Introduction: Machinic Visions of the Planetary

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Introduction : Machinic Visions of the Planetary. / Lee-Morrison, Lila; Maurer, Kathrin ; Munck Petersen, Rikke; Routhier, Dominique.

I: Media+Environment, Bind 5, Nr. 1, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskning

Harvard

Lee-Morrison, L, Maurer, K, Munck Petersen, R & Routhier, D 2023, 'Introduction: Machinic Visions of the Planetary', Media+Environment, bind 5, nr. 1. https://doi.org/10.1525/001c.88425

APA

Lee-Morrison, L., Maurer, K., Munck Petersen, R., & Routhier, D. (2023). Introduction: Machinic Visions of the Planetary. Media+Environment, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.1525/001c.88425

Vancouver

Lee-Morrison L, Maurer K, Munck Petersen R, Routhier D. Introduction: Machinic Visions of the Planetary. Media+Environment. 2023;5(1). https://doi.org/10.1525/001c.88425

Author

Lee-Morrison, Lila ; Maurer, Kathrin ; Munck Petersen, Rikke ; Routhier, Dominique. / Introduction : Machinic Visions of the Planetary. I: Media+Environment. 2023 ; Bind 5, Nr. 1.

Bibtex

@article{585db3a62d044b869135af2dedc5c575,
title = "Introduction: Machinic Visions of the Planetary",
abstract = "At a time of increasing challenges that concern our relationship to the environment, including looming and continuing environmental crises, sociopolitical designations of alterity, and the uncertainty of a planetary future outside of capital{\textquoteright}s globalizing social forms, we address how new forms of vision and visuality brought forth through technologies envision planetarity and planetary relations. Imaging technologies are central to consider as sources of knowledge about the environment. Their image output has the power to reconfigure relations of the planetary and can and can act as a source of speculative reimagining. The development and dependence on machine vision technologies such as satellite imaging, wide-scale algorithmic platforms, statistical modeling programs, drones equipped with LiDAR, and other sensing networks with visual output bring about an expansion of the perceptual scope. Through inquiries into the themes of scale, alterity, nonhuman entanglements, and operational imaging, this issue asks how machinic ways of seeing generate a new aesthetics of planetarity.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, machinic visions, planetarity, aesthetic, digital technologies",
author = "Lila Lee-Morrison and Kathrin Maurer and {Munck Petersen}, Rikke and Dominique Routhier",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1525/001c.88425",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "Media+Environment",
issn = "2640-9747",
publisher = "University of California Press Journals Division",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Introduction

T2 - Machinic Visions of the Planetary

AU - Lee-Morrison, Lila

AU - Maurer, Kathrin

AU - Munck Petersen, Rikke

AU - Routhier, Dominique

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - At a time of increasing challenges that concern our relationship to the environment, including looming and continuing environmental crises, sociopolitical designations of alterity, and the uncertainty of a planetary future outside of capital’s globalizing social forms, we address how new forms of vision and visuality brought forth through technologies envision planetarity and planetary relations. Imaging technologies are central to consider as sources of knowledge about the environment. Their image output has the power to reconfigure relations of the planetary and can and can act as a source of speculative reimagining. The development and dependence on machine vision technologies such as satellite imaging, wide-scale algorithmic platforms, statistical modeling programs, drones equipped with LiDAR, and other sensing networks with visual output bring about an expansion of the perceptual scope. Through inquiries into the themes of scale, alterity, nonhuman entanglements, and operational imaging, this issue asks how machinic ways of seeing generate a new aesthetics of planetarity.

AB - At a time of increasing challenges that concern our relationship to the environment, including looming and continuing environmental crises, sociopolitical designations of alterity, and the uncertainty of a planetary future outside of capital’s globalizing social forms, we address how new forms of vision and visuality brought forth through technologies envision planetarity and planetary relations. Imaging technologies are central to consider as sources of knowledge about the environment. Their image output has the power to reconfigure relations of the planetary and can and can act as a source of speculative reimagining. The development and dependence on machine vision technologies such as satellite imaging, wide-scale algorithmic platforms, statistical modeling programs, drones equipped with LiDAR, and other sensing networks with visual output bring about an expansion of the perceptual scope. Through inquiries into the themes of scale, alterity, nonhuman entanglements, and operational imaging, this issue asks how machinic ways of seeing generate a new aesthetics of planetarity.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - machinic visions

KW - planetarity

KW - aesthetic

KW - digital technologies

UR - https://mediaenviron.org/post/1230-call-for-papers-machinic-visions-of-the-planetary-in-media-environment-special-theme-issue

U2 - 10.1525/001c.88425

DO - 10.1525/001c.88425

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

JO - Media+Environment

JF - Media+Environment

SN - 2640-9747

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 387264824