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Touch, time and technics: Levinas and the ethics of haptic communications

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 08:48 authored by Dave Boothroyd
<p>The development of immersive media-communication environments, and their theorization in terms of the 'haptic', calls for a reconsideration of the relationship between sensuality and the ethics of contact. For the most part, the cultural theorization of the virtual which remains preoccupied with the visual has tended to limit its scope to the paradoxes, politics and ethics of representation. Much of media and cultural studies work, for instance, has adopted, directly or indirectly, the traditional visual and ocularcentric paradigm in its analyses of cultural forms and technologies as these have become integrated into contemporary life. Whilst it has been argued, for instance by Mark Hansen in his recent books, that this paradigm is inadequate to digital media and the developments of human-machine interactions the digital introduces, few comentators have addressed how new developments in immersive sensory media environments bear on the ethics of communication. By way of a reflection on the themes of the tactility of contact and the ethics of touch in the work of Emmanuel Levinas, this article critically evaluates the ethical significance of the 'sensory extension' haptic media represent. It identifies and argues against the neo-positivist tendency of Hansen's reliance on the empiricism of the neurosciences whilst locating the resources for an ethics of touch in Levinas' concept of time as 'diachrony'.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Creative Arts (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Theory, Culture and Society

Volume

26

Issue

2-3

Pages/Article Number

330-345

Publisher

SAGE Publications

ISSN

0263-2764

eISSN

1460-3616

Date Submitted

2014-08-08

Date Accepted

2009-03-01

Date of First Publication

2009-03-01

Date of Final Publication

2009-03-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2014-08-08

ePrints ID

14271

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