Hey! I Saw Them Live*

Introduction

Alison Landsberg’s discussion of prosthetic memory and Yoni Van Den Eede’s concept of mediational extensions form a comprehensive analysis of how we interact with media in the modern day, and how this media ultimately impacts us and our sense of identities. This dynamic relationship, and the complexities it introduces into our lives, is applicable in our modern entertainment scene, particularly through studying how concerts and live performances have been transformed with the introduction of smartphones and personal digital recording devices. Laura Glitsos delineates the role of documentation in live music, and how this aspect of concerts has mutated as technology develops. These sources work together to provide an explanation for how these concepts work with one another and how they can be applied to situations in our modern world.

Media Extensions and Prosthetic Memories

Landsberg’s writing centres on memory and its place in our lives. Memories “validate our experiences” as by simply having a memory, one logically has the experience that it represents (176). However, Landsberg contradicts this notion of memory through her article’s primary focus: prosthetic memory. Prosthetic memories “do not come from a person’s lived experience in any strict sense”, and are instead the product of reliance on third-party influence to create the illusion of experience and memory (Landsberg 175). These third-parties are often technologies or media used as extensions of a person’s selfhood. Van Den Eede’s writings support Landsberg’s definition of prosthetic memory, explicitly describing technology as “an extension of the human being, of human organs, body parts, senses, capabilities, and so on”(153). As an extension of humanity, technology immediately becomes a form of prosthesis and, by effect, an integral asset in creating prosthetic memories. These “technologies [that] structure and circumscribe experience” texturize and dramaticize the contents of prosthetic memories, and are, at their core, vessels for communication (Landsberg 176).

In his discussion of media as an extension of humans, Van Den Eede continuously cites Marshall McLuhan. McLuhan emphasizes the roles of “rhetoric, grammar, and logic”, arguing that media “are linguistic entities that “translate one thing, that is, a human function, into another, that is, an artifact”(Van Den Eede 159). This theory corroborates both the process of mediation described in Tim Ingold’s, Making, and Gregory Bateson’s definition of language as a structure dependent on its context. As dictated by McLuhan, media communicates rhetoric using grammar that is understood through logic, mirroring the semiotic processes Tim Ingold uses to describe the process of making. Like Ingold, McLuhan views media as a sort of transducer, representing ideas in material form, enabling communication in our societies, and effectively acting as “the glue that binds our human reality together”(Ingold 102, Van Den Eede 159). Memories are the base of our realities, making this communication indescribably important in our lives.

Building off this semiotic model, McLuhan further describes media as “translations of us, the users, from one form into another form: metaphors”(Van Den Eede 159). He implores us to reconsider what language is, evoking Bateson’s definition of language as a “digital system” wherein “signs have no correspondence of magnitude” and thus the differences between these signs can only hold meaning “determined by reference to a larger system of rules within which that difference functions”(Wolfe 235). Per Bateson, language only holds meaning because of its structure, just as McLuhan’s definition of media holds that the true impact or meaning of media can only be understood within the larger context in which it is situated. Similarly, without context, our memories–natural and prosthetic–would be unintelligible and meaningless.

Effectively, prosthetic memories cannot exist without considering technology and media as an extension of ourselves, just as language is arguably an extension of ourselves. Landsberg and Van Den Eede’s works form a reciprocal relationship in the theories they espouse: as an extension of humanity, media becomes a vessel for prosthetic memory, while the creation of prosthetic memories give these media extensions a purpose.

Our Memories and Time

An interesting instance of Landsberg and Van Den Eede’s theories in practice is the increasing prevalence of digital recording technology in concert and live music spaces. Recording has long been an integral aspect of live music performances, to the extent that “the live performance is produced through the processes of recording” defining it as a cultural artefact “entwined with the aspects of that production”(Glitsos 35). However, the advent of the smartphone revolutionizes this aspect of concerts as users “not only view moving images but also [create] them”(Glitsos 36). This provides the viewer total agency over the narration of their experience, and thus the memories they create.

