How to Discomfort a Worldview? Social Sciences, Surveillance Technologies and Defamiliarization

Rocco Bellanova, Ann Rudinow Saetnan

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterResearchpeer-review

Abstract

his chapter proposes two thinking exercises—or techniques—to nurture researchers’ ability to discomfort (their) worldviews: symmetric dispositifs and wildlife pictures. We believe that these thinking exercises can help us, and maybe other researchers, to achieve estrangement; i.e. to produce descriptions of our research objects that make them open to new, and possibly alternative, relations with them and among them. Our efforts are not to deny or debunk worldviews, but rather to provisionally break them apart, to destabilize them, to separate the worlds from the views, and then reunite them by emphasizing their constant and dynamic mutual construction. Practicing and embracing estrangement may help revive the desire to explore, test and fasten alternative world-view relationships, and—especially when security and surveillance technologies are at stake—it may highlight the (absurd) mechanisms of the power relations of everyday life.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationScience, Technology and Arts in International Relations
Editors J.P. Singh, M. Carr, R. Marlin-Bennett
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherRoutlegde
Pages29-39
Number of pages11
ISBN (Electronic)9781315618371
ISBN (Print)9781138668942, 9781138668973
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • International Relations
  • science and technology studies (STS)
  • Surveillance
  • Security
  • Methodology

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