Plato’s prescription: the origin myth of media theory
Plato’s prescription: the origin myth of media theory
Plato’s Phaedrus, perhaps his most enigmatic and structurally convoluted dialogue, could easily be said to inaugurate a pointed critique of mass media that persists to the present day. Indeed, in certain corners of media theory, the origin myth of writing furnished in the Phaedrus (in which the Egyptian god Theuth presents writing as a gift to King Thamus) has in turn come to serve as a kind of origin myth for media theory: a primaeval pharmacopoeia of media effects. And yet, this is an origin myth that can only underwrite not only its own non-originarity and non-truth, insofar as its very status as a written text ensures that it will never meet the criteria that it itself establishes for a reasoned account of things (logos). It remains perpetually orphaned, unable to defend itself, irrevocably cut off from its ‘father’, the speaking subject, and thus from the vitality of living discourse. But this paradox, I argue, is not a failing of the dialogue, but is a device intended to encourage the reader’s active involvement in the text’s status as medium. The Phaedrus is not just diagnostic, but therapeutic.
philosophy, communication, dialogue, speech, media theory, Plato, Jacques Derrida
203-232
Sutherland, Thomas
a9a8e23c-232e-47ca-9be6-abeac690bfb2
19 December 2022
Sutherland, Thomas
a9a8e23c-232e-47ca-9be6-abeac690bfb2
Sutherland, Thomas
(2022)
Plato’s prescription: the origin myth of media theory.
Media Theory, 6 (2), .
Abstract
Plato’s Phaedrus, perhaps his most enigmatic and structurally convoluted dialogue, could easily be said to inaugurate a pointed critique of mass media that persists to the present day. Indeed, in certain corners of media theory, the origin myth of writing furnished in the Phaedrus (in which the Egyptian god Theuth presents writing as a gift to King Thamus) has in turn come to serve as a kind of origin myth for media theory: a primaeval pharmacopoeia of media effects. And yet, this is an origin myth that can only underwrite not only its own non-originarity and non-truth, insofar as its very status as a written text ensures that it will never meet the criteria that it itself establishes for a reasoned account of things (logos). It remains perpetually orphaned, unable to defend itself, irrevocably cut off from its ‘father’, the speaking subject, and thus from the vitality of living discourse. But this paradox, I argue, is not a failing of the dialogue, but is a device intended to encourage the reader’s active involvement in the text’s status as medium. The Phaedrus is not just diagnostic, but therapeutic.
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 February 2022
Published date: 19 December 2022
Keywords:
philosophy, communication, dialogue, speech, media theory, Plato, Jacques Derrida
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Local EPrints ID: 495178
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495178
PURE UUID: 11ebf4a6-2d58-4166-b51b-d77539ef97c3
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Date deposited: 31 Oct 2024 17:34
Last modified: 01 Nov 2024 03:09
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Author:
Thomas Sutherland
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