This article considers how scientific visualizations of data represent attempts to record and predict certainty about our social, political, and economic experiences and futures. Written from the perspective of someone living in the UK’s lockdown response to the global Coronavirus pandemic, the article reflects on questions of uncertainty and vulnerability which are constructed in the Government’s response and experienced by the UK’s population. It discusses graphs which scientists have produced to model the impact of the disease on the population, together with an artist’s documentation of the data which his body produced during cancer treatment, and the philosophical notion of ‘living with dying,’ which the feminist philosopher Gillian Ho...
YesSince the 1980s, the digital revolution has been both a negative and positive force. Within a few...
This issue shows how matter is mathematical, artistic, propositional, an ethical apparatus, affectiv...
This article examines Judith Butler’s concepts of vulnerability and grievability in the context of t...
You are viewing an article about Planet Texas 2050 from June 2020.Office of the VP for Researc
For over a decade, pandemics have been on the UK National Risk Register as both the likeliest and mo...
The Covid-19 pandemic has burst upon us as a general test for humanity, for which we were woefully u...
Pandemics have long been recognised on the UK’s National Risk Register as both the likeliest and mos...
The Covid-19 pandemic broke on a world whose grip on epistemic trust was already in disarray. The fi...
In this article for 'Landscape', the journal of the Landscape Institute, Professor Brian Evans of th...
Researchers have long studied how data visualizations influence risk perception. It’s possible that ...
The COVID-19 outbreak is a contradiction of the globalization, one of the most seductive and also on...
In times of crisis our values are tested. Coronavirus is impacting societies, institutions, families...
This article reflects on recent developments in the author's fine art research project, Monsters and...
This article tracks the historical emergence of a new visual convention in the representation of the...
The Coronavirus crisis links to the climate crisis in ways that challenge humankind to demonstrate a...
YesSince the 1980s, the digital revolution has been both a negative and positive force. Within a few...
This issue shows how matter is mathematical, artistic, propositional, an ethical apparatus, affectiv...
This article examines Judith Butler’s concepts of vulnerability and grievability in the context of t...
You are viewing an article about Planet Texas 2050 from June 2020.Office of the VP for Researc
For over a decade, pandemics have been on the UK National Risk Register as both the likeliest and mo...
The Covid-19 pandemic has burst upon us as a general test for humanity, for which we were woefully u...
Pandemics have long been recognised on the UK’s National Risk Register as both the likeliest and mos...
The Covid-19 pandemic broke on a world whose grip on epistemic trust was already in disarray. The fi...
In this article for 'Landscape', the journal of the Landscape Institute, Professor Brian Evans of th...
Researchers have long studied how data visualizations influence risk perception. It’s possible that ...
The COVID-19 outbreak is a contradiction of the globalization, one of the most seductive and also on...
In times of crisis our values are tested. Coronavirus is impacting societies, institutions, families...
This article reflects on recent developments in the author's fine art research project, Monsters and...
This article tracks the historical emergence of a new visual convention in the representation of the...
The Coronavirus crisis links to the climate crisis in ways that challenge humankind to demonstrate a...
YesSince the 1980s, the digital revolution has been both a negative and positive force. Within a few...
This issue shows how matter is mathematical, artistic, propositional, an ethical apparatus, affectiv...
This article examines Judith Butler’s concepts of vulnerability and grievability in the context of t...