Future objects: tracing the socio-material politics of anticipation

被引:0
|
作者
Alejandro Esguerra
机构
[1] Bielefeld University,
来源
Sustainability Science | 2019年 / 14卷
关键词
Objects; Anticipation; Future; Anthropocene; Materiality;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper advances current scholarship on future practices and anticipation arguing that the ways in which we engage in future making not only rely on distinct practices but also on objects, future objects. Future objects are defined as an array of socio-material entities that underpin future practices. In drawing on science studies, this paper develops a typology of future objects that takes as its ordering mechanism the political work future objects perform. Type one future objects are solid and ready to use. Their political work is to secure the present by allowing for political agreements that concern the future. Based on a linear model of expertise, this type of future object provides answers in speaking truth to power. Bodies and instruments, databases and power points are involved when producing, as well as performing, type one objects. Type two future objects are about the experimental infrastructure for creating futures. Foresight conferences organize space with the aim in mind to come up with novel visions of sustainable futures in the Anthropocene. Finally, type three future objects are more fluid and still in the making. They are collectively worked on in iterative cycles. Examples range from prototypes of climate engineering to negotiation texts of global environmental agreements. They operate as a centering device and materialize in artifacts integrating participants contributions. In outlining the difference between the three object types, the paper elaborates on the environmental politics of anticipation especially with regard to science policy interaction.
引用
收藏
页码:963 / 971
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Future objects: tracing the socio-material politics of anticipation
    Esguerra, Alejandro
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE, 2019, 14 (04) : 963 - 971
  • [2] On gravel - socio-material objects of northern development
    Howey, Kirsty
    [J]. LEARNING COMMUNITIES-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LEARNING IN SOCIAL CONTEXTS, 2020, (26): : 40 - 49
  • [3] Data journeys: Capturing the socio-material constitution of data objects and flows
    Bates, Jo
    Lin, Yu-Wei
    Goodale, Paula
    [J]. BIG DATA & SOCIETY, 2016, 3 (02): : 1 - 12
  • [4] Settings, arenas and boundary objects: socio-material framings of information practices
    Anderson, Theresa Dirndorfer
    [J]. INFORMATION RESEARCH-AN INTERNATIONAL ELECTRONIC JOURNAL, 2007, 12 (04):
  • [5] Tracing architects' fragile knowing about users in the socio-material environment of design practice
    Van der Linden, Valerie
    Dong, Hua
    Heylighen, Ann
    [J]. DESIGN STUDIES, 2019, 63 : 65 - 91
  • [6] Assemblages and Actor-networks: Rethinking Socio-material Power, Politics and Space
    Mueller, Martin
    [J]. GEOGRAPHY COMPASS, 2015, 9 (01): : 27 - 41
  • [7] ICONIC BRANDS A Socio-Material Story
    Kravets, Olga
    Orge, Orsan
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MATERIAL CULTURE, 2010, 15 (02) : 205 - 232
  • [8] Is medical education ready to embrace the socio-material?
    Goldszmidt, Mark
    Faden, Lisa
    [J]. MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2016, 50 (02) : 162 - 164
  • [9] The textual rendition: Socio-material criticism reconsidered
    Grieve, T
    [J]. PAPERS OF THE BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2006, 100 (01): : 5 - 24
  • [10] A Metalanguage for Learning: Rebalancing the Cognitive with the Socio-Material
    Lim, Fei Victor
    Cope, Bill
    Kalantzis, Mary
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN COMMUNICATION, 2022, 7