8c17 Ryan Shaw » 2008 » January

1/30/2008

Ontological Insecurity and Pointillist Time

Filed under: books, narrative, memory — ryan @ 11:58 am

My pleasure reading over the last couple of weeks has been W.G. Sebald’s Austerlitz, the story of a man who is haunted throughout his life by his inability, or unwillingness, to remember his origins. Last night, I was reading Anthony Giddens for a class on memory and archives that I’m taking this semester, and I came across a passage that perfectly describes Sebald’s eponymous protagonist:

Both Austerlitz and the anonymous narrator repeatedly remark on his feelings of disconnection from and aversion to the flow of time, and throughout the book Sebald makes the reader feel what it is to experience time as “a series of discrete moments,” as when he describes a massive clock in a railway station:

During the pauses in our conversation we both noticed what an endless length of time went by before another minute had passed, and how alarming seemed the movement of the hand, which resembled a sword of justice, even though we were expecting it every time it jerked forward, slicing off the next one-sixtieth of an hour from the future and coming to a halt with such a menacing quiver that one’s heart almost stopped.

Giddens discusses the “ontologically insecure individual” as if he were a deviation from the norm, where normality is defined in terms of being able to sustain an autobiographical narrative. Certainly that is the assumption of narrative psychologists, who analyze the stories people tell about themselves and correlate mental health with tales of redemption, told in the third person. They would no doubt reward Austerlitz’s melancholy and fragmented first-person recollections with a cocktail of prescription drugs. But maybe Austerlitz isn’t such an oddball. Zygmunt Bauman contends that the linear, novelistic experience of time has been replaced in our current society by what he calls “pointillist time”:

If Bauman is right, ontological insecurity is now the norm, and whatever autobiographical narratives we do manage to piece together function only retrospectively, rather than motivating our future plans and actions.

1/7/2008

Questioning Privatized Search

Filed under: economics, infrastructure, policy, search — ryan @ 12:19 pm

Wikia Search has launched. Wikia Search is Jimmy Wales’ new project, an effort to apply an “open” Wikipedia-style approach to the creation of a search engine. I haven’t been following the project closely, so I don’t know the details of how it works. But despite my reservations about the “open and transparent” Kool Aid that Wales and so many others are selling, I am glad to see such experimentation. I have been thinking a lot lately about the critical role of indexing and search infrastructure, and coming to the conclusion that there is too much research focused solely on the technological aspects of such infrastructure, and too little creative thinking about the social, economic, and political dimesions of how we provide it. Current orthodoxy seems to assume that such infrastructure should be completely provided by private companies who profit from advertising. This seems “obvious” given the success of Google, and the failure of non-commercial systems such as libraries to cope with the web. Yet I wonder if this story is too simple, and whether Google’s dominance, coupled with the radical hypercapitalist ideology that has held sway the past couple of decades, has blinded us to alternative approaches. Certainly the disadvantages of the completely privatized approach are beginning to become apparent in many areas: the troublesome co-dependence of contextual advertising and link spam, the disturbing implications of perfecting personalized search, and the temptations for private search providers to trade for their own account. Analogies between the web and the physical world are always questionable, but I wonder what the U.S. would be like if it had entrusted the construction of its transportation network, signage, maps, and such solely to private companies funded by advertisers? Would that have been the best way to support the people and companies who depend on that infrastructure to find and be found? I doubt it.

1/1/2008

Unusual New Chair at UCLA

Via my advisor, Michael Buckland:

In the 1960s a rare book dealer, Bernard Breslauer, made a bequest to UCLA to establish a Breslauer Chair in Bibliography. He lived on to a ripe old age and only now is the Chair being established in the Department of Information Studies. It is a regular fulltime, full professor position, but with some unusual conditions attached:

  • An obligation to collaborate with the rich and varied special collections at UCLA, though the nature and extent of the collaboration is unspecified;
  • To occasionally organize workshops or conferences, possibly jointly with others; and
  • The fortunate incumbent will have as a personal research fund the interest on a $1.5 million endowment (perhaps $70,000 a year or more, which is not to be used for his/her salary).

The chair is in “Bibliography” but there is ample theoretical and historical justification for interpreting that term broadly to include documents of all genres and any media and to range over subject bibliography and the organization of information. It is not restricted to Historical (aka Analytical) Bibliography, the study of the making of printed books.

It is an exceptional and influential opportunity for the individual, for the department, and for a neglected niche where material culture, digital libraries, and humanities computing converge - but only if the right appointee can be found.

The position description is at http://is.gseis.ucla.edu/jobs/breslauer_announcement.pdf.

Please do not hesitate to forward this announcement to anyone who might be interested. Any help in spreading the word would be appreciated.

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