DISCOURSE NETWORKS 1800/1900

From Fabulous Loop de Loop
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Friedrich A. Kittler defines a discourse network as:

“[T]he network of technolo­gies and institutions that allow a given culture to select, store, and pro­cess relevant data. Technologies like that of book printing and the institu­tions coupled to it, such as literature and the university, thus constituted a historically very powerful formation, which in the Europe of the age of Goethe became the condition of possibility for literary criticism.” [1]

[...]

“physical, technological, discursive and social systems in order to provide epistemic snap-shots of a culture’s administration of power and knowledge.”[2]

ANNOTATION
|...| John Johnston, forward to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997.
|...| Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz - Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999
|...| Saul Ostrow Preface to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston
|...| David E. Wellbery. Forward to Friedrich A. Kittler’s Discourse Networks 1800/1900

In Discourse Networks 1800/1900, Friedrich Kittler identifies two discourse networks: the discourse network of 1800 is defined by the technologies of the alphabet and printing which make writing the dominant medium of communication.

The 1800s witnessed a shift toward the discourse network 1900, in which the monopoly of the alphabet is broken by new technologies of storage and transmission – principally the camera, gramophone and typewriter.[3] Each discourse network produces different subjectivities (a different relation of the subject to the world).

The annotations below discuss the notion of discourse networks in greater detail and also posit the possibility that we are living through a new discourse network (“DN 2000”), which proceeded to eclipse the discourse network 1900 around the time of the Macy conferences on cybernetics and the subsequent digitisation of discourse.

ANNOTATION
|...| John Johnston, forward to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997.

Friedrich A. Kittler’s Discourse Networks1800-1900 (1985) sets nineteenth century romanticism and twentieth century modernism apart.

Romanticism is embedded within a discourse of pedagogy and philosophy whilst modernism draws on psycophysics and psychoanalysis “what an author is, and what define reading and writing are all historically determined aspects of a larger communication system”[4] Literature becomes “a form of data processing”[5] “texts receive and store, process and transmit information in a way not structurally different from computers.” […] “methodologically, literary texts constitute ‘a discourse on discourse’ a reflection of the very hardware of cultural data processing and its historical variables”. [6] At this point literature requires other discourses (scientific and/or institutional) “in order to make so-called sense.”

With the advent of new storage and transmission systems, such as film and photography (c.1900) discourse analysis can no longer suffice, “literary criticism must come to terms with the materiality of its objects” [7] The monopoly of written texts is broken.

Note: texts were always storage systems and transmission “hardware”. In the discourse network 1800- the illusion that literature was not a technical media was preserved because literature was understood to be the “translation of a silent, wordless nature”[8] and invested with “spiritual” properties. Film and photography (as new storage systems) disrupt this illusion as they store information with superhuman efficiency and fidelity. After the advent of film and photography writing becomes a medium amongst many. At the same time “intransitive writing" develops, "the writing down of delirium coincides with what science and media are doing” Psyco-science and psychoanalysis accompany this development in writing as attendant discourses. Technologies of inscription and record emerge along with the “talking cure”.

Turing’s Universal Machine (theorised in 1936), ups the stakes, allowing for the translation of any medium to any other. the media separation of Discourse Network 1900 (optical, acoustic and writing automata) will come back together: “all media in a digital base will erase the idea of the media” [9]

DISCOURSE NETWORK 2000?

Is a new Discourse Network, “DN 2000," already looming on the event horizon?

Kittler acknowledges that his own work "has become part of an information network that describes literature as an information network".[10] But does this indicate an increase of system complexity, a cultural version of re-normalization, or an immanent mutation of the network?

In order to describe discourse networks as differentiated and contrasting systems, "at least two delimiting events" are indispensable. For the two networks Kittler analyses in Discourse Networks 1800/1900, "universal alphabetization circa 1800 and technological data storage circa 1900 constitute just such turning points, for which there is sufficient evidence within about fifteen years." [11] […] “methodological constraints determine that an event inaugurating another discourse network can only be identified retrospectively. Despite intriguing possibilities raised by the current telecommunications assemblage and computer chip architectures, Kittler must therefore remain silent about DN 2000.”[12]

“[A]mbiguity in the communications model itself, insomuch as the computer’s capacity for automated calculation tends to subsume and displace communications” the work on Wiener, Von Neumann and Shannon allowed for an “epistemological break which is only now becoming apparent.”[13]

I note that, the elements which allow a shift into the discourse network 1900 include: Shannon’s communications theory (the fact that information becomes a measurable entity and that the content of the message and the message are divorced from each other); Von Neumann’s games theory (which places the subject in exterior relation to the game); Wiener et al’s teleological concept in which feedback is linked to purpose; the development of command line code [14] Computers complete the triad of communication theory: data storage, transmission through calculation. Digitisation, however, brings to an end medial difference.

