This is the repository for the online module Bots as Digital Infrapuncture, commissioned by the Utrecht University
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 

2.9 KiB

Title: Introduction - Digital Infrapuncture Slug: 01-s1-introduction-digital-infrapuncture Date: 2020-11-01 12:00 Summary: Digital infrapuncture is a speculative term that can help reframe the perception of the stress points that an infrastructure could have.

Digital infrapuncture is a speculative term that can help reframe the perception of the stress points that an infrastructure could have. In a talk she presented in 2016 called Identifying the point of it all: Towards a Model of "Digital Infrapuncture"1, Verhoeven develops this concept in relation to the field of digital humanities.

Informed by the work of scholar Nowviskie (Nowviskie 2015)2, Verhoeven asks for a rethinking of digital infrastructures in terms of capacity and care, by "developing an appreciation for where it hurts, where the sense of pain is in the worlds that we inhabit and study" and creating small scale interventions which can enkindle transformation on a larger scale.

In her presentation, she describes digital infrastructures according to their:

  • capacity to create the conditions of possibility for connection
  • their capacity for repair (Jackson, 2014)3
  • and their capacity to bring things (back) together

A screenshot of the last slide from Verhoeven's presentation.

If we understand an infrastructure as a relational device -- or in other words -- as a technology that bring things (back) together, we critically enquire where do fail in doing this.

What are examples of infrastructures that do not bring things together anymore?

How does an infrastructure connect? And how are these connections constructed and formatted?

Who is an infrastructure bringing together? And who not? What are the conditions and possibilities for connection they provide? Where do they not connect and concequently exclude people?

And, most importantly, who can actually intervene in the design of infrastructures? And how?


Footnotes & Further readings


  1. Verhoeven, Deb. "Opening Keynote: Identifying the point of it all: Towards a Model of 'Digital Infrapuncture'" Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School (2016) https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/opening-keynote-identifying-point-it-all-towards-model-digital-infrapuncture ↩︎

  2. Nowviskie, Bethany. "On Capacity and Care" Bethany Nowviskie (2015) Accessed 18 September, 2020. http://nowviskie.org/2015/on-capacity-and-care/ ↩︎

  3. Jackson, Steven J. "Rethinking Repair" Media Technologies: Essays on Communication, Materiality, and Society (2014): 221-239. https://sjackson.infosci.cornell.edu/Jackson_RethinkingRepair(MITPress2014).pdf ↩︎