Transmitted Wounds Transmitted Wounds

Transmitted Wounds

Media and the Mediation of Trauma

    • $28.99
    • $28.99

Publisher Description

In Transmitted Wounds, Amit Pinchevski explores the ways media technology and logic shape the social life of trauma both clinically and culturally. Bringing media theory to bear on trauma theory, Pinchevski reveals the technical operations that inform the conception and experience of traumatic impact and memory. He offers a bold thesis about the deep association of media and trauma: media bear witness to the human failure to bear witness, making the traumatic technologically transmissible and reproducible.

Taking up a number of case studies--the radio broadcasts of the Eichmann trial; the videotaping of Holocaust testimonies; recent psychiatric debates about trauma through media following the 9/11 attacks; current controversy surrounding drone operators' post-trauma; and digital platforms of algorithmic-holographic witnessing and virtual reality exposure therapy for PTSD--Pinchevski demonstrates how the technological mediation of trauma feeds into the traumatic condition itself. The result is a novel understanding of media as constituting the material conditions for trauma to appear as something that cannot be fully approached and yet somehow must be.

While drawing on contemporary materialist media theory, especially the work of Friedrich Kittler and his followers, Pinchevski goes beyond the anti-humanistic tendency characterizing the materialist approach, discovering media as bearing out the human vulnerability epitomized in trauma, and finding therein a basis for moral concern in the face of violence and atrocity. Transmitted Wounds unfolds the ethical and political stakes involved in the technological transmission of mental wounds across clinical, literary, and cultural contexts.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2018
December 3
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
216
Pages
PUBLISHER
Oxford University Press
SELLER
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford trading as Oxford University Press
SIZE
3.4
MB
Biopolitical Screens Biopolitical Screens
2014
Waltzing with Bashir Waltzing with Bashir
2013
Trauma and Transcendence Trauma and Transcendence
2018
Forensic Memory Forensic Memory
2017
Mind Reading as a Cultural Practice Mind Reading as a Cultural Practice
2020
9/11 and the Visual Culture of Disaster 9/11 and the Visual Culture of Disaster
2014
Echo Echo
2022
The Handbook of Communication Ethics The Handbook of Communication Ethics
2024