Difference between revisions of "Carolin Wiedemann, Soenke Zehle (2012) Depletion Design: A Glossary of Network Ecologies"
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− | + | [[File:DEPLETION_DESIGN-img.jpg | thumbnail | right]] | |
− | + | == <small>'''Abstract'''</small> == | |
− | + | ''Depletion Design'' suggests that ideas of exhaustion cut across cultural, environmentalist, and political idioms and offers ways to explore the emergence of new material assemblages. We, or so we are told, are running out of time, of time to develop alternatives to a new politics of emergency, as constant crisis has exhausted the means of a politics of representation too slow for the state of exception, too ignorant of the distribution of political agency, too focused on the governability of financial architectures. But new forms of individual and collective agency already emerge, as we learn to live, love, work within the horizon of depletion, to ask what it means to sustain ourselves, each other, again. Of these and other knowledges so created, there can no longer be an encyclopedia; a glossary, perhaps. | |
− | [[ | + | == <small>'''File'''</small> == |
− | [[ | + | |
− | [[ | + | [[File: DEPLETION_DESIGN.pdf]] |
− | [[ | + | |
− | [[ | + | == <small>'''Source'''</small> == |
− | [[ | + | |
− | [[ | + | [[Institute_of_Network_Cultures | Institute of Network Cultures]] |
+ | |||
+ | == <small>'''Links'''</small> == | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''URL:''' http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/no-8-depletion-design-a-glossary-of-network-ecologies-2/# | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Wayback Machine:''' https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/no-8-depletion-design-a-glossary-of-network-ecologies-2/# | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Library]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Institute of Network Cultures]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Carolin Wiedemann]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Soenke Zehle]] | ||
+ | [[Category:English]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Holland]] | ||
+ | [[Category:2012]] |
Latest revision as of 17:49, 15 April 2017
Contents
Abstract
Depletion Design suggests that ideas of exhaustion cut across cultural, environmentalist, and political idioms and offers ways to explore the emergence of new material assemblages. We, or so we are told, are running out of time, of time to develop alternatives to a new politics of emergency, as constant crisis has exhausted the means of a politics of representation too slow for the state of exception, too ignorant of the distribution of political agency, too focused on the governability of financial architectures. But new forms of individual and collective agency already emerge, as we learn to live, love, work within the horizon of depletion, to ask what it means to sustain ourselves, each other, again. Of these and other knowledges so created, there can no longer be an encyclopedia; a glossary, perhaps.
File
Source
Links
Wayback Machine: https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/no-8-depletion-design-a-glossary-of-network-ecologies-2/#