This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by The Austrian Science Fund (FWF). Looking afresh at the Anthropocene, this volume investigates how the capitalist engineering of the earth is not only accelerating, but is doing so in parallel with the expansion of digital technological systems, including so-called 'artificial intelligence'. Against the backdrop of new regimes of data positivism, algorithmic classification and prediction, and even the emergence of unexpected forms of collective…mehr
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by The Austrian Science Fund (FWF). Looking afresh at the Anthropocene, this volume investigates how the capitalist engineering of the earth is not only accelerating, but is doing so in parallel with the expansion of digital technological systems, including so-called 'artificial intelligence'. Against the backdrop of new regimes of data positivism, algorithmic classification and prediction, and even the emergence of unexpected forms of collective intelligence, Incomputable Earth addresses the crucial need to rethink the meaning and inter-relationality of such terms as 'extraction', 'computation', and 'planetarity'. Beyond the theory, it also asks what cognitive and political capacities we need to grapple with the implications of this parallel intensification of datafication and the Anthropocene. Examining new forms of subjectivity and resistance, this timely volume tackles a range of urgent topics, from the racialized politics of climate change to feminist ecologies and planetary financialization. In an original, hybrid format that reflects the interdisciplinary nature of these debates, Incomputable Earth is made up of scholarly essays, striking artistic contributions, and a glossary of emerging concepts in the humanities. Bringing together international scholars, artists, grassroots collectives, and environmental organisations, this is a vital intervention into the past, present, and future of computation and its inescapable impact upon our social, political, and planetary life.
Antonia Majaca is a researcher, curator and principal investigator for the research project 'Incomputable' (2019-2021) at the IZK - Institute for Contemporary Art, Graz University of Technology, Austria. Marina Vishmidt is a Lecturer in Media, Communications and Cultural Studies and convenor of the MA in Culture Industry at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. She is the co-author of Reproducing Autonomy: Work, Money, Crisis and Contemporary Art, with Kerstin Stakemeier (2016), and the author of Speculation as a Mode of Production (2018).
Inhaltsangabe
Part I: Critical Essays 1. Artificial Intelligence Individuation And 'Black Reason' Ramon Amaro (University College London UK) A Critical Counter-Genealogy Of 'General Intellect' Vs Artificial Intelligence Matteo Pasquinelli (University of Arts and Design Karlsruhe Germany) Indeterminacy And Automated Rationality Luciana Parisi (Duke University USA) Knowledge Infrastructures And Ontologies Of Climate Paul N. Edwards (University of Michigan USA) Planetary Financialization Risk And Environmental Racism Razmig Keucheyan (University of Bordeaux France) The Naturalization Of Algorithmic Ontologies / Nature 'For' Algorithmic Technologies Safiya Noble (University of California Los Angeles USA) Aesthetics Of The 'Inhuman' In The Racialised Politics Of Climate Change Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London UK) The Communist Impossibility Of Artificial Intelligence Keti Chukhrov (National Research University Higher School of Economics Moscow Russia) Black Feminist Aesthetics Against Biocentric Ontologies Of The Human Zakiyyah Iman Jackson (University of Southern California USA) Feminist Ecologies Of Bioremediation / Damaged Worlds And Speculative Repair Maria Puig della Bellacasa (University of Warwick UK) Part II: Glossary TBC Part III: Visual Contributions Featuring work from the following artists and collectives: Territorial Agency (UK) Feral Atlas (Denmark) Black Quantum Futurism Collective (USA) Karrabing Collective (Australia) Denise Ferreira Da Silva & Arjuna Neuman (USA & Canada) Studio Urbonas (USA & Lithuania) Pedro Neves Marques & Mariana Silva (USA) Margarida Mendes (UK) Lucy Siyao Liu (USA) Ana Vaz (Portugal & France) Imani Jacqueline Browne (UK) Paula Cobo-Guevara (USA) Taeyoon Choi (USA) Marwa Arsanios (Lebanon) Tega Brain (USA) Vladan Joler (Serbia) Armin Linke (USA)
Part I: Critical Essays 1. Artificial Intelligence Individuation And 'Black Reason' Ramon Amaro (University College London UK) A Critical Counter-Genealogy Of 'General Intellect' Vs Artificial Intelligence Matteo Pasquinelli (University of Arts and Design Karlsruhe Germany) Indeterminacy And Automated Rationality Luciana Parisi (Duke University USA) Knowledge Infrastructures And Ontologies Of Climate Paul N. Edwards (University of Michigan USA) Planetary Financialization Risk And Environmental Racism Razmig Keucheyan (University of Bordeaux France) The Naturalization Of Algorithmic Ontologies / Nature 'For' Algorithmic Technologies Safiya Noble (University of California Los Angeles USA) Aesthetics Of The 'Inhuman' In The Racialised Politics Of Climate Change Kathryn Yusoff (Queen Mary University of London UK) The Communist Impossibility Of Artificial Intelligence Keti Chukhrov (National Research University Higher School of Economics Moscow Russia) Black Feminist Aesthetics Against Biocentric Ontologies Of The Human Zakiyyah Iman Jackson (University of Southern California USA) Feminist Ecologies Of Bioremediation / Damaged Worlds And Speculative Repair Maria Puig della Bellacasa (University of Warwick UK) Part II: Glossary TBC Part III: Visual Contributions Featuring work from the following artists and collectives: Territorial Agency (UK) Feral Atlas (Denmark) Black Quantum Futurism Collective (USA) Karrabing Collective (Australia) Denise Ferreira Da Silva & Arjuna Neuman (USA & Canada) Studio Urbonas (USA & Lithuania) Pedro Neves Marques & Mariana Silva (USA) Margarida Mendes (UK) Lucy Siyao Liu (USA) Ana Vaz (Portugal & France) Imani Jacqueline Browne (UK) Paula Cobo-Guevara (USA) Taeyoon Choi (USA) Marwa Arsanios (Lebanon) Tega Brain (USA) Vladan Joler (Serbia) Armin Linke (USA)
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