A Flock of Rogue Drones

Main Article Content

Hille Koskela
Liisa Mäkinen
Thomas Behrndt

Abstract

This story of Natalija is inspired by Evgeny Zubkov’s artwork titled Russia 2046. The piece depicts an old woman feeding breadcrumbs to drones. We imagine that where the drones are now, there once were birds. What are the relations of these various actors and how can we understand this change? For us, the image of Natalija encapsulates the relationships we as humans can form with non-living creatures, the spaces we share and the practices we engage in. Furthermore, it brings into question the separation lines of post-human and non-human life in an age of learning machines. This story as a whole depicts a future where technologies, in this case self-adapting drones, are introduced into an environment but, as time passes, are left to a state of neglect. In the story, the devices learn to interact with their surroundings, leading to contact and interaction between drones and human. While the story is imaginative, there are several reference points to surveillance research, particularly to questions relating to space/place (how is space under surveillance being produced?), agency (what kind of agency surveillance enables or supports; how is surveillance perceived by the user/target?), and technology (what are the varying contextual roles surveillance techniques are able to take?).

Article Details

Section
Essays
Author Biographies

Hille Koskela, University of Turku

Professor, Department of Geography

Liisa Mäkinen, University of Turku

Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Geography

References

Koskela, Hille. 2000. “The Gaze without Eyes”: Video Surveillance and the Changing Nature of Urban Space. Progress in Human Geography 24 (2): 243–265.

———. 2003. Webcams, TV Shows and Mobile Phones: Empowering Exhibitionism. Surveillance & Society 2 (2/3): 199–215.

Mäkinen, Liisa A. 2016. Surveillance On/Off: Examining Home Surveillance Systems from the User’s Perspective. Surveillance & Society 14 (1): 59–77.

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.