Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Electronic Mediations

Una geología de los medios

Rate this book
La historia de nuestra cultura medial tiene miles de millones de años. Pero descifrar el entorno digital que gobierna nuestras vidas requiere de algo más que un ejercicio de interpretación semiótica. A contracorriente de los discursos glorificadores de una supuesta inmaterialidad digital, Jussi Parikka señala aquí que las máquinas digitales actuales y su entramado socio-técnico dependen tanto de la electricidad como de una variedad de minerales que cotizan en alza en los mercados mundiales al tiempo que derraman toxinas sobre el medioambiente y afectan la salud de quienes intervienen en la fabricación de esos artefactos.

Una geología de los medios, primer libro traducido al español del investigador finlandés, excava en los estratos temporales de largo aliento de nuestra materialidad medial: la historia de la Tierra, sus metales, su química y sus minerales, elementos que constituyen la materialidad de los medios digitales y le confieren al entorno técnico su condición geológica. En línea con el rechazo a la teleología humanista de Donna Haraway, Rosi Braidotti y los nuevos materialismos, en paralelo a las críticas al extractivismo y sus efectos por parte de los estudios feministas y poscoloniales, la perspectiva geocentrada e inorgánica de Parikka constituye un vigoroso intento de colocar la teoría de los medios a la altura de los desafíos del Antropoceno.

296 pages, Paperback

First published March 17, 2015

36 people are currently reading
555 people want to read

About the author

Jussi Parikka

32 books35 followers
Jussi Parikka is a Finnish new media theorist and Professor in Digital Aesthetics and Culture at Aarhus University, Denmark. He is also Professor in Technological Culture & Aesthetics at Winchester School of Art as well as Visiting Professor at FAMU at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
45 (30%)
4 stars
60 (40%)
3 stars
32 (21%)
2 stars
8 (5%)
1 star
3 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for August Bourré.
187 reviews15 followers
October 5, 2023
Finally got around to this. A few good things in here, but not at all what I was expecting. Lots of theorizing about materialism almost as a way to distance oneself from the physical reality of materialism, if that makes sense. Laments for Foxconn factory workers while simultaneously trying to figure out how to use their suffering to make avant garde art projects accessible (both physically and intellectually) only to wealthy Europeans.

What ultimately made me decide the book as a whole was a failure was when he took up the issue of respiratory illnesses in Foxconn factory workers, and seemed to decide it was more interesting as a metaphor than as a fact in the world to be confronted.
Profile Image for Britni Williams.
16 reviews3 followers
October 8, 2017
The appendix was definitely the best/most useful chapter for me. (But I definitely didn't care for his use of "anthrobscene" throughout the book. Sure it was a cute play on words the first time. The other 20 usages were just annoying.)
Profile Image for melancholinary.
451 reviews37 followers
November 23, 2018
Of course planned obsolescence (and perceived obsolescence) take a great part on our incapability to trace the mineral-footprint inside every technical media we are facing everyday. In our consumer society, black-box inside any contemporary consumer electronic is a necessity in order to keep the tradition of planned obsolescence. We should look the notion of black-box not exclusively on its functionality, but through its materiality to the point that the exploitation of mineral and labour is visible.

What we can do? Well, according Jussi Parikka, media archeology and contemporary art method of tracing materiality in an object might be a good start. When most of the technological tools is manufactured by a corporation (and sometimes military), a more ethical alternative on the development of new media is needed. This alternative could be conceived by understanding the media archeology.
Profile Image for etogeid.
25 reviews1 follower
September 20, 2024
Este libro nos lo recomendó una profesora de una materia (que es medio una fiaca) y la tipa cuando te recomienda algo no es que te lo recomienda y ya, sino que te obliga a aceptar y tomar su recomendación. No me quedó otra que leerlo. La verdad que es una falopeada, onda el hecho de relacionar la evolución geológica de la tierra con la historia de los medios (de comunicación, audiovisuales, tecnológicos, medios en general) es algo que nunca me lo hubiera imaginado. El libro es predominantemente un libro de ecología, maneja bastante lenguaje cientifico. Tiene cosas interesantes como lo del impacto ecológico que tiene el arte, el concepto del antropoceno, lo del tiempo y el sonido profundo. Pero en general es un libro bastante denso y medio bodrio, encima lo tuve que leer en inglés porque no lo conseguí en español. Qué decir. Bueno nos vemos en la reseña de memorias de una geisha!!!
Profile Image for Vanessa Lorenzo.
5 reviews
October 10, 2018
The most impresive story that influenced the understanding of the rest of the book (and actually how I think-with soil media now) was the one about the Earth screaming. I like the way the author plays with the words while talking about, otherwise, a very heavy subject. Funk the space, let's dig into soil.
5 reviews1 follower
August 7, 2025
1.nivel d obsesión: me he leido 1 libro d geologia¿? xq mencionaba a donna haraway en la contraportada. 2.igual q en el mundo d los medios digitales dl antropobsceno q todo se consume muy rapido creo q esto tb ocurre en libros como este q se puede notar q está publicado hace 10 años (y especialmente antes dl covid). 3.libro muymuy documentado y q ofrece perspectivas interesantes x otro lado.
Profile Image for Bertha Bella Duygu Nas.
11 reviews10 followers
February 7, 2017
A brilliant and subtle analysis that uncovers and explains how media cultural objects ground with the soil, what components and materials enable the information technology, and political economy behind the industrial and postindustrial production.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.