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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/29778
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dc.contributor.authorGoodwin, Emily-
dc.contributor.authorBrophy, Sarah-
dc.date.accessioned2024-05-10T13:16:18Z-
dc.date.available2024-05-10T13:16:18Z-
dc.date.issued2023-04-
dc.identifier.citationSomatechnics, Volume 13 Issue 1, Page 1-22en_US
dc.identifier.other10.3366/soma.2023.0393-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/29778-
dc.description.abstractThis essay engages with pandemic-era artistic practice, asking how digital technologies are being taken up out of desires and attempts to be intimate with, proximate to, ‘contemporary’ with one another. Drawing on theories of pandemic temporality and on media analysis approaches that highlight the digital’s materiality, affectivity, and self-reflexivity, we think with three first-person, visual-digital works composed, circulated, and archived during the COVID-19 pandemic: Ella Comberg’s research creation photo-essay on Google Street View, titled ‘Eye of the Storm,’ Bo Burnham’s Netflix streaming special Inside, and Richard Fung’s short documentary film ‘[…],’ shot on iPad. We suggest that these visual-digital pieces open onto the promises and limitations of mediated intimacies – with others, with ourselves, and with the space-time of lockdown. Their commitments to texture and tension draw out the ‘impurity’ (Shotwell 2016) of our digital lifeworlds, while also attuning us to possibilities for ‘waiting with’ (Baraitser and Salisbury 2020) one another amidst what Nadine Chan (2020) calls the ‘distal temporalities’ of late capitalism. To deliberately dwell in stuck or looped time and linger over the touch of distant, distal others – or what we call asynchronous encounters – is not to indulge or excuse the ways in which contemporary media platforms capitalise on affective and creative labour or surveil digital lifeworlds. Instead, we posit that the textures, glitches, and flickering bonds of mediated intimacy may offer new, multiple, reflexive and recursive pathways ‘toward inhabited futures that are not so distal’ (Chan 2020: 13.6).en_US
dc.description.sponsorshipThis article draws on research supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherEdinburgh University Press Journalsen_US
dc.rightsAn error occurred on the license name.*
dc.rights.uriAn error occurred getting the license - uri.*
dc.subjectdigital mediaen_US
dc.subjectCOVID-19 pandemicen_US
dc.subjectvisual artsen_US
dc.subjectmaterialityen_US
dc.subjecttemporalityen_US
dc.subjectintimacyen_US
dc.titleAsynchronous Encounters: Artistic Practice and Mediated Intimacy in the Space-Time of Lockdownen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
dc.contributor.departmentEnglish and Cultural Studiesen_US
Appears in Collections:English & Cultural Studies Publications

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