Media Genealogy| As If, or, Using Media Archaeology to Reimagine Past, Present, and Future: An Interview with Lori Emerson

Authors

  • Jay Kirby North Carolina State University
  • Lori Emerson University of Colorado

Keywords:

media archaeology, interface, design, Michel Foucault, Marshall McLuhan

Abstract

Jay Kirby, PhD student in the Communication, Rhetoric, and Digital Media program at North Carolina State University, conducted this interview with Associate Professor Lori Emerson to focus on her research about how interfaces and the material aspects of media devices affect our uses and relationships with those devices. Emerson, who runs the University of Colorado’s Media Archaeology Lab, explains how we can look at older technology that never became an economic success to imagine what could have been and reimagine what is and what could be. In the Media Archaeology Lab, Emerson collects still-functioning media artifacts to demonstrate these different possibilities. In this interview, Emerson draws on examples from digital computer interfaces, word processors, and other older media to show how their material aspects are bound up in cultural, commercial, and political apparatuses. By bringing these issues to light, Emerson shows how a critical eye toward our media can have far reaching implications.

Author Biographies

Jay Kirby, North Carolina State University

PhD StudentCommunication, Rhetoric and Digital MediaNorth Carolina State University

Lori Emerson, University of Colorado

Associate ProfessorDepartment of EnglishUniversity of Colorado

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Published

2016-06-24

Issue

Section

Special Sections