[future shock] WOPPWOW

I don’t even know where to begin with this one.

Gear Queer + Favela Chic? Brazenly ‘of the Zeitgeist,’ yet lo-fi and kind of understated. Bonus marks for Bowie and Google Earth.

And, once you’ve adjusted your brain, there’s even a website.

(via Rory Hyde and Emile Zile)

Epizo(ot)ic Media

With DARPA threatening to enlist America’s patriotic dogs in the defense of their homeland, and the IEET looking at the rights of non-human persons, this whole interest-nexus seems pretty close to simmering over (note to self: really need to read Johnson’s Where Good Ideas Come From).

Definitions:

  • epizoic adj 1 describes a nonparasitic animal or plant that lives on the external surface of a living animal, 2 describes plants whose seeds or spores are dispersed by being attached to the coats of animals
  • epizootic adj describes an outbreak of disease that rapidly affects many animals in a given area at the same time

This, then, is the other side of the cyborg/robot coin — machines and animals/plants as ways of interrogating the boundaries and agency of ‘the human’, as we move forward. Adding biology to technology (esp. media), rather than the other way round.

Theun Karelse, writing at the Institute for Augmented Ecology:

Non-humans are fitted with wearable technology, in past decades it has predominantly been GPS, but what happens when they start carrying rich mobile media like we do?

In its original set-up groWorld at FoAM set out to investigate interactions between plants and humans from multiple perspectives. This includes work on minimising borders and maximising edges between man-made and vegetal, by entangling culture & cultivation {sym}, building & growing {bio} and nature & technology {sys}. Some HPI-s (human plant interaction) prototyped at FoAM are human-plant gaming, plantbased solarcells and a foraging application for smartphone. Later Angelo Vermeulen has been working with cockroaches for his Entomograph see insects. IforAE, a temporary research within FoAM is currently investigating epizoic (epizootic) media to look at trans-species social networks.

Check out his list of projects — an set of items that should help you start to bend your brain around the (still permeable) boundaries of the field.

Further reading:

[future shock] 8 theses on cyborgism

I like (most) cyborgs.

Cyborg Madonna
Creative Commons License photo credit: Walraven

I like Donna Haraway, Ghost in the Shell, and talking at length about technological prostheses.

And here we are, doing just that.

This round of discussion has its roots tangled messily round Tim Maly‘s 50 cyborgs, a month of posts celebrating the term’s fiftieth anniversary, back in September. This was something Chairman Bruce described as:

‘a large clique of obviously intelligent and creative people who all more or less know each other through the Internet, and are all loosely riffing about cyborgs, and what-cyborg-means-to-them.’

Then, more recently, we had Amber Case at TED and Lepht Anonym talking about self-bootstrapping with implants. In reaction, Matthew Battles wrote a piece for Gearfuse, which M1k3y read and tweeted. Based on that piece, I had a late night discussion with Matthew about who gets to be a cyborg, which Tim Maly later compiled and annotated on Storify.

With me thus far? Good.

Next, we took it into a Google Document and – 13,000 words and two days later – found ourselves with a mammoth discussion/exploration of all kinds of nuances and discontinuities in our use of the term ‘cyborg’, with contributions from Tim Maly, Amber Case, Matthew Battles, Tim Carmody, Ella Saitta, Deb Chachra, Hilary Dixon, Adam Rothstein, and others. None of whom I have met in the flesh — something worth highlighting.

Strange and all kinds of epic.

Now, there’s a lot of these 13,000 words to leak out over the coming weeks and months, but this is something that stuck with me. Originally authored by Tim Carmody, but edited by committee — to the point where we felt we could agree.

Thus: 8 theses on cyborgism. Martin Luther by way of Steve Mann, though, if that’s the case, I’m not sure what we’re supposed to nail it to. The TED website? Donna Haraway’s office at UC Santa Cruz?

Either way, here’s what we came up with:

  1. Pointing to something like cell-phone use and saying “we’re all cyborgs” is not substantially different from pointing to cooking or writing and saying “we’re all cyborgs.”
  2. Cooking and writing are nothing to sneeze at! They’re important technologies that we’ve incorporated nearly seamlessly into our psychological lives and (in the case of cooking) our biological evolution.
  3. Despite our long-running species enmeshment in technology, we’re witnessing the emergence of something closer to the popular techno-organic image of the cyborg, if not necessarily the original idea of either the cyborg or the broader field of cybernetics.
  4. That new thing (whatever form it takes) is bigger than computers or phones or consumer communication technologies. It points to the incorporation of technological components that violate or transform the bodily/agential integrity of human beings.
  5. This is happening in a way that’s partially invisible, as part of the medical/industrial/networked aspects of our societies (tooth fillings, drugs, Google Instant, etc.), and in a way that’s much more visible, more closely related to our ideas of disability, transgenderism, etc.
  6. This presents a weird synthesis of the classic idea of the cyborg, the development of medical technology, the evolution of consumer technology, and identity politics.
  7. Cyborgs have a troubling dual origin, which includes both mega-reliance on techno infrastructure and homesteading DIY self-emancipation. This tension will not go away.
  8. Equally, this tension is nothing new. This is a tension that began in earnest during the Macy conferences in the 1940s, when cyberneticists, technologists and anthropologists began to meet to discuss this very subject.

I have a great deal of fondness for this list, even as it dodges controversy by charting a safer path. How about you? Partially-formed thoughts? Observations? Strident cries of diagreement?

Let us know.