The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities

The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities

by Kathrin Maurer
The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities

The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities

by Kathrin Maurer

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Overview

A comprehensive overview of how civilian drones sense the world and how they build the aesthetic imaginaries of our communities.

Drone technology has garnered critical attention across many fields, from engineering to the humanities. While the first wave of drone scholarship was key in initiating the debate on drones, it also privileged the idea of the “scopic regime”—a militarized regime of hypervisuality—in its analyses of the connection between vision and power. The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities broadens the drone’s spectrum of perception by acknowledging its creative, life-affirming possibility with the notion of the sensorium. The sensorium of the drone is a multimedia, synesthetic sensing assemblage in which the human agent is enmeshed with the drone. Drone sensoria can sense in many more ways than the scopic regime—with sound, touch, smell, temperature, and movement.

In The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities, Kathrin Maurer shows how drone sensoria can change our understanding of human communities by constructing imaginaries of social communities based on decentralized and fluid sensing processes. Maurer takes an aesthetic approach to technology, working with two understandings of aesthetics. One understanding refers to aesthetics as a way of experiencing, and it explores how the drone-human assemblage perceives the world. The other refers to aesthetic mimetic representation, and focuses on how aesthetic drone imaginaries in literature, popular culture, visual arts, and films negotiate the sensorial technology of the drone.

Bringing together key ideas in technology studies, studies of aerial views, visual and aesthetic studies, posthuman sensing, machine–human interaction, and communities, The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities sheds a welcome and necessary light on this technology’s creative potential as well as its dangers and risks.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262374897
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 10/03/2023
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 33 MB
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About the Author

Kathrin Maurer is Professor of Humanities and Technology at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU). She is the leader of the Center for Culture and Technology and the research cluster “Drone Imaginaries and Communities” funded by the Independent Research Fund Denmark.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
Part I The Sensorium of the Drone
1 The Sensorial Experience of the Drone and Communities 17
Part II The Body
2 Embodied Sensing and Cyborg Communities 37
3 Facial Sensing and Datafied Communities 67
Part III The Earth
4 Flattened Sensing and Planetary Communities 93
5 Volumetric Sensing and Postcarbon Communities 121
Part IV The Nonhuman 
6 Swarm Sensing and Multitude Communities 147
7 Viral Sensing and Pandemic Communities 171
Conclusion 195
Afterword 203
Notes 207
Bibliography 253
Index 283

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Maurer’s deep and fruitful analysis of drones sets the standards for critical humanities inquiry into their artistic uses, offering a fundamental contribution about aesthetics, sensing, and the communities formed through sensorial capacities beyond the human.”
—Jussi Parikka, Professor, Aarhus University; author of Insect Media and Operational Images

“In this highly imaginative study, Kathrin Maurer invites readers to see beyond the military violence of drone technology, envisioning human-machine communities of shared sensory experience outside the dominance of the techno-gaze.”
—Joanna Zylinska, Professor of Media Philosophy and Critical Digital Practice, King’s College London; author of Nonhuman Photography and The Perception Machine
 
“By probing the sensory envelope of human-machine assemblages, Maurer carves out a compelling narrative of discourse, desire, and multisensory community-building between nonmilitary drones and their human operators – a new and potentially liberatory aesthetic built from out-of-body sensing and autonomous flight.”
—Caroline A. Jones, Professor of Art History, MIT Department of Architecture; Director, MIT Transmedia Storytelling Initiative; editor of Sensorium: Embodied Experience, Technology, and Contemporary Art

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