Just published, and not behind a paywall. You can find it here, in the Spring 2020 issue of Anthropological Quarterly. Update - now it is! Uggh - what the hell did I expect.
Occasional posts on anthropologically interesting science fiction, anthropological futures and my own future as an anthropologist.
Sunday, September 13, 2020
Review of The Anthropology of the Future, by Rebecca Bryant and Daniel M. Knight
Monday, May 4, 2020
The Impoverishment of the COVID Future
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From Wikimedia Commons |
As I complete this essay, the quarantine imposed on
Baltimore stretches into its second month, and I continue teaching online amid
terror and despair. Blog posts and
newspaper articles forecast a new era of education in the age of social
distancing, a new kind of virtual conference in the absence of travel, and new
research without the face-to-face interactions that have heretofore been the
bread-and-butter of ethnographic fieldwork. All of these may be
prognostications, but they are not, I would submit, really about the
future. Instead, each “future” describes a present--online education,
virtual meetings, digital anthropology. None of them are really “new” at
all. Just the opposite, they are part of a process of what Escobar
(echoing Tony Fry) describes as “the systematic destruction of possible futures
by the structured unsustainability of modernity” (Escobar 2018: 117).
Here, the COVID pandemic ushers in a future, but it is not a real future. Instead, a “de-future,” a truncated present where face-to-face relationships
disappear and only online connections remain. As Deleuze wrote in his essay on Bergson's duration, “The possible passes into the real through limitation,
the culling of other possibilities” (Deleuze 1991: 187). Shorn of alternatives,
the COVID future ushers forth an impoverished dystopia of distant relations,
multiplied inequalities, Mad-Max guerilla capitalism. Prognostication in
the age of the pandemic has been about the way our future will be an attenuated
present: less social interaction, less economic well-being, less life. It
it was a tv miniseries, I don’t think I would want to see this
future.
Of course, it’s worth asking why it would matter if I would
watch such a dystopia. Isn’t this the way it is? Yes, and no.
Yes-the disruption and loss of life have an undeniable, terrifying
reality. But at the same time, no: we can look to alternatives that
acknowledge pandemic realities but also sketch alternatives to capitalism, to
the bourgeois rentier class, to precarious employment (Wolff
2020). We can sketch alternatives to a digital divide education where
people with a fast broadband and the latest laptop get access, and everyone
else survives on asynchronous, canned powerpoints (Aschoff
2020). Finally, COVID underlines the failures of neoliberalism at
almost every level. And, in that failure, raises alternatives that are
already implicit in the practices and institutions of people in many of the
places where anthropologists have worked: all kinds of cooperatives, land
trusts, community health centers. As anthropologists, we need to
elaborate those alternative futures, to engage in a “futuring” that will spell
the end of a fait accompli modernity.
References
Deleuze, Gilles (1991). Bergsonism. NY: Zone Books.
Escobar, Arturo (2018). Designs for the Pluriverse. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Networked, Not Virtual: ethnography when you can't go there
(from our storymap)
In my capacity as a fellow in our faculty research center, I've been doing a lot of support work for the unexpected shift to learning-at-a-distance. At my uni, very few of us have experience teaching online. The faculty (generally) aren't especially enthusiastic, and there hasn't really been a lot of institutional support. So, I wasn't surprised when most of the questions I was fielding took the form of: "I do X in my class. How can I do X online?" Not surprised because that's the ideological frame distance education has relied upon: an exact homology between offline- and online teaching, with the physical classroom replaced by the discussion board, the lectures by videos. But actual online courses (not our band aid efforts to stitch together something in a few days) are structured very differently than their physical counterparts. The best classes maximize their digital affordances and don’t try to simply "reproduce" face-to-face education.
Something similar has happened with ethnography. I have read dozens of semi-panicked posts: if I can't go into the field, perhaps I can go into the digital field? Well - there have been several, thoughtful posts from digital anthropologists on this sentiment, including a recent one in GeekAnthropologist. Reading these, though, I can't help but notice that these would-be digital anthropologists don't really want to be digital at all. And they're not really proposing digital anthropology. If you're studying the lives of people in their (physical) communities, can you really do digital anthropology? In other words, if people are undertaking online/offline lives (whether under quarantine or not), are those lives best understood through digital anthropology? Or are you talking about what my colleague, Matthew Durington, and I have called "networkedanthropology"?
In networked anthropology, we acknowledge the skein of digital and physical connections in people's lives, and we try to recognize and enable the capacities of people to represent those lives through networked, media platforms that make sense to them.
