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[ 133 There Are No Digital Humanities gary hall Building on the work of Jean-François Lyotard and Gilles Deleuze in The Postmodern Condition and“Postscript on Societies of Control,”respectively, let us pursue a little further the hypothesis that the externalization of knowledge onto computers, databases, and more recently mobile media environments, networked servers, and the cloud is involved in the constitution of a different form of society and human subject.To what extent do such developments cast the so-called computational turn in the humanities in a rather different light to the celebratory data fetishism that has come to dominate this rapidly emerging field? Is the direct, practical use of techniques and methodologies drawn from computer science and various fields related to it here, too, helping to produce a major alteration in the status and nature of knowledge and indeed the human subject? I’m thinking not just of the use of tools such as Anthologize, Delicious, Juxta, Mendeley, Pliny, Prezi, and Zotero to structureanddisseminatescholarshipandlearninginthehumanities .Ialsohaveinmind the generation of dynamic maps of large humanities data sets and employment of algorithmic techniques to search for and identify patterns in literary, cultural, and filmic texts as well as the way in which the interactive nature of much digital technology is enabling user data regarding people’s creative activities with this media to be captured, mined, and analyzed by humanities scholars. To be sure, in what seems to be almost the reverse of the situation Lyotard describes in The Postmodern Condition,1 many of those in the humanities—and this includes some of the field’s most radical thinkers—do now appear to be looking increasingly to science (and technology and mathematics), if not necessarily computer science specifically, to provide their research with a degree of legitimacy. Witness Franco “Bifo” Berardi’s appeal to “the history of modern chemistry on the one hand, and the most recent cognitive theories on the other”(121) for confirmation of the compositionist philosophical hypothesis in his book The Soul at Work: “There is no object, no existent, and no person: only aggregates, temporary atomic compositions, figures that the human eye perceives as stable but that are indeed mutational, transient, frayed and indefinable” (120). It is this hypothesis, derived part ii ][ Blog Posts gary hall 134 ] from Democritus, that Bifo sees as underpinning the methods of both the schizoanalysis of Deleuze and Guattari and the Italian Autonomist Theory on which his own compositionist philosophy is based. Can this turn toward the sciences (if there has indeed been such a turn, a question that is worthy of further examination) be regardedasaresponseonthepartof thehumanitiestotheperceivedlackof credibility , if not obsolescence, of their metanarratives of legitimation: the life of the spirit and the Enlightenment but also Marxism, psychoanalysis, and so forth? Indeed, are the sciences today to be regarded as answering many humanities questions more convincingly than the humanities themselves? While ideas of this kind are perhaps a little bit too neat and symmetrical to be entirely convincing, this “scientific turn” in the humanities has been attributed by some to a crisis of confidence. It is a crisis brought about, if not by the lack of credibility of the humanities’metanarratives of legitimation exactly then at least in part bythe“imperiousattitude”of thesciences.Thisattitudehasledthelattertocolonize the humanists’ space in the form of biomedicine, neuroscience, theories of cognition , and so on (Kagan, 227).2 Is the turn toward computing just the latest manifestation of and response to this crisis of confidence in the humanities? Can we go even further and ask, is it evidence that certain parts of the humanities are attempting to increase their connection to society3 and to the instrumentality and functionality of society especially? Can it be merely a coincidence that such a turn toward computing is gaining momentum at a time when the UK government is emphasizing the importance of the STEMs (Science,Technology,Engineering and Mathematics) and withdrawing support and funding for the humanities? Or is one of the reasons all this is happening now due to the fact that the humanities,like the sciences themselves , are under pressure from government, business, management, industry, and increasingly the media to prove they provide value for money in instrumental,functional , performative terms? Is the interest in computing a strategic decision on the part of some of those in the humanities? As Dan Cohen and Fred Gibbs’s project to text mine“the 1,681,161 books that were published in English in the UK in...

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