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How do data come to matter? Living and becoming with personal data:

Deborah Lupton
- 05 Jul 2018 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 2, pp 205395171878631
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TLDR
In this paper, the onto-epistemological dimensions of human-human interactions are discussed. But the authors focus on the use of digital technologies that generate information with and about their bodies and everyday lives.
Abstract
Humans have become increasingly datafied with the use of digital technologies that generate information with and about their bodies and everyday lives. The onto-epistemological dimensions of human–...

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When Species Meet

TL;DR: In this paper, a what-if scenario on what could happen if we plan for the horse and who else that could benefit from that is presented, where the horse is the centre of the stable and the equestrian sport.
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Emerging data infrastructures and the new topologies of education policy

TL;DR: How the creation of data infrastructures that enable the generation, communication and representation of digital data are changing relations of power, including both centralised and dispersed forms, and space in education is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Popular culture and new media: The politics of circulation

TL;DR: In this paper, a relatively short but dense and ambitious book, which attempts to provide some conceptual tools with which to approach the transformations to contemporary cultural life wrought by the inexploitation of the 20th century.
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‘It’s made me a lot more aware’: a new materialist analysis of health self-tracking:

TL;DR: Findings from a study involving interviews with 40 Australian self-trackers are discussed and analysed from a feminist new materialist perspective, focusing on relational dimensions, affective forces and agential capacities.
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The Ethics of Competition: Accountability Policy Enactment in Chilean Schools' Everyday Life.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the ways in which accountability policies in public policies have a moral order, an ethical horizon, and offer a vocabulary of imagined micro-policies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Posthumanist Performativity: Toward an Understanding of How Matter Comes to Matter

TL;DR: The ubiquitous puns on "matter" do not, alas, mark a rethinking of the key concepts (materiality and signification) and the relationship between them, rather, it seems to be symptomatic of the extent to which matters of "fact" have been replaced with matters of signification (no scare quotes here).
Book

The Companion Species Manifesto : Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness

Donna Haraway
TL;DR: The Companion Species Manifesto as discussed by the authors is about the implosion of nature and culture in the joint lives of dogs and people, who are bonded in significant otherness, in all their historical complexity, Donna Haraway tells us, dogs are not surrogates for theory, she says; they are not here just to think with.
Journal ArticleDOI

Big other: surveillance capitalism and the prospects of an information civilization

TL;DR: An emergent logic of accumulation in the networked sphere, ‘surveillance capitalism,’ is described and its implications for ‘information civilization’ are considered and a distributed and largely uncontested new expression of power is christened: ‘Big Other.’
Journal ArticleDOI

Big Data, new epistemologies and paradigm shifts:

TL;DR: The authors examines how the availability of Big Data, coupled with new data analytics, challenges established epistemologies across the sciences, social sciences and humanities, and assesses the extent to which they are engendering paradigm shifts across multiple disciplines.

When Species Meet

TL;DR: In this paper, a what-if scenario on what could happen if we plan for the horse and who else that could benefit from that is presented, where the horse is the centre of the stable and the equestrian sport.
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