In a quarantined world, what's missing from the social scene? With regards to the production of ethnography, at least one element is missing: the anthropologist. But only that. Even without the anthropologist, social and cultural life continue. And more than that--the documentation and theorization of social and cultural life continues as people record and comment on the things that happen in their lives and in their communities. In this sense, networked anthropology is about capitulation--perhaps we really weren't that important anyway? But we can certainly help people in their own efforts to represent and communicate their identities and communities, and this is, I think, what (at least some) of our colleagues should be doing.
Last summer, we worked on a project in a small neighborhood in Baltimore undergoing rapid gentrification that was leading to the displacement of a long-standing community of African American residents. Collaborating with children at a community center, we helped them (co)produce maps, photographs, video and audio interviews that we put together for an app tour, an exhibit and a performance. It was a great project to work on, and the article that we are submitting on this includes all of them as co-authors. In light of our present pandemic, and in the interest of protecting communities from us, it occurs to me that we (me and Matt Durington) didn't really need to be there at all. Sure - we needed to talk to people and see what they were up to. In the end, though, the images and interviews are produced by people in the community. My point: if we never actually stepped foot in that neighborhood, that would not make it digital anthropology. We would just be doing networked anthropology - anthropology with people who were physically (not virtually) in their communities.
I don't know when the infection rates and death toll of the pandemic will subside. But it seems likely that we will not be able to undertake our in situ research for some time. Even if we can go into the field, it may be in fits and starts, with pandemic flare-ups mandating our social distancing once again. But just because we are not in situ doesn't mean that people in the communities where we work aren’t in situ! By now, we are all used to that peculiar hypocrisy in anthropology that decries colonization and its authorizing gaze, but that still seems to insist on presence in order to undertake anthropology. Perhaps enough of that?
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
The Future of Social Media in Anthropology
From the conclusion to my contribution on "Social Media" in Wiley's "The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology:"
Anthropologists are still coming to terms with social media and its impact on everyAnd I think I still agree with that-- social media continue to be leaky and messy: the dishes you haven't yet washed in your intellectual sink.
level of our lives. No matter what new SNS platforms develop, though, it is certain that
social media will continue to be a source of controversy in the field. The reasons for
controversy may vary, but they will all pivot on the essential liminality of social media.
By definition, it occupies spaces between worlds: between people, between online and
offline, between official and unofficial, between private and public, between resistance
and accommodation, between horizontality and verticality. For all of these reasons,
anthropologists are unlikely to be entirely comfortable with the social media they and
their interlocutors utilize, whatever new platforms may develop in the future. But that
discomfort can also be a source of strength, one that can help to highlight and perhaps
help to overturn persistent inequalities in the field, all the while revealing dimensions
of our work that may have been suppressed or sublimated in the past.
Thursday, October 3, 2019
Review of Readymade Bodhisattva: The Kaya Anthology of South Korean Science Fiction,
My review of the tremendously exciting collection of translated South Korean science fiction: Readymade Bodhisattva. It's the first of its kind in English, and serves as a tremendous introduction to SF that is really quite different than that of neighboring China or Japan.
Futures at AAACASCA 2019
The American Anthropological Association/ Canadian Anthropological Society meeting in Vancouver is in November, but the browsable schedule is already out. As in previous years, I have identified future-oriented or science fiction-oriented panels that I would love to attend (including two I'm on). This may not be a complete list, and I apologize for panels I've missed. But even this, incomplete as it might be, is an impressive collection of a robust future-orientation in the work of anthropologists.
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Biofutures - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 122
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Haunting Toward the Future: Colonial Durabilities and Temporalities - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 13
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Untaming futures? Plural knowledges, unknown environments and technologies of anticipation (Part 1) - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 202
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – In an Atmosphere of Change: Speculative Futures in Anthropological Perspective - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 118
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – NARRATING THE FUTURE FOR A WARMING WORLD - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 205
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – Untaming futures? Plural knowledges, unknown environments and technologies of anticipation (Part 2) - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 202
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – The Climate of Governance and the Governance of Climate: Negotiating the Futures of Natures & Cultures - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 15
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Utopia and Changing the Future: Anthropology’s Role in Imagining Alternatives (Part 2) - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 11
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – Horizons of Possibility: Dynamic Future Selves in a Changing and Contested World - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 115
8:00 AM – 9:45 AM – Forging Futures in Contested Landscapes - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 215
10:15 AM – 12:00 PM – Forecasting Futures: Education as Speculative Practice - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 119
10:15 AM – 12:00 PM – So many futures, so little time: Anthropological approaches to catastrophe and the future - Vancouver CC EAST, Ballroom C
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – Ethnographies of Palestinian Futures - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 204
The Meaning of the Future
Yet there is a great deal of polysemy implied in "the future," and our orientation to future temporalities likewise varies (Bryant and Knight 2019). I did some text analysis of the abstracts for these panels in order to look at the evolving terrain of future work [click on the graph for the full size]:
The graph uses "Infranodus,"a web-based, text analysis application that uses word co-occurence to construct a network. Nodes are key terms, and the edges (or lines) between them show words (actually lemmas) separated by 1 word or words separated by two words (Paranyushkin 2019).
