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Mapping technology-harm relations: From ambient harms to zemiosis

journal contribution
posted on 2021-01-01, 00:00 authored by Mark WoodMark Wood
This article develops a new approach to analysing the technology-harm nexus. The approach distinguishes between different technology-harm relations: relations with technology that are harmful by virtue of what they contribute to bringing about. In this article, I focus on categorizing generative harm relations: relations with technology that are harmful by virtue of what they do to actors. Drawing together insights from zemiology, moral philosophy, postphenomenology, Stiegler’s technophenomenology, and Latour’s actor-network theory, I distinguish six generative harm relations: ambient harms, alterity harms, exclusion harms, interface harms, harm translation and zemiosis. Distinguishing between these generative harm relations helps us delineate the techno-sociality of a range of social harms, from gun violence and digital coercive control, to forms of oppression, inequality and immiseration (re)produced by algorithms.

History

Journal

Crime, Media, Culture

Volume

00

Article number

ARTN 17416590211037384

Pagination

1 - 18

Location

London, Eng

ISSN

1741-6590

eISSN

1741-6604

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD

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