Media Archaeology

A.Y. 2023/2024
9
Max ECTS
60
Overall hours
SSD
L-ART/06
Language
Italian
Learning objectives
The course aims to provide the students with a general knowledge of the conceptual framework and the critical and theoretical tools of media archaeology, characterized by an interdisciplinary methodology that combines philosophy and critical theory with anthropology, the theory and history of cinema and media, and the history of technology. Through the in-depth analysis of selected case studies, the goal of the course is to reframe past, contemporary or emerging media through an investigation of media and dispositives that anticipated them, as well as through an account of the genealogical processes and epistemic constructs that have informed their becoming. The course will particularly emphasise interrupted or dead-end paths, that have been neglected or overlooked from the institutional history of media, and will pay special attention to the complex set of bodily gestures and movements that are connected to media practices and interaction. Through an archaeological approach to media and dispositives, the course aims to offer to the students a critical contribution both to their studies in communication and media, and to their future activities in the professional fields of multimedia communication.
Expected learning outcomes
Knowledge and understanding:
The students will develop an awareness of the non-linear and discontinuous character of the history of media, becoming familiar with some of the methodologies proper to media archaeology. They will be able to identify connections between contemporary media and the media of the past, as well as to explain the relationship between the emergence of ideas and concepts in a certain historical epoch and the evolution of technologies and dispositives.

Ability to apply knowledge and understanding:
The course will enable the students to put into practice a set of tool to analyse the history of media phenomena and to critically discuss the dominant media trend in history through alternative genealogical trajectories. They will apply the acquired competences to tackle different types of sources for an archaeological investigation of media (literary texts, audio-visual materials, optical and technological dispositives). Relying upon the examination of the case studies, they will be able to apply the conceptual framework addressed by the course to a critical analysis of contemporary media culture. The notions and critical tools acquired will be employed by the students in the various professional fields of communication, especially by those concerned with the design, project and management of media processes.
Single course

This course can be attended as a single course.

Course syllabus and organization

Single session

Responsible
Lesson period
Second semester
Course syllabus
Unit A (20 h; 3 CFU): What is media archaeology (methodology, examples, science and pseudoscience)
Unit B (20 h; 3 CFU): Screening Fears: phantasmagoria, cinema, telepresence
Unit C (20 h; 3 CFU): Genealogies of contemporary screens


In our daily practices, nothing seems more familiar and immediate than a screen: that of our smartphone or tablet, personal computer and the different devices we use activate through visual, voice and tactile interfaces. The pervasiveness of screens has become evident more than ever in the pandemic context: we ended up naturalising screens, i.e. taking them for granted and making them part and parcel of our environment, without questioning them. But what is a screen? In Longobard, the term 'skirm' meant a shield and any surface capable of providing shelter. How then did the screen come to mean the device we know nowadays? What were the social practices and uses that transformed it into a surface for projecting images? The screen has an ambiguous structure that refers at once to the action of exhibiting and protecting, of showing and concealing. This course aims to investigate this specific object through the method of media archaeology, understood as a form of thought as well as an artistic practice able to shed light on unexpected genealogies and enlighten our relationship with contemporary screens.
Prerequisites for admission
None
Teaching methods
Lectures, discussions, analysis of artworks and devices, visual materials of contemporary digital culture, collective discussion, internet tools for blended teaching (padlet, mentimeter).
Teaching Resources
Slides and suggested readings will be accessible on the Team "Archeologia dei media", Channel 2023-2024, codice: 8aqe3g0, and on the Ariel site.

Bibliography
UNITS A,B
A. C. Dalmasso, B. Grespi (a cura di), Mediarcheologia, Cortina, Milano 2024, pp. 417.
F. Casetti, Schermare le paure. I media tra proiezione e protezione, Bompiani, Milano 2023, pp. 273.

UNIT C
J. Bodini, M. Carbone, A.C. Dalmasso (a cura di), I poteri degli schermi, Mimesis, Milano 2021, pp. 260.

Not attending students are also required to study:
E. Modena, Nelle storie. Arte, cinema, e media immersivi, Carocci, Roma 2022, pp. 163.
Assessment methods and Criteria
Oral exam testing the knowledge of the texts in the syllabus and the acquired skills, with a particular focus on concepts and case studies.
The exam program of A.Y. 2022-2023 can be taken until the February 2024 roll call and no later, thereafter (i.e. from May 2024) it will only be possible to take the program of A.Y. 2023-2024.

The evaluation corresponds to:
- knowledge level of the theoretical frameworks;
- ability to apply concepts to case studies;
- making judgments;
- ability to argue with conceptual and linguistic precision.
L-ART/06 - CINEMA, PHOTOGRAPHY AND TELEVISION - University credits: 9
Lessons: 60 hours
Educational website(s)
Professor(s)
Reception:
Wednesday 2-4 p.m. Please contact me to schedule an appointment
Festa del Perdono campus or Microsoft Teams
Reception:
On Monday from 15.00 to 18.00 (please send me an email at least a day before).
Dipartimento di filosofia, second floor, and/or Teams (ONLY ON TEAMS in October and November 2023)