194 pages, 6 x 9
17
Paperback
Release Date:22 Mar 2024
ISBN:9780817361358
Hardcover
Release Date:22 Mar 2024
ISBN:9780817321864
Disobedient Aesthetics
Surveillance, Bodies, Control
SERIES:
Rhetoric and Digitality
University of Alabama Press
Examines emergent forms of creative civil disobedience that have arisen in response to digital tools of bodily surveillance and control
The contemporary world bristles with tools of observation and manipulation. Security cameras, social media, data mining, biometric scans, and other instruments ensnare the individual in a web of surveillance. In Disobedient Aesthetics, Anthony Stagliano exposes the use of human lives as sites of data exploitation and outlines paths of resistance. From the thermal-vision systems used on military drones, which use human body heat itself as a media object, to facial recognition platforms that use human faces as data mines, and from law enforcement tools of DNA analysis to data-driven urban governance, the realm of algorithmic surveillance and control is wide and subtle.Disobedient Aesthetics outlines interventions into the technical systems subtending data-driven surveillance and control. Stagliano maps not only the surveillant regimes afforded by recent networked technologies, but also the inventive, artistic research into ways of undermining, upending, or redirecting such technologies. The concluding chapter examines creative, critical, and collective efforts to democratize access to the technology that undergirds such scrutiny and enables ways to detect and contest its power.
In a fascinating epilogue, Stagliano revisits current theories of control and offers an alternative reading of Gilles Deleuze’s oft-cited thesis on control societies: namely that it is not a matter of “finding new weapons” to undermine control but developing new techniques, new designs, new prototypes, and new modes of creative escape.
By highlighting experimental art as rhetorical deliberation on contemporary projects of control and as maps of disobedient avenues pointing toward new worlds, Stagliano shows a vital new direction for conceptualizing rhetoric in the present.’
—Andrew Pilsch, author of Transhumanism: Evolutionary Futurism and the Human Technologies of Utopia
In Disobedient Aesthetics: Surveillance, Bodies, Control, Anthony Stagliano brings theories of rhetoric and media to bear on compelling examples of embodied protests against control society technology. His discussion of facial recognition as a form of production posits the human face in posthuman terms--face as an interface of control, face as a site of demand, face as an index of unrecognizable traits, and face as a locale for deception and truth—thus upending a purely representational approach to aesthetics.’
—Annette Vee, author of Coding Literacy: How Computer Programming is Changing Writing
Anthony Stagliano is a filmmaker, media artist, and theorist based in Rome. His films and videos have screened in festivals and galleries around the world. He is an assistant professor of communication and media arts at John Cabot University.