A Hyperized Story: Difference between revisions

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[http://lucasbattich.com/hyper/one.html Everybody may feel like TV celebrities, just by being on televised, although there's a fascist overtones to the whole thing.]
[http://lucasbattich.com/hyper/one.html Everybody may feel like TV celebrities, just by being on televised, although there's a fascist overtones to the whole thing.]


=== Thomas' texts and their links ===
=== Thomas ===


* [http://mailinator.com/inbox.jsp?to=hypertextnarrative#/#showmailpane In 1937 the mass observation movement started in the UK.]
* [http://mailinator.com/inbox.jsp?to=hypertextnarrative#/#showmailpane In 1937 the mass observation movement started in the UK.]

Revision as of 16:08, 26 November 2014

what

A pseudo narrative based on hyperlinks.

The narrative includes readings of Foucault and Deleuze on disciplinary and control societies, TV show Black Mirror, the story of Josh Harris, and many intricate goodies.

Key ideas and terms include:

  • Infrastructure
  • The geographical location of internet sites
  • TV as a controling and normalizing force


List of LINKS and their content

This listing is to help the team organize the narrative and the connection between nodes.


Benjamin's text(s)

Jules' links

Lucas

You are at the vaults of a server in London, about to learn more on disciplinary societies.

The disciplinary power is to train (through a two-fold movement of homogenization and separation), rather than to select and to levy.

Who is Foucault?

The disciplinary power exercises a movement of normalization, while it also separates its subjects according to their level within the system.

Everyone is an observer and observed at the same time.

The examination combine the techniques of an observing hierarchy and those of normalizing judgement.

A society of control do not follow enclosures, but rather its mechanisms of power are modulated across different areas.

"Limitless postponement" as the paradigm of control societies (related to Kafka's The Trial)

Everybody may feel like TV celebrities, just by being on televised, although there's a fascist overtones to the whole thing.

Thomas