Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Crisis, Crisis, Crisis, or Sovereignty and Networks

  • Wendy Chun

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

    54 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This article addresses the seemingly paradoxical proliferation of coded systems designed to guarantee our safety and crises that endanger us. These two phenomena, it argues, are not opposites but rather complements; crises are not accidental to a culture focused on safety, they are its raison d'être. Mapping out the temporality of networks, it argues that crises are new media's critical difference: its exception and its norm. Although crises promise to disrupt memory – to disturb the usual programmability of our machines by indexing ‘real time’ – they reinforce codes and coded logic: both codes and crises are central to the production of mythical and mystical sovereign subjects who weld together norm with reality, word with action. Codes and states of exception are complementary functions, which render information and ourselves undead. Against this fantasy and against the exhaustion that crisis as norm produces, the article ends by arguing that we need a means to exhaust exhaustion, to recover the undecidable potential of our decisions and our information through a practice of constant care.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalTheory, Culture & Society
    Volume28
    Issue number6
    Pages (from-to)91-112
    Number of pages22
    ISSN0263-2764
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 11.2011

    Research areas and keywords

    • Digital media
    • code
    • crisis
    • critical
    • exhaustion
    • networks
    • new media
    • software studies
    • sovereignty
    • states of exception

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • Social Sciences(all)
    • Sociology and Political Science

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Crisis, Crisis, Crisis, or Sovereignty and Networks'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this