Research Seminar: ‘Investigating digitally mediated temporal experience’
- Date: Wednesday 11 February 2026, 15:45 – 17:00
- Location: Clothworkers North Building LT (G.12)
- Cost: Free
The aim of this talk is to set out an empirical framework for scrutinizing the ethical dimensions of digitally mediated temporal experience
Much recent scholarship in the field of media phenomenology has investigated the role of temporality in shaping our experience of digital media in everyday life, as well as the ethical and political ramifications that flow from it. Consistent with the central phenomenological tenet of locating the present as ontologically prior to any past origin, the idea is that in order to properly understand the texture of day-to-day digital navigation our focus should not be on discrete media texts or objects, but on the way they are experienced first and foremost as presents into which we find ourselves repeatedly thrown. The aim of this talk is to establish an empirical framework for scrutinizing the ethical dimensions of digitally mediated temporal experience. The traces of this experience are not paths from a past or causal origin, but traces of mobility experienced as always-already presentness.
Tim Markham is Professor of Journalism and Media at Birkbeck, University of London. He is author of Digital Life (Polity, 2020), Media and the Experience of Social Change: The Arab World (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017), Media and Everyday Life (Palgrave, 2017; 2022), and The Politics of War Reporting: Authority, Authenticity and Morality (Manchester, 2012); co-author of Media Consumption and Public Engagement: Beyond the Presumption of Attention (Palgrave, 2007; 2010) and co-editor of Conditions of Mediation: Phenomenological Perspectives on Media (Peter Lang, 2017).