This chapter invites the reader to rediscover Nikolai Marr's scientific work, which is situated at the intersection of archaeology, linguistics, and anthropological language theory. Marr's linguistic models, which Sergei Eisenstein compared to a reading of Joyce's Ulysses, underwent however multiple waves of critique. His heterodox materialism, originating in an archaeological vision of history and leading to a speculative 'palaeontology of speech', reveals a complex vision of time, one traversed by 'survivals' and anachronisms. ; Elena Vogman, 'Language Follows Labour: Nikolai Marr's Materialist Palaeontology of Speech', in Materialism and Politics , ed. by Bernardo Bianchi, Emilie Filion-Donato, Marlon Miguel, and Ayşe Yuva, Cultural Inquiry, 20 (Berlin: ICI Berlin Press, 2021), pp. 113–32
The expression 'organization of perception' appears in one of the first paragraphs of Walter Benjamin's essay 'The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility' (1935-36), in a passage that highlights the historical determination of sensory perception. The idea of the historicity of perception – which Benjamin found in art historians such as Alois Riegl, Franz Wickhoff, and Heinrich Wölfflin – lies at the very center of what one can consider his 'media theory'. Yet the notion of an organization of perception also relates to the wider context of aesthetic theories and practices of the 1920s and 1930s, including a series of sensorial experiments exploring this link: Thus, in theorizing rhythm, the Soviet avantgarde negotiates between transgressions of a homogeneous, linear time regime and the industrial organization of movements and frequencies of body, speech, and thought. Projection, on the other hand, structures the perception of light and redefines the materiality of perception in such a radical way that the very notion of materialism is challenged. The workshop considers the relation of media and perception in terms of historicity, rhythm, and projection, thereby connecting to the current ICI Focus 'ERRANS, in Time'. It brings together a number of scholars who have researched particular constellations of the historical, technical, and political organization of perception. Programme Part I 16:00 Welcome 16:10 Antonio Somaini (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3) Light as Medium 16:40 Elena Vogman (DFG project 'Rhythm and Projection' at FU Berlin) Rhythm, Medium, Milieu: On the Memory of Forms 17:00 Gertrud Koch (Freie Universität Berlin) Film Theory as Media Theorie 17:20 Discussion 17:50 Coffee break Part II 18:10 Ekaterina Tewes (DFG project 'Rhythm and Projection' at FU Berlin) Organization of Perception, Organization of Matter 18:30 Georg Witte (DFG project 'Rhythm and Projection' at FU Berlin) Rhythm, Organization, Form 18:50 Clara Masnatta (ICI Berlin) Paradoxical Presence: Projecting ...