This international conference is organised by the CD-Hist team (in parallel to the “CD-ROM. One Click, One Story” exhibition). It seeks to explore how digital and computing pasts are remembered, revived, and reimagined. Technostalgia stands at the intersection of personal memory and collective practices, intertwining affects, communities, cultures, heritage, markets and ideologies. Whether through the emulation of obsolete systems, the storytelling of early computing experiences, the maintenance of vintage hardware, the emulation of videogames and dead formats, the aesthetic strategies of retro interfaces and design, a market of “geek” artifacts, activities of communities related to retro-computing or the demo scene, technostalgia opens a fertile ground for analysing both “restorative” and “reflective” relations to past IT technologies (). It invites us to discuss the role of “techno-melancholia” (), memories, different expressions of contemporary nostalgia ( and digital nostalgia (), maintenance and heritagisation, remembrance and restoration (), as well as some “desired return to an ideal past” ().
Programme
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9.30
Welcome and Introduction by Fred Pailler, Valérie Schafer and Alina Volynskaya
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9.45
The Politics of Nostalgia
Chair: Benjamin Thierry (Sorbonne ͷversity)
Jesper Verhoef (ͷversity of Groningen), The Golden Age Myth: How Technostalgia Obscures Neoliberal Histories
Antonino Sciotto (ͷversity of Piemonte Orientale), Overcoming technostalgia. Archiving practices and social movements
Anastasis Fintzos-Vavlis (ͷversity of Athens), “There was magic back then”: Meanings of Nostalgia in Youth Nerd Life-Stories in 1980s and 1990s Greece
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11.15
Break
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11.30
Practices of Reconstruction
Chair: Andreas Fickers (ͷ)
Mario Tirino (ͷversità di Salerno) and Giorgio Busi Rizzi (ͷversiteit Gent), Posting Memories, Playing Machines: Digital Community, Media Heritage, and the Affective Archive through the case of Computer Love Records
Till Heilmann (Ruhr ͷversity Bochum), Networking images: Historical and Nostalgic Practices of GIF 0.0
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12.30
Lunch
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13.15
Web Memories
Chair: Susan Aasman (ͷversity of Groningen)
Johanna Arnesson and Evelina Liliequist (Umeå ͷversity), Generational Memories of the Internet: Digital Nostalgia for Early Swedish Web Communities
Natalie Fridzema (ͷversity of Groningen) and Anya Shchetvina (Humboldt ͷversity), Longing for Autonomy: The Vernacular Web as Technostalgic Activist Imaginary
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14.15
Break
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14.30
Re-Enacting and Sharing
Chair: Katharina Niemeyer (ͷversité du Québec à Montréal)
Julien Mailland (Indiana ͷversity) and Kevin Driscoll (ͷversity of Virginia), Old Tech, New Tricks: Rebuilding Minitel and Creating New Communities
Bruno de Paula and Alison Croasdale (ͷversity College London), Blowing into the cartridge (even though you really shouldn’t): a walking encounter with international shared playing histories and contemporary reselling
Aicha El Waqf (Social Science Lab_MENA), Technostalgia in Moroccan Newsrooms and Classrooms: Afterlives of 1980s–1990s Tools at Morocco’s National Journalism Institute (ISIC)
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16.00
Followed by a visit of the CD-Hist exhibition “CD-ROM. One Click, One Story” at les Rotondes, and drinks until 18.00.
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11.00
Nostalgia at Play
Chair: Sandra Camarda (ͷ)
Thibault Le Page (ͷversity of Geneva and HEAD–Genève), Nostalgia as a Driver: Maintenance and Archiving Practices of Video Games in Japan
Jack Pocaluyko (ͷversity of Oslo), The GUI Repertoire: Performing Desktop Histories in Let’s Play Majerus G3
Sergio Minniti (Mercatorum ͷversity), From Arcades to Heritage and Back: Grassroots Platformisation in the Reappropriation of Arcade Games in Italy
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12.30
Concluding comments by Susan Aasman, Sandra Camarda and Benjamin Thierry
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13.00
End of the conference
Local organisers
CD-Hist Team : Fred Pailler, Valérie Schafer and Alina Volynskaya (C²DH, ͷ)
Scientific Committee
- Susan Aasman (ͷversity of Groningen)
- Sandra Camarda (C²DH, ͷ)
- Andreas Fickers (C²DH, ͷ)
- Stefan Krebs (C²DH, ͷ)
- Katharina Niemeyer (ͷversité du Québec à Montréal)
- Benjamin Thierry (Sorbonne ͷversity)
Registration
Attendance is free, but please register.