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Capturing personal data in exchange for free services is now
ubiquitous in networked media and recently led to diagnoses of
surveillance and platform capitalism. In social media discourse,
dataveillance and data mining have been criticized as new forms of
digital work and capitalist exploitation for some time. From social
photos, selfies and image communities on the internet to connected
viewing and streaming, and video conferencing during the Corona
pandemic - the digital image is not only predominantly networked
but also accessed through platforms and structured by their
economic imperatives, data acquisition techniques and algorithmic
processing. In this issue, the contributors show how participation
and commodification are closely linked in the production,
circulation, consumption and operativity of images and visual
communication, raising the question of the role networked images
play for and within the proliferating surveillance capitalism.
The COVID-19 pandemic has reorganized existing methods of exchange,
turning comparatively marginal technologies into the new normal.
Multipoint videoconferencing in particular has become a favored
means for web-based forms of remote communication and collaboration
without physical copresence. Taking the recent mainstreaming of
videoconferencing as its point of departure, this anthology
examines the complex mediality of this new form of social
interaction. Connecting theoretical reflection with material case
studies, the contributors question practices, politics and
aesthetics of videoconferencing and the specific meanings it
acquires in different historical, cultural and social contexts.
In contemporary society, digital images have become increasingly
mobile. They are networked, shared on social media, and circulated
across small and portable screens. Accordingly, the discourses of
spreadability and circulation have come to supersede the focus on
production, indexicality, and manipulability, which had dominated
early conceptions of digital photography and film. However, the
mobility of images is neither technologically nor conceptually
limited to the realm of the digital. The edited volume re-examines
the historical, aesthetical, and theoretical relevance of image
mobility. The contributors provide a materialist account of images
on the move - ranging from wired photography to postcards to
streaming media.
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