Univ.-Prof. MMag. Dr. Clemens Apprich
Clemens Apprich is head of the Department of Media Theory as well as the Peter Weibel Research Institute for Digital Cultures at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna, where he holds the Professorship for Media Theory and History since 2021. He studied philosophy, political science, cultural history and theory in Berlin, Bordeaux, and Vienna. In 2011 he became research associate at the Centre for Digital Cultures at Leuphana University of Lüneburg, where he was also guest professor from 2017 to 2018. From 2018 to 2019 he was a visiting research fellow at the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema, Concordia University in Montréal, and from 2020 to 2021 assistant professor in media studies at the University of Groningen. Apprich is still guest researcher at the Centre for Digital Culture, as well as an affiliated member of the Digital Democracies Institute at Simon Fraser University and of the Global Emergent Media Lab at Concordia University. His current research deals with filter algorithms and their application in data analysis as well as machine learning methods. Apprich is the author of Technotopia: A Media Genealogy of Net Cultures (Rowman & Littlefield International, 2017), and, together with Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, Hito Steyerl, and Florian Cramer, co-authored Pattern Discrimination (University of Minnesota Press/meson press, 2019). Currently, he is working on a new book about Animated Intelligence (Amsterdam University Press, forthcoming).
Contact
Office Hours: by Appointment
Phone: +43-1-71133-3550
Email: apprich[at]uni-ak.ac.at
Showroom: Clemens Apprich
- title
- Teilen und Herrschen: Die "digitale Stadt" als Vorläuferin heutiger Medienpraxen
- type
- Article in Journal With Citation Index (Peer Reviewed)
- keywords
- Kulturwissenschaften allg., Digitale Medien, Medien- und Kommunikationswissenschaft
- texts
- Abstract
- The beginning of the 1990s saw the rise of critical interest in examining the promises and risks posed by newly built network technologies in Europe. A key role within these discussions was played by the newly founded “Digital Cities”, whose stated goal was to provide the necessary infrastructure for self-governed communities. Not only was the shared use of technological infrastructure crucial to the invention of new forms of organization, interaction and participation, but also the active sharing of common goals and interests. For this reason the idea of the digital city with its virtual communities helped to implement new technologies by providing the necessary metaphors in order to translate technological developments into social practices. Hence, many of the technologies that make up Web 2.0 emerged in the 1990s, and with them also emerged the idea of social media, user-generated content or participatory platforms. By retracing the threads of current practices of sharing back into the early days of network building, the aim of this article is to critical-ly examine new forms of network-based subjectivation which produce specific concepts of subjectivity within the digital environment.
- authors
- Clemens Apprich
- publishers
- International Center for Information Ethics
- date
- 2011
- ISBN/ISSN/ISMN
- 1614-1687
- published in
- title
- International Review of Information Ethics (IRIE)
- volume/issue
- (Vol. 15)
- pages
- 33–40
- language
- German