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Technicity and the Genesis of the Posthuman World in Literature, Film, Performance, Computational Media, and Critical Theory

Type: Virtual

Virtual Session

Description

Although Heidegger proclaimed that the essence of technology is a bringing-forth or revealing (poiesis) of the world, he did not articulate what kind of world or whose world it brings forth. Given that technology is, after all, made by humans, it is highly probable that it reveals an anthropocentric world. How do later thinkers of technology such as Derrida, Deleuze/Guattari, Serres, Simondon, and Stiegler address this ambiguity regarding the relation between technology and the human being? To what extent do contemporary trends of philosophy of technology such as neocybernetics, object-oriented ontology, and new materialism succeed in elucidating a potential of technology to reveal a non-anthropocentric world? And how does the historical change in the dominant mode of technology impact on “the essence of technology”? In other words, what different relations between technology and the human do three historically dominant modes of technology—mechanics of the seventeenth and eighteenth century, thermodynamics of the nineteenth century, and information theory of the twenty and the twenty-first century—develop and realize? In what ways do literary, cinematic, performative, or computational media works deploy, assemble, or transform aesthetic techniques and/or media technologies to reproduce, complicate, or break with anthropocentrism? 
This seminar aims to bring together proposals that rethink the role of technicity in all forms of art in revealing, deconstructing, or modulating the world on the multiple scales beyond and below those of human perception, memory, understanding, and emotion. We also invite proposals that examine and/or supplement existing critical theories on technics and the world from a non-anthropocentric or planetary perspective. Proposals are also welcome that aim to closely read literary texts, films, performances, or intermedial and computational media works that experiment with artistic techniques’ or media technologies’ potential to reinvent a non- or post-anthropocentric collective or assemblage.
Related possible topics we consider include but are not limited to:

Paleontological explorations of technics
The status of technology in environmental humanities
Technogenesis and anthropogenesis
Media archaeology and technology
Technology of biopolitics and human/inhuman assemblages
Theories of apparatus and dispositif
Technology and affect
Technology and art for the Frankfurt School and Benjamin
Artificial intelligence and art making
Science and technology studies’ approaches to technicity in art

Please submit a paper title, abstract, and speaker bio by selecting “Technicity and the Genesis of the Posthuman World in Literature, Film, Performance, Computational Media, and Critical Theory” in the drop-down menu on the ACLA website. Please feel free to send inquiries to seminar organizers at [email protected] and [email protected]
 

Schedule

Friday, May 30, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Dream Apparatus (across Film, Video, and Poetry)
Mayumo Inoue — Hitotsubashi University
Radically saying no? Agents and the Creation of Cultures of Artificial Intelligence through artistic practices
Sonja Thiel — University of California Berkeley (UC Berkeley)
The Museum of Failure: Technology, Art, and Posthuman conditions
Juhyeon Gu
Paying Attention: De/Culturing the Global Youth
Yu-I (Yvette) Hsieh — Rutgers University
Saturday, May 31, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

The Cinematic Genesis of the Posthuman World as Emergent Transindividual Individuations
Jecheol Park — Seoul National University
Hauntological Archive and Troubling Histories on East Asian films
[email protected] Ahn — Sookmyung Women's University
Exploring Technicity and the Copernican Turn in a Retro-Futuristic Discourse: Ian McEwan’s "Machines Like Me"
Pinar İnceefe — University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Return of the obsolete film medium in the age of Posthumanism
Yongjin Kim — Chung-Ang University
Sunday, June 1, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Technics as Mediation: Rethinking Nature in Wu Ming-Yi's The Stolen Bicycle
Chen-Kuang Yin — National Tsing Hua University
When a noun becomes a verb: Ontological possibilities of Simondonian technicity in William Gibson’s cyberpunk novels
Amrita Iyer — Nanyang Technological University
Maxwell's Demon and the Veil of Ignorance
Zach Wagner — Binghamton University (The State University of New York)
The Proliferation of AI Agents: No Human Needed for Non-human Communication
Sangmin Kim — Yonsei University