Fri 7 Mar 2008
LOCO-MOTION - 14 theses and ghosts for locative and mobile media
Posted by ibbertelsen under cultural theory, media theory
This was a short (5-minute) presentation I gave last year at the College of Fine Arts, Sydney, for the New Mobilities Symposium. I was of course trying to write a longish article, but instead it’s a short manifesto. At the same time as presenting this, I showed a video of a slow-mo dog pouncing on a mobile phone. How serious was I? I don’t know really …
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LOCO-MOTION
14 theses and 21 ghosts for locative and mobile media
Andrew Murphie
Mobile and locative media are now at the core of things. This is an unstable core. It’s this instability I’m interested in today. I’m not trying to “pin down” mobile and locative media. Rather I’m interesting in how what I’m calling “loco-motion” propels an ongoing variation in living and technical systems. This has implications for thinking about media, but also for much else. I’m also interested in loco-mobile media as inter-temporal. By this I don’t mean that we have lots of modes of living available to us, that we can switch between. Rather I’m suggesting that the switching itself is becoming our prime mode of living, not only with mobile phones, or locative media, but all media events, for example VJing.
14 THESES ON MOBILE AND LOCATIVE MEDIA
1 - If ‘a body coincides with its own variati0n’ (Massumi) then mobile media coincide with their own variation
2 - Location is Mobile
3 - The Locative Opens a Field of Variation
4 - Loco-motion remakes communication - but not as communication studies style communication. Here “Communication is a mutual adjustment of
bodies” (Sean Watson)
5 - Loco-motive battles are not over content, or communications, or intellectual property, but over affective distribution.
6 - Work with loco-motion is transdisciplinary, beyond even this perhaps. There are no “stable” media to pin down in a discipline. A self-satisfied Media Studies perishes.
7 - Mobility is often immobile, if immobile intensity. However, it’s also true that mobility creates mobility.
8 - It’s the phone that’s mobile, not you.
9 - Loco-motion resists “art”, but is good for chasings …
10 - Loco-motion brings the “postcognitive” into fuller operation (Mark Amerika)
11 - New inter-temporalities proliferate.
12 - So do new “pre-accelerations” (Erin Manning). So do new preterritorialisations
13 - loco-motion is about targeting (servomechanisms rule the world in most spheres of life)
14 - loco-motion “fractalises” (Guattari) “the screen” and with it the society of spectacle (there is no attention, no “capture”, no time of the gaze, only inter-times)
21 GHOSTS AND MYSTERIES HAUNTING LOCO-MOTION
1 - Location itself
2 - Mobility - it’s all around us, and yet ..
3 - that which remains hidden .. as Derrida once wrote, “The hidden theme is the hidden theme” (as Nick Mansfield was fond of quoting to me)
4 - Cognitive Capital
5 - Politics, that is, the Polis
6 - the haptic, the proprioceptive (and proprioceptive enslavement)
7 - down time
8 - possessions
9 - Possessions of Possession; Shamanism and Exorcism
10 - Animal Spirits
11 - Ghosts at the Edge of Infinity
12 - Ghosts with No Name (the asemiotic)
13 - Devas (that is, new forces of production that we might have to talk nicely to)
14 - the world (do we still believe in it, see it)
15 - abstraction - misplaced concreteness (Whitehead) and “concrete misplacedness” (Matthew Fuller)
16 - “Standard Objects” (Matthew Fuller)
17 - forgotten networks
18 - Work … as a separate activity from other activities
19 - Love … as assembled from non-standard objects
20 - the synaptic (Guattari)
21 - Escape