[…]

Johnston links to Foucault's scheme of Epistemes, as outlined in The Archaeology of Knowledge. Foucault does not go beyond the mid-nineteenth century in his discourse analysis.[15] This is why Foucault has difficulty accounting for the modern period – “data -processing methods and technologies destroy ‘the alphabetical storage transmission monopoly, that old-European basis of power.”[16]bringing home the truth that “all books [or libraries] are discourse networks, but not all discourse networks are books”[17]

In Foucault’s Order of Things: epestemes = renaissance, classical and modern compared to Kittler’s Discourse Networks = republic of letters, Discourse Network 1800, Discourse Network 1900 (the last matches Foucault's emergent post modernism) [18]

Silent reading: optical and auditory data stored with silent reading, due to alphabetisation and the educational methods instituted by Heinrich Stephani (and others) around 1800. “effects how language is produced and perceived, and links “to non-discursive [non-textual] domains - the human body principally”[19]

Phonic methods (such as sub-vocalisation) dematerialized the linguistic sign “one no longer de-cyphers but hears with an inner voice” (the voice, for instance, of the mother, reading to the child in infancy, is internalised)[20] With woman under erasure, nature assumes organic continuity with the poet who communes with it through non-naturalised voice of the text.[21] In Discourse Network 1800 woman is excluded - “she cannot be both source and medium. Faust serves and the exemplary text in transition as Faust (the scholar poet) attempts to communicate with the republic of letters which was passing. Poetry dominates the new discourse (1800), watched over by the state which is itself closed off to “every hermeneutic” [...] “it cannot get behind the speech act that instituted it”[...] “the translator Faust is watched over by the devil in poodle’s garb” […] “the poet must also work as functionary of the state, or as school teacher. Discourse Network 1800 denies its own status as a network.”[22]

Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz elaborate on the exclusion on women from Discourse Network 1800. Muttermund is the medium through which the child learns to read (subvocalise). This represents the spiritualised auralisation of language. Muttermund means both ‘the mother’s mouth’ and ‘the opening of the uterus’. In this way, in Kittler, composition and re-reading are eroticised - associating an ‘intercourse’ with mother nature as a form of originary orality. “ [A] transcendental inner voice superior and anterior to any form of written language.” “Woman” becomes a “site of linguistic origin and inscription – urging Goethe to serve as state bureaucrat and to produce texts for a predominantly female audience. Discourse Network 1800 was a feedback loop of “didactic techniques, media reform, surcharge of maternal imago.”
In Discourse Network 1800 writing was the “sole channel for processing and sharing information” = reading is an exercise in scriptographically and typographically induced hallucinations” [23]

This hallucinatory state comes to an end as the discourse network 1900 introduces new media which challenge the ideology of the text. Electricity “brings to an end the classic-romantic experience of reading and writing”[24] Nietzsche’s typewriter was a Malling Hansen (Danish made) bought in 1880 for 450 richemarks [Kittler’s claim as to the provenance of the typewriter has since been challenged]. With the advent of the typewriter, writing was no longer a “continuous translation from nature to culture” “but a violent inscription or mnemotechnique” [25]

In the era of the typewriter, Kittler claims “rather than presenting the subject with something to be deciphered [writing] makes the subject what it is.”[26] As we move into the discourse network 1900 Nietzsche experiments with the “telegraphic style”, writing is no longer a “spiritualised expression” but “the transposition of signs […] against an empty ground”[27].

Kittler argues that the disconnection of hand and eye to meaning (breaking the writer from the physical, bodily connection with meaning, which in the discourse network 1800 would provide a direct contect between the writer and nature) and with orality (which also provides connection to the natural world). Nature is no longer a continuity which includes Man[28] Once this connection is broken woman –who had in discourse network 1900 been confined to the role of the muse – now becomes a secretary. The typwriter becomes a central mechanism in the operations of discourse network 1900.

Alan Turing (a typist) preferred ‘discreet’ machines to ‘continuous’ machines. For him the discreet typewriter avoids the confusion between writing and experience. For Heidegger the typewriter alters our relationship to being. the typewriter, for him, was “somewhere being a tool and a machine” [29]

Nietzsche’s aesthetic language theory splits the optical and acustic which can only be bridged by metaphor. This anticipates the separation of the eye and ear engendered by phonography and film. Consequently, for Nietzsche: “language has nothing to do with truth and falsehood, it expresses the relation between humans and things.” The use of daring metaphors expresses this relation- language is literary in its foundations [30]

Pink noise and psychophysics.[31] In Kittlers Discourse Network 1900 nature is psycho-physical. Nerve impulses in the brain function independently of consciousness (in the same way a typewriter is unconscious of the message it may be sending). In 1900 children were taught to “read without understanding and write without thinking” [32] This represents aphasia in production.

