看不见的语言:艺术家媒介写作中对网络技术的隐喻

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Steven Zultanski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近,一些艺术家和理论家一直在写关于当代媒体世界的算法、基础设施和经济方面的文章。这样的写作将关于社交媒体的讨论从对新颖话语的考虑转向强调网络现实背后的权力结构、利润动机和政治阴谋。社交媒体平台被设计成具有自由意义的自主舞台,而不是受到高度控制和严密监控的企业/政府空间。换句话说,这些平台让互联网感觉像是建立在话语之上,而不是建立在代码、服务器、光纤电缆和稀有金属开采中被过度剥削的劳动力之上。本文考察了Hito Steyerl、Trevor Paglen、Jackie Wang等人的作品,认为艺术家作家正在使用开放和灵活的隐喻,以及其他文学技巧,来阐明基本上看不见的代码、监视和经济系统之间的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Invisible language: Metaphors for networked technology in artists’ writings on media
Recently, a number of artists and theorists have been writing about the algorithmic, infrastructural and economic aspects of the contemporary media world. Such writing shifts the conversation about social media away from considerations of novel discourse and instead places emphasis on the power structures, profit motives and political machinations that undergird networked reality. Social media platforms are designed to feel like autonomous arenas of free signification, rather than highly controlled and tightly monitored corporate/governmental spaces. In other words, these platforms make the Internet feel like it is built on discourse, rather than on code, servers, fibre-optic cables and the hyper-exploited labour involved in the mining of rare metals. This article examines writings by Hito Steyerl, Trevor Paglen, Jackie Wang and others to argue that artist-writers are using open-ended and flexible metaphors, along with other literary techniques, to articulate the connections between the largely invisible systems of code, surveillance and economics.
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来源期刊
Journal of Writing in Creative Practice
Journal of Writing in Creative Practice Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
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