No(i)stalgia: On the impossibility of recognising noise in the present


Autoria(s): Hainge, Greg
Contribuinte(s)

Greg Hainge

P. Hegarty

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Starting from a comparison between the process of writing by hand and writing to screen, this paper contends that there is a continuity between the former, apparently archaic form of writing, and the latter, supposedly more modern form of writing. It will be suggested that, rather than being truly archaic, writing by hand perhaps constitutes a nostalgic act which attempts to bypass the perceived virtuality of the postmodern condition. As such, it will be claimed, via Baudrillard, that nostalgia of this kind is a type of hyper-simulacrum that relies on a misinterpretation of the noise created by the very act of expression. It will be claimed, however, that if interpreted without the sort of wilful misinterpretation to which noise often falls prey, many kinds of noise grafted onto contemporary cultural objects bear testimony to a certain continuity across historical eras as well as to the fact that we are ultimately incapable of recognising many cultural products' noise (and thus the products themselves in their entirety) in their own era. This paper therefore calls for a noisy theory which, analysing the world from an immanent position, would acknowledge the impossibility of full knowledge of the sign

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76521

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Routledge

Palavras-Chave #C1 #420302 Cultural Theory #780199 Other #2002 Cultural Studies #200525 Literary Theory
Tipo

Journal Article