Academics Cartesian Minefield Material/Digital Politics/Economics Speculations Technology [future shock]
by Justin
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[future shock] 8 theses on cyborgism
I like (most) cyborgs.
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:
- 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.”
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
Academics Cartesian Minefield Memory Politics/Economics Speculations
by Justin
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Dunagan on Neuropolitics
As a precis, the final chunk his concluding paragaph is incredibly apposite, but go – read the complete article. It’s solid stuff, with a brace of excellent case studies; well worth checking out.
‘There are certainly new and opposite cognitive, social, and political forms taking shape before us: artificial intelligences, cyborgs, posthuman subjectivity, a breakdown of mind along with the destruction of the planet, a technoprogressive democracy, a society of control networked from synapse to street, and on and on. This paper was an attempt to look out the window at our minds as they reach the “sound barrier,” and what possibilities, if any, might lie just beyond the sonic boom. We’re almost there; meet you on the other side.’
– Jake Dunagan, 2010, ‘Politics for the Neurocentric Age’, Journal of Futures Studies 15 (2), p. 67.
Built Environment Cartesian Minefield Politics/Economics Science! Speculations Technology [future shock]
by Justin
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[future shock] ‘a new body-mind relationship’
From anthropologist Michael Taussig, the following paragraph has been lingering; floating on the surface on my consciousness as cognitive duckweed. Once tangled up in the pond pump, it has proved all-but-impossible to remove.
‘For the question arises as to whether a new body will be formed as that other body we call planet earth heats up? Certainly changes are already happening down to the genetic level with insects and plants. As regards us humans equipped with a body whose thermostat will be reset together with other basic adjustments, might we not come to possess a new body-mind relationship such that our body’s understanding of itself shall change? Even more important in changing the old-fashioned mind-body setup will be the cultural changes — that foreboding sense of cliff-hanging insecurity in a world ever more engaged with security in a climate gone terrorist.’
– Michael Taussig, 2009, What Color is the Sacred?, p. 14
Cartesian Minefield Politics/Economics Speculations Technology Writing [future shock]
by Justin
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[future shock] Haruki Murakami: Reality A & Reality B
Couple of excerpts from a great New York Times piece. Haruki Murakami on 9/11, network realism, and the challenges for 21st century fiction:
‘Viewed from such a professional perspective, it would seem that the interface between us and the stories we encounter underwent a greater change than ever before at some point when the world crossed (or began to cross) the millennial threshold. Whether this was a change for the good or a less welcome change, I am in no position to judge. About all I can say is that we can probably never go back to where we started.
Speaking for myself, one of the reasons I feel this so strongly is the fact that the fiction I write is itself undergoing a perceptible transformation. The stories inside me are steadily changing form as they inhale the new atmosphere. I can clearly feel the movement happening inside my body. Also happening at the same time, I can see, is a substantial change in the way readers are receiving the fiction I write.’
‘We often wonder what it would have been like if 9/11 had never happened — or at least if that plan had not succeeded so perfectly. Then the world would have been very different from what it is now. America might have had a different president (a major possibility), and the Iraq and Afghanistan wars might never have happened (an even greater possibility).
Let’s call the world we actually have now Reality A and the world that we might have had if 9/11 had never happened Reality B. Then we can’t help but notice that the world of Reality B appears to be realer and more rational than the world of Reality A. To put it in different terms, we are living a world that has an even lower level of reality than the unreal world. What can we possibly call this if not “chaos”?
What kind of meaning can fiction have in an age like this? What kind of purpose can it serve? In an age when reality is insufficiently real, how much reality can a fictional story possess?‘
– Haruki Murakami, ‘Reality A and Reality B‘, New York Times, 29/11/2010 (emphases mine)
(*adds Murakami books to Christmas list*)
Journalism Material/Digital Politics/Economics Speculations Visual Culture [future shock]
by Justin
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[future shock] Weaponised Corpus Linguistics
Okay, so this one’s just a suggestion — but we’re operating at full batshit here, and you know someone’s going to try building it. The panopticism of the public database, from one of the comments on Charlie Stross’ piece on the peculiar machinations of Foundation X:
‘Also, does anyone else keep thinking of that textual analysis algorithm they used on Agatha Christie’s books, that was meant to identify when she started to lose it?
If there’s an open source implementation, would it be cruel to integrate it with [They Work For You]?’
– Alex, on ‘Did somebody just try to buy the British government?’, Charlie’s Diary, 03/11/2010
UPDATE (04/11): Here we go.
Academics Material/Digital Politics/Economics Pop Culture Technology
by Justin
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Steven Johnson: Innovation & Anarchism

photo credit: Phil Hawksworth
There’s a seriously nifty interview with science writer Steven Johnson in today’s Guardian. Not sure how I feel about his occasional echoes of the technology tree from Sid Meier’s Civilization, but the notion of an ‘adjacent possible’ is really rather wonderful. Some choice extracts:
‘to 1950s viewers, Johnson argues, complex TV shows such as Lost or The Wire would have been borderline incomprehensible, like some kind of avant-garde art, because certain ways of engaging with the medium hadn’t yet been learned.’
