Fall 2024 'Technology in Crisis' Honors Digital Humanities Course

Course flyer
Larissa Rocha

Course flyer

Next semester, honors students will have the opportunity to examine theorist Walter Benjamin's concerns about art's role in the face of technological progress in the Retro Reading course led by Curtis Maughan, director of the World Languages and Digital Humanities Studio. Close-readings will be enhanced by explorations of AI platforms and open world video games, among other contemporary technologies.  

"Technology in Crisis" will guide students through an extensive analysis of one of the most influential essays of the 20th century, "The Work of Art in the Age of Technological Reproducibility," (1936) by the German Jewish theorist-philosopher-public intellectual Walter Benjamin (1892-1940). As movies grew into the primary mode of mainstream entertainment in the 1930s, many of Benjamin's contemporaries asked the question, "Can film be art?" — to which Benjamin responded by asking, "How has film changed the very nature of art?" Since its publication, Benjamin's essay has been called forth whenever society has had to reconsider the boundaries of art in the face of technological advancement, from the golden age of television to the digital turn. It's particularly relevant to our contemporary moment at the dawn of AI. 

"Anyone who is excited by, worried about or interested in how the explosion of generative AI will radically change our media landscape should consider taking this course," Maughan said. "We will develop and deepen our understanding of the present moment by looking back to an analogous moment in the 1930s, when the explosive growth of film began to impact all elements of daily life, from the dissemination of news to the creation of celebrity to methods of scientific inquiry."  

Though the course no longer requires an application, interested students should register as early as possible to ensure they get a seat. For more information regarding the course, contact Maughan at cmaughan@uark.edu

 

Contacts

Larissa Rocha, graduate research assistant
Department of World Languages, Literatures and Cultures
479-575-2951, lrochade@uark.edu

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