Authors
Steve Anderson
Publication date
2007
Journal
Transmedia Frictions: The Digital, the Arts, and the Humanities
Pages
100-114
Description
This chapter examines the impact of digital technologies on the writing of history, arguing that the narrative logics of the database and search engine have resulted in two divergent movements–one that seeks to articulate a" total" history that is encyclopedic in scope and rooted in relatively stable conceptions of historical epistemology; another that exploits digital technology's potential for randomization and recombination in order to accommodate increasingly volatile visions of the past. At the opposing ends of this spectrum are Steven Spielberg’s Survivors Project, a randomly accessible archive of over 100,000 hours of video testimonies by Holocaust survivors, and the Recombinant History Project’s Terminal Time, an artificial intelligence apparatus that constructs infinitely variable historical documentaries based on audience biases and beliefs. Although these two projects represent competing conceptions of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Anderson - Transmedia Frictions: The Digital, the Arts, and the …, 2007