SEP 24 - TEXTUAL ANALYSIS

Hayles, Katherine. 2012. “Chapters 1 & 2” in How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis.University of Chicago Press, pp. 1-54.

http://site.ebrary.com.ezproxy.library.yorku.ca/lib/oculyork/reader.action?docID=10547388



CHAPTER ONE
• Important question: How we think?
  • Way we are thinking is co-evolved with technology
  • Technology has changed our way of thinking
  • Human growth is in correlation to technological growth
  • More advanced we are in technology (in information gathering/learning), more adaptive our minds will work to adjust to the pace

• Technogenesis: the co-relation of human and technological advancement
  • Technogenesis connected to the way we think
  • We adjust behaviours to adjust to the pace of technology
  • Definition: “Another way is through that concept of technogenesis, the idea that humans and technics have coevolved together.” (page 10)
  • Into Contemporary Times (Baldwin effect): “He suggested that when a genetic mutation occurs, its spread through a population is accelerated when the species reengineers its environment in ways that make the mutation more adaptive.” (page 10)

• Emergence of Digital Humanities: Page 24
"“Digital Humanities” was meant to signal that the field had emerged from the low-prestige status of a support service into a genuinely intellectual endeavor with its own professional practices, rigorous standards, and exciting theoretical explorations."
• First-wave Digital Humanities: Page 25-26 
  • Mimics print
  • Textuality was primary
  • Sound was secondary
  • "Quantitative, mobilizing the search and retrieval powers of the database, automating corpus linguistics, stacking hypercards into critical arrays"
• Second wave of DH: Page 26
  • Qualitative, interpretive, experiental, emotive, generative
  • "Digital toolkits"
  • Methodological strengths:
    • Attention to complexity
    • Medium specificity
    • Historical context
    • Analytical depth
    • Critique and interpretation

• Speculative computing: Page 26
  • Opposing DH
  • “Attempts to open the field of discourse to its infinite and peculiar richness as deformative interpretation. How different is it from digital humanities? As different as night from day, text from work, and the force of controlling reason from the pleasures of delightenment” Johanna Drucker

• Scale Matters (important issue in effecting transformation): Page 27
  • "Digitized texts that can be searched, analyzed, and correlated by machine algorithms number in the hundreds of thousands (now, with Google Books, a million and more), limited only by ever-increasing processor speed and memory storage."
  • Can process tons of information in a second

CHAPTER TWO
• Effects of digital humanities: Introduces machine reading and hyper reading (forms of reading)
  • Machine Reading: Computer takes out visible patterns, human reading interprets (29)

• Assimilation and distinction (valuable towards digital humanities strategies): Page 46
  • Assimilation: extends existing scholarship into the digital realm
    • Offers more affordances than print for access, queries, and dissemination
    • Often adopts an attitude of reassurance rather than confrontation
    • Electronic editions of print texts
  • Distinction:
    • Emphasizes new methodologies
    • New kinds of research questions
    • Emergence of entirely new fields
    • Digital fiction and poetry

Collaboration (shift from cooperation to collaboration): Page 34
  • Collaboration is a rule than an exception

• "Digital forensics": Page 32
"The idea is to bring to digital media the same materialist emphasis of bibliographic study, using microscopic (and occasionally even nanoscale) examination of digital objects and codes to understand their histories, contexts, and transmission pathways."
• Database: Page 38
  • Specified in categories and modifying them as the work proceeds
  • Effect: Liberate contradictory and refractory threads in the material
  • Requires more patience because it's not linear
  • Flexible structure can be implemented into different communities

Technological determinism page 3
• Taking one technological aspect and making it the cause of something
• Says that the problem is the technology
• Reduction of an affect to one cause—that being that technology is the cause

Word Cloud Exercise:
  • So what? Pattern recognition, stuff you wouldn’t realize
  • Word cloud, frequency of words, understand contours of body of knowledge
  • Textual analysis, how does it change, how do you deal with text?
Lecture
  • Digital Divide: People with and without technological knowledge
  • Technological imaginations: new technological innovations
    • Co-evolution of humans and technologies