Remix in the Age of Ubiquitous Remix
Publication date
2021-08
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Document Type
Article
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cc_by_nc
Abstract
What is remix today? No longer a controversy, no longer a buzzword, remix is both everywhere and nowhere in contemporary media. This article examines this situation, looking at what remix now means when it is, for the most part, just an accepted part of the media landscape. I argue that remix should be looked at from an ethnographic point of view, focused on how and why remixes are used. To that end, this article identifies three ways of conceptualizing remix, based on intention rather than content: the aesthetic, communicative, and conceptual forms. It explores the history of (talking about) remix, looking at the tension between seeing remix as a form of art and remix as a mode of ‘talking back’ to the media, and how those tensions can be resolved in looking at the different ways remix originated. Finally, it addresses what ubiquitous remix might mean for the way we think about archival material, and the challenges this brings for archives themselves. In this way, this article updates the study of remix for a time when remix is everywhere.
Keywords
Archives, digital culture, digitalization, memes, new media culture, remix, remix theory, vidding, Communication, Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
Citation
Waysdorf, A 2021, 'Remix in the Age of Ubiquitous Remix', Convergence : The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies, vol. 27, no. 4, pp. 1129-1144. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354856521994454