Additionally, the algorithm tries to identify "clusters" of terms--represented by different colored nodes and edges here. But this seems of limited efficacy here, where there is considerable overlap in the nomenclature of the future. Better, perhaps, is to focus on a few key terms, and the terms to which they're linked.
"Environmental" [click on the map for a full image of the network]
"World"
"Climate"
"Alternative"
These keywords, together with the connections they forge, ultimately tell a more nuanced story about anthropology's emerging futures. The lemma "world" might appear in texts as "worlding," "world-building" etc., and might point, on the one hand, to the changes inextricably impacting our world today. On the other hand, "world" also includes links to the prospect of different worlds, however defined, whether in "space" or "imagined." "Alternative" opens on to the imaginative element of anthropological futuring, and the ways this might gesture towards other possibilities less premised on capitalist exploitation. This includes indigenous futures, and alternative narratives on the future from oppressed peoples. On the other hand, "climate" brings us into the decidedly more pessimistic futures of the anthropocene, where "change," "health" and "environment" make up the dreadful calculus of environmental catastrophe.
All together, the pessimism and the optimism of the present moment, one where we teeter on the brink of future disaster, while alternatives appear to us (as anthropologists) in multiple forms, from policy changes, to space travel, to worlds re-shaped by alternatives to Eurocentric capitalist exploitation. The future work evolving in anthropology engages all of these levels simultaneously: 1) the future as a significant horizon in the lives of our interlocutors; 2) the future as an ethnographic object in its own right; 3) the future as a site for anthropological interventions.
References
Bryant, Rebecca and Daniel Knight (2019). The Anthropology of the Future. NY: Cambridge University Press.
Paranyushkin, Dmitry (2019). "Infranodus." In Proceedings of WWW '19: The Web Conference (WWW '19), May 23, 2019, San Francissco, CA.
Thursday, November 21
8:00 AM – 9:45 AM – Decolonial Belongings and Futures: Creating Spaces of Belonging thru Epistemic Disobedience - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 72:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Biofutures - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 122
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Haunting Toward the Future: Colonial Durabilities and Temporalities - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 13
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Untaming futures? Plural knowledges, unknown environments and technologies of anticipation (Part 1) - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 202
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – In an Atmosphere of Change: Speculative Futures in Anthropological Perspective - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 118
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – NARRATING THE FUTURE FOR A WARMING WORLD - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 205
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – Untaming futures? Plural knowledges, unknown environments and technologies of anticipation (Part 2) - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 202
Friday, November 22
10:15 AM – 12:00 PM – Utopia and Changing the Future: Anthropology’s Role in Imagining Alternatives (Part 1) - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 112:00 PM – 3:45 PM – The Climate of Governance and the Governance of Climate: Negotiating the Futures of Natures & Cultures - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 15
2:00 PM – 3:45 PM – Utopia and Changing the Future: Anthropology’s Role in Imagining Alternatives (Part 2) - Vancouver CC EAST, Room 11
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – Horizons of Possibility: Dynamic Future Selves in a Changing and Contested World - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 115
Saturday, November 23
8:00 AM – 9:45 AM – Algorithmic Futures: Computing as a Site and Object of Technopolitical Interventions - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 3018:00 AM – 9:45 AM – Forging Futures in Contested Landscapes - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 215
10:15 AM – 12:00 PM – Forecasting Futures: Education as Speculative Practice - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 119
10:15 AM – 12:00 PM – So many futures, so little time: Anthropological approaches to catastrophe and the future - Vancouver CC EAST, Ballroom C
4:15 PM – 6:00 PM – Ethnographies of Palestinian Futures - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 204
Sunday, November 24
10:15 AM – 12:00 PM – Geological Anthropology: Waters, Ruins, Futures (Part 2) - Vancouver CC WEST, Room 101 & 102The Meaning of the Future
Yet there is a great deal of polysemy implied in "the future," and our orientation to future temporalities likewise varies (Bryant and Knight 2019). I did some text analysis of the abstracts for these panels in order to look at the evolving terrain of future work [click on the graph for the full size]:
The graph uses "Infranodus,"a web-based, text analysis application that uses word co-occurence to construct a network. Nodes are key terms, and the edges (or lines) between them show words (actually lemmas) separated by 1 word or words separated by two words (Paranyushkin 2019).
