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9781478031253 Academic Inspection Copy

Technocreep and the Politics of Things not Seen

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New and emerging technologies, especially ones that infiltrate intimate spaces, relations, homes, and bodies, are often referred to as creepy in media and political discourses. In Technocreep and the Politics of Things Not Seen, Neda Atanasoski and Nassim Parvin introduce a feminist theory of creep that they substantiate through critical engagement with smart homes, smart dust, smart desires, and smart forests toward dreams of feminist futures. Contributing authors further illuminate what is otherwise obscured, assumed, or dismissed in characterizations of technology as creepy or creeping. Considering diverse technologies such as border surveillance and China's credit system to sexcams and home assistants, the volume's essays and artworks demonstrate that the potentials and pitfalls of artificial intelligence and digital and robotic technologies cannot be assessed through binaries of seeing/being seen, privacy/surveillance, or harmful/useful. Together, their multifaceted and multimodal approach transcends such binaries, accounting for technological relations that exceed sight to include touch, presence, trust, and diverse modes of collectivity. As such, this volume develops creep as a feminist analytic and creative mode on par with technology's complex entanglement with intimate, local, and global politics. Contributors. Neda Atanasoski, Katherine Bennett, IvAn Chaar LOpez, Sushmita Chatterjee, Hayri Dortdivanlioglu, Sanaz Haghani, Jacob Hagelberg, Jennifer Hamilton, Antonia HernAndez, Marjan Khatibi, Tamara Kneese, Erin McElroy, Vernelle A. A. Noel, Jessica Olivares, Nassim Parvin, Beth Semel, Renee Shelby, Tanja Wiehn
Neda Atanasoski is Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Maryland. Nassim Parvin is an Associate Professor in the Information School at the University of Washington.
Prologue ix Acknowledgments xi Interview with ChatGPT xv Introduction / Neda Atanasoski and Nassim Parvin 1 1. Maintenance Play / Antonia HernAndez 27 Artist Contribution: "The Embodied Self" / Marjan Khatibi 39 Interlude: Smart Dust / Neda Atanasoski and Nassim Parvin 43 2. Uncivil Technoscience: Anti-immigration and Citizen Science in Boundary Making / IvAn Chaar LOpez 51 3. Hesitancy, Solidarity, and Whiteness: The Limits and Possibilities of Rape-Reporting Apps / Renee Shelby 67 4. Undoing Landlord Technologies: Beyond the Propertied Logics of the Pandemic Past and Present / Erin McElroy 79 Artist Contribution: "Thousand Dreams of Yamur" / Hayri Dortdivanlioglu 95 Interlude: Smart Homes / Neda Atanasoski and Nassim Parvin 99 5. "Reading the Room": Messy Contradictions in the Datafied Home / Tanja Wiehn 113 6. Surveillance Vigilantes: Property, Porch Pirates, and Paranoia on Nextdoor / Jessica L. Olivares 127 7. Alexa, Disability, and the Politics of Things Not Apprehended / Jennifer A. Hamilton 149 Artist Contribution: "Masks, Mirrors, Light and Shadow" / Vernelle A. A. Noel 161 Interlude: Smart Desires / Neda Atanasoski and Nassim Parvin 163 8. Tracking for Two: Surveillance and Self-Care in Pregnancy Apps / Tamara Kneese 175 9. "So Creepy It Must Be True!": Techno-Orientalism, Technonationalism, and the Social Credit Imaginary / Jacob Hagelberg 189 10. Resistant Resonances: Vocal Biomarkers, Transductive Labor, and the Politics of Things Not Heard / Beth Semel 207 Artist Contribution: "Streetsmarts" by Katherine Bennett 223 Interlude: Smart Forests / Neda Atanasoski and Nassim Parvin 225 11. Animal-Vegetal-Technology: Creeping Categories / Sushmita Chatterjee 239 Artist Contribution: "Close Your Eyes" by Sanaz Haghani 255 Epilogue: Dreaming Feminist Futures / Neda Atanasoski and Nassim Parvin 257 Bibliography 265 Contributors 283 Index
"Successfully rethinking the stance that certain technologies go too far into our private lives and bodies, this stellar collection opens up intellectual space for alternative perspectives that will enliven many debates in science and technology studies and beyond. It exposes the exceptional limits of liberal critique of privacy and the human when faced with technologies that threaten the divide between the human and nonhuman, surveillance and privacy, and the intimate and economic. A well-conceptualized, exciting, and much-needed intervention." - Felicity Amaya Schaeffer, author of (Unsettled Borders: The Militarized Science of Surveillance on Sacred Indigenous Land)
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