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This work explores the intersections of post-colonial theory, globalization, and digital communication, emphasizing how technological advancements in transportation and media have transformed the perception of distance and relationships among diverse cultures. It examines the challenges faced by marginalized groups, the evolving narrative of their stories, and the shifting dynamics of authority and memory in the digital age. Influenced by thinkers like Lukács, Auerbach, and Flusser, this analysis provides insight into the complexities of identity and collective memory in an increasingly interconnected world.
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Post-Colonialism? “I” and “You”, Near and Far: Mapping the World on the InternetAleš Vaupotič, Ljubljana (Seoul, AILC/ICLA 2010)
Mappingthespace • »the ambiguous attitude of the English working class to [the Irish proletariat] divided the oppressed, provoked a struggle of exploited against exploited instead of their united struggle against their common exploiters« (Lukács Lenin) • »the traveller in the undiscovered country of the poor must, [...] until his stories are corroborated by after investigators, be content to lie under the imputation of telling such tales ...« From: Henry Mayhew London Labour and London Poor (4 Vol., 1861-2).
The Globalization and the Contamination of Distances • »the progress then achieved in transportation and communication, together with the spread of elementary education [...], made it possible to mobilize the people far more rapidly and in a far more unified direction; everyone was reached by the same ideas and events far more quickly, more consciously, and more uniformly. For Europe there began that process of temporal concentration, both of historical events themselves and of everyone's knowledge of them, which has since made tremendous progress and which not only permits us to prophecy a unification of human life throughout the world but has in a certain sense already achieved it.« (Auerbach Mimesis)
The Globalization and the Contamination of Distances • »Loss of the traveller's tale and, with it, the possibility of some kind of interpretation, which will be coupled with a sharp loss of memory, or rather, with the flourishing of a paradoxical immediate memory linked to all-powerful nature of the image. A real-time image no longer offering concrete (explicit) information but discreet (implicit) information, a sort of illumination of the reality of the facts.« (Virilio The Perspective of Real Time)
Vilém Flusser's Techno Imagination and Proxemics • »I am not responsible for the Iraqis [in the context of the media coverage of the then contemporary Golf war in 1990-91], but I am responsible for an aspect of their cognition. I am engaged for them and they are, whether they want it or not, for me.« (Flusser Kommunikologie weiter denken)
The Distances in a Literary Web Project: SMS sonnet, by Teo Spiller http://www.s-p-i-l-l-e-r.com/SMS