌与上帝联系在一起。尽管彼得斯将分析重点放在了元素媒体上,但在 "意义的安息日 "一文的最后,他还是为包括同名云彩在内的大自然的意义提出了论据,认为它们是宇宙历史的产物,与人类的主观性无关。[技术史学家可以从《神奇的云》中获益良多。彼得斯对基础设施和物流媒体的运作提出了新的见解。他有力地区分了媒体的物质性和持久性,通过生态媒体活动将人类文化与自然有机地交织在一起,并重新调整了关于技术决定论的陈旧辩论。彼得斯阐述的媒体观远远超越了十九世纪以人为中心的过时信息观。神奇的云》为技术史学家提供了一个很好的机会,让他们重新思考媒体在大科技主导的数字世界中的身份和地位,以及日益被全球地球环境问题所定义的媒体。作为一部雄心勃勃的著作,《神奇的云》可以从几个方面进行批评。该书篇幅之长,涵盖范围之广,堪称百科全书式,可能会让读者感到疲惫不堪。有时,该书的覆盖面肯定会超出其掌握的范围(第 28 页)。作者自己也承认,他所涉及的每一个重要主题都值得用一生的时间来研究(第 280 页)。书中也没有一个总括性的论点,也没有对主要媒体要素的清晰阐述,从而将作品串联起来,帮助读者浏览。然而,这种适合于历史专著的批评却误解了该书的性质,作者是想将其作为一本综合参考书--一本媒体研究领域毕生工作的权威性总结。彼得斯是一位天生的平实主义者,他的作品读来令人赏心悦目。他的书中充满了哲学智慧和...
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来源期刊
Technology and Culture
Technology and Culture 社会科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
14.30%
发文量
225
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Technology and Culture, the preeminent journal of the history of technology, draws on scholarship in diverse disciplines to publish insightful pieces intended for general readers as well as specialists. Subscribers include scientists, engineers, anthropologists, sociologists, economists, museum curators, archivists, scholars, librarians, educators, historians, and many others. In addition to scholarly essays, each issue features 30-40 book reviews and reviews of new museum exhibitions. To illuminate important debates and draw attention to specific topics, the journal occasionally publishes thematic issues. Technology and Culture is the official journal of the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT).
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