Exe0.2 Geraldine Juárez
Geraldine Juárez - Artist
Master in Fine Arts / Valand Academy
- Execution as deterritorialization
Introduction
The Google Cultural Institute is a complex subject of interest since it reflects the colonial impulses embedded in the scientific and economic desires that formed the very collections which the Google Cultural Institute now mediates and accumulates in its database.
A critique of the Google Cultural Institute where their motivations are interpreted as merely colonialist would be misleading and counterproductive. It is not their goal to slave and exploit whole populations and its resources in order to impose a new ideology and civilise barbarians in the same sense and way that European countries did during the Colonization. Additionally, it would be unfair and disrespectful to all those who still have to deal with the endless effects of Colonization, that have exacerbated with the expansion of economic globalisation.
The conflation of technology and science (technoscience) that has produced the knowledge to create such an entity as Google and its derivatives, such as the Cultural Institute, together with the scale of its impact on a society where information technology is one of the dominant form of technology – but not the only one -, makes technocolonialism a more accurate term to describe Google's cultural interventions from my perspective.
Technocolonialism: a definition
- How do you produce a defintion? - Elements of a definition - defintion vs deterritorialization
Relevant concepts & differences with
What is the difference of technocolonialism with
- Management
- Solutionism
- Spectacle: Thesis 24: But the spectacle is not the necessary product of technical development seen as a natural development. The society of the spectacle is on the contrary the form which chooses its own technical content. [1]
- ↑ [http://library.nothingness.org/articles/SI/en/display/77 From The Society of the Spectacle by Guy-Ernest Debord]