The Scroll Shadows of Electric Urbanism: Geometry of Alienation & Boredom
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13133/2532-6562/17869Keywords:
xenofeminism, Gilles Châtelet, screensAbstract
The geometry of the screen is pretty boring–rectangular. This article attempts to dissect and refashion the electric rectangles that consume so much of today’s visual field. Rather than static surfaces, I argue that the hand-held screens of smartphones host a geometrical underworld that allows urban interactions to be rethought. Electric platforms offer a new density–millions of interactions can take place in a few cm2 of a phone display. How are we seen and how do we hide at these scales? The nanoscopic aspect of electrons reshapes traditional modes of narrative visibility. The velocity of electricity renders today’s images semiotically stochastic. I explore these concerns by engaging the philosophy and aesthetics of xenofeminism along with Gilles Châtelet’s geometry, which conceives distance as a surface rather than a line. As a case study, I analyze the electric object “#xenofeminism” on Instagram. Geometry is useful in studying electric geographies because it is scale independent (geometry works at planetary or subatomic levels). Today’s screenscape induces alienation and boredom. I examine these affects to better appreciate xenofeminism’s “politics for alienation.”
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