Author Archive

Bruno Latour, An Inquiry Into Modes of Existence, Intro and contents

25 March 2012

Reblogged from proliferations:

In case you didn’t know, the Intro and contents of the French version of Latour’s Inquiry into the modes of existence is currently available on his website. I was already familiar with most of the arguments and material presented in the introduction as this is mostly stuff I have already heard in some of his recent talks and interviews. Some themes are presented in…

Read more… 20 more words

Reviews of Harman and Latour

17 March 2012

In Volume 5, Issue 1, 2012 of the Journal of Cultural Economy:

  • Bruno Latour’s The Making of Law: An Ethnography of the Conseil d’État – by David Saunders
  • Graham Harman’s Prince of Networks: Bruno Latour and Metaphysics – by Chris Healy

Occupy comes to Bournemouth

12 March 2012

One thing I would have definitely not predicted about the likely evolution of the Occupy movement is that its next flashpoint would be my own town, the quiet seaside holiday resort of Bournemouth. But apparently after the protesters were evicted from the St Paul’s camp in London a few weeks ago, they somehow figured out that the Chancellor (a largely ceremonial role) of Bournemouth University is Lord Nicholas Phillips, who also happens to be the President of the UK’s Supreme Court. So last Friday they set up camp on the lawn at the rear entrance of Bournemouth University’s Talbot Campus, with one of their demands being a meeting with Lord Phillips.

This is happening literally on my doorstep, so on Sunday evening I grabbed my camera, got on my bike and paid a visit to the Occupy Bournemouth movement. There were two middle-aged guys busying themselves at the site, writing messages on the pavement with chalk, putting up posters, and setting up a tent, which one of them told me was going to be the “library,” where people will be able to educate themselves about the movement and other political matters. Both men had their Guy Fawkes masks resting on the top of their heads, ready to deploy at a moment’s notice. They were happy to put it on for me, and indeed whenever someone showed up with a camera, the masks came down. When I took a break from photographing and was chatting with one of the protesters, I saw from the corner of my eye that another protester also took a photo of me chatting to his comrade. I wouldn’t be surprised if I’ve turned up in one of their social media streams already.

The protester I was chatting to told me that today they found out that the piece of land they are occupying is owned by the local council, rather then Bournemouth University. He thought that was good news for them, as for some reason it would take longer for the council to evict them, than for the university. He also told me he came from the St. Paul’s camp, where he spent several months. “We are really big,” he said, “we are all over the world.”

The camp is situated right next to a busy roundabout (Boundary Roundabout), on the border that separates the towns of Bournemouth and Poole, and is very visible to passing traffic. Drivers periodically honked in support, as they glimpsed the camp’s banners asking them to do so. It is also right next to the footpath at the rear entrance of the campus, where thousands of students and staff pass by every morning and afternoon. It will be interesting to see the next move of the University and/or the Council. But my interlocutor gave me the impression that they were in for the long haul and the camp was only just in the initial stages of being constructed.

P.S. My blog post title and the first paragraph are somewhat misleading, as it suggests as if the Occupy movement had only just arrived in Bournemouth. But actually the Occupy movement has been around at least since November 2011, when they got evicted from outside the town hall, and there is another Occupy camp in Boscombe. Their Facebook page dates back to 21st October 2011. So I should have titled the post “Occupy comes to Bournemouth University.”

Update (13/3/2012):

Further coverage: Protesters ‘Occupy’ BU

Plus photo of the sign on the rear gate.

(Photos taken around 6pm on 11 March 2012. Click on Permalink for larger image, if you get the gallery view.)

Video of Isabelle Stengers’ keynote in Halifax

9 March 2012

On “Cosmopolitics: Learning to Think with Sciences, Peoples and Natures,” Halifax, Canada, March 5 , 2012. Thanks to dmf for the link. More details here.

Materialism and World Politics

9 March 2012

Reblogged from Speculative Heresy:

Click to visit the original post

CfP on strategy and materiality

3 March 2012

Call for Papers: BRITISH JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT Special Issue on Strategizing Material & Materializing Strategy. The deadline for submission of papers is 30 January 2013. See the full call here [PDF].

The British Journal of Management is pleased to announce a special issue focused on strategizing material and materializing  strategy. Grounded in practice-based views of strategy,  this special issue will explore material practices associated with  strategizing: How are objects, artifacts, tools and other material resources used by practitioners to shape and enact organizational strategy?

