The Digital Dionysus: Nietzsche and the Network-Centric Condition

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https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/25477/1/1004618.pdf
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https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/25477/1/1004618.pdf
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https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/25477/1/1004618.pdf
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https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/25477/1/1004618.pdf
Contributor(s)
Mellamphy, Dan (editor)
Biswas Mellamphy, Nandita (editor)
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EnglishAbstract
Can Nietzsche be considered a thinker of media and mediation, as the German media theorist Friedrich Kittler declared in his influential book Gramophone, Film, Typewriter? Nietzsche was a truly transdisciplinary thinker, one who never fit into his own nineteenth-century surroundings and who recognized himself as a “herald and precursor” of the future, of our globally-reticulated digital present. Perhaps not since Kittler has there been a study — let alone an anthology — that re-assesses and re-evaluates Nietzsche’s thought in light of the technically mediated and machinic conditions of the human in the age of digital networks.