Landsberg categorizes memories as “a domain of the present” whose primary purpose is to construct strategies in the now through which someone can live in the future (176). In practice, concert-goers record videos and photographs as a precursor to potential memory lapse, effectively visuallizing a future wherein they forget the experience of the concert. However, in that process, we corrupt the experience of the concert with the documentation of the videos. The memories of the experience take precedence over the experience itself.

Related to this phenomenon, Fredric Jameson declared that we see “the waning of our historicity, of our lived possibility of experiencing history in some active way”(Landsberg 177). Essentially, in the age of post-modernity–increasingly so as the digital age progresses–true experience is dead. Instead, prosthetic memory has so thoroughly complicated the relationship between memory and experience that media is used to record our experiences to an extent that effectively transforms potential ‘real’ memories into prosthetic ones. Instead of watching the artists live and living truly in the present, we concern ourselves with the future, opting to watch the show through the screen of whatever recording device we brought.

A Dependance on Documentation

A byproduct of this relationship between extensions and prosthetic memories is the “unsettled boundaries between real and simulated [memories]” and the subsequent disruption “of the human body” and “its subjective autonomy”(Landsberg 175). Van Den Eede notes these disruptions, expanding on how “the technological extension of a human function produces a heightening of intensity within that function, body part or sense”(158). By exacerbating the strength of a human function, these technologies highlight the fallacies of the organic human form, including our ability to retain memories. Technology expedites the act of recording–a process that has traditionally been performed by a person and their memory–making it a readily available form of memory prosthesis. This immediacy of personal technologies facilitates a reliance on them, one that would ultimately be both a cause and effect of a general decline to our organic memories. For example, “the camera phone augments the drive to collect and save live music experiences” with the recordings’ ultimate purpose is to act as a preservation of the experience that can be repeated (Glitsos 37). We have access to our phones, so we use them in place of our eyes, experiencing a concert through a screen instead of in real-time.

Essentially: if there is an opportunity to record memories elsewhere, why would we rely on our fallible minds?  

Prosthetic Emotions 

Despite the questionable ways in which they are ultimately experienced, live music and concerts remain popular, speaking to a “popular longing to experience history in a personal and even bodily way”(Landsberg 178). Evidently, people still have a desire to create these memories of experiences even if their authenticity is debateable. This desire to “create experiences and to implant memories” of “[experiences] of which we have never lived” is motivated by how these memories become experiences that “consumers both possess and feel possessed by”(Landsberg 176). Prosthetic memories have a comparable impact on our selfhoods and identities to ‘real’ memories. Regardless of how they were ultimately created and recorded, the experiences feel real, and impact us accordingly. Though Landsberg’s example of films differentiates more distinctly between the prosthetic and the truly experienced, her concept is applicable to live performances as well. Concert-goers watch through their phones, corrupting the true experience, but the ultimate emotional impact of the experience “might be as significant in constructing, or deconstructing, the spectator’s identity as any experience that s/he actually lived through”(Landsberg 180).

The proportional impact that prosthetic memories have on our selves when compared to traditional memories suggests an eventual era when “we might no longer be able to distinguish prosthetic or ‘unnatural’ memories from ‘real’ ones”(Landsberg 180). Evidently, Landsberg views us and our media extensions as two distinctly separate entities. By contrast, Van Den Eede specifies that technology and media compensate for our own deficiencies “by taking action, more specifically by deploying tools and prostheses”(154). This definition is complicit in establishing a reliance on media that facilitates a codependent relationship between humans and their mediational extensions, yet the intended purpose of these extensions is to achieve things that we cannot perform organically. Through this relationship, the era of differentiation between prosthetic and ‘real’ memories has arguably already come to an end.