Gertrude Stein (a student of William James) conducted experiments in Harvard which “measured the parameters of memory, sensory and motor responses by excluding meaning as an independent variable” [33] Psychoanalysis, therefore, sets the condition of the office, to type and take dictation without linking these operations to meaning. This aphasic mode also sets the ground for Saussure [and Shannon] and allows Freud to distinguish “thing recognition” and “word recognition” [34]

Charles Bell Idea of a New Anatomy of the Brain = establishes that electric stimulus can “solicit taste, vision and eating responses without proximity to the referent” [35] Hermholtz posits that nerves are related to telegraphy </ref>Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler Discourse Networks 1800/1900 p.17</ref>: Nerves in the human body have been accurately compared to telegraph wires. Such a wire conducts one single kind of electric current and no other; it may be stronger, it may be weaker; it may move in either direction; it has no other qualitative differences. Nevertheless, according to the different kinds of apparatus with which we provide its terminations, we can send telegraphic dispatches, ring bells, explode mines, decompose water, move magnets, magnetise iron, develop light, and so on. The same thing with our nerves. The condition of excitement which can be produced in them, and is conducted by them, is ... everywhere the same.” [36]

ANNOTATION
|...| Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz - Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999

1962-63 saw the publication of a number of texts on orality – Eric Havelock’s Preface to Plato being central amongst them, along with books by C. Levi-Strauss, M. McLuhan, Jack Goody & Ian Watt. All were produced at a time where print-based media had lost its dominance ([37].

The theme of orality would be central to media theory as it emerged through the 1960s and to structural linguistics, structural anthropology and post-structuralism. Because central to the issue of orality are the themes of medially, storage systems and memory. These writers drew on the themes of orality as much as they did on information theory and cybernetics - indeed the cybernetic explanation became the means by which to deal with the issue of orality.

Walter Ong uses the term “secondary orality” […] “every exploration of orality is the renegotiation of the limits of literacy.” [38]Andre Leroi Gourhan’s Gest et Parol (1964-65) McLuhan’s Understanding Media (1964) drew closer attention to the materialites of communication “All the smart things to be said about computers can be spelled out in Plato’s Phaedrus” . Harrold Innis’ Empire and Communication and Bias and Communication (1950 and 1951), which were influencial on McLuhan, were the first books to attempted to account for world history in terms of media and communication, but for the most part media theory emerged in the 1960-s alongside the attendant subjects of orality and literacy – which, because of the introduction of technical media such as film, TV and video into discourse, were in crisis.

Consequently for Jakobson: “the object of the science of literature is not literature, but literariness - that is that which makes a given work a work of literature [using literary masterpieces as ] defective, secondary documents.” [39] For Kittler, media studies should centre on ‘mediality’ to explain why media do what they do, focussing on an intrinsic “technological logic, the changing links between body and medium, the procedures of data processing, rather than evaluate them from the point of view of social usage.” This is why McLuhan is a central voice in Kittler.[40]

The French across the Rhine examines the reception of post structuralist writers in Germany, which came from the margins of academia. BUT, offers Kittler, “who could take Marcuse seriously after reading Lacan?”, although for many detractors, “ what was good about post structuralism was not new and what was new was not good.” [41]

Kittler observes that the development of structuralism (structural linguistics) is concurrent with the invention of the typewriter. Answering the shortcomings of Foucault’s discourse analysis, Kittler states: “Even writing itself, before it ends up in libraries, is a communications medium which the archaeologist [Foucault] simply forgot. […] discourse analysis cannot be applied to sound archives or towers of film rolls” [42]

Kittler’s career can be split into three decades: 1970s– discourse analysis; 1980s– technologies of discourse (by electric media)and; 1990s– digitisation of discourse. [43] from the renaissance to the romantic era the family was not a fact of social history but a code. German literature in 1800 becomes a way of programming people – a recoding enterprise. With the spread of the nuclear family came the spread of literacy from which the notion of “authorship” arose.

