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dc.date.accessioned2019-05-28T13:58:52Z
dc.date.available2019-05-28T13:58:52Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://95.216.75.113:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/41
dc.descriptionBiography: Diego Gómez-Venegas (Santiago, 1979) is an academic, media artist, and designer based in Santiago de Chile, where he lives and works. Diego is also an assistant professor at the Department of Design of the University of Chile where he teaches, researches, and develops artistic production on the design of technical and technological apparatuses, their condition as objects of knowledge, and the confrontational agencies they could bear. Diego holds an MFA in Design Media Arts from UCLA, and has been awarded with scholarships from the Fulbright Commission, and the Chilean Science and Technology Commission.
dc.language.isoen
dc.typePresentation
dc.titleCyberSyn and the symbolic (processing) memory of paper
dc.contributor.authorGómez-Venegas, Diego
dc.description.abstractChile’s CyberSyn project —the cybernetic network aiming to monitor the economy, built in the early 1970s during the government of president Salvador Allende under the scientific direction of the British cybernetician, Stafford Beer— has been first and foremost represented through an iconic photograph of its OpsRoom: a space enclosed by wooden walls with back-light screens and colorful information schemes on them, wrapping its characteristic radial center shaped by seven futuristic swivel chairs which included an abstract physical interface on their armrest (Medina, 2011, pp. 114-128). However, beyond these visual aspects —“literally, the monitors and interfaces” (Ernst, 2012, p. 55) of the project— not much (or at least not enough) has been said about the media conditions CyberSyn offers as a relevant subject matter for the fields of Media Art Histories and Media Studies. Accordingly, this article proposes a media archaeologically driven discussion on the other two thirds of the project —the CyberNet teletype network (with its perforated paper tapes), and the CyberStride processing core (with its punched-cards)— through the lens of Friedrich Kittler’s media theory, and more particularly, under his notion of the symbolic (Kittler, 1997). All this, beginning with a critical analysis on Beer’s claims stating that “the use of paper detracted from, or even prevented, the process of communication” (Medina, 2011, p. 118), for then initiating a media technological defense on paper —with attention to Alan Turing and Jacques Lacan— as a key material (and thus also a medium) for the emergence of CyberSyn’s media symbolic strength.
dc.subjectCyberSyn
dc.subjectChile
dc.subjectMedia Archaeology
dc.subjectThe Symbolic
dc.subjectKittler


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