The allure of media extensions and their impact on the creation of memories is explicitly displayed in their superfluous use in live performance settings. Through our smartphones–the extensions and facilitators of prosthetic memories in this context–concert-goers become “both hero and narrator of their own epic”(Glitsos 40). The aforementioned agency provided by smartphones offers their users a form through which they can insert themselves into the recorded moment. This particular concept is ironic considering someone must be present to an experience to properly record it. However, these recordings give the user a point through which they can insert themselves once more in the moment once it has passed, further reinforcing Landsberg’s emphasis of memory as a function of the present.

Conclusion

Landsberg and Van Den Eede indirectly highlight a reciprocal relationship between the media extensions we use, and the prosthetic memories their use creates. These sources reformulate concepts we have discussed in class, further exemplifying language as defined by Bateson, and offering another layer of complexity to the theories proposed by Ingold through their dual citation of McLuhan. The complicated relationship between humans and their media extensions represent a transition into a new media era, and the prosthetic memories created through this relationship are symbols of the potential obsolescence of ‘real’ memory. These relationships and their consequences can be observed through our habitual use of smartphones in concerts and how they reflect many of the concepts that both Landsberg and Van Den Eede describe.

Works Cited

Glitsos, Laura. “The Camera Phoen in the Concert Space: Live Music and Moving Images on the Screen.” Music, Sound, and the Moving Image, vol. 12, no. 1, 2018, pp. 33-52. https://doi.org/10.3828/msmi.2018.2

Ingold, Tim. Making. Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

Landsberg, Alison. “Prosthetic Memory: Total Recall and Blade Runner.” Cyberspace/Cyberbodies/Cyberpunk: Cultures of Technological Embodiment, edited by Mike Featherstone and Roger Burrows, SAGE Publications, 1995, pp. 175-189.

Van Den Eede, Yoni. “Extending “Extension”: A Reappraisal of the Technology-as-Extension idea through the Case of Self-Tracking Technologies.” Design Mediation & The Posthuman, Lexington Books, 2014, pp. 151-172.

Wolfe, Cary. “Language.” Critical Terms for Media Studies, edited by W.J.T Mitchell and Mark B.N. Hansen, The University of Chicago Press, 2010, pp. 233-248.

Image by Molly Kingsley

Written by Molly Kingsley

7 thoughts on “Hey! I Saw Them Live*”

  1. Hey Molly–
    This is a super interesting post and I appreciate just how many different scholars and ideas you were able to bring into it. I particularly liked this line: “We have access to our phones, so we use them in place of our eyes, experiencing a concert through a screen instead of in real-time”. I have felt this way before when taking videos at a concert, temporarily becoming unable to watch the artist onstage because I had to make sure my hand was steady and the framing of the shot looked alright. It really does take you out of the moment for the sake of having a nice video to watch later and remember the show by. I think there comes a point when, if too much time is spent recording a concert, the experience of the show is actually only lived retrospectively when watching those videos. I have a friend who does something which I think is really smart; she turns on Voice Memos and puts her phone in her pocket at concerts for the artists she really loves. There can be almost a sense of “missing out” that we feel nowadays if we can’t record special experiences– and I think a lot of this is to do with the performativity of social media. Sometimes just knowing that you can listen back to the live sound of a performance at a later time can allow for a better sense of presence in the moment.

  2. As someone who constantly goes to concerts and live performances, I found your post really interesting. The concept of prosthetic memories is new to me, but after reading about it, I can see how it connects to our class discussions on semiotics, especially the way people attach meaning to objects, signs, and experience. Landsberg’s idea that we can feel deep emotions for experiences we’ve never personally lived through really stood out to me.

    I actually see this in my own concert-going experiences. Whenever I miss seeing one of my favorite artists live, I feel a strong sense of disappointment. Their music already holds emotional meaning and memories for me, so attending a concert feels like a way to relive or even heal those emotions. If the song is sad, hearing it live helps me process it, if it’s happy, it amplifies my joy. After each concert, I leave with new emotions and new memories attached to those songs. When I listen to them again later, I’m instantly taken back to that moment.

    I also relate to what you mentioned about recording performances. I always record parts of concerts so I can ”unlock” those memories later. Watching the video helps me relive the moment, it’s like my own form of memory prosthesis. But I agree with you that recording can take away from the real experience in the moment. It’s a constant balance between being present and preserving the memory.

