[Air-L] Reading list on (media) politics of visibility/invisibility
MC Cambre
mcambre at ualberta.ca
Thu Sep 8 06:28:48 PDT 2016
This is a great initiative and I am happy to throw something in. My only
flag is that it is an enormous set of fields, or zone at the intersection
of a number of fields. Many of the works below are not directly writing
about the social media environment but offer the philosophical and
theoretical underpinnings for much of the research in the area.
*Some important contributions/interventions:*
- Invisibility and “the right to look” (Mirzoeff): [politics]
- Invisibility and “the distribution of the sensible” (First Levinas &
then Rancière) [philosophy]
- Barbara Maria Stafford's notion of an aesthetic of “the visible
invisible” [philosophy]
- Invisibility as a precondition for transparency. The condition of
sight (Merleau-Ponty) from "The Phenomenology of Perception" and of course
"The Visible and the Invisible"[philosophy]
- Hans Belting's work on the image [art history]
- Georges Didi-Huberman on the "visible, visual and virtual" [visual
studies]
- Rob Shields on "visualicity" [sociology]
- Elkins edited book on "visual literacy" has a lot of key essays from
Mitchell and Sherwin and others.[social sciences & art history]
- Tony Jappy's "Introduction to Visual Semiotics" in the Advances in
Semiotics series with Bloomsbury [methods & philosophy]
- My own book "The semiotics of Che Guevara: Affective Gateways" centres
on this visible/invisible dynaming, and is in the same Semiotics series
with Bloomsbury [methods & philosophy]
- Paul Virilio's work on speed and acceleration is particularly
applicable to the visible/invisible dynamic in social media
- Marc Andreyevic's work on dronification, and all the stuff derived
from Foucault's panopticon work is about the interplay of visible/invisible
on some level...
okay all for now!
cc
On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 8:02 AM, Steffen Albrecht <steffen.albrecht at berlin.de
> wrote:
> Dear Daniel,
>
> Though it's been published some years ago, I'd highly recommend
>
> Brighenti, Andrea (2007): Visibility. A category for the social sciences.
> In: Current Sociology 55(3), pp. 323-342
>
> with regard to the category
>
> ..."classical" approaches and authors that do NOT explicitly talk about
> today's political (social) media contexts, but which you would consider
> highly applicable to understand such phenomena.
>
> Best,
> Steffen
>
> ----- ursprüngliche Nachricht ---------
>
> Subject: Re: [Air-L] Reading list on (media) politics of
> visibility/invisibility
> Date: Do 08 Sep 2016 13:09:34 CEST
> From: Ansgar Koene<Ansgar.Koene at nottingham.ac.uk>
> To: Daniel Kunzelmann<kunzelmann.daniel at yahoo.de>,
> air-l at listserv.aoir.org<air-l at listserv.aoir.org>
>
> Hi Daniel,
> sounds like a really interesting topic to assemble a reading list for.
> One article I recently read that could fit in the invisible category,
> under 'influence of algorithms' would be
> Zeynep Tufekci, “Algorithmic Harms beyond Facebook and Google: Emergent
> Challenges of Computational Agency”, J. on Telecomm. & High Tech. L., 203,
> 2015
>
> Cheers,
> Ansgar
>
> Dr. Ansgar Koene
> Senior Research Fellow: Horizon Policy Impact, CaSMa & UnBias
> Horizon Digital Economy Research Institute
> University of Nottingham
> http://casma.wp.horizon.ac.uk/
> http://unbias.wp.horizon.ac.uk/
> http://www.horizon.ac.uk/
> https://sites.google.com/site/arkoene/
>
> ________________________________________
> From: Air-L [air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org] on behalf of Daniel
> Kunzelmann [kunzelmann.daniel at yahoo.de]
> Sent: 08 September 2016 10:55
> To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
> Subject: [Air-L] Reading list on (media) politics of
> visibility/invisibility
>
> Dear all,
>
> I felt like starting another list of literature :) Here is the
> question/thesis at stake: We live in a hyper-mediated world, in which
> the *speed and sheer amount of media posts *(Facebook, your favorite
> newspapers, Twitter, blogs, you name it...) suggest that political
> impact, relevance and importance is connected to "being visible" or
> "making something visible". Vice versa, *if something is **not
> visible**in today's social-media-democracy it does not exist, thus has
> no meaning, thus has no political power/impact/relevance**.*
>
> Yet, I feel - and so far it's only really a feeling - that *these
> invisible spaces and actions enable, generate and allocate as much
> political power as their visible twins.* Against the backdrop of
> "social-media-everywhere" and the *dominant daily narrative of the
> visible* (which we all experience when we look at our smartphone), I'm
> now looking for *authors and concepts that explore/reflect/challenge/*
>
> - that either the *politics of the visible*
> - or the *politics of the invisible*
> - or even the *relationship between visibility and invisibility* with
> regards to political power.
>
> It might be *authors and concepts that already reflect on today's
> (hyper) social media worlds**, as well as "classical" approaches on
> visibility/invisibility of power.* To give you two examples:
>
> Thinking about today's social media, we could have a closer look at the
> power of images (e.g. a meme) on our interfaces (visible) or at the
> algorithmic structures that sort and "deliver" these images (invisible).
> Both layers of power are real, in the sense that they affect us in our
> daily live, but one is visible and one is invisible. And of course, they
> are certainly connected.
>
> Same goes for something that existed before social media, let's say
> party politics. There have always been official press releases and
> interviews about how well e.g. a party congress went and what wonderful
> values this party now stands for (transparency, inclusion, etc.), but at
> the same time, at the congress in question, there also existed back-room
> meetings and private phone calls to influence internal party currents
> (opacity, exclusion, etc.). Again, both spaces and actions are real, in
> the sense that they have power effects on the party's members and/or
> possible voters, but one (media) space is visible and the other one
> invisible. And, here too, both layers work together perfectly.
>
> So, anyone wants to share their must-read with me?
>
> *...on "new" Cultural and Social Anthropological approaches and authors
> that already reflect on the politics of visibility/invisibility against
> today's backdrop of "social-media-everywhere". **
> **
> **...and/or "classical" ***approaches and authors* that do NOT
> explicitly talk about today's political (social) media contexts, but
> which you would consider highly applicable to understand such phenomena.
>
> *Either directly drop your recommendations in here:
> *https://danielderkunzelmann.piratenpad.de/airl-mediaoverload-politics-
> visibility-invisibility*
> or reply to this message via the list or a pm :)*
> *
> Of course, when the literature list is done, I will be sharing it with
> all of you!
>
> kind regards,
> Daniel
>
> *Daniel Kunzelmann,
> Ph.D.c / Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich / Institute of Cultural
> Anthropology/European Ethnology
> twitter @der_kunzelmann <https://twitter.com/der_kunzelmann>
> blog http://transformations-blog.com/daniel-kunzelmann/
> web http://unibas.academia.edu/DanielKunzelmann
> linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/pub/daniel-kunzelmann/7b/426/9a5*
>
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--
--
*Carolina Cambre PhD Assistant Professor Concordia University, Montreal
Centre for Global Citizenship Education & Research Fellow Affiliate of
Concordia University - Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling
http://storytelling.concordia.ca/content/cambre-carolina
<http://storytelling.concordia.ca/content/cambre-carolina> Book:
http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/the-semiotics-of-che-guevara-9781472505293/
<http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/the-semiotics-of-che-guevara-9781472505293/>*
<http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/the-semiotics-of-che-guevara-9781472505293/>
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