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Event

Digital Salon

Florian Rötzer in conversation with Joseph Vogl

Fri, September 10, 2021 6:00 pm CEST

Location
Online
Language
German

Florian Rötzer talks to literature and cultural studies scholar Joseph Vogl about the financial-economic and technical foundations of digital society, about information capitalism and communication technology.

Joseph Vogl is Professor of Literature, Cultural Studies and Media at the Institute for German Literature at Humboldt University in Berlin. Previously, he was Professor of History and Theory of Artificial Worlds at the Faculty of Media at the Bauhaus University in Weimar. From this it is already apparent that Vogl's thinking does not move along pre-set paths, but off the track. Vogl has also demonstrated this in his numerous conversations with Alexander Kluge.

Coming from literary studies, for example with his doctorate on Kafka and the reception of French philosophers, above all Gilles Deleuze, Vogl has increasingly become a political and, since the financial crisis at the latest, a political-economic thinker who seeks to understand and critically question the capitalist system and contemporary society. Already in his 2008 book »Das Gespenst des Kapitals« he exposes the myths of the financial markets and the propagated invisible hand of the free market as secularized religion. With the book »Der Souveränitätseffekt« (2015), Vogl shows how financial capitalism is developing as a global structure and its political and economic elites are gradually eroding democratic control.

In his recent book, »Kapital und Ressentiment« Vogl makes clear that the triumph of finance capitalism is directly related to information technology and is reinforced by digitalization and the accompanying privatization of infrastructures. For him, Internet platforms continue to drive the process of capitalizing information as a commodity and financializing the economy into all areas of life and taking over state functions, while the control of the behavior of market actors is constantly refined. The understanding of theories and truth is also changing in the spirit of neoliberalism and through the information concept. Speculation literally prevails, prices are formed by options, facts by expectations: »Not what was and is, but what may, possibly or probably will occur, determines the course of events.«

Florian Rötzer will talk with Joseph Vogl about whether the intellectual who wants to be on the cutting edge has to deal with the financial-economic and technical foundations of the digital society. Above all, it will be a question of which societies emerge from information capitalism through the amalgamation of the financial market and digital information and communication technology. Vogl notes not only the decline of democracy, but also the fragmentation of societies, in which resentment against other fragmented groups is released and exploited under the conditions of market-based competition. Is there a way out?

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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«.

Organizing Organization / Institution

ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe
Accompanying program

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ZKM | Center for Art and Media

Lorenzstraße 19
76135 Karlsruhe

+49 (0) 721 - 8100 - 1200
info@zkm.de

Organization

Dialog