CFP – Technology and Culture, “Mechane” 9, 1 (2025)

Technology and Culture

If we can assume the reciprocal relationship between technology and 
culture as coextensive with the human dimension (from the prehistory of 
man to his current stabilization, up to the limit of his possible 
overcoming), it is surprising how the theoretical reflection on this 
relationship comes after, and how it becomes more consistent and 
decisive as this relationship loses its connotation of hendiadys or 
almost hendiadys, so that it appears on the contrary in terms of an open 
tension or even of a real contrast.

In modern capitalist society, due to the expansion of the mechanical 
domain, technology is linked first and foremost, if not exclusively, to 
civilization. Only in this very different, halved, if not even reversed 
form, does something of the ancient hendiadys survive and culture 
appears as a power of an action aimed at modifying reality, objects, 
increasing their value, where the empowerment and increase in value 
however concerned the other side involved in the movement of 
transformation: the subject. The colere, the cultivating, if on the one 
hand it refers to nature, to its transformation and care aimed at making 
it a place habitable by man, a cultivating that accompanies the clearing 
of the land also (and not secondarily!) the “cult” rendered to the gods, 
on the other hand it concerns the “cultivation of the soul”, cultura 
animi in Cicero’s words, that is, a condition of the subject––personal 
culture made possible in turn by the spiritual transformation of the 
environment, ultimately the personal formation and self-realization 
through an objective culture (goods and cultural values). In any case, 
whether this  regards either the object or the subject, the 
transformation is aimed at following its nature, to bring to completion 
the potentialities prefigured in its disposition, not to impose foreign 
forces and purposes (properly one cultivates a plant in order to obtain 
an edible fruit, better than the one that would be naturally produced by 
that very plant, but one does not cultivate a tree to obtain the mast of 
a ship). Now, it is precisely the divergence between objective culture 
and subjective culture, up to a fracture such that the increase of one 
not only does not correspond to the increase of the other but rather 
operates in such a way as to prevent its deployment, which characterizes 
what has been defined as the modern crisis of culture––the modern 
“tragedy of culture,” to use Simmel’s expression, which represents in 
the most acute way the all-modern opposition between technology and 
culture.

With a penetration that finds no equals, this conflict brings into play 
philosophical reflection––but also sociological, historical, artistic 
and literary considerations, in short the entire German culture––in the 
years between “Bismark and Weimar,” to take up here the subtitle of a 
collection of essays dedicated precisely to the relationship between 
technology and culture, which well restores the richness of a debate 
destined to mark in the form of an insurmountable dichotomy (but also of 
the opposition to it) the reflection to come, well beyond Germany and 
Europe itself and for the entire twentieth century, or at least 
certainly until the end of the Cold War and the “unification of the 
entire world under Capital.” The pairs of opposites in which the 
dichotomy “technology and culture” is specified in this debate, of which 
“no serious comparison on this issue can fail to take into account” 
(Technology and culture, 1975), are widely known: “Zivilisation/Kultur,” 
“Mechanisierung/Kultur,” “Spirit/Soul” (or even “Spirit/Life”) are just 
some of a long list, which together with keywords such as for example 
“Intellectualization”, “Disenchantment”, “Relativism” (and their 
opposites) mark the disintegration of Culture or even the full 
realization of its nihilistic essence, if we understand culture with 
Heidegger “as the realization of the supreme values, through the 
commitment in favor of the highest goods of man,” accompanied by 
“analogous commitment to itself, thus becoming a politics of culture” 
(The age of the image of the world, 1977).

This story, which decisively seals the relationship between “technology 
and culture” and sinks a significant part of its roots in Nietzsche’s 
critique of the modern scientific factory of culture (well summarized in 
the formula “internal culture for external barbarians”), finds its most 
powerful neutralization and defeat in the stigmatization of this 
opposition in terms of reactive and reactionary criticism of declining 
intellectual bourgeois strata, aristocratic mandarinism which paved the 
way for Nazi madness, when not directly high intellectual fascism and 
petty-bourgeois and provincial defense. A powerful apparatus of revision 
and rehabilitation of mass culture, of the information society, of its 
progressive and democratic character (“inclusive” we would say today), 
has been affirmed over time in different latitudes, becoming hegemonic 
in public discourse. Although it seems not to ignore (first of all in 
order to defuse in advance any objection) the fascination with 
technology typical of certain revolutionary and nationalist right, as 
well as the potentially totalitarian character and  exploitation of the 
mega-capitalist machine (or of less thunderous but not without grip 
accusations, such as those of conformism, homogenization and more or 
less occult persuasion of the cultural industry), such a device 
abdicates from any critical attitude and willingly supports the progress 
and new evolutions of mass technologies, the last of which pertain to 
the digital culture.

The question that this issue of “Mechane” wants to try to answer is then 
to what extent the paradigm of the opposition “technology and 
culture”––distinctive of the past criticism of advanced 
capitalism––should be considered obsolete and captivated by outdated 
grand narratives in our era of “cultivated technology” (kultivierte 
Technik), as well as of a fully developed “technical culture.” In the 
light of the “new spirit of capitalism” (call it as you please: 
“platform-capitalism,” “data capitalism,” “surveillance capitalism” and 
so on) is there still a tension not entirely resolved between technology 
and culture? And if there is, in what form and following––or not 
following––which philosophical traditions and/or “critical theories?

With this in mind, we invite you to submit contributions for the number 
9 of “Mechane.” The issues to be addressed include, among others:

–        Genealogical aspects of the link between technology and culture 
in the philosophical field;
–        The role of technology in the definition of the categories of 
modern and postmodern, with particular attention to the anthropological 
and philosophical tradition;
–        Different models of development of the relationship between 
technology and culture;
–        Transformation, organization, innovation of culture and 
promotion of technical culture and culture of innovation;
–        Technology and new material and immaterial cultures;
–        Culture and new technological society of the spectacle;
–        Culture and education, technological education and 
technological organization of education.

Submissions are invited in Italian, English, French, German, and 
Spanish. Please forward a brief abstract (no more than 500 words) to 
mechane.journal@gmail.com by December 15, 2024. Authors of accepted 
proposals will be requested to submit the complete paper (no more than 
40,000 characters) by April 15, 2025. All submissions will be subject to 
peer review.

https://www.mimesisjournals.com/ojs/index.php/mechane/call-for-papers