锂跳舞(隐藏在众目睽睽之下)

Simon Ellis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这篇文章中,我探讨了电影舞蹈与社交媒体的关系,以及为智能手机跳舞所特有的生产和消费逻辑。我偶然遇到了两个制作舞蹈视频的人,试图理解社交媒体技术改变屏幕舞蹈实践和从业者的方式。作品以Harmony Bench、Shoshana Zuboff、Alan Jacobs、Zygmunt Bauman、Neil Postman、Yuk Hui、Annie Pfinst和Helen Poynor的作品为基础。我利用他们的学术和艺术构建了一个实验性的、非线性的七部分叙事,讲述了电影舞蹈如何成为一套明显与运动中的人类提取数据化相矛盾的实践。第一部分——两个年轻人和他们的相机——描述了两个人在拍摄他们的舞蹈时的遭遇,并以此为写作平台。在第2部分——关于接下来发生的事情的假设——我介绍了贯穿整篇文章的隐藏主题,并为我的假设提供了一个理由,即这两个人正在为社交媒体进行屏幕舞蹈。第3部分——算法编排——介绍了屏幕舞蹈中的编排与社交媒体算法之间的关系。第4部分——经济公共领域——探讨了Bench所概述的数字公共领域,以及它与可见性、技术和盈利的关系。第5部分——神话和未来时态的权利——讨论了雅各布斯和祖博夫,以及他们如何利用隐藏来考虑一个超越技术官僚理性主义的未来。在第六部分“隐藏在未来”中,我向遥远的未来迈进,想起了安妮·普芬斯特和海伦·波伊诺2016年的一部电影舞蹈作品。我这样做是为了想象一个非技术官僚的世界。最后,第7部分——从消费中提炼生产——描述了我们在电影舞蹈中是如何通过社交媒体获得一种伪装或隐藏为生产模式的消费逻辑的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lithium dancing (hidden in plain sight)
In this article I explore screendance’s affair with social media, and the logics of production and consumption endemic to dancing for and with smartphones. I use an incidental encounter with two people making a dance video to try and make sense of the ways in which screendance practices and practitioners are being changed by social media technologies. The writing is built on the work of Harmony Bench, Shoshana Zuboff, Alan Jacobs, Zygmunt Bauman, Neil Postman, Yuk Hui and Annie Pfingst and Helen Poynor. I use their scholarship and art to construct an experimental and non-linear seven-part narrative about how screendance can become a set of practices that visibly contradict the extractive datafication of humans in motion. Part 1—Two young people and their camera—describes the encounter with two people filming their dancing, and serves as the platform on which this writing is based. In part 2—An assumption about what happened next—I introduce the theme of hiding that runs throughout the article, and make a case for my assumption that these two people were making their screendance for social media. Part 3—Algorithmic choreography—introduces the relationship between choreography in screendance and social media algorithms. Part 4—Being in (the) economic common—explores the digital commons as outlined by Bench, and its relationship to visibility, technology and profit-making. Part 5—Myth and the right to a future tense—discusses Jacobs and Zuboff and how they both deploy hiding to consider a future that transcends technocratic rationalism. In part 6—Hidden in the future I zip forward far into the future and remember a 2016 screendance work by Annie Pfingst and Helen Poynor. I do this to as a strategy to imagine a non-technocratic world. Finally, part 7—To distill production from consumption—describes how, through social media, we in screendance have acquired a logic of consumption disguised or hidden as a mode of production.
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