Computation must and has always had to “reckon with everything.” This volume brings together contributions that seek to describe the environmentality of computation based on selected settings.

Reckoning with Everything

The Becoming-Environmental of Computing

The transformation of the cultural technique of calculation into a computational environment for the whole planet Earth requires media studies to undergo fundamental changes that go beyond mere reflection on the transformation of global political and economic structures. The becoming environmental of computing confronts us with the fact that the map is the territory: map and territory, media and nature, the Symbolic and the Real, are not distinguished in any categorical way but rather temporarily stabilized results of recursive processes by which they differentiate themselves from each other and call each other into being.

However, the cultural technique of calculation has not only become “environmental” since the ubiquity of computation turned cultural techniques into environing techniques. Computation must and has always had to “reckon with everything,” with the materialities of the media that define the environmental conditions of computability, as well as with practices of extracting, storing and transferring data. This volume brings together contributions that seek to describe the environmentality of computation based on selected settings.

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Publishing Year
2025
Language
English
Pages
285
License
CC-BY-SA 4.0
ISBNs
978-3-95796-267-6 (Print)
978-3-95796-268-3 (PDF)
DOI
10.14619/2676
Available as
Print, PDF

The Editors

Benedikt Merkle is a researcher at the institute for media studies and a member of the CRC 1567 “Virtual Lifeworlds” at Ruhr-University Bochum. He completed his doctoral project on the media-history and aesthetics of digitally networked objects and internet technology at Bauhaus-University Weimar. He held positions as scientific coordinator at the CRC 1187 “Media of Cooperation” at the University of Siegen and as a researcher within the NOMIS Project “The New Real” at Bauhaus-University Weimar. In 2023, he was a visiting researcher at UC Santa Barbara on a Fulbright scholarship.

Benedikt Merkle's Author Profile

Bernhard Siegert was from 2001 until 2025 Gerd Bucerius Professor for the History and Theory of Cultural Techniques at Bauhaus Universität Weimar. From 2008 to 2020 he was co-director of the International Research Center for Cultural Techniques and Media Philosophy at Weimar (IKKM). From 2021 until 2025 he led the project “The New Real—Past, Present, and Future of Computation and the Ecologization of Cultural Techniques” funded by the NOMIS Foundation. Siegert has held numerous visiting professorships and scholarships at (among others) UC Santa Barbara, New York University, University of British Columbia, Stockholm University, University of Cambridge, Freie Universität Berlin, and Harvard University. His most recent book is FINAL FRONTIERS. Eine Medienarchäologie des Meeres (Fink/Brill 2024, an English translation is forthcoming with University of Chicago Press in 2026).

Bernhard Siegert's Author Profile