drupa Prize 2018 Awarded to Dr. Lisa Handel
For her doctoral thesis on “Maschinengeschichten und Prozesswelten. Interferenzmuster des Ontomedialen zwischen Technowissenschaften und Prozessphilosophien” (Machine Stories and Process Worlds. OntoMedia Interference Patterns between Techno Sciences and Process Philosophies) Dr. Lisa Handel (33) was awarded the drupa Prize 2018. In her doctoral thesis written at the Faculty of Philosophy at Heinrich-Heine University in Düsseldorf the cultural and media scientist calls for a new thinking in view of the increasing computerisation and digitisation of all areas of life.
The drupa Prize comes with prize money of € 6,000 and is offered and presented every year by Messe Düsseldorf. The Prize is meant to recognize top performances in humanities produced at the Faculty of Philosophy at Heinrich-Heine University in Düsseldorf. This year the drupa Prize was presented by Claus Bolza-Schünemann (Chairman of the Board at Koenig & Bauer AG and Chairman of the drupa committee), Hans Werner Reinhard (Management Board of Messe Düsseldorf), Prof. Dr. Andrea von Hülsen-Esch (Vice-Rector for International Affairs at Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf), Prof. Dr. Ulrich Rosar (Dean of the Faculty of Philosophy at Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf) and Prof. Dr. Reinhold Görling of the Cultural and Media Science Institute in the Faculty of Philosophy at Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf. The award ceremony of the drupa Prize – in the 40th year of its existence – was once again held in the presence of invited guests at the Industrie-Club Düsseldorf.
Claus Bolza-Schünemann started his laudatory speech for this year’s prize winner, the 33-year old cultural and media scientist Lisa Handel, by saying that several highly interesting doctoral theses had been submitted to the drupa Prize committee again. The Prize committee comprises of the Rector and Vice-Rector of the Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf, the Chairman of the drupa committee and the CEO & President of Messe Düsseldorf. Nominated for the drupa Prize 2018 were five of the doctoral theses successfully completed and defended in the Faculty of Philosophy at Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf in 2016 and 2017. The doctoral theses covered subjects ranging from Romance and German language studies through cultural and media science to art history and general philology.
All nominees – all female scientists this time – he said, stood out with above-average performances: “Four doctoral theses had received the best mark summa cum laude, one the second-best mark magna cum laude. This alone deserves our praise and congratulations,” says Claus Bolza-Schünemann.
Experts say that the doctoral thesis “Maschinengeschichten und Prozesswelten – Interferenzmuster des Ontomedialen zwischen Technowissenschaften und Prozessphilosophien” awarded with the drupa Prize 2018 is an “extraordinarily complex and innovative study in which current developments in the omnipresence of computerisation are discussed from a media-philosophical perspective.“ In her study the prize winner Lisa Handel “picks up on the process philosophy insights and assumptions of renowned and important philosophers such as Henri Bergson, Alfred North Whitehead and Gilles Deleuze and links them with the theories and practices of techno sciences including digital science and quantum physics.”
With her doctoral thesis the prize winner has not only made “an impressive contribution to linking ‘science and humanities’” says university professor Dr. Ulrich Rosar to explain the nomination of Lisa Handel. At the same time, the cultural and media scientist “provides significant mental figures for gaining a wider understanding of the pressing problem of ecology as a relationship between relations.”
According to Claus Bolza-Schünemann, in her prize-winning doctoral thesis Lisa Handel shows that changes do not just simply occur along the lines of “one day like this, the next like that” but constantly take the shape of processes in all areas of life. Using letterpress printing, the steam engine and telephone as examples, whose development and societal impact Claus Bolza-Schünemann summarises in his laudatory speech, the drupa president reveals the intention of the prize-winning doctoral thesis: that the materials and technologies used are not only meant to an end but also inherently impact events.
Lisa Handel also emphasises in her thesis that humans are not passive observers of the processes, but that “we actively help shape them through our actions”. Seen from this perspective, current events such as the refugee and financial crises, real estate bubbles, environmental disasters and also climate change are – according to Lisa Handel – interim results of processes we have considerably influenced rather than suddenly occurring events.
The publishing house Transcript has included the 2018 drupa Prize-winning doctoral thesis in its portfolio under the title “Ontomedialität: Eine medienphilosophische Perspektive auf die aktuelle Neuverhandlung der Ontologie”. The 400-page volume is scheduled for release in 2018 (ISBN 3837640590, 9783837640595).