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[Commlist] Digital Delights & Disturbances Spring ‘23– Lecture series
Thu Jan 26 18:29:46 GMT 2023
**Digital Delights & Disturbances Spring ‘23**– Lecture series
Presented by: *JCU Media and Communications* speaker series
_Events will be on campus (at John Cabot University, Rome) and live
streamed on YT_
Big data, artificial intelligences, algorithmic prediction: are these
the solutions to the problems affecting our unstable societies or more
sophisticated forms of social control and compliance to the powers that
be? Is there any way out from the digital neoliberal realism within
which we live? Are there ways to imagine data that are not extractive
and abusive, A.I.s that are relational and not intrusive, or a domain of
the digital that is not just limited to the ‘social’ of social media?
*2^nd of February 2023 – 6.30pm CET*
*Digital Politics and the Politics of Disengagement: social justice,
data justice, environmental justice*
Adi Kuntsman
The talk will focus on the recently published co-authored book,
“Paradoxes of Digital Disengagement: in search of the Opt-Out Button”
(Westminster University Press), and address a number of topics which
push the boundaries of what we think of as the field of digital
politics. The talk will address these so through the lens of digital
reduction and digital disengagement. Firstly, it will discuss the
ordinary violence of digital public services and automated decision
making which increase the hold of the state on the poor and the
racialised, while leaving little room to refuse the digital; secondly,
it will explore the growth in everyday datafication from the perspective
of digital justice; and finally, the talk will turn to global
environmental harms of digital communication and discuss promises and
limitations of environmentally driven digital disengagement. Weaving
together a number of disciplinary and conceptual frameworks, the talk
will show that the conceptual and political framework of digital
disengagement is a powerful tool to imagine a different (digital) future.
*9^th of February 2023 – 6.30 pm CET*
*Female Biophilia as inclusive innovation*
Giulia Tomasello
Female Biophilia wants to explore how the intersection of science and
technology is uniquely situated to address womxn’s intimate care and
contribute to revolutionize practices within bodies. An opportunity to
question how we are changing the way we interpret and question the
world, no matter if about biological or social issues and it suggests
that it’s time to choose how we want technology to enter all aspects of
our lives.
*5^th of April 2023 – 6.30 pm CET*
*The Trillion Dollar platform in your pocket?*
Marc Coté and Jennifer Pybus
The average person has over 40 different applications on their mobile
device and each app has about 18 different third parties or Software
Development Kits (SDKs) that harvest and share our data. Not
surprisingly, Google and Facebook feature in the majority of apps,
though users have little access to who is accessing our data, why, or
how it is supercharging their profits. The lecture will discuss how
platform monopolisation is spreading through mobile apps, and open up
SDKs to show how digital giants are controlling your data.
*26^th of April 2023 – 6.30 pm CET (on Zoom)*
**
*White Sight. Visual Politics and Practices of Whiteness (Book launch) *
**
Nicholas Mirzoeff
White supremacy is not only perpetuated by laws and police but also by
visual culture and distinctive ways of seeing. Nicholas Mirzoeff argues
that this form of “white sight” has a history. By understanding that
white sight was not always common practice, we can devise better ways to
dismantle it. Spanning centuries across this wide-ranging text, Mirzoeff
connects Renaissance innovations—from the invention of perspective and
the erection of Apollo statues as monuments to (white) beauty and power
to the rise of racial capitalism dependent on slave labor—with
ever-expanding surveillance technologies to show that white sight
creates an oppressively racializing world, in which subjects who do not
appear as white are under constant threat of violence. Analyzing recent
events like the Black Lives Matter protests following the murder of
George Floyd and the Central Park birdwatching incident, Mirzoeff
suggests that we are experiencing a general crisis of white supremacy
that presents both opportunities for and threats to social justice. If
we do not seize this moment to dismantle white sight, then white
supremacy might surge back stronger than ever. To that end, he
highlights activist interventions to strike the power of the white
heteropatriarchal gaze.
*
*
*Please rsvp*at (ddd /at/ johncabot.edu) to reserve your seat or receive the
link for the live streaming.
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