Nicola Giusto, Ma in Digital Communication and Cultures
The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia
Ontological and political implications of Network Theory
It is self-evident how information and communications technologies play a central role in social and cultural transformations in many universes: media, language, social actors, politics and public administration, thought and space.
This paper attempts to clarify the present time, analyzing social network paradigm and its relation with the so called digital culture from a critical prospective.
In particular, it preliminary stresses the relationship between any kind of network, power, knowledge and technology (Heidegger, Foucault), then it presents a critical analysis of the most recent studies and ideas (SNT, SNA, the Small world theory, the Network effect, Innovation, Information cascade and logic of diffusion). In part III, two different kinds of realist social ontology are presented and evaluated (Latour’s work and DeLanda’s Assemblage theory) in the attempt to move towards a new philosophy of relation.
The last part explores social and political implications of living embodied in a complex global social network where governance is everyday more managed by technical protocols, apparatus and machines (Deleuze, Castells, Agamben, Galloway).
More information on:
http://www.culturedigitali.org
http://www.lefthandedstudio.com
2. Panopticon was first developed as an architecture
work by J. Bentham (1748 - 1832)
3. Bentham’s building
• Prisoners are constantly visible BUT they do not
see. “visibility is a trap”
• Prisoners are objects of information NEVER subjects
of communication. “collection of separated
individualities”
• Control is unverifiable! No one see inside tower
• Efficiency, Economy, Simplicity, Automation
4. M. Foucault (1926 - 1984)
• The birth of the clinic, 1963
• Discourse on language, 1970
• Discipline & Punish: the birth of the prison, 1975
• Lectures at Collège De France: Security, Territory,
Population, 1977 - 78, & The birth of biopolitics,
1978 - 1979
5. Overall Foucaultian thought
• Knowledge is Power. Information empowers
action, action provokes new information (circular
process)
• Technology changes the model of power /
knowledge
• Active role of observation. Objectivation
produces, evokes its own object
• Contra Structuralist theory, analysis has to be
related to a defined historical context
6. Panopticism as power
• Embodied power relationships... “political
anatomy” ... individual is fabricated
“[...] the body is reduced as a political force at the
least cost and maximezed as a useful force” p. 368
• Exercised continuously
“[...] these tiny, everyday, physical mechanisms, by all
those systems of micro-power that are essentially
non-egalitarian and asymmetrical that we call the
discipline”
7. Panopticism as knowledge
• Increase the utility of the penalty
“the codified power to punish turns into a
disciplinary power to observe” p. 369
• Formation of “biographical” knowledge
“the legal punishment bears upon act; the punitive
technique on a life” p. 371
8. Panopticism as disciplinary society or
‘social laboratory’
Surveillance & Control in order to organise
moltiplicities thru:
• “continuos registration and perpetual assessment
and classification”
• “define tactics of distribution, reciprocal adjustment
of bodies, gestures and rhythms, differentiation of
capacities, reciprocal coordination in relation to
apparatus or tasks”
9. Institutions
object produced knowledge produced
prison prisoner punishment
psychopathology,
asylum madman experimental psychiatry
hospital patient medical treatment
sociology of production,
factory worker human resource management
school student education
army soldier performance, trainings
family ... ...
11. Control
Discipline
Society of Sovereignty XX
XVIII - XIX
(G. Deleuze)
procedure, norm,
Ceremonial,
Mechanism number, signature, codes, protocols
ritual, spectacle
examination
King, leader, Bodies and
Who dividuals
hangman relationships
Light power:
Corporal force, access to information
Kind of power separation, inscription,
power of death or exclusion
subjection
Institution, vast closed Networks -
Space environment, fixed Striated vs Rhizomic
structure spaces
Manifest, public,
Visibility Invisible, material Invisible, intangible
catharsis
13. Deleuze’s Postscript on the societies of
control
[...] In the societies of control, on the other hand, what
is important is no longer either a signature or a
number, but a code: the code is a password, while on
the other hand disciplinary societies are regulated by
watchwords (as much from the point of view of
integration as from that of resistance). The numerical
language of control is made of codes that mark access
to information, or reject it. We no longer find
ourselves dealing with the mass/individual pair.
Individuals have become "dividuals," and masses,
samples, data, markets, or "banks."
14.
15.
16. Internet and decentralised networks
Asymmetry of informations: Server / Clients, Hub / nodes, Google, Facebook, Flickr,
Apple, AT&T, Bing / End User
Moglen, E. (2010), Freedom in the Cloud, Talk at New York ISOC meeting. : http://www.isoc-ny.org/?p=1338
17. Internet and decentralised networks
Asymmetry of informations: Server / Clients, Hub / nodes, Google, Facebook, Flickr,
Apple, AT&T, Bing / End User
Moglen, E. (2010), Freedom in the Cloud, Talk at New York ISOC meeting. : http://www.isoc-ny.org/?p=1338
18. Mapping - make the social graph visible
• map of security cameras in Venice
Anoption project
• participated cartography
Biopolitics map Venice 2007
• create & share data maps
Targetmap