Digital Salon
Florian Rötzer in conversation with Nicola Gess
Fri, April 09, 2021 6:00 pm CEST
- Location
- Online
For some years now, talk of the »post-factual age« has been going around. By this is meant that political discourse seems to be guided more than before by gut feelings, resentment, and an irrelevance of the distinction between truth and lies.
There is also concern that people are being manipulated by right-wing populists, conspiracy theorists and adversarial states through influence campaigns, fake news and disinformation via the Internet. In the Baroque era, the fascination with deception and the world as a stage was, among other things, a consequence of printing. Is today's de-realization one of online media, of the virtual?
Guest in the digital salon of the ZKM is Prof. Dr. Nicola Gess, who teaches literary studies at the University of Basel and has just published a book on »Half-truths. On the Manipulation of Reality«, published by Matthes & Seitz. In it, she explains that fake news, conspiracy theories and populist propaganda often resort to half-truths. They bridge the gap from fact-based discourse to the space of speculation and fiction, and are ultimately not concerned with truth or lies, but with coherence, credibility, and attention. Their thesis is that fact-checks bounce off representatives of half-truths because of this; fiction theory and narratology, instruments of literary studies, are responsible for debunking them.
The live talk will be held in German
The Digital Salon
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In the 18th century, intellectuals met in salons hosted by women to present their ideas, let their wit shine, engage with other intellectuals regardless of the barriers of class and gender, and engage in erudite conviviality. Salons were partly public events in private rooms, to which the »celebrities« acting on stage - from literature, philosophy, natural sciences and politics - were invited together with the audience. The salons of the Enlightenment found their continuation in the format of TV talk shows, with their disputes driven by the media's need for attention.
In the Digital Salon, on the other hand, we want to once again cultivate a quiet culture of conversation that takes its time, has no particular goal, and strolls discursively with the respective guest. Topics include, for example, the role and self-description as intellectuals, the thoughts that are timely, the change in attention and publicity through the digital lifeworld, political visions of the future, and »what needs to be done«.