The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danish Journals and nowadays Facebook discourse

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Standard

The forgotten form of knowledge : Similarities between early 18th century Danish Journals and nowadays Facebook discourse. / Worsøe-Schmidt, Lisbeth.

2017. Abstract from The Eighteenth Century: Past and Present, Uppsala, Sweden.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Worsøe-Schmidt, L 2017, 'The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danish Journals and nowadays Facebook discourse', The Eighteenth Century: Past and Present, Uppsala, Sweden, 12/10/2017 - 14/10/2017.

APA

Worsøe-Schmidt, L. (2017). The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danish Journals and nowadays Facebook discourse. Abstract from The Eighteenth Century: Past and Present, Uppsala, Sweden.

Vancouver

Worsøe-Schmidt L. The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danish Journals and nowadays Facebook discourse. 2017. Abstract from The Eighteenth Century: Past and Present, Uppsala, Sweden.

Author

Worsøe-Schmidt, Lisbeth. / The forgotten form of knowledge : Similarities between early 18th century Danish Journals and nowadays Facebook discourse. Abstract from The Eighteenth Century: Past and Present, Uppsala, Sweden.

Bibtex

@conference{1fb583cfc7c847e4a08d6fd3a1d166b3,
title = "The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danish Journals and nowadays Facebook discourse",
abstract = "The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danishjournals and nowadays Facebook discourse. Contemplating the early display of the public sphere in the 18th century, one is struck by the ease with which participants conduct themselves within the emerging institution. This does not correspond very well with Habermas' notion of public reasoning as “peculiarand without historical precedent”. On closer examination, it turns out that only a minority, namely the very people whose names and works have survived in history and literary history, held this ease. Most of the very early Danish general periodicals show a different picture. During the first half of the 18th century, all sorts of stupid jokes, provocations and sharp attacks on dissenters thrived in a fashion rather similar to the kind of discourse frequently found on today's social media. But why and how did public discourse become more polished during the 18th century? Is it possible to generalize the process that discourse in early Danish journals underwent? And is there hope for today's public discourse on social media or are we lost in moral blindness and lack of sensitivity as Baumann puts it? The paper seeks the answer through a dual analytical strategy, first an examination of the conceptions of reason, emotion and morality introduced by early Danish journals and second, a sociohistorical study of authors and editors of the journals. The theoretical standpoint is the intersection between theory on the public sphere (Habermas and T{\"o}nnies), mediatization theory (Averbeck-Lietz), and philosophy/sociology of knowledge (Berger, Brinkmannand Gustavsson).",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Danish 18th century journals, Facebook discourse, public sphere, mediatization, philosophy of knowledge, Danish 18th century journals, Facebook discourse, public sphere, mediatization, philosophy of knowledge",
author = "Lisbeth Wors{\o}e-Schmidt",
year = "2017",
month = sep,
day = "20",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 12-10-2017 Through 14-10-2017",
url = "http://1700-tal.se/ncecs17/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - The forgotten form of knowledge

AU - Worsøe-Schmidt, Lisbeth

N1 - Conference code: 2

PY - 2017/9/20

Y1 - 2017/9/20

N2 - The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danishjournals and nowadays Facebook discourse. Contemplating the early display of the public sphere in the 18th century, one is struck by the ease with which participants conduct themselves within the emerging institution. This does not correspond very well with Habermas' notion of public reasoning as “peculiarand without historical precedent”. On closer examination, it turns out that only a minority, namely the very people whose names and works have survived in history and literary history, held this ease. Most of the very early Danish general periodicals show a different picture. During the first half of the 18th century, all sorts of stupid jokes, provocations and sharp attacks on dissenters thrived in a fashion rather similar to the kind of discourse frequently found on today's social media. But why and how did public discourse become more polished during the 18th century? Is it possible to generalize the process that discourse in early Danish journals underwent? And is there hope for today's public discourse on social media or are we lost in moral blindness and lack of sensitivity as Baumann puts it? The paper seeks the answer through a dual analytical strategy, first an examination of the conceptions of reason, emotion and morality introduced by early Danish journals and second, a sociohistorical study of authors and editors of the journals. The theoretical standpoint is the intersection between theory on the public sphere (Habermas and Tönnies), mediatization theory (Averbeck-Lietz), and philosophy/sociology of knowledge (Berger, Brinkmannand Gustavsson).

AB - The forgotten form of knowledge: Similarities between early 18th century Danishjournals and nowadays Facebook discourse. Contemplating the early display of the public sphere in the 18th century, one is struck by the ease with which participants conduct themselves within the emerging institution. This does not correspond very well with Habermas' notion of public reasoning as “peculiarand without historical precedent”. On closer examination, it turns out that only a minority, namely the very people whose names and works have survived in history and literary history, held this ease. Most of the very early Danish general periodicals show a different picture. During the first half of the 18th century, all sorts of stupid jokes, provocations and sharp attacks on dissenters thrived in a fashion rather similar to the kind of discourse frequently found on today's social media. But why and how did public discourse become more polished during the 18th century? Is it possible to generalize the process that discourse in early Danish journals underwent? And is there hope for today's public discourse on social media or are we lost in moral blindness and lack of sensitivity as Baumann puts it? The paper seeks the answer through a dual analytical strategy, first an examination of the conceptions of reason, emotion and morality introduced by early Danish journals and second, a sociohistorical study of authors and editors of the journals. The theoretical standpoint is the intersection between theory on the public sphere (Habermas and Tönnies), mediatization theory (Averbeck-Lietz), and philosophy/sociology of knowledge (Berger, Brinkmannand Gustavsson).

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Danish 18th century journals, Facebook discourse, public sphere, mediatization, philosophy of knowledge

KW - Danish 18th century journals

KW - Facebook discourse

KW - public sphere

KW - mediatization, philosophy of knowledge

UR - http://1700-tal.se/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/NCECS17-%E2%80%93-Book-of-abstracts.pdf

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 12 October 2017 through 14 October 2017

ER -

ID: 183875856