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Media theory /Cultural theory
F R I E D R I C H K I T T L E R (1943–2011) was a Professor of Media Aesthetics and History at Humboldt University of Berlin and the author of numerous books, including Discourse Networks 1800/1900 and Gramophone, Film, Typewriter.
is Associate Professor of German at the University of British Columbia. G E O F F R E Y W I N T H R O P - Y O U N G is Professor of German at the University of British Columbia. M I C H A E L W U T Z is Rodney H. Brady Presidential Distinguished Professor of English at Weber State University.
ILINCA IURASCU
Valhalla
“ As demonstrated by his famous mapping of the three media operations—recording, transmitting, processing—onto ‘trenches,’ ‘blitz,’ and Ronald Reagan’s Star Wars, war for Friedrich Kittler was the principle that drove media history. Although a provocation for whiggish as well as for critical thinking that found the telos of media history in humanity’s progress toward democracy or capitalism’s perversion of democracy, Kittler’s highly original approach to media analysis opened up a road to a posthumanistic theory of media which has never been more timely than today.” —B E R N H A R D S I E G E R T , author of Cultural Techniques: Grids, Filters, Doors, and Other Articulations of the Real
a Cultural Politics book A series edited by John Armitage, Ryan Bishop, and Douglas Kellner D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y P R E S S www.dukeupress.edu Cover art: Joseph G. Cruz, What happens when the horizon completes its circle, 2016. Sand from the original test site of the V2, dimensions variable. From the installation titled Across the Sky, Came a Screaming, Evanston Art Center, Evanston, IL. Courtesy of the artist.
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FRIEDRICH KITTLER
O P E R AT I O N
“ The preeminent thinker of media in the past half century, Friedrich Kittler speaks to deep concerns of the digital age in a voice that is philosophical, wry, learned, obscure, indirect, profound, and always stimulating. To read him is to have your neurons rearranged. Kittler’s work is essential.”—J O H N D U R H A M P E T E R S , coauthor of Promiscuous Knowledge: Information, Image, and Other Truth Games in History
FRIEDRICH KITTLER
Operation Valhalla collects eighteen texts by German media theorist Friedrich Kittler on the close connections between war and media technology. In these essays, public lectures, interviews, literary analyses, and autobiographical musings, Kittler outlines how war has been a central driver of media’s evolution, from Prussia’s wars against Napoleon to the so-called War on Terror. Covering an eclectic array of topics, he charts the intertwined military and theatrical histories of the searchlight and the stage lamp, traces the microprocessor’s genealogy back to the tank, shows how rapid-fire guns brought about new standards for optics and acoustics, and reads Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow to upset established claims about the relationship between war, technology, and history in the twentieth century. Throughout, Operation Valhalla foregrounds the outsize role of war in media history as well as Kittler’s importance as a daring and original thinker.
O P E R AT I O N
Valhalla
W R I T I N G S O N WA R , W E A P O N S , A N D M E D I A DUKE
Edited and translated by Ilinca Iurascu, Geoffrey Winthrop-Young, and Michael Wutz
2/3/2021 11:19:21 AM