Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology

The purpose of this thesis is to establish a conversation between Bruno Latour and the work of contemporary philosophers and critical theorists in order to develop their respective approaches to articulate a critical theory about technology. To analyse these different perspectives, the thesis follow...

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Main Author: Bakhtiar, Siavash
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52177/
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author Bakhtiar, Siavash
author_facet Bakhtiar, Siavash
author_sort Bakhtiar, Siavash
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The purpose of this thesis is to establish a conversation between Bruno Latour and the work of contemporary philosophers and critical theorists in order to develop their respective approaches to articulate a critical theory about technology. To analyse these different perspectives, the thesis follows a conceptual framework based on what Latour calls the “principle of symmetry” between human and non-humans actants that take part in the constitution of what we call society. Through focusing on different “thing theories,” the thesis works to recuperate some of these concepts and practices to enrich my own conceptual toolbox. Each chapter focuses on a particular case study – the revolving door, the Automated Public Toilet, barbed wire and the smartphone – that gives me the ground where I put at test these different perspectives to see if they can be good theoretical allies to give more space in critical theory for what Latour calls its “missing masses.”
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spelling nottingham-521772025-02-28T14:09:08Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52177/ Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology Bakhtiar, Siavash The purpose of this thesis is to establish a conversation between Bruno Latour and the work of contemporary philosophers and critical theorists in order to develop their respective approaches to articulate a critical theory about technology. To analyse these different perspectives, the thesis follows a conceptual framework based on what Latour calls the “principle of symmetry” between human and non-humans actants that take part in the constitution of what we call society. Through focusing on different “thing theories,” the thesis works to recuperate some of these concepts and practices to enrich my own conceptual toolbox. Each chapter focuses on a particular case study – the revolving door, the Automated Public Toilet, barbed wire and the smartphone – that gives me the ground where I put at test these different perspectives to see if they can be good theoretical allies to give more space in critical theory for what Latour calls its “missing masses.” 2018-10-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52177/1/Siavash%20Bakhtiar%20-%204183763%20PhD%20Thesis.pdf Bakhtiar, Siavash (2018) Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. technology philosophy bruno latour theory
spellingShingle technology
philosophy
bruno latour
theory
Bakhtiar, Siavash
Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology
title Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology
title_full Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology
title_fullStr Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology
title_full_unstemmed Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology
title_short Minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology
title_sort minor grip: on the constitution of morality, agency and affectivity with technology
topic technology
philosophy
bruno latour
theory
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52177/