In the lines of Albrechtlund and Dubbled (2005) and their call for a new direction in Surveillance Studies, this paper discusses the overlapping of surveillance, art and entertainment. Indeed surveillance ought to be considered not only regarding its negative implications (e.g. the infringement of privacy or social sorting) but also regarding ‘the fun features and entertainment value of surveillance’ (Albrechtlund and Dubbled 2005: 216). Drawing on this new direction in the recent years in Surveillance Studies, this paper focuses on the interplay between watcher and watched and the possibility of challenging surveillance through artistic, entertaining or/and playful motives. Play and games within this framework participate both to the activ...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
As the increasingly ubiquitous field of surveillance has transformed how we interact with each other...
In the lines of Albrechtlund and Dubbled (2005) and their call for a new direction in Surveillance S...
This paper suggests a direction in the development of Surveillance Studies that goes beyond current ...
This paper suggests a direction in the development of Surveillance Studies that goes beyond current ...
This paper suggests a direction in the development of Surveillance Studies that goes beyond current ...
In the recent decades, with the rapid proliferation of surveillance systems for both political and c...
The paper reflects on two hackivist projects, an art installation and a performance, which sought to...
In May 2013, seven collaborators produced “Work and Play at the Threshold of Visibility. ” The inten...
The notorious intensification and digitalization of surveillance technologies and practices in today...
The purpose with this essay is to examine how arts and politics integrate to raise urgent messages a...
Deposited with permission of Double DialoguesOver the 1990s technologies and uses of surveillance de...
Surveillance as a practice of observation is connected to metaphors that stress optical aspects refe...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
As the increasingly ubiquitous field of surveillance has transformed how we interact with each other...
In the lines of Albrechtlund and Dubbled (2005) and their call for a new direction in Surveillance S...
This paper suggests a direction in the development of Surveillance Studies that goes beyond current ...
This paper suggests a direction in the development of Surveillance Studies that goes beyond current ...
This paper suggests a direction in the development of Surveillance Studies that goes beyond current ...
In the recent decades, with the rapid proliferation of surveillance systems for both political and c...
The paper reflects on two hackivist projects, an art installation and a performance, which sought to...
In May 2013, seven collaborators produced “Work and Play at the Threshold of Visibility. ” The inten...
The notorious intensification and digitalization of surveillance technologies and practices in today...
The purpose with this essay is to examine how arts and politics integrate to raise urgent messages a...
Deposited with permission of Double DialoguesOver the 1990s technologies and uses of surveillance de...
Surveillance as a practice of observation is connected to metaphors that stress optical aspects refe...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
Ex. 1: A UK enterprise offers the possibility to “stream” on-line the images randomly captured by CC...
As the increasingly ubiquitous field of surveillance has transformed how we interact with each other...