In the 1980s Kittler introduced media into his vocabulary, from that point discourse analysis registers as “material communicative events in historically contingent, inter-discursive networks that link writers, archivists, addressees and interpreters.” [such networks] “exhibit regularities which program what people can say.”[44]

At this point a new breed of German media theorists – Kittler, Boltz and Horisch – played “Marx to Foucault’s Hegel: they pulled discourse analysis off its textual and discursive head and on its media-technological feet.” [45]

[...]

Discourse Network 1900 sees the abolition of the Gutenberg galaxy as media data streams particular to the information they processed (for ear and eye - the auditory and scopic) come on line. The monopoly of writing is broken.

Women in Discourse Network 1900 are released from their “supplementary function to the male creative process” no longer needed to “validate the male author function” [46] Rather than “a naturalised inner voice” in Discourse Network 1800, women become writers and typists [writing from dictation, the sense of which they do not need to understand, they reproduce the code. Women as typists, stenographers, short-hand takers, computers – become word processors (a job which in the DN 2000 will be taken over by non-human computers).

Mallarme's observation that “one does not make poetry with ideas but with words”[47] registers a change in understanding of what words and reading mean. He exorcises the spirit from writing and forefronts writing as a technology - orientated toward the mechanics of language. [One advantage of the alphabet is that it is not orientated to sense specificity (as are phonography and film), although film and phonography were superhuman in their ability to store information.] [So.. this is why our machines form our thoughts, present parameters for particular operations. This is why Nietzsche’s aesthetics is conditioned by the media specificity of the time, as is Lacan’s Triad of real, imaginary and symbolic (which corresponds to the technical standard of code, processing and message). This emphasis in Discourse Network 1900 gives rise to the emphasis on “textuality as such” [..] “from means to ends in themselves” [48]

In this new discursive space Mcluhan and Nietzche are bred to produce Marshall McNietzche. Kittler revives previously obscure texts: in Rilke’s Primal Sound, Goethe Speaks into the phonograph; Fata Morgana Machine by Salomo Friendlaender (aka Mynona); Heidegger’s On The Typewriter and Carl Schmitt’s The Burbanks, using these un(der)read texts as an archive. These texts “represent print’s meditation on its own marginalisation” [49] The new apparatus do not rely on symbolic coding system to mediate information but rather to record the visual effects of the real (sound waves, light waves, writing via a typewriter) which “no longer lends itself to metaphysical soul building” [50]

In relation to Lacan, film lends itself to the imaginary, corresponding to Lacan’s mirror stage (when the body is unfamiliar to the self); the real is associated with the blind sight of photography; the symbolic corresponds to writing in its new form which reveals it as an ends in itself - a system through which to order and store information. [51] These factors led Boltz to term Lacanian psychoanalysis as a “media theory of the unconscious.” 
For Kittler , Nietzsche was the first philosopher to understand “philosophical speculation are the effects of the commerce between bodies and media” (xxiv) = “our writing tools are working on our thoughts” N used a danish writing ball typewriter so he couldn’t see the letter being typed - a total disconnect between the operation of the machine and its symbolic output. N’s writing changes, he thinks Man has moved fro (knowledge, speech and virtous action) to favour the memory machine (On Geneology…) [humans change and turn] “from agency of writing to become an inscription surface.” [52]

Poststructuralism claims to reveal many key concepts (so-called Man, the decentered subject, authorship &c) as vapour or effect arising from (…) discursive operations and materialities. In Kittler, these do not vanish but are ‘bracketed’ as exterior apparatus make them increasingly redundant. [post structuralism is therefore itself an effect of these apparatus - as it becomes apparent when systems networks in the DN 2000 perform the theories of post structuralism].

After DN 1800-1900 = “system network 2000” is heralded by Turing, whose Universal Machine reintegrates the formally divergent media – now evacuated of Spirit and revealed to be media as such.[53] For Derrida, for instance, style is always “ the question of a pointed object… sometimes only a pen, but just as well a stylet, or even a dagger” (a stiletto and a stylus) So-called man was never there, an illusion supported by historically specific technology.[54]

ANNOTATION
|...| David E. Wellbery. Forward to Friedrich A. Kittler’s Discourse Networks 1800/ 1900

David E. Wellbery writes that the discourse network of 1900 is characterised by the ‘presuppositions’ of exteriority mediality and corporeality [55]. These elements which would dismantle romantic-hermeneutic discourse. Nietzsche writing for the gymnasium where he studied before going to university, in common with all other students, would read and author papers with titles like My Life, Course of My Life, My Literary and Musical Activity and A Look Back [56] Nietzsche would later come to hate the German Essay as a form – parodying it with Ecce Homo with chapter titles such as Why I Am So Clever, Why I Write Such Good Books and Why I Am a Destiny. Nietzsche was aware that the performance and articulation of subjectivity in these chapters sought to preserve the cadaver of the spirit of the romantic age. “In front of me is an inkwell in which I can drown the sorrows of my black heart, a pair of scissors to accustom me to the idea of slitting my throat, manuscripts with which I can wipe myself, and a chamber pot.” [57].

