Buch, Englisch, 80 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 154 g
Reihe: SpringerBriefs in Education
Thinking and Mediatic Displacement at the University
Buch, Englisch, 80 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 154 g
Reihe: SpringerBriefs in Education
ISBN: 978-3-030-65975-2
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
The book describes lecturing and academic writing through the lens of a phenomenology of gestures and arrives at a description of the experience of university thinking as expanding the subject’s range of experiences about the world and about one’s modes of thinking about the world. The media configuration characteristic for university study practices is a movement of rendering inoperative one medium through another medium so that thinking can emerge, a movement called ‘mediatic displacement’. The question of the digital university becomes then a question whether mediatic displacement is possible on a digital screen. Although this is conceivable, digital technologies are still relatively new, and we are not used to playing with them in a profanatory way as the book discusses through the example of videoconferencing and MOOCs. The promise of the digital university seems to remain utopian until we figure out how to enact the techniques of mediatic displacement currently flourishing at the physical university.
Both emerging and established researchers will benefit from this book since it offers an alternative way of discussing the possibility of a digital transformation of the university, starting from a phenomenology of gestures and an understanding of thinking as a collective experience of potentiality and profanation at the same time. By combining two perspectives, media-theoretical and educational-philosophical, this book show a new way of understanding what makes a university and, thus, contributes to the emerging debate on the digital university.
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Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction.- Chapter 1. How to recognise a university.- Chapter 2. The media specificity of the university: a historical journey from the 12 century until the 20 century.- Chapter 3. The lecture: a collective study practice definitory for the classical university.- Chapter 4. The MOOC: the screen and its potential for making a digital university.- Chapter 5. On university thinking.- Concluding thoughts on the digital university, or the very possibility.