lecturer in digital media and culture at the University of Manchester, UK.

sam.hind@manchester.ac.uk

Category: Performance

  • ‘The New Social-ism’ – 11th December 2013

    What is knowable, valuable and visible in the emerging social economy?

    A one-day conference hosted by Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies

    10am-6.30pm, 11th December 2013

    Room MS.01, University of Warwick

    The era of ‘advanced liberalism’ or ‘neoliberalism’ was characterized by an expansion of economic rationalities and methodologies, beyond the limits of the market. Sociology, social policy and other forms of social expertise were amongst the victims of this ‘economic imperialism’, leading to an apparent ‘death of the social’ (Rose, 1996).

    Today, however, appeals to the ‘social’ are everywhere: ‘social enterprise’, ‘social media’, ‘social neuroscience’, ‘social prescribing’, ‘social marketing’, ‘social analytics’, ‘social innovation’. This is thanks partly to the affordances of new techniques of accounting, network visualization and behavioural analysis, many of which take advantage of the ubiquitous digitization of market and non-market activity. The social world can be seen, quantified and influenced via new forms of expertise and data analytics. Managers, marketers and policy-makers make explicit appeals to the ‘social’, in order to sustain brands, rational decision-making, mental health and public goods. But the question of how the social sciences relate to this new-found interest, or contribute to it, remains an open one (Savage & Burrows, 2007).

    How do we make sense of this? What is the ontology of the ‘social’ that is being appealed to, and how does it differ from the ‘social’ of 20th century statistics, society and sociology? What methodologies are at work in rendering this form of sociality visible, measurable and governable? Is social network analysis now performative, as neo-classical economics has been described in the past? What power relations are latent in this new notion of the social, and to what extent is it in fact reducible to the economic after all – or, perhaps, the biological?

    This conference brings together scholars working in economic sociology, science and technology studies, social studies of finance, media studies, social studies of Big Data and other fields, to address these questions. Confirmed speakers include:

    The conference is free to attend, but registration is essential. You can register for this conference here. All queries should be sent to Will Davies –William.j.davies@warwick.ac.uk

    The event takes place in Room MS.03, which is in the Mathematics and Statistics building. A campus map is available here (the building is number 38 on the map). Information on how to get to Warwick University is available here.

    The conference is sponsored by Economy and Society.

  • Cartographica 48 (3)

    The new fall issue of Cartographica is now available online. In the review section:

    Chris Perkins tackles a new title on graphic design maps, A Map of the World According to Illustrators and Storytellers. 

    Richard Hornsey details another tube map book, Mind the Map. His ‘Listening to the Tube Map’ article for Environment and Planning D is well worth a read. Available (open access) here.

    I take on Jason Farman’s exhaustive Mobile Interface Theory.

    Clancy Wilmott delves into the fantastic Cities Without Ground (which I also talked about here).

    And, Gwilym Eades critiques Mapping Europe’s Borderlands.

    You can find my review on the About page.

  • OWS and Protest Tactics

    A 10 minute video on the police tactics employed during OWS nearly 2 years ago on the eve of its anniversary (via the sparrow project). The narration grounds the visual evidence of multiple arrests in relation to their apparent arbitrary nature, based on clothing, personal appearances and facial hair. Interesting in light of the mass arrests in Tower Hamlets recently.

    It is also worth noting the similarity to the strategies employed by the London Metropolitan Police Force over the last few years. Although I would perhaps break from the videographers’ narrative to suggest that onward movement during such events is not necessarily a bad thing, and can in fact, as the Met well know, create even more problems for the police.

  • Tele-cartographies

    More on Julian Oliver’s delightful Border Bumping project in video form below. It returns for a second time at Abandon Normal Devices this October:

  • Festival Season in the City

    Autumn is always a fertile season in the city. Bands are back on tour, students are back to University, and festivals of literature, technology, film and science abound. Manchester and Liverpool are no different. I thought I’d give a little rundown of some of the intriguing events going down in the next few months as a little taster:

    Oct 3rd – Liverpool – Border Bumping. As part of Abandon Normal Devices. From the website:

    “Border Bumping will relaunch as a freely available, custom-built smartphone application in September 2013, allowing users to collect cell tower and location data as they traverse national borders in trains, cars, buses, boats or on foot.

    The ongoing collection and rendering of these disparities results will create an ever evolving record of infrastructurally antagonised territory, a tele-cartography”.

    http://www.andfestival.org.uk/events/border-bumping/

     

    Oct 4th – Liverpool – A Pervert’s Guide to Ideology. As part of Abandon Normal Devices. From the website:

    “The makers of The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema return with The Pervert’s Guide To Ideology. Philosopher Slavoj Žižek and filmmaker Sophie Fiennes use their interpretation of moving pictures to present a compelling cinematic journey into the heart of ideology – the dreams and beliefs that shape our common practices”.

    http://www.andfestival.org.uk/events/perverts-guide-to-ideology/

     

    Oct 12th – Manchester – What is a City but the People? Archive Film and Walking Tour. As part of The Manchester Weekender. From the website:

    “Discover the modernist dreams of post-war Manchester in a fascinating guided walk and archive film screening – presented by Manchester Modernist Society and the North West Film Archive”.

    http://www.creativetourist.com/articles/cinema/manchester/manchester-weekender-guided-walk-film-what-is-a-city-but-the-people/

     

    Oct 13th – Manchester – UFO in Her Eyes. As part of Manchester Literature Festival. From the website:

    “Written and directed by Xiaolu Guo, UFO in Her Eyes is an adaptation of her critically acclaimed 2010 novel of the same name. Partially inspired by Kafka’s The Metamorphosis and Kurosawa’s Rashomon, the film is a compelling and funny satire on contemporary Chinese society and new consumerism. Kwok Yun’s life is changed forever when she thinks she sees a UFO hovering over Three-Headed Bird Village. She alerts the authorities, who immediately send a team to investigate, while the village’s ambitious mayor spots a tourist opportunity. As money and visitors pour in, the village is transformed, and Kwok Yun has to adjust to a very different life”.

    http://www.manchesterliteraturefestival.co.uk/events/ufo-in-her-eyes-290

     

    Oct 19th and 20th – Manchester – From Semaphore to Smartphone. As part of Manchester Science Festival. From their website:

    “We use our smartphones for everything these days – sending texts, browsing the web, taking pictures, watching movies and keeping in touch with our friends. It makes you wonder what we did before them. Well, wonder no more as the University of Salford takes you on a journey of communications discovery. See how technology has changed the way we communicate, find out how the telephone works and how broadband is delivered to your home, marvel at how big mobile phones used to be and discover how radio allows you to communicate around the globe. A hands-on exhibition that will engage the whole family”.

    http://www.manchestersciencefestival.com/whatson/event.aspx?ID=1639

     

    Oct 27th – Manchester – Nose-wise: A Smelly Talk and Walk of Manchester. As part of Manchester Science Festival. From their website:

    “What does Manchester smell like? From the scents of St Albert’s Square to the whiffs of the canal, take a fascinating smellwalk through the city, led by Dr Victoria Henshaw of the University of Sheffield, and discover the important role this frequently neglected sense plays in our experience of the world around us. This two-hour family session starts with an interactive talk on the sense of smell at The Manchester Museum – complete with pongy props and animal skulls – followed by a guided sniff through Manchester city centre, finishing under the Chinese Arch in Chinatown. An extraordinary sensory journey through the city’s fragrances, stinks and stenches”.

    http://www.manchestersciencefestival.com/whatson/smelly-walk