Infrastructural Imaginaries and Aesthetics 2: Making Sense of Networked Space
Type: Virtual Paper
Day: 2/25/2022
Start Time: 9:40 AM
End Time: 11:00 AM
Theme:
Sponsor Group(s):
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
Organizer(s):
Theresa Enright
, Justinien Tribillon
, Brian Rosa
,
Chairs(s):
Justinien Tribillon, Bartlett School of Planning, University College London
; ,
Description:
Over the past two decades, scholars have demonstrated that infrastructure is made of images and representations as much as concrete and steel. Infrastructures are at once symbols, projections of political ideals, and expressions of modernity (Kaika and Swyngedouw, 2000; Gandy, 2014; Rouillard, 2017; Weizman, 2012). When they crack, rust, and collapse, we seek to understand failure in extramaterial terms: as technological, moral, and political decay (Simonnet, 2019; Denis and Pontille, 2021; Truscello, 2020). As such, transdisciplinary works have studied infrastructure as optical (De Boeck, 2011; Chattopadhyay, 2012), visual (Parks, 2009; Mukherjee, 2020), symbolic (Appel, Anand and Gupta, 2018; Easterling, 2014), sonic (Ouzounian, 2020), spectral (Simone, 2012), as poetics (Larkin, 2013), as spatial aesthetics of race (Summers, 2019, as commons (Berlant 2016) and as ideologies (Graham and Marvin 2001; Humphrey, 2005). Addressing the shifting meanings embedded within, and signaled by infrastructure, these works have demonstrated both the power of human representation and the power of material significations in ordering space and subjects. Infrastructural imaginaries and aesthetics change over time, and historic infrastructures, for example, may be recast as valuable heritage and/or as artifacts of socio-spatial division, driving arguments for their conservation or dismantling (Caratzas, 2008). With attention to how different actors modulate infrastructure’s visibility and meaning to communicate problems, solutions, values, and ownership, scholars have identified the exposure of infrastructure as an important horizon of control (Mattern, 2021; Picon, 2018; Simone, 2012).
Who and what imagines infrastructure? With what effects? What aesthetic work is involved in the production and transformation of infrastructure? How do we articulate the relation between the imaginaries and aesthetics of infrastructure, materiality, and socio-spatial change? How does this differ between societies and over time? Addressing these questions, this panel examines the relationship between aesthetics and infrastructure from multiple, historic, comparative, global, and transnational perspectives.
Presentation(s), if applicable
Himanshu Burte, ; Conceiving and living infrastructure: Flyovers and lived citizenship in Mumbai |
Tea Lobo, ; Parks Afford Stories: Green Infrastructure Imaginaries and the Aesthetic Evaluation of Spaces |
Damien Masson, CY Cergy Paris Université; Mapping the everyday infrastructures of feeling: sonic transects of Paris underground |
Caitlin Morrissey, ; Making up the global city through transport infrastructure |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
Role | Participant |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Infrastructural Imaginaries and Aesthetics 2: Making Sense of Networked Space
Description
Virtual Paper
Contact the Primary Organizer
Justinien Tribillon - j.tribillon@ucl.ac.uk