Additionally, the algorithm tries to identify "clusters" of terms--represented by different colored nodes and edges here. But this seems of limited efficacy here, where there is considerable overlap in the nomenclature of the future. Better, perhaps, is to focus on a few key terms, and the terms to which they're linked.
"Environmental" [click on the map for a full image of the network]
"World"
"Climate"
"Alternative"
These keywords, together with the connections they forge, ultimately tell a more nuanced story about anthropology's emerging futures. The lemma "world" might appear in texts as "worlding," "world-building" etc., and might point, on the one hand, to the changes inextricably impacting our world today. On the other hand, "world" also includes links to the prospect of different worlds, however defined, whether in "space" or "imagined." "Alternative" opens on to the imaginative element of anthropological futuring, and the ways this might gesture towards other possibilities less premised on capitalist exploitation. This includes indigenous futures, and alternative narratives on the future from oppressed peoples. On the other hand, "climate" brings us into the decidedly more pessimistic futures of the anthropocene, where "change," "health" and "environment" make up the dreadful calculus of environmental catastrophe.
All together, the pessimism and the optimism of the present moment, one where we teeter on the brink of future disaster, while alternatives appear to us (as anthropologists) in multiple forms, from policy changes, to space travel, to worlds re-shaped by alternatives to Eurocentric capitalist exploitation. The future work evolving in anthropology engages all of these levels simultaneously: 1) the future as a significant horizon in the lives of our interlocutors; 2) the future as an ethnographic object in its own right; 3) the future as a site for anthropological interventions.
References
Bryant, Rebecca and Daniel Knight (2019). The Anthropology of the Future. NY: Cambridge University Press.
Paranyushkin, Dmitry (2019). "Infranodus." In Proceedings of WWW '19: The Web Conference (WWW '19), May 23, 2019, San Francissco, CA.
Sunday, March 24, 2019
AAA Paper Abstract: The Weight of Absence: Anthropologies of Non-Connection
(A day's worth of geolocated instagram posts in Baltimore: August 24, 2018)
The digital world presupposes a binary logic of connection
and disconnection, one that decomposes into haves and have-nots. Moreover, this
binary logic follows on burgeoning urban inequalities in a neo-liberal age, and
growing chasms in wealth and opportunity only seem to confirm the either/or
logic of digital capitalism. In cities,
it echoes in the dreadful calculus of gentrification and abandonment, capital
investment and disinvestment, inclusion and exclusion. But is dis-connection
only an absence? In this paper, I
explore absences and disconnections in social media and in urban networks as latencies
visible through an application of structural holes, triadic closure, structural
equivalence and other social network tools to digital media in cities. This work is inspired both by Ernst Bloch’s “Not-Yet”
and his insights that even forms of social life thoroughly imbricated in
capitalism nevertheless contain a “surplus” of potentiality that gestures
towards critical, emancipatory futures. In
addition, the work is inspired by anthropological methods from Alfred Russel Wallace
and others that take absence as data points in the empirical proof of
presence. I argue that even absence itself
is imbricated by a “horror vacui” that sets up presence as a moral dialectic. In this paper, these take the form of alternatives
that connect equity, justice and utopian alternatives to disinvestment and
abandonment visible through analyses of diverse digital platforms, including
social media, app platforms and website connectivity. Ultimately, this research builds on
anthropologies that move beyond the narration of what is to the speculative
design of what should be.
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Multimodal Interrogations of Anthropologically Unintended Media - Video link
Matt Durington and I had a wonderful time giving a talk at UBC Okanagan. Thanks to Dr. Fiona McDonald and the Collaborative and Experimental...
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By Own screenshot, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=26632754 I watch people on the Seoul subway playing 쿠키런 (Cookie Run)...
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(from our storymap ) In my capacity as a fellow in our faculty research center, I've been doing a lot of support work for the u...
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There are 3 approaches to generative AI in the classroom: 1) an outright ban on it; 2) a limited use policy that covers certain assignme...