Marco Deseriis on Sat, 23 Feb 2008 00:25:26 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime-ann> March 6-7 | Radars & Fences | NYU Conference |
. Radars & Fences When the Paradigms of Discipline and Control Collide Conference March 6-7 New York University http://blogs.nyu.edu/blogs/md1445/rf/ To RSVP: http://www.nyu.edu/media.culture/events Radars and fences, satellites and walls, networks and bunkers. Two different sets of technologies confront us: the former epitomize the selective and flexible character of what Gilles Deleuze termed the “societies of control”; the latter embody the “old” disciplinary paradigm based on separation, physical mass containment, and restriction of the freedom of movement. Most of the times control and discipline coexist ad reinforce each other; sometimes they seem to collide. This is due to a variety of far-reaching factors and transformations occurring in the productive sphere. As a matter of fact, it is the very structure of the network society, with its decentralization of tasks and constant multiplication of electronic eyes that threatens the opacity of physical and immaterial bunkers. By looking at the grey areas where control and discipline, transparency and secrecy, democracy and the state of exception overlap and collide, Radars and Fences provide a cross-disciplinary platform whereby researchers, artists, journalists, filmmakers, and activists can negotiate new and critical positions. (Extended rationale at the bottom of this email) *** SCHEDULE Thursday, March 6, 5:00-8:30pm NYU School of Law 40 Washington Square South Vanderbilt Hall Room 206 5:00 – 5:15 pm Welcome * Ted Magder, NYU Council for Media & Culture; Chair, Department of Media, Culture, and Communication, NYU Steinhardt 5:15 – 5:30 pm Conference Overview * Marco Deseriis, doctoral candidate, Department of Media, Culture, and Communication, NYU Steinhardt 5:30 - 8:00 pm Panel: The Military between Transparency and Secrecy Speakers: * James DerDerian, Director of the Global Security Program, Watson Institute, Brown University "The Desert of the Real, the Simulacrum of War, and the Weaponization of Culture" * Trevor Paglen, Artist and experimental geographer, Department of Geography, University of California, Berkeley "Blank Spots on a Map: State Secrecy and the Geography of Nowhere" * John Sifton, Human rights attorney, Executive Director of One World Research "Why the CIA Secret Prisons Were not Really Secret" Moderator: * Stephen Duncombe, NYU Council for Media & Culture; Gallatin School, NYU 8:00 - 8:30 pm Reception *** Friday, March 7, 10:00-2:00 pm NYU Kimmel Center for University Life 60 Washington Square South Room 808 10:00 am – 1:00 pm Panel: Identification Procedures, Net Wars, and the Struggle over the Securitization of the Internet Speakers: * David Lyon, Director of the Surveillance Project, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. "Stretched Screens: Ubiquity, Interoperability and Identification Protocols" * Gabriella Coleman, Assistant Professor, Department of Media, Culture and Communication, NYU. "Old and New Net Wars over Speech, Freedom and Secrecy or How to Understand the Hacker and Lulz battle against the C0$" * Ron Deibert, Director of the Citizen Lab and the OpenNet Initiative, University of Toronto. "The New Geopolitics of the Internet" Moderator: Becky Lenz, Visiting scholar, Department of Media, Culture and Communication, NYU. 1:30 – 2:00 pm Closing Remarks & Reception *** Please RSVP on the Council for Media & Culture web site: http://www.nyu.edu/media.culture/events/event.html?e_id=662 *** RATIONALE Radars & Fences: When the Paradigms of Discipline and Control Collide Radars and fences, satellites and walls, networks and bunkers. Two different sets of technologies confront us: the former are transparent, discreet, mobile, and selective; the latter are opaque, conspicuous, immobile, and non-discriminating. The former epitomize the modulating and flexible character of what Gilles Deleuze termed the “societies of control” while the latter embody the “old” disciplinary paradigm based on separation, physical mass containment, and restriction of the freedom of movement. Most of the times control and discipline coexist and reinforce each other; sometimes they seem to collide. This is due to a variety of far-reaching factors and transformations occurred in the productive sphere over the last decades. If the fall of the Berlin Wall and the emergence of ICT seemed to foretell, if only for a while, the decline of disciplinary apparatuses, the new millennium presents us with an extremely functional “return” of dividing and enclosing technologies – from the U.S.-Mexico fence and Israel-Palestine wall to the steady growth of the U.S. prison-industrial system. In other words, besides that such a "return" may be in fact a process of constant strengthening, the Foucaultian disciplinary paradigm and the Deleuzian control societies are coming to form a mesh, where individualized immaterial control and physical mass containment of the workforce seem perfectly integrated and complementary. However, if in authoritarian states such as China and Iran such integration of discipline and control needs little justification in ideological terms (at least on the inside), in the West such a co-existence is not frictionless. During the Cold War, the emerging rhetoric of transparency and accountability associated with control societies had primarily a propagandistic function against the opacity and closeness of real socialism. But with the rise of the network society, transparency has increasingly become a necessary and material component of open workflows, management methods, and governance. At the same time though, an excess of openness puts at risk industrial secrets, military R&D, intellectual property assets, state secrets, and political careers. To be sure, in the control societies access to information is restricted and modulated by codes and passwords. However, a number of notable examples – from the Abu Ghraib scandal to the leaking of the Windows source code, from the unveiling of the NSA eavesdropping program to the CIA extraordinary renditions – show how hard it is for governments and corporations to obfuscate and seclude information from public scrutiny. And yet, there are areas of public life that formidably resist the rhetoric of transparency: around the 10 per cent of the DoD budget is allocated to the so-called “black programs,” top-secret military programs whose very existence and name is unacknowledged by the government; immigrants’ detention facilities are situated in the remotest regions; and biotech research is highly protected in spite of its far-reaching consequences on the ecosystem and human life. On the other hand, it is the very structure of the network society, with its decentralization of tasks and constant multiplication of electronic eyes that threatens the opacity of physical and immaterial bunkers. By looking at the grey areas where control and discipline, transparency and secrecy, democracy and the state of exception overlap and collide, Radars and Fences provide a cross-disciplinary and experimental platform whereby researchers, artists, journalists, and activists can negotiate new and critical positions. *** Radars & Fences is being coordinated by doctoral candidate Marco Deseriis as part of a grant awarded by the NYU Council for Media and Culture with assistance provided by the Department of Media, Culture and Communication, and the Information Law Institute. _______________________________________________ nettime-ann mailing list nettime-ann@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ann