Automation & Cultural Production
Event Information
About this Event
Seb Franklin and Annie McClanahan join Nick Ridout for a conversation about automation and its relationship to cultural production.
Instead of imagining a future in which our lives are managed for us by robots or AI, it may be time to think instead about how automation is already deeply embedded in our everyday lives. Automation is quietly reshaping human activity in manufacturing, logistics, finance, welfare, education and justice. Automation is not replacing human beings, but it may be changing how we work and act, and how we think and feel about ourselves and other people.
The current pandemic has made the entanglement of human behaviour with data more visible to more people than ever before: a contact tracing app, for example, draws attention to a human-data relationship in a way that using a contactless bank card to access public transport might not. But both are examples of how the human-data relationship may be automating humans, generating behaviours that shape new kinds of subject.
Seb, Annie and Nick will talk about these changes and how they are manifesting themselves in cultural production. Will new kinds of subjectivity formed through our involvement with automation lead to the production of new aesthetic forms? Can an analysis of cultural production that recognises the contemporary and historical significance of automation offer a critical understanding of human relationships with the machines we make?
Seb Franklin is the author of Control: Digitality as Cultural Logic (MIT Press, 2015) and Forms of Disposal: Digitality, Racial Capitalism, and the Informatics of Value (forthcoming, University of Minnesota Press). He teaches contemporary literature, culture, and theory at King’s College London.
Annie McClanahan is an Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of Dead Pledges: Debt, Crisis, and 21st Century Culture (Stanford UP, 2016), the first book to look at cultural responses to the 2007-8 financial crisis. She has published in South Atlantic Quarterly, Representations, Journal of Cultural Economy, theory & event, boundary 2, and elsewhere. She is currently working on a project titled “Tipwork, Microwork, Automation.”
Nick Ridout is Professor of Theatre at Queen Mary University of London. His new book, Scenes from Bourgeois Life, was published by University of Michigan Press in June 2020. As part of his ongoing historical materialist work on theatre, he is currently working on histories and theories of possession and automation in work, acting and performance.
Duration: 2 hours
This talk is free and open to anyone. If you have any particular access requirement needs or would like more information, please contact us at possession.automation@gmail.com
Other Conversations
Possession & Performance will be hosted by Nick Ridout with Paul C Johnson and Rebecca Schneider on Friday 24th July, 6-8pm (BST). Please click here for further information.
Possession & Subjectivity will be hosted by Nick Ridout with Kyla Wazana Tompkins and Roberto Strongman on Friday 31st July, 608pm (BST). Please click here for further information.
These talks are part of Performance, Possession & Automation, a collaborative research project led by Nick Ridout and Orlagh Woods, in collaboration with Joe Kelleher, Fiona Templeton and Simon Vincenzi.
We are exploring automation and possession as two ways of thinking about what happens to human subjects who act in ways that they do not themselves fully control. How can making and thinking about performance contribute to thinking about these ideas?
This project is supported through the Collaborations Fund of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences and The Centre for Public Engagement, Queen Mary University of London in partnership with Fierce Festival and Hampstead Theatre.