Derek’s post on Network Captives, which in turn references an exchange between Jeff and Will, dives into that big question of where new media is leading, and specifically if it is indeed leading us away from what we consider “literacy.”

As is raised in these places, the concepts of the “open” text (a la Umberto Eco) or a Barthes-esque writerly text are both good places to start this issue. However ludologists and others who study interactive fiction (IF) might want to suggest that games move beyond these theories in that even the most writerly text remains static: that is, the readers interpretation of page one will not alter the text that on page two. The inclusion of the idea of collaboration is useful in making this move.

However, I also find that collaboration once again catches us in the literacy net.

How so? Put simply, the concept of collaboration rests upon the notion of authorship, which in turn relies on concepts of intellectual property and presence: the very foundations of a phono/logocentric literate culture. To think otherwise? See the beginning of A Thousand Plateaus:

The two of us wrote Anti-Oedipus together. Since each of us was several, there was already quite a crowd.Here we have made us of everything that came within range, what was closest as well as farthest away. We have assigned clever pseudonyms to prevent recognition. Why have we kept our own names? Out of habit, purely out of habit. To make ourselves unrecognizable in turn. To render impreceptible, not ourselves, but what makes us act, feel, and think. Also because it’s nice to talk like everybody else, to say the sun rises, when everybody knows it’s only a manner of speaking. To reach, not the point where one no longer says I, but the point where it is no longer of any importance whether one says I. We are no longer ourselves. Each will know his own. We have been aided, inspired, multiplied.

We can say collaboration if we wish, as long as we know it is simply a manner of speaking, but perhaps it would be better to speak of distributed cognition, and thus to recognize that even “I” am multiple, always more/less/other than my “self.” Indeed, it is new media that makes this visible, just as the movie camera introduced us to “unconscious optics” in Benjamin’s essay on mechanical reproduction. If as Kittler and others have contended, film presents us with our Freudian uncanny doppelganger and the tinges of paranoia seeing our double can produce, new media presents us with our rhizomatic simulacrum and a schizophrenic disorientation.

But I digress…

My point is that new media “opens” the concepts of text, reader, and author to the point where they cannot be distinguished. In its place are physical machines, both organic and inorganic, whose symbolic behaviors and interactions produce, among other things, cognition and consciousness.

To the extent that literacy as a concept relies on the interiorization of thought and a logocentric concept of text (see Derrida or Ulmer taking up Derrida), it simply cannot function to explain new media.

Now I realize that anyone might object by saying “but that’s not how web pages/games/blogs/wikis/etc really work b/c X.” That’s true. And as others might explain, “maybe in theory that might work out, but ideology/capitalism/etc won’t allow it to turn out that way.” Maybe, maybe not. This isn’t a prediction.

However, I will make one prediction. What we are examining now are only the incunabula of new media. I doubt someone living in the 15th century could imagine what printed books would become. While I have much at stake in studying the technology that does exist, with the rate of technological growth, we need to develop a theory of new media literacy that tries to account for what might come.

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7 responses to “the literacy net”

  1. “However, I will make one prediction. What we are examining now are only the incunabula of new media. ”
    Absolutely. Note how textbook publishers, certain people on certain technology oriented listservs, all look to new media. They already know its role. Really? We’ve only been active on the web since ’93 and we already know how it is shaping culture?
    Unfortunately, and I know you are invested in professional writing in a big way, so please excuse this remark as just an observation and not critique of you, professional writing absorbs much of this talk. New media is about learning software for the work environment to be better prepared for future jobs. That’s the language of literacy talking. Folks are fooling themselves to think that preparing students for a new media world means preparing them for literacy! Imagine Montaigne inventing the essay only to ask: how can this be used to deliver a better oral talk so that I can work for the aristocracy?

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  2. I agree. A couple days ago I was writing “what heppens when bandwidth is 5-10,000 faster? when processors are 50 or 100 Mhz? when every hard drive has a terrabyte of space?” I.e what happens 5-10 years from now? It is difficult for the publisher or any commercial enterprise to look far beyond the next exchange, the next fiscal quarter.
    This is a problem with professional writing, a perhaps necessary faith in the transparency of communication. Even though our students in general are not interested in really being professional (i.e. corporate/technical/copy) writers (they mostly want to be novelists), they are still beholden to many of the values of literacy, especially authorship. Thus when I teach Internet Invention, they become both confused and uneasy.
    By the same token, a traditional humanistic education, whether grounded in literary studies or rhet/comp, faces a similar problem: banking on literacy training as a foundation for getting into new media. Honestly, I wonder if its counterproductive. The more invested in literacy students become, the more resistant they are to learning new media. In other words, they come to imitate the faculty. They might have been better off spending their time at home playing video games and surfing.
    So the question becomes how to generate a posthumanistic pedagogic ecology from which new media savvy students might emerge?

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  3. More on New Literacy

    It’s interesting to me to be thinking about literacy in terms of new online technologies while actually using those technologies to in some way understand the concept.

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  4. When you say, “new media presents us with our rhizomatic simulacrum and a schizophrenic disorientation,” Alex, it reminds me that the identity crisis accompanying new media involves some basic distrust of fluxuating identit(y/ies) and memor(y/ies) refashioned by media and technology. That disorientation isn’t comfortable, easy or familiar, I’d say. Accordingly, lots of Graphists (if there is any such thing–Guardians of the Incunabula, let’s say) lay anchor, holding to the decree that we’ve worked incredibly hard to end up *here.* And just when writing programs have begun to answer the questions that have been the source of so much wrangling for legitimacy, status, tenure lines, budgets, disciplinary independence–we (all) have your question to answer, “how to generate a posthumanistic pedagogic ecology from which new media savvy students might emerge?” Well, right…somebody has to ask it.

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  5. Thanks Derek. I agree: there are many in rhet/comp who have much invested–materially, ideologically, emotionally–in a particular disciplinary version of writing, for which they have struggled mightily and for which they continue to struggle in many places. Much the same can be said for our literary colleagues. For me to pose this question about English Studies in a discourse that the discipline could barely, if at all, recognize as its own, is alienating to say the least. However, I have not had much success at trying to imagine a way to speak of these concerns within English Studies. At times, I think that I might be viewed as some kind of traitor to the cause. When I speak about the potential impact of new media on literacy, my students often say, “it’s disturbing to hear an English professor say that.” And yet, I feel that those of us striving to address these concerns are more like canaries in a coal mine. We can sense the coming new media flood. We can be like that famous king (whose name escapes me) and go down to the shore with our collected works of Shakespeare and Heath anthologies and command the tide not to rise, or … well, as you point out, that’s the question, or what?

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  6. Canute the Great? My first thought was Nebuchadnezzar and Babylon, especially when Wikipedia told me the name translates to “Nabu, defend my boundary marker [or frontier],” and with all of our appropriately apocalyptic allusions to floods and posthumanism.

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  7. You’re the man Derek! Thanks for going the extra mile. That brings me back to my days as a history undergrad. The Wikipedia link suggests that Canute did this to prove the limits of his power (though it then turns around and says this is maybe “Canute propaganda:” now there’s a job, being a Canute propagandist). I could only hope the same would be true of our comrades. The Shakespeare is Dead! Long live the Shakespeare! or some such.

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