  3. Hi Molly!

    Great post! As someone who just went to their first concert, I felt the need to document the moment! However, the whole reason for going to a concert is to be in the moment and experience this artist live! I have been trying to stray away from short-form content and, it may be placebo, but I feel my brain relaxing. I can consume more information than I could in weeks prior. I have gained more brain capacity to remember and process, and I feel more purposeful with my thoughts. It seems filling up my brain without using prosthetic memory has helped my own memory! I do not know if this is a universal experience or I am just grasping at straws, but your post made me reflect on my own reliance of a technological memory. Do you have any of these relatable experiences?

    Great job!

  4. Hi Molly! I was intrigued by how you discussed about the relation between prosthetic memories and the experience of people get in a concert. I recalled some of my own experiences with concerts, and I do have to admit that the limited recordings that I have stored away in my devices just cannot compare to the actual experience and emotions that I had when I was watching them live with the crowd around me. I had tried reviving my memories, and in the hope of recalling what I had felt, searched for official recordings of the concert online, hoping that the professional cameras have a better view and the captured the memories better, but I did not even finish watching the recordings once – no matter the equipment they used. I can tell the memories are new ones, prosthetic memories, compared to the memories I had experience first hand.
    This lead me wondering whether one can tell the difference if they did not go to the concert in person at all. All of their memories about the event will have to be acquired from the recordings – certainly this is still an experience for them, but without a “real” memory as reference object, can it still be considered prosthetic memories? Or is it only prosthetic when they believe what they’ve experienced is the same as the people who went to the concerts? Maybe this is something to think about.
    I love how you framed and explained prosthetic memories in your own way! This has been very inspiring for me to read as well.

  5. Hi Molly this was a fun interesting blog post. I enjoyed your connection to Landsberg’s idea of prosthetic memory with Van Den Eede’s concept of technological extension and your example of concerts and smartphone recording. The point about how people experience live music “through a screen instead of in real time” really stood out to me. It made me think about how much our sense of presence and authenticity has changed, how now the act of recording has become part of the experience itself.
    I also enjoyed how you brought in McLuhan and Bateson to frame media as language. That connection helped me better understand how technologies don’t just extend our senses but actually shape how we perceive and remember. It makes me wonder if prosthetic and “real” memories are even that different anymore, or if technology has simply woven them together as part of how we experience and remember things today

  6. Hi Molly!!

    I really enjoyed reading your post! I liked how you tied together so many of our readings and even went beyond the course material by bringing in Glitsos. You did an excellent job connecting theory to something so relatable. The way you used concerts and recording culture as an example made these ideas about prosthetic memory and media extensions feel more digestible. As someone who goes to concerts a lot, I totally related to that feeling of wanting to record everything while also knowing it changes how you experience the show in the moment.

    I liked the quote you found that describes people using their phones to record as “both hero and narrator of their own epic.” That line captures so well how recording shifts our role from observer to participant. It made me think about how that connects to the idea of memory as something we’re always trying to preserve or control. This highlights how much technology shapes not just what we remember, but how we remember.

    This really reminded me of the concept of the aura. Do you think the constant presence of phones at concerts kills the “aura” of live performance, or does it create a new kind of shared aura that exists through documentation and social media? Like, when we rewatch a clip we took or share it online, are we just repeating the moment, or are we creating a whole new kind of experience that still has emotional value?

    Super interesting read!

  7. Hi Molly.
    This is sooper cool. I really like how you intertwined further external readings into comparing these two texts. It really stuck with me the idea of having our phones extend and externalise how we experience reality. Like a sort of prosthetic mediation to access memories and emotions that we feel in the moment. It was mentioned in a previous comment, but that line from Glitsos about being a hero and narrator was really impactful. Especially if one thinks about the emotional linkage that was described in Landberg’s text to prosthetic memories. This is really relatable and incredibly well written.

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