Theory, Culture & Society 30 (6), Special Issue: Cultural Techniques (2013)

29 October 2013, dusan

“This special issue is dedicated to Kulturtechniken (‘cultural techniques’), one of the most interesting and fertile concepts to have emerged in German cultural theory over the last decades. Our goal was to compile a collection that can serve as both archive and toolbox. For readers with a more historically-oriented interest in the multilayered past of the concept, we included important earlier proposals to define Kulturtechniken as well as more recent attempts to (re)write the history of the concept in light of current theory debates. For those more concerned with possible applications and implications, we encouraged contributors to apply their particular understanding of Kulturtechniken to new, sometimes unexpected, domains – from servants and swarms all the way to the basic reconfiguration of our understanding of time and machinic temporality. We are, in short, interested in unfolding the concept and probing its use value. Our two guiding questions are: What are cultural techniques? And what can be done with the concept?” (from the introduction)

Edited by Geoffrey Winthrop-Young, Ilinca Iurascu and Jussi Parikka
Publisher Sage, November 2013
ISSN 0263-2764
172 pages

Cultural techniques at Monoskop wiki (with source bibliography)
Publisher

PDF

Roswitha Mueller: Bertolt Brecht and the Theory of Media (1989)

14 October 2013, dusan

Bertolt Brecht spent a career puncturing artistic illusion while casting a spell as an innovator that has continued since his death in 1956. Best known to theater goers for “The Threepenny Opera,” “Mother Courage and her Children,” “The Caucasian Chalk Circle” and other production, the great playwright was, in fact, a man of all media. He was interested in radio and the cinema as soon as they appeared in Europe and brought to them, as well as to the stage, a dramatic theory so radical and influential that it has come to be known by the adjective “Brechtian.”

Publisher University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln & London, 1989
Modern German Culture and Literature series
ISBN 0803231326, 9780803231320
149 pages

Reviews: Katie Trumpener, Susan Bennett (Theatre Research International).

PDF (no OCR)

Friedrich Kittler: Draculas Vermächtnis: Technische Schriften (1993) [German]

10 September 2013, dusan

A collection of essays by Friedrich Kittler, including his famous reading of Dracula.

Essays zu den „Effekten der Sprengung des Schriftmonopols“, zu den Analogmedien Schallplatte, Film und Radio sowie „technische Schriften, die numerisch oder algebraisch verfasst sind“.

Publisher Reclam, Leipzig, 1993
ISBN 3379014761, 9783379014762
259 pages
via poshumano

Review (Geert Lovink, Mediamatic)

PDF
See also Kittler at Monoskop wiki