Drone Imaginaries and Society

Veranstalter
University of Southern Denmark, Department of the Study of Culture
Veranstaltungsort
Sky Room, Odense Campus College, Campusvej 55, 5230 Odense M
Ort
Odense
Land
Denmark
Vom - Bis
05.06.2018 - 06.06.2018
Von
Kathrin Maurer, University of Southern Denmark

Drones are in the air. The production of civilian drones for rescue, transport, and leisure activity is booming. The Danish government, for example, proclaimed civilian drones a national strategy in 2016. Accordingly, many research institutions as well as the industry focus on the development, usage, and promotion of drone technology. These efforts often prioritize commercialization and engineering as well as setting-up UAV (Unmanned Arial Vehicle) test centers. As a result, urgent questions regarding how drone technology impacts our identity as humans as well as their effects on how we envision the human society are frequently underexposed in these initiatives.

Our conference aims to change this perspective. By investigating cultural representations of civilian and military drones in visual arts, film, and literature, we intend to shed light on drone technology from a humanities’ point of view. This aesthetic “drone imaginary” forms not only the empirical material of our discussions but also a prism of knowledge which provides new insights into the meaning of drone technology for society today.

Several artists, authors, film makers, and thinkers have already engaged in this drone imaginary. While some of these inquiries provide critical reflection on contemporary and future drone technologies – for instance issues such as privacy, surveillance, automation, and security – others allow for alternative ways of seeing and communicating as well as creative re-imagination of new ways of organizing human communities. The goal of the conference is to bring together these different aesthetic imaginaries to better understand the role of drone technologies in contemporary and future societies.

The focus points of the conference are:
- Aesthetic drone imaginaries: Which images, metaphors, ethics, emotions and affects are associated to drones through their representation in art, fiction and popular culture?

- Drone technology and its implications for society: How do drones change our daily routines and push the balance between publicity and privacy

- Historical perspective on drones: In what way do drone imaginaries allow for a counter-memory that can challenge, for instance, the military implementation of drones?

- Drones as vulnerability: Do drones make societies more resilient or more fragile, and are societies getting overly dependent on advanced technologies?

- Utopian or dystopian drone imaginaries: What dream or nightmare scenarios are provided by drone fiction and how do they allow for a (re)imagining of future societies?

- Drones and remote sensing: In what way do drones mark a radical new way of seeing and sensing by their remotely vertical gaze and operative images?

- Drone warfare: Do drones mark a continuation or rupture of the way we understand war and conflict, and how do they change the military imaginary?

Organizer: Kathrin Maurer (Phd, Dr. Phil) , Associate Professor of German Studies kamau@sdu.dk

The conference is free of charge, but you need to register for it here <http://webpay.sdu.dk/system/droner>.

Keynote Speaker:
Derek Gregory, Peter Wall Distinguished Professor at Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies and Department of Geography at the University of British Columbia

Programm

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

9:30 Welcome and introduction: Drone Imaginaries and Society - Kathrin Maurer, Daniela Agostinho

10:00 – 12:15 Session 1: Drone Art

Thomas Stubblefield, Signature Strikes: Drone Art and World-Making
Jan Mieszkowski, Drones and the Big Data Sublime

13:00 – 15:15 Session 2: Seeing with Drones

Svea Braeunert, Forms of the Unseen: Hito Steyerl’s Documents of Drone Warfare

Rasmus Degnbol, Photographing Europe’s Border Change from Above

15:45 – 17:45 Session 3: Drones and Social Communities

Jutta Weber, Social Radar: On Drones and Data Science
Dan Gettinger and Arthur Holland, Drone Art: What it Means, Why it Matters, and Where it’s Going

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

9:15 – 11:30 Session 4: Drone Art and Surveillance

Tomas van Houtryve, Blue Sky Days
Sarah Tuck, Drone Vision: Warfare, Surveillance and Protest

12:15 – 14:30 Session 5: Drones and Gender Politics

Lauren Wilcox, Queering War: The Gender Politics of the Drone
Claudette Lauzon, The Objects of Drone Warfare: A Feminist Art History

14.45 – 16:00 KEYNOTE

Derek Gregory, Sweet Target...Sweet Child: Aerial Violence and the Imaginaries of Remote Warfare

Kontakt

Kathrin Maurer

Campusvej 55
DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark
0045-6550-3335

kamau@sdu.dk

https://www.sdu.dk/en/om_sdu/institutter_centre/ikv/konferencer+og+seminarer/2018_drone_imaginaries_and_society
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