Écrans fantômes, fantômes d’écrans : dialectique de la fugacité et la spectralité dans les apparitions technologiques de « disparus »

Autori

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15162/2704-8659/1295

Parole chiave:

fantômes, écrans, hantologie, spectralité, ontologie, ghosts, screens, hauntologie, spectrality, ontology

Abstract

This paper explores the new forms assumed by ghost apparitions, through the screens of new communication and information technologies. It analyses the diversity of the manifestations and the channels through which these new ghosts circulate. It opens up a reflection on the continuities and ruptures of the relationships between technologies and spectres. Moreover, the paper ends up in a discussion on the status of the “spectre” in the context of hyper-mediatised societies.

Cet article explore les nouvelles formes d’apparition fantomatiques qui se manifestent à travers les écrans des nouvelles technologies d’information et de communication. L’analyse de la diversité des manifestations et des supports de ces nouveaux fantômes, ouvre à une réflexion sur les continuités et ruptures dans les rapports entre technologies et spectres. Et à une discussion sur le statut du spectre dans le contexte des sociétés hypermédiatisées.

Biografia autore

Lionel Obadia, University of Lyon

Lionel Obadia, PhD in sociology (1997), has been associate professor of Ethnology (1998-2004) and is currently full professor of Anthropology (since 2004) at the University of Lyon, France. He has also taught in other French universities (EHESS, EPHE, SciencePo). He has been the head of the department of Social Sciences and Humanities at the French Agency for Research (ANR) from 2017 to 2021. He is specialized in anthropology of religion, Asian religions and Globalization. He has conducted fieldworks in France, Europe (on Buddhism in the West), Nepal (on Buddhism and Shamanism) and South India. He has published ten books and more than 150 papers (journal articles and book chapters).

 

Lionel Obadia, docteur en sociologie (1997) a commencé sa carrière comme maitre de conférences en ethnologie (1998-2004) puis comme professeur en anthropologie sociale et culturelle(depuis 2004) à l’université de Lyon, France, et a enseigné dans d’autres universités françaises (EHESS, EPHE, SciencePo). Il a dirigé He has headed the department of Social Sciences and Humanities at the French Agency for Research (ANR) from 2017 to 2021. He is specialized in anthropology of religion, Asian religions and Globalization. He has conducted fieldworks in France, Europe (on Buddhism in the West), Nepal (on Buddhism and Shamanism) and South India. He has published ten books and more than 150 papers (journal articles and book chapters).

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Pubblicato

2021-11-30