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Please find below a call for papers for the RGS-IBG conference in London, 2017. Apologies for cross-posting. 

 

Organisers: Andrew Lapworth, Thomas Keating, Nina Williams

 

Geography’s Technology: Conceptualising technology, technics and the technological

Geographers have long explored the ways technologies reconfigure the production and experience of time and space. In doing so, notions of ‘technology’ or the ‘technological’ have been posited – though often implicitly – in terms of the materialities of hardware and software infrastructures, cyber- and virtual spaces, cloud computing, smart cities, and through associations with technics and affective externalisations of space-time. And recently, turns to technological and digital geographies have raised a number of important questions about the dangers of decontextualizing geographical engagements with technology within a singular category of 'the technological’ or 'the digital’. Yet there has been surprisingly little attention to how and whether technology explicitly provides a conceptual basis to contextualise and invigorate geographical research. However, beyond geography, philosophical and theoretical writings have done much to highlight the shortcomings of a cultural theory that subordinates or ignores notions of the technological. In such work, technological processes and objects have been variously conceptualised both in providing the basis for an entire new technical culture (Simondon, forthcoming 2017), and in discussing how technologies of consumer capitalism separate the subject from alternative circuits of knowledge and desire (Stiegler, 2014; Lazzarato, 2014). 

This session explores technology, technics and the technological as concepts for geographical thought and research. We welcome contributions intersecting theoretical, methodological, and philosophical questions. These might include, but are by no means limited to, the following:

Please send abstracts (200 words) to Andrew Lapworth ([log in to unmask]), Thomas Keating ([log in to unmask]), Nina Williams ([log in to unmask]) by Monday 13th February 2017.

 

References

Lazzarato, M. (2014) Signs and Machines: Capitalism and the Production of Subjectivity, Los Angeles, Semiotext(e).

Simondon, G. (forthcoming, 2017) On The Mode of Existence of Technical Objects, Minneapolis, Univocal.

Stiegler, B. (2014) Re-Enchantment of the World: The value of the human spirit vs. industrial populism, Arthur, T. (trans.), Bloomsbury, London.

 


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Tom Keating

Human Geography PhD Student
School of Geographical Sciences
University of Bristol
University Road 
Bristol
BS8 1SS