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Digital interfaces with distant suffering : Exploring the vibrant digital materiality of visual global politics

Ølgaard, Daniel Møller LU (2021) EISA2021
Abstract
While the question of how images matters in world politics is a pertinent issue in contemporary International Relations (IR) theory, little attention has been paid to the digital interfaces on and through which images are disseminated. This article engages with recent literature on ‘new materialism,’ ‘postphenomenology’ and ‘interface theory’ as one way to bring to the fore the technological materiality of digital interfaces that have thus far been treated as the hinterlands of visual global politics. The article begins with a review of recent literature on images and world politics that showcases the analytical shortcomings caused by the lack of attention paid to technology and materiality and makes obvious the need for a conceptual and... (More)
While the question of how images matters in world politics is a pertinent issue in contemporary International Relations (IR) theory, little attention has been paid to the digital interfaces on and through which images are disseminated. This article engages with recent literature on ‘new materialism,’ ‘postphenomenology’ and ‘interface theory’ as one way to bring to the fore the technological materiality of digital interfaces that have thus far been treated as the hinterlands of visual global politics. The article begins with a review of recent literature on images and world politics that showcases the analytical shortcomings caused by the lack of attention paid to technology and materiality and makes obvious the need for a conceptual and methodological vocabulary with which to take stock of the crucial role of digital interfaces in visual global politics. Next, I theorise the role of interfaces in global affairs and propose an analytical strategy that enables IR scholars to examine how interfaces shape visual global politics in concrete albeit ambiguous ways. Finally, applying this framework, I provide an illustrative analysis of a specific digital interface - the app “ShareTheMeal” by the World Food Programme - and discuss how this particular interface shapes the visual mediation of and public responses to humanitarian disasters. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Visual politics, Postphenomenology, Apps, humanitarianism, Digital Media
conference name
EISA2021
conference dates
2021-09-13 - 2021-09-17
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bd7e7c9e-066f-4383-acad-8b2afa34a901
date added to LUP
2021-12-06 11:09:21
date last changed
2021-12-06 14:32:00
@misc{bd7e7c9e-066f-4383-acad-8b2afa34a901,
  abstract     = {{While the question of how images matters in world politics is a pertinent issue in contemporary International Relations (IR) theory, little attention has been paid to the digital interfaces on and through which images are disseminated. This article engages with recent literature on ‘new materialism,’ ‘postphenomenology’ and ‘interface theory’ as one way to bring to the fore the technological materiality of digital interfaces that have thus far been treated as the hinterlands of visual global politics. The article begins with a review of recent literature on images and world politics that showcases the analytical shortcomings caused by the lack of attention paid to technology and materiality and makes obvious the need for a conceptual and methodological vocabulary with which to take stock of the crucial role of digital interfaces in visual global politics. Next, I theorise the role of interfaces in global affairs and propose an analytical strategy that enables IR scholars to examine how interfaces shape visual global politics in concrete albeit ambiguous ways. Finally, applying this framework, I provide an illustrative analysis of a specific digital interface - the app “ShareTheMeal” by the World Food Programme - and discuss how this particular interface shapes the visual mediation of and public responses to humanitarian disasters.}},
  author       = {{Ølgaard, Daniel Møller}},
  keywords     = {{Visual politics; Postphenomenology; Apps; humanitarianism; Digital Media}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Digital interfaces with distant suffering : Exploring the vibrant digital materiality of visual global politics}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}