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Situating situatedness through Æffect and the architectural body of Arakawa and Gins

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journal contribution
posted on 2007-01-01, 00:00 authored by Jondi Keane
This paper explores the situated body by briefly surveying the historical studies of effect and of affect which converge in current work on attention. This common approach to the situated body through attention prompted the coining of a more inclusive term, Æffect, to indicate the situated body’s mode of observation. Examples from the work of artist-turned-architects, Arakawa and Gins, will be discussed to show how architectural environments can act as heuristic tools that allow the situated body to research its own conditions. Rather than isolating effect from affect, observer from subject, organism from environment, Arakawa and Gins’ work optimises the use of situated complexity in the study of the site of person. By constructing surrounding in which to observe and learn about the shape of awareness, their procedural architecture suggests ways in which the interaction of top-down conceptual knowledge and bottom-up perceptual learning may construct possibilities in emergent rather than programmatic ways.

History

Journal

Janus Head Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Continental Philosophy

Volume

9

Season

Winter

Pagination

437 - 457

Location

Amherst, N.Y.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1524-2269

eISSN

1521-9194

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007 by Trivium Publications, Amherst, NY

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