Is speculative imagination a myth? A critical theory take on the power of anticipatory
logics to limit thinking differently about digital tech futures
When: 5 November 2020, 9.00–11.00 a.m.
Where: Lnu-se.zoom.us/j/65185632938
Abstract
Why do we speculate about the future endlessly but without really imagining things very
differently? In this talk, Professor Annette Markham talks about the power of anticipatory
logics on our (in)ability to think outside the box about digital futures. While still
hopeful about the potential and ethic of speculative thinking, Annette’s talk focuses on
how everyday conversations about digital tech can close off alternatives and foster a
sense of inevitability. To challenge this process of ‘discursive closure,’ Annette gives
examples from research practices developed as part of the Museum of Random Memory, a three
year arts-based intervention where a team of researchers and activists sought to build
provocations that would enable participants to open up alternative thinking.
Bio
Annette Markham is a Professor of media and communication in the Digital Ethnography
Research Centre at RMIT University (Melbourne, Australia). internationally recognized for
developing epistemological frameworks for rethinking ethics and research methods for
digitally-saturated social contexts. A long-time member of the internet research
community, Annette conducts critical sociological and ethnographic studies of how
identity, relationships, and cultural formations are constructed in and influenced by
digitally saturated socio-technical contexts. Her ethnographic studies of identity
practices and cultural formations through digital media are well represented in her
pioneering book Life Online: Researching real experience in virtual space (1998, Alta
Mira). Her more recent research focuses on critical approaches to algorithms and
datafication, speculative methods for building better ethical futures, data literacy and
critical pedagogy, and rhetorical analysis of human-machine communication through
automated, algorithmic systems. She is founder and director of the Museum of Random Memory
arts-based digital literacy initiative, the annual Skagen Institute for developing
creative and transgressive methods, and the international Future Making Research
Consortium. Annette is also a Professor MSO (on leave) in the Department of Information
Studies and Digital Design at Aarhus University, Denmark.
Med vänliga hälsningar,
Kora
Koraljka Golub
Professor
Head of the iInstitute
Digital Humanities Initiative Co-Leader
Linnaeus University
http://lnu.se/personal/koraljka.golub