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History is marked by catastrophic events that defy meaning and
understanding. The 20th century was a century of prosperity and
progress; it was also history's bloodiest. The death toll from war
and genocide reached 140 million people. Trauma of this magnitude
poses grave challenges to memory and thought. This work explores
failures of memory and cognition - the blackout - as a condition
that plagues history, and is particularly problematic in an era of
media, in which memory is increasingly disembodied and virtualized,
undermined by a Generalized Media Disorder. Technologies of media
and war are creating a condition in which the virtual world is
displacing the ethical world. BLACKOUT traces this phenomenon
through a century of upheaval - from World War I, which exceeded
all previous notions of destruction, to the War on Terror, a
perpetual war in a realm of perpetual media. World War II is
particularly significant in its deployment of previously
unfathomable technologies of disappearance - extermination, nuclear
weapons, and the massive incineration of cities in Germany and
Japan. The blackout is a space of memory and thinking that
collapses with catastrophe and falls into a stupor. Our humanity
has been nearly extinguished by the tremendous violence it has
enacted, pushing philosophy, language and ethics to their limits.
Joan Grossman is an award-winning documentary filmmaker and video
artist, based in Brooklyn, New York. Her work has been shown in
more than 20 countries. She also teaches media theory and
production, and received her doctorate in Media Philosophy from the
European Graduate School in Switzerland.
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