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Auteur principal: Jochum, Uwe
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2004
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875887
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author Jochum, Uwe
author_facet Jochum, Uwe
Jochum, Uwe
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Gnosis of Media Jochum, Uwe Library Role Electronic Libraries Internet Access to Information Ideology Misconceptions History Much contemporary library thinking and planning hinges on the belief that the true telos (or mission) of libraries is to merge into the new electronic environment, usually referred to metonymically as "the Internet." In this article, I argue that those who propagate the Internet as the coming information paradise, subsuming and superseding libraries, are mistaken and that the claims they advance are fundamentally flawed. Yet these flaws are interesting ones, with a tradition stretching back almost two thousand years. Indeed, belief in the Internet and the digital library as the information paradise of the future can be traced through such proponents and antecedents as Marshall McLuhan and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin to the ideological tradition of gnosticism. That this philosophical-theological pedigree has gone unnoticed to date results from the antihistoricism of the Internet dogma's contemporary adherents--also a common property of all gnostics. Only by exposing the gnostic background of much modern media theory can the true role of libraries again become apparent, and that is to be what libraries have always been, namely, a body of memory.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ875887
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2004
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Gnosis of Media
Jochum, Uwe
Library Role
Electronic Libraries
Internet
Access to Information
Ideology
Misconceptions
History
The Gnosis of Media Jochum, Uwe Library Role Electronic Libraries Internet Access to Information Ideology Misconceptions History Much contemporary library thinking and planning hinges on the belief that the true telos (or mission) of libraries is to merge into the new electronic environment, usually referred to metonymically as "the Internet." In this article, I argue that those who propagate the Internet as the coming information paradise, subsuming and superseding libraries, are mistaken and that the claims they advance are fundamentally flawed. Yet these flaws are interesting ones, with a tradition stretching back almost two thousand years. Indeed, belief in the Internet and the digital library as the information paradise of the future can be traced through such proponents and antecedents as Marshall McLuhan and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin to the ideological tradition of gnosticism. That this philosophical-theological pedigree has gone unnoticed to date results from the antihistoricism of the Internet dogma's contemporary adherents--also a common property of all gnostics. Only by exposing the gnostic background of much modern media theory can the true role of libraries again become apparent, and that is to be what libraries have always been, namely, a body of memory.
title The Gnosis of Media
topic Library Role
Electronic Libraries
Internet
Access to Information
Ideology
Misconceptions
History
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875887