与数字技术同步:从实时环境到森林未来主义

Kate Lewis Hood, Jennifer Gabrys
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引用次数: 0

摘要

森林是多重时间性的区域。它们保留时间,并通过保留时间的做法来构成。环境监测和管理的数字技术越来越多地组织森林的时间性。本文探讨了新出现的技术时间性如何测量、调整和改变森林世界,同时复制和重构殖民主义和资本主义技术的较长持续时间。我们汇集了有关政治森林、数字媒体时间性、反殖民和土著思想的学术研究,分析了通过数字技术实现的时间政治,并塑造了可感知和可能的森林过去、现在和未来。特别是,我们追溯了 "实时 "作为一种体验、认识和管理森林环境的时间记录的社会技术生产。通过对亚马逊森林砍伐实时警报系统的分析,我们思考了这些时间性是如何将即时、连续的森林数据用于理解和保护森林的,同时又是如何掩盖了依赖于剥夺、榨取和封闭的殖民主义和资本主义对森林的持续性描述。文章的后半部分讨论了土著未来主义以及数字平台的艺术和社会政治用途,这些数字平台重新塑造了森林的时间性。通过分析这些多重的、有时是相互矛盾的时间性,我们认为这些实践和干预可以通过时间性、土地和数据主权的多元和再分配配置,挑战主导的时间线及其不平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Keeping time with digital technologies: From real-time environments to forest futurisms
Forests are zones of multiple temporalities. They keep time and are constituted through time-keeping practices. Digital technologies of environmental monitoring and management increasingly organise forest temporalities. This article considers how emerging techno-temporalities measure, pace, and transform forest worlds while reproducing and reconfiguring longer durations of colonial and capitalist technologies. We draw together scholarship on political forests, digital media temporalities, and anti-colonial and Indigenous thinking to analyse the politics of time that materialise through digital technologies and shape what forest pasts, presents, and futures are senseable and possible. In particular, we trace the socio-technical production of the ‘real-time’ as a temporal register of experiencing, knowing, and governing forest environments. Analysing a real-time deforestation alert system in the Amazon, we consider how these temporalities valorise immediate, continuous forest data that can be mobilised for understanding and protecting forests, while simultaneously glossing over durational colonial and capitalist framings of forests that rely on dispossession, extraction, and enclosure. The second half of the article turns to Indigenous futurisms and artistic and socio-political uses of digital platforms that rework forest temporalities. By analysing these multiple and sometimes contradictory temporalities, we suggest that these practices and interventions can challenge dominant timelines and their inequities through pluralistic and redistributive configurations of temporality, land, and data sovereignty.
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