Through research on the practice of strategy, scholars have already begun to explore material objects and strategy tools. One emerging stream of research explores how material objects, including the participants’ physical bodies, are used in strategizing. (…) A  second stream of research has investigated the role of strategy tools in materializing  strategy. (…) However, much more work  is  needed to advance this agenda, which is the purpose of this special issue.

Example topics

We  welcome  empirical  papers that provide new insight on strategizing material and materializing strategy. While organization scholars have traditionally privileged discourse (talk and text) as the empirical basis for their research findings, a growing number are turning their attention toward socio-materiality, which refers to the “inherent inseparability” of social and material aspects of organizational work (Orlikowski, 2008, p. 434). Sometimes material objects are treated as actors (e.g. Callon, 1986; Latour, 1987) or material objects and actors as entangled bundles (e.g. Leonardi,  2011). We invite diverse research methods, both qualitative and quantitative. We are open to innovative approaches, including action research, cognitive mapping, conversation analysis, video ethnography, simulation, and mixed-methods.

Relevant questions include:
•    How do managers use materials and tools to shape strategic processes and decisions?
•    What roles do different types of strategists play in creating, diffusing and/or using strategic materials and tools?
•    How does materiality constrain and/or enhance strategy practice?
•    How are participants’ physical bodies a resource and constraint for strategizing?
•    How do materials and tools gain legitimacy? How are they diffused within and  beyond organizations?
•    What types of materials and tools are used to shape the strategy process? How do they shape the strategy process?
•    What are the dynamics between strategy materials and strategy tools?
•    What are the dynamics between strategizing materials or tools and other elements of strategy practice (e.g. affect and emotion)?

Guest Editors: 

Stéphanie Dameron, Université Paris-Dauphine, France
Jane Lê, University of Sydney, Australia
Curtis LeBaron, Brigham Young University, USA

ANT goes on holiday

28 February 2012

Seminar on actor-network theory and tourism at Wageningen University.

19 April 2012, 13:00-17:00, Leeuwenborgh C62, Wageningen University

Tourism: Ordering, Materiality and Multiplicity

The recent emerging of ANT in tourism studies is linked to a growing interest in understanding tourism as a relational set of practices connecting culture, nature and technology in multifarious ways. Despite the widespread application of ANT across the social sciences no book has dealt with the practical and theoretical implications of using ANT in tourism research.

ANT and Tourism, edited by René van der Duim, Carina Ren and Gunnar Þór Jóhannesson, is the first book to critically engage with the use of ANT in tourism studies. The Cultural Geography Group at Wageningen University has thus organised an international seminar in order to present the book and its main tenets to the wider public.

Program

13.00 hrs.     Tourismscapes 2.0
Opening by René van der Duim, Wageningen University

13.20 hrs.     Relational entrepreneurship
Lecture by Gunnar Þór Jóhannesson, University of Iceland

13.40 hrs.     Oscypek cheese and Ontological Politics
Lecture by Carina Ren, Aalborg University

Coffee/tea break

14.30 hrs.       Discussion
Chair: Claudio Minca, Wageningen University

Coffee/tea break

16.00 hrs.       Wageningen Geography Lecture
Experiencing the Enchantment of Place and Mobility
Jørgen Ole Bærenholdt

Semiotics of Subjectivities

24 February 2012

XL Congress of the Italian Association for Semiotic Studies, Turin, September 28-30, 2012. Keynote speakers:

  • Maurizio Bettini
  • Omar Calabrese
  • Jean-Claude Coquet
  • Umberto Eco
  • Paolo Fabbri
  • Bruno Latour
  • Giovanni Manetti
  • Peter Sloterdijk
  • Patrizia Violi

Policy meets ANT workshop

24 February 2012

Call for participation
Policy meets Actor Network Theory: doctoral student workshop

Policy has become “increasingly central concept and instrument in the organization of contemporary societies [and] now impinges on all areas of life so that it’s virtually impossible to ignore or to escape its influence” (Wedel et al 2005: 3). It has been closely associated with the political in terms of decision making, yet it stems into specific domains for setting goals and means of achieving them.  Policy occupies space at the crossroads – for some it is at the overlap of authority, expertise and order. For others it merges politics, science, technology, and society. And for yet others, policy is associated with administration, management and organization. It conveys deliberation and purpose, competence as well as rationality.

The analytical approach known as Actor Network Theory (ANT), born in science and technology studies, is notoriously known for not being a theory in the strict sense of a testable, predictive and explanatory model. Starting as a negative reading of what is the world enacted in much of social theory ANT offers a set of ontological considerations in the larger scheme of things and associated methodological propositions at the level of research design. In the 1990’s, ANT inspired analytics have also ventured to studies of policy via the governmentality studies and their interest in mentalities as well as technologies of government and in the action at a distance. However, governmentality studies today as a mainstream body within policy analysis are more associated with the former interest in ‘mentalities’ of governing.