The co-evolution of technology and cultural form was one of the precepts of my Goldsmiths MA. So the level of personal resonance should be of no great surprise…
‘the best way to encourage (or to have) new ideas isn’t to fetishise the “spark of genius”, to retreat to a mountain cabin in order to “be creative”, or to blabber interminably about “blue-sky”, “out-of-the-box” thinking. Rather, it’s to expand the range of your possible next moves – the perimeter of your potential – by exposing yourself to as much serendipity, as much argument and conversation, as many rival and related ideas as possible; to borrow, to repurpose, to recombine. This is one way of explaining the creativity generated by cities, by Europe’s 17th-century coffee-houses, and by the internet.’
In other words, “maximise your exposure to randomness.”
See also: The real reason for Germany’s industrial expansion.
Politics/Economics Pop Culture Visual Culture [future shock]
by Justin
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[future shock] Animated News!
Thus far, 2010 seems to have been dominated by media artifacts of such world-historical contingency and raw peculiarity that – following any kind of close examination – they cause your brain to effervesce all over the floor.
Above, I give you the video equivalent of Iceland; dripping with futurity and latent fubarosity (where ‘fubar‘ = ‘the formal official metric unit of contemporary weirdness’). Let’s break it down.
The Big Society?
‘The Big Society could turn out Victorian, Feudal, Democratic Socialist, Swiss, even Anarcho-Syndicalist. It could draw influences from anywhere. But it is unambiguously a move off the traditional left-right axis of politics and I believe this is why we are all so confused by it.’
– Vinay Gupta, on the Tories’ halting attempts to define a new politics
‘My aim is to bake a cake that actually can consume itself, because that – in a sense – is what the fourth sector is doing. We’re baking a self-eating cake.’
– Nicola Murray MP (Rebecca Front), The Thick of It
Hacking Browne?
‘So, new marketing plan, courses of such critical intensity and theoretical purity that working for the man afterwards would be inconceivable.
As such the loans would never be repaid, and graduates would surely form anarcho-syndicalist non-profit collectives for rich fulfilled lives.’
– Dr. Joss Hands, reacting to the Browne Review of HE Funding and Student Finance
Material/Digital Politics/Economics Real Life Speculations Travel
by Justin
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The Iceland Notes
Not sure if I’m going to get around to finishing these for a few weeks yet, so I thought I’d post what I have. I was in Iceland from the 7th-19th September, in a half-assed attempt to avoid the psychic whiplash that would have resulted from me moving straight from postgrad halls in London back to the fields of rural Sussex. As a travel experience, it defied my expectations in all kinds of strange and unexpected ways. Here are some of my reflections:
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The Iceland Notes, or What I Did On My Holidays
(Part One of Several)
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So, you say you want to understand the emerging contours of the twenty-first century? Look to Iceland.
Fingers on keyboard. It’s 11.20 on a Saturday in mid-September, and there’s a small beer on the table – sitting unobtrusively to the right of my Chinese-made, grease-caked Lenovo ThinkPad. I don’t remember buying it. The beer that is; not the laptop.
Tomorrow afternoon, I take a bus to Keflavik and, from there, fly back to the United Kingdom in a half-empty plane, held together by insulation tape and Icelandic bloody-mindedness. The United Kingdom: a polity which, in a strange echo of the Holy Roman Empire, is anything but. The United Kingdom: a body politic with its collective breath held in anticipation of a socio-economic buggering – delivered enthusiastically by a coalition government of an entirely novel and interesting shade of malevolence.
Muted by my body’s desperate attempts to metabolise last night’s tidal swell of Viking beer, this nevertheless stands as a partial, halting answer to the eternal question; usually delivered with a near-imperceptible tilt of the head – ‘So, what are you doing in Iceland?‘
I take a quick swig of the beer. Though not overtly horrible, drinking-before-lunch and drinking-to-stave-off-a-hangover align in a way that floods my spine and stomach with a powerful sense of foreboding.
So, what am I doing in Iceland?
Ultimately, it all comes down to TINA – that lynch-pin of the Thatcher-Reaganite consensus and, later, of neoliberal globalisation: ‘There is no alternative.‘ My hypothesis: Iceland offers an alternative: albeit muted, partial, and – for the most part – virtual. But however much it is limited by the shrink-wrap legalese of Iceland’s IMF loans, there’s definitely something going on. Others have tasted it on the air; finding themselves lured as if by a siren to this volcanic outpost populated by knitwear hipsters, trolls, and abnormally small horses (not ponies). Though they would surely deny it, these exiles are the collapsitarians, and, for now, this is their Big Rock Candy Mountain.
However hungover I am currently, there’s a woman to my left who is surely an order of magnitude more so. She stirs beneath her jacket, shuddering slightly. I take a second mouthful of beer as a gesture toward focus.
Failure.
Bear with me; I’ll return to you later.
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The Icelandic National Concert and Conference Centre. Major icon/dream of pre-crash Iceland, with construction continuing at a much-reduced pace. Currently due to open in Spring 2011.
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Time passes and the hangover fades. I’m now at Keflavik – Europe’s most beautiful airport – a full 30 minutes before my flight departs. I’ve stocked up on natural bath products, Nordic t-shirts, and dried fish. Starting to sense that this trip might be what games researcher Jane McGonigal refers to as an ‘experience grenade‘: the fuse is lit, and I’m working through ideas, keeping them circulating until the explosion.
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