ANNOTATION
|...| Saul Ostrow Preface to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston

Our ability to interpret (information systems) is largely the result of historically determined communication systems [...] “media create the, means of communication” its subject and content are also the product of their storage mediums” [58] [clear relation to McLuhan- extension causes change in our conception of the social.
For Kittler this relationship is now being inverted = we will become the product of technology [see also to C. Schmitt and M. Heidegger].
The transitoion from discourse network 1800 to discourse network 1900 is recorded in the narrative of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. The undead aristocrat needs the blood streams of the middle class –doctors, lawyers, estate agents- to survive. But it is the data streams that the new class live by which cause Dracula’s downfall. This narrative reflects the change wrought by the fragmentation of data streams in the late 19th century. 0 Dracula is apprehended, outsmarted by data of his movements –which was collated and cross-referred – making a profile from a variety of discreet data streams: newspapers, photography, stenography, notes, letters. I note that the forensic methods of Edgar Allan Poe’s Inspector Dupin and Conan Doyell’s Sherlock Holmes also use new technologies of inscription and record to crack the case.

The eventual melding of different media “may erase the very notion of medium altogether - but also that of the body”[59] “only the residue of the voice, the word, our image or gesture that is now preserved, undifferentiated from one to the other” If modernism is the history of fragmentation the next DN will be characterised by lack of difference = but here it is the fact that data is produced through the devisable that makes Dracula visible and identifiable, so in “DN 2000”, insofar as we have identities, we have them because devisable data can be cross referenced on a database]. “the commands we use command us.” [60] “this is the outworking of interactivity - mouse clicks and keystrokes, bureaucratic structure we navigate every day” [61]

  1. Friedrich Kittler, Discourse Networks 1800/1900
  2. Kittler in Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxiii
  3. Friedrich A. Kittler’s Discourse Networks 1800/ 1900
  4. Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997 p.4
  5. Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997 p. 4
  6. Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997 p.4
  7. Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997 p.4
  8. Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler, Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997 p.5
  9. Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997 p. 6
  10. Friedrich A. Kittler, Discourse Networks 1800/1900 p371
  11. Friedrich A. Kittler Discourse Networks 1800/1900 p370
  12. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997 p.6
  13. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997 p.7
  14. see: George Dyson, Turing’s Cathedral: The Origins of the Digital Universe, Allen Lane, 2012
  15. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997 p.6
  16. Friedrich A. Kittler Discourse Networks 1800/1900'Italic text p369
  17. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.10
  18. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxiii
  19. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p12
  20. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.12
  21. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997, p12
  22. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997, p13
  23. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxiv
  24. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.18
  25. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.14
  26. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.14
  27. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.14
  28. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by john johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.14; Note:Derrida in Eperous, a study of Nietzsche’s many styles, relates style to stylus, as a “differential inscription “ […] “prior to and irreducible to meaning”.
  29. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.15
  30. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler Discourse Networks 1800/ 1900 p.15
  31. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.16
  32. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.16
  33. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.16
  34. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997, p.17
  35. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler Discourse Networks 1800/1900 Italic text p.17
  36. Johnston in Friedrich A. Kittler, Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston, Routledge, 1997,p.17
  37. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xii
  38. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xii
  39. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xiv
  40. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xiv
  41. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xvi-xvii
  42. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xx
  43. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter'Italic text, Stanford, 1999 xx
  44. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxii
  45. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxii
  46. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxv
  47. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxv
  48. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxvii
  49. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxvii
  50. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxvii
  51. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxviii
  52. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxvix
  53. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxx
  54. Geoffrey Winthrop Young & Michael Wutz, Introduction to Kittler, Friedrich, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, Stanford, 1999 xxxvii
  55. Wellbery, in Kittler DN, vii-xxxiii
  56. Kittler, Discourse Networks 1800/ 1900 p. 180
  57. Nietzsche, in Kittler's Discourse Networks 1800/1900 p.181
  58. Saul Ostrow Preface to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston p.x
  59. Saul Ostrow Preface to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston p. xi
  60. Saul Ostrow Preface to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston p. xi
  61. Saul Ostrow Preface to Literature, Media, Information Systems Essays by Friedrich A. Kittler Edited and Introduced by John Johnston p.xii