Our workshop wants to build on these traditions. We want to ask how ANT may enhance our understanding of policy beyond the rationalist vs. social constructionist debate which has marked policy analysis. This question also implies interest in innovative research design for studying policy which would move beyond the traditional commitments to either global or local scaling of research. We want to engage with some of the key propositions of ANT as deployed in our own empirical analyses of complex realities in the making. Here we refer to a series of methodological commitments applied to the study of policy worlds:

  • principle of symmetry as a way of working in the same analytical register with both success and failure of a policy or a reform
  • study of translations as a way of working with the complexities of new and often unexpected realities crafted in policy process and implementation
  • study of socio-material arrangements with a revised concept of agency which allows for materialities to have effects rather than merely index the social and the symbolic; the question extends to what materialities are engaged in holding policy worlds together
  • study of ‘ontological politics’ as a way of working with non-coherent realities and their co-ordination,
  • question of ‘performativity’ as a way to rearticulate analytical focus on the ‘existence’ of policy worlds in the making

Each participant will have 60 minutes allocated to their work. During this hour they will introduce their paper, providing an overview of the content and argument (approximately 10-15 minutes), followed by critical comments and questions from a predefined main discussant (approximately 10-15 minutes). The author then has a ‘right of reply’ (approx. 10 minutes), before general discussion of the paper (approx. 20-25 minutes).

All papers (max 8000 words) will be electronically circulated to all participants two weeks in advance of the workshop. Participants are required to read the papers. Organizers will name main discussants for each paper who will prepare a detailed reflection of the allocated paper.

PhD students interested in joining the workshop should email an abstract (500 words) to the organizers which will show how their research project fits within the parameters of the workshop and provide a brief summary of their paper.  Selected participants will be asked to submit full paper two weeks prior to the event for circulation. Deadline for abstract submission is 30 March 2012.

Workshop will be held on 21 and 22 June 2012.

Venue for the workshop will be confirmed. Currently, funding is being raised to support workshop participants in attending. There will be no attendance fee.

This workshop is part of University of Kent, South-East ESRC Doctoral Training Centre Advance Training in sociology of policy.

Contact:

David Kocman, School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research, University of Kent, dk218@kent.ac.uk
Aleksandra Lis, Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology, Central European University, lis_aleksandra@phd.ceu.hu

Charisma

21 February 2012

Charisma among others means ‘a special magnetic charm or appeal’ according to Merriam-Webster Dictionary, and it comes from the Greek kharisma, ‘divine favour’ or ‘gift,’ from kharizesthai, ‘to favour,’ which comes from kharis, ‘grace’ or ‘favour.’ And now it is also the name of a new research network focusing on interdisciplinary consumer market studies. See the announcement below. You may notice that a lot of the people involved have been active at the intersection of economic sociology and science and technology studies (STS), which one of the organisers once described as the “‘new’ new economic sociology.’

CHARISMA: CONSUMER MARKET STUDIES

We are pleased to announce that Charisma: Consumer Market Studies, a new online research network, is now live and can be accessed here: http://www.charisma-network.net

In collaboration with CRESC and the Journal of Cultural Economy, the site acts as a resource hub and network for researchers interested in consumer markets. It features a range of material including news items, events and announcements, commentaries and working papers as well as photo essays and data visualisations. At the moment, this includes recent posts from Franck Cochoy, Bill Maurer, Paul Langley, Linsey McGoey, Daniel Weinbren, and Liz McFall.

Charisma takes a robustly interdisciplinary approach to consumer market research since we believe that properly understanding the mix of devices and desires that drive markets means being open to experimental, visual, digital, as well as more traditional techniques, methods, theories and perspectives.

We invite interested researchers to participate and contribute to the site. Charisma is designed to allow the production of content amongst a diverse range of participants. Members of the research network will be issued with an account enabling them to upload content ranging from publication or conference announcements, photos, blog entries or research briefs.

With this in mind, if you or your colleagues are interested in being part of this research network, please send a request to admin@charisma-network.net.

Please feel free to distribute this email widely.

All the best,

The Charisma Team

Joe Deville, Goldsmiths, University of London
Liz McFall, Open University

Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/charismanetwork
Join our mailing list: http://www.charisma-network.net (sign up at the bottom of the page)


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 65 other followers