Documentation

“What Follows for Students & Society in the 2020s? 3 Speculative Futures for Education & Technology” (Recorded Session)
This is the 7th and last session of the TiM seminar which took place via Microsoft Teams. This session begins with a conversation between Felicitas Macgilchrist and Rianne van Lambalgen about three possible futures for education and technology, especially in light of the current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Their conversation will draw on a “social science fiction”,…
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“The Incomplete Citizen: Performatives of citizenship through a Post humanist praxis” – Aishwarya Kumar
In January 2020, during the student protests in India, political participation saw a new wave that had long been present and yet hadn’t been harnessed and recognized as a form of citizenship participation. This performance involved the decentralized production of knowledge in the light of weakening institutional journalism and governance. Dissatisfied with the news that…
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“Pre-enacting necessarily” – T.P.
Dr. Janneke Adema’s affirmative proposal of ‘post-publishing’ works to carry along the desired and leaves behind the undesired aspects associated with the currently dominant modes of publishing in the humanities. Hers is a speculative project, in the imaginative sense of the word. The early Ursula K Le Guin novel, “Very Far Away from Anywhere Else”…
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“A new death of the author?” – Christl de Kloe
In the sixth Transmission in Motion seminar (and the first online version), entitled “Post-Publishing and Performative Publications”, Dr. Janneke Adema discussed how we can think about “new” and/or other forms of doing research, of publishing, and of distribution. She introduces the concept of post-publishing and discusses this concept through various projects of new and different…
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“Theory without Technology” – Chris Julien
post–publishing Academic publishing, from a posthumanities perspective, opens up a large field of possible entanglements, as the practice-based research of Janneke Adema thoughtfully demonstrates. Such a posthuman take on publishing opens up a large field of questions and practices, which Adema raises, and perhaps even more pertinently, experiments with in her work. Stressing the processual…
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“The Rhythms of Language” – Anthony Nestel
In her inspiring lecture, Janneke Adema proposed to rethink, affirmatively, the humanities, the human and the digital in a creative and pragmatic direction they call “posthumanities”. With the rise of posthumanist and antihumanist theorists, such as new materialists, posthumanists, object-oriented philosophers, and media archaeologists, the question of a posthuman pragmatics is, more than ever, fundamental….
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“The display as a publishing tool” – Freja Kir
This piece of small writing forms the fourth part in a series covering different methods on current perspectives for measuring transmissions in motions. The writings specifically draw on references and inspiration shared from the seminar of the same title hosted by the University of Utrecht during the first half of 2020. Throughout the writings, the…
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“Post-publishing in the COVID-19 era: the Italian case” – Angelo Zinna
In the sixth session of Transmissions in Motion, Dr. Janneke Adema discussed new and experimental approaches in the world of academic publishing, arguing in favor of a reevaluation of concepts such as “book” and “author” in order to better suit what she defines as the “post-humanities.” Adema explains that thanks to the rise of digital…
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“Post-Publishing against the Market?” – Dennis Jansen
Janneke Adema’s notion of “post-publishing,” as discussed in her recent TiM webinar, arrives at the intersection of two notable trends in Western academia. On one hand, the increasing significance of posthumanist and post-anthropocentric thought across the Humanities, which are now said to be transforming into a “posthumanities” (e.g. Braidotti 2013). On the other hand, the…
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TiM Recorded Session: “Post-Publishing and Performative Publications” – Dr. Janneke Adema
This is the 6th session of the TiM seminar which took place via Microsoft Teams In this talk, Janneke introduces the concept of post-publishing and explore it more in-depth through an exploration of a selection of publishing projects, which highlight how the mode in which we produce, disseminate and consume text, influences the content and…
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