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The Invisible Landscapes : The Construction of New Subjectivities in the Era of the Mobile Telephone

Yoshida, Miya LU (2006) In Doctoral studies and research in fine and performing arts
Abstract
The interventions of portable digital devices such as mobile telephones, mp3 players, PDAs and many others, have contributed to the formation of contemporary notions of space. The impact of these devices' mobility (informing the users' mobility) could even be paralleled to the shift from the effects of still photography to those of film in the 19th century. Especially important for the perspective of this study is the notion that mobile



telephony is said to enhance the complexity of subjective space - for example by its passive aural communication functions questioning and relativising existing spatial boundaries. As this study can exemplify in many cases, the shift in spatialities is one that is first and foremost one... (More)
The interventions of portable digital devices such as mobile telephones, mp3 players, PDAs and many others, have contributed to the formation of contemporary notions of space. The impact of these devices' mobility (informing the users' mobility) could even be paralleled to the shift from the effects of still photography to those of film in the 19th century. Especially important for the perspective of this study is the notion that mobile



telephony is said to enhance the complexity of subjective space - for example by its passive aural communication functions questioning and relativising existing spatial boundaries. As this study can exemplify in many cases, the shift in spatialities is one that is first and foremost one that involves subjectivities - ?objective? space remains



unchanged, although the rhetoric of telecommunication hastens to suggest this. What has actually changed are the social institutions in public environments, implementing a variety of significant changes in the relation of public and private space as well as introducing critical changes in the perception of and attention for the self as



related to an external social reality. This implies not only a transcendence of spatial models, but also modal change of our being-in-space.



In order to think about these questions, I have developed the concept of a methodological ?juxtassemblage? out of the manifold evidence of historical and contemporary mobile communication - a quasi-?cubist?, multi-perspective research method that involves the retrieval and juxtaposition of artistic materials as well as found ?non-artistic? elements - as my adisciplinary working approach, since it promises to facilitate thinking about and in newly emerging spaces, which are complicated, if not impossible, to grasp within the confines of



a single discipline. In order to develop this ?juxtassemblage? based on concrete materials and observations in different fields of ?commonplace? knowledge about mobile communication, I curated two interrelated art projects under the title The Invisible Landscapes - one in Malmö (2003), the other in Bangkok (2005). In both cases, I used a curatorial platform for testing, examining and collecting artistic and theoretical knowledge.



As a result of the valuable contributions of artists to these two exhibitions and the curatorial process connected to them, I was able to unfold the inherent contradictions, paradoxes and disjunctures in the way the space of mobile telecommunication is perceived individually and socially, and I have further developed them



with an exploration of a collection of visual materials from the realm of mobile network communication. By navigating through these concrete materials - artistic, non-artistic / subjective, less subjective / visual and



non-visual -, my study comes to conclude that phenomena to be described by a psychological ?flatness? - a ?flattening-out? of subjectivities to conform to a mode of existence that is replaced by capitalist economies and geopolitics mostly organized in networks - can be observed as one pervasive aspect of new modes of being in space produced through individual and collective uses of digital mobile communication.



(My full document can be found in http://www.invisible-landscapes.net/en/dissertation_start.html) (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Associate Professor Mouri, Yoshitaka, Musical Creativity and the Environment, Faculty of Music, Tokyo National University of Fine Arts & M
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Subjectivities, Art History, Digital Network, Mobile Telecommunication, Geopolitics, Konstvetenskap
in
Doctoral studies and research in fine and performing arts
issue
1
pages
468 pages
publisher
Malmö Faculty of Fine and Performing Arts, Lund University
defense location
Lunds Stadshall
defense date
2006-09-15 10:00:00
ISSN
1653-8617
ISBN
91-628-6921-3978
91-628-6921-2
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7d3f05be-5024-4aa8-bd7b-f696e2f64634 (old id 547086)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:57:52
date last changed
2021-07-27 11:12:27
@misc{7d3f05be-5024-4aa8-bd7b-f696e2f64634,
  abstract     = {{The interventions of portable digital devices such as mobile telephones, mp3 players, PDAs and many others, have contributed to the formation of contemporary notions of space. The impact of these devices' mobility (informing the users' mobility) could even be paralleled to the shift from the effects of still photography to those of film in the 19th century. Especially important for the perspective of this study is the notion that mobile<br/><br>
<br/><br>
telephony is said to enhance the complexity of subjective space - for example by its passive aural communication functions questioning and relativising existing spatial boundaries. As this study can exemplify in many cases, the shift in spatialities is one that is first and foremost one that involves subjectivities - ?objective? space remains<br/><br>
<br/><br>
unchanged, although the rhetoric of telecommunication hastens to suggest this. What has actually changed are the social institutions in public environments, implementing a variety of significant changes in the relation of public and private space as well as introducing critical changes in the perception of and attention for the self as<br/><br>
<br/><br>
related to an external social reality. This implies not only a transcendence of spatial models, but also modal change of our being-in-space.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
In order to think about these questions, I have developed the concept of a methodological ?juxtassemblage? out of the manifold evidence of historical and contemporary mobile communication - a quasi-?cubist?, multi-perspective research method that involves the retrieval and juxtaposition of artistic materials as well as found ?non-artistic? elements - as my adisciplinary working approach, since it promises to facilitate thinking about and in newly emerging spaces, which are complicated, if not impossible, to grasp within the confines of<br/><br>
<br/><br>
a single discipline. In order to develop this ?juxtassemblage? based on concrete materials and observations in different fields of ?commonplace? knowledge about mobile communication, I curated two interrelated art projects under the title The Invisible Landscapes - one in Malmö (2003), the other in Bangkok (2005). In both cases, I used a curatorial platform for testing, examining and collecting artistic and theoretical knowledge.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
As a result of the valuable contributions of artists to these two exhibitions and the curatorial process connected to them, I was able to unfold the inherent contradictions, paradoxes and disjunctures in the way the space of mobile telecommunication is perceived individually and socially, and I have further developed them<br/><br>
<br/><br>
with an exploration of a collection of visual materials from the realm of mobile network communication. By navigating through these concrete materials - artistic, non-artistic / subjective, less subjective / visual and<br/><br>
<br/><br>
non-visual -, my study comes to conclude that phenomena to be described by a psychological ?flatness? - a ?flattening-out? of subjectivities to conform to a mode of existence that is replaced by capitalist economies and geopolitics mostly organized in networks - can be observed as one pervasive aspect of new modes of being in space produced through individual and collective uses of digital mobile communication.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
(My full document can be found in http://www.invisible-landscapes.net/en/dissertation_start.html)}},
  author       = {{Yoshida, Miya}},
  isbn         = {{91-628-6921-3978}},
  issn         = {{1653-8617}},
  keywords     = {{Subjectivities; Art History; Digital Network; Mobile Telecommunication; Geopolitics; Konstvetenskap}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Malmö Faculty of Fine and Performing Arts, Lund University}},
  series       = {{Doctoral studies and research in fine and performing arts}},
  title        = {{The Invisible Landscapes : The Construction of New Subjectivities in the Era of the Mobile Telephone}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4831631/547087.pdf}},
  year         = {{2006}},
}