Theories of Knowledge: Digital epistemology

This course is part of HF's PhD week, and gives 1 ECTS.

Course Description 

The digital is virtually omnipresent in our lives. It conditions our existence in the world and the multifaceted way we generate knowledge, aspects that we, as humanities scholars are called upon to analyse. Whether or not we specifically use digital research methods in our work or study digital objects directly, the digital affects knowledge production in the humanities. The digital humanist Jonas Ingvarsson conceives of digital epistemology as a way of conceptualising the technological situation in which we are immersed. In this context, the digital is a “critical, discourse analytical and media archeological concept” (Ingvarsson, 2021, p. 7). As mode of thought, the digital holds a potential for critical reflection on our contemporary world as well as on history, according to Ingvarsson, who is among others, inspired by Michel Foucault, Marcel O’Gorman, Cecilia Lindhé and Alan Liu.

The candidates will explore the concept digital epistemology. They will also work with related perspectives, such as media archaeology and discourse analysis. The objective of the course is for the PhD candidates to gain insight into how the digital transforms not only our tools, machines and objects but also our ways of organising knowledge and ultimately our thinking. The course will stimulate the candidates to reflect upon relations the digital both makes it possible to establish and forces us to investigate: relations between texts, artworks or other objects we historically have kept apart, between human and machine, and more.

Registration

Registration closes when the course has reached its maximum number of participants. The maximum number of participants is 16.

Course preparations

All participants read the entire curriculum. Each participant chooses one of the articles from the list (apart from Ingvarsson’s, which will be the main topic for the lecture) and prepares to present it during the course. The presentations should discuss the chosen text in relation to the objective of the course (see course content). 

The participants' choice of text must be announced well before the course. A list where participants can choose between texts will be made available in Canvas.

In class

The seminar begins with a lecture by Heidi Karlsen on digital epistemology with an emphasis on Jonas Ingvarsson’s work.

This introductory session is followed by seminar work. Each participant presents the chosen text and relates it to the objective of the course. A general discussion follows, led by the course holders.

Follow up

After the seminar the participant should write a brief reflection paper (1-2 pages). The paper should discuss a couple of problems, or texts, that seem particularly relevant to the participant’s own work and field of research. Deadline for the reflection paper: Wednesday 12 June.

Course conveners: Heidi Karlsen (ILN) and Anne Birgitte Rønning (ILOS)

Curriculum

Apter, E. (2017). Overburden. Overburden. https://editor.e-flux-systems.com/files/96423_e-flux-architecture-overburden.pdf

D’Ignazio, C., & Klein, L. F. (2020). Show your work. In Data Feminism. The MIT Press. https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/11805.001.0001

Drucker, J. (2012). Chapter 6: Humanistic Theory and Digital Scholarship. In M. K. Gold (Ed.), Debates in the Digital Humanities. University of Minnesota Press. https://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/read/untitled-88c11800-9446-469b-a3be-3fdb36bfbd1e/section/0b495250-97af-4046-91ff-98b6ea9f83c0#ch06

*Heldén, J. (2016). Astroecology [Print poetry, digital poetry, art installations, a music album and theater]. http://www.astroecology.se/

Ingvarsson, J. (2021). Towards a Digital Epistemology: Aesthetics and Modes of Thought in Early Modernity and the Present Age. Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78724-0

Kittler, F. A. (1999). Gramophone, film, typewriter. Stanford University Press. "Introduction" p.1-19. 

Moretti, F. (2000). Conjectures on World Literature. New Left Review, 1, 54–68.

Roe, G., Gladstone, C., & Morrissey, R. (2016). Discourses and Disciplines in the Enlightenment: Topic Modeling the French Encyclopédie. Frontiers in Digital Humanities, 2. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdigh.2015.00008

Rustad, H. K. S. (2023). Chapter 2 The Computational Network Environment of Poetry. In H.K.S Rustad, Situating Scandinavian Poetry in the Computational Network Environment (pp. 23–49). De Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111004075-002

            *For your analysis of this artwork, several of the above readings are relevant, such as Ingvarsson, Kittler and Rustad. You may as well consult Rustad’s chapter 4 in Situating Scandinavian Poetry, which is dedicated to an analysis of Helen’s work.

Published Feb. 12, 2024 2:36 PM - Last modified May 20, 2024 10:19 PM