Difference between revisions of "Exe0.2 Geraldine Juárez"

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It only makes sense that Google, a company with a mission of to organise the world’s information for profit, found ideal partners in the very institutions that were previously in charge of organising the world’s knowledge. But as I pointed out before, it is paradoxical that the Google Cultural Institute is dedicated to collect information from museums created under Colonialism in order to elevate a certain culture and way of seeing the world above others. Today we know and are able to challenge the dominant narratives around cultural heritage, because these institutions have an actual record in history and not only a story produced for the ‘about’ section of a website, like in the case of the Google Cultural Institute.  
It only makes sense that Google, a company with a mission of to organise the world’s information for profit, found ideal partners in the very institutions that were previously in charge of organising the world’s knowledge. But as I pointed out before, it is paradoxical that the Google Cultural Institute is dedicated to collect information from museums created under Colonialism in order to elevate a certain culture and way of seeing the world above others. Today we know and are able to challenge the dominant narratives around cultural heritage, because these institutions have an actual record in history and not only a story produced for the ‘about’ section of a website, like in the case of the Google Cultural Institute.  


The Google Cultural Institute is not a museum, it is a database with an interface that enables to browse cultural content. Unlike the ''prestigious'' museums it collaborates with, it lacks a history situated in a specific cultural discourse. It is about fine art, world wonders and historical moments in a ''general sense''. The Google Cultural Institute has a clear corporate and philanthropic mission but it lacks a point of view and a defined position towards the cultural material that it handles. This is not surprising since Google has always avoided to take a stand, it is all techno-determinism and the noble mission of organising the world’s information to make the world better. But “brokering and hoarding information are a dangerous form of techno-colonialism.”<ref> Bush, Randy. Psg.com On techno-colonialism. (blog) June 13, 2015. Accessed Dec 22, 2015 https://psg.com/on-technocolonialism.html </ref>  
The Google Cultural Institute is not a museum, it is a database with an interface that enables to browse cultural content. Unlike the ''prestigious'' museums it collaborates with, it lacks a history situated in a specific cultural discourse. It is about fine art, world wonders and historical moments in a ''general sense''. The Google Cultural Institute has a clear corporate and philanthropic mission but it lacks a point of view and a defined position towards the cultural material that it handles. This is not surprising since Google has always avoided to take a stand, it is all techno-determinism and the noble mission of organising the world’s information to make the world better. But “brokering and hoarding information are a dangerous form of techno-colonialism.”<ref> Bush, Randy. Psg.com On techno-colonialism. (blog) June 13, 2015. https://psg.com/on-technocolonialism.html </ref>  


Searching for a cultural narrative beyond the Californian ideology, the Alphabet's search engine has been looking for different cultural narratives to insert their philanthropic services in the history of information science beyond Silicon Valley. After all, they understand that “ownership over the historical narratives and their material correlates becomes a tool for demonstrating and realizing economic claims”.<ref>10. Starzmann, Maria Theresia. “Cultural Imperialism and Heritage Politics in the Event of Armed Conflict: Prospects for an ‘Activist Archaeology’”. Archaeologies. Vol. 4 No. 3 (2008):376 </ref>
Searching for a cultural narrative beyond the Californian ideology, the Alphabet's search engine has been looking for different cultural narratives to insert their philanthropic services in the history of information science beyond Silicon Valley. After all, they understand that “ownership over the historical narratives and their material correlates becomes a tool for demonstrating and realizing economic claims”.<ref>10. Starzmann, Maria Theresia. “Cultural Imperialism and Heritage Politics in the Event of Armed Conflict: Prospects for an ‘Activist Archaeology’”. Archaeologies. Vol. 4 No. 3 (2008):376 </ref>

Revision as of 01:04, 18 April 2016

Geraldine Juárez - Artist

Master in Fine Arts / Valand Academy

Portions of this rough abstract are part of previous texts such as "Intercolonial Technogalactic" (forthcoming Intercalations 3) and A pre-emptive history of the Google Cultural Institute (2016) (forthcoming Constant)


Introduction

Screenshot Google Cultural Institute (search:executions)

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 constant 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. But what is technocolonialism?.

The main purpose of this text is to produce a defintion of technocolonialism, using previous and on-going theorical and technical research about the Google Cultural Institute as case study/sample/object/database/space. (?)

Technocolonialism: a definition

* Problem: How do you produce a definition? Do i have to? It is needed? (yes i think). Why?


To my knowledge, there is no official definition of technocolonialism, but it is important to understand it as a continuation of the idea of Enlightenment that gave birth to the impulse to collect, organise and manage information in the 19th century. My use of this term aims to emphasize and situate contemporary accumulation and management of information and data within a technoscientific landscape driven by “profit above else” as a “logical extension of the surplus value accumulated through colonialism and slavery.”[1]

Unlike in colonial times, in contemporary technocolonialism the important narrative is not the supremacy of a specific human culture. Technological culture is the saviour. It doesn’t matter if the culture is Muslim, French or Mayan, the goal is to have the best technologies to turn it into data, rank it, produce content from it and create experiences that can be monetized.

It only makes sense that Google, a company with a mission of to organise the world’s information for profit, found ideal partners in the very institutions that were previously in charge of organising the world’s knowledge. But as I pointed out before, it is paradoxical that the Google Cultural Institute is dedicated to collect information from museums created under Colonialism in order to elevate a certain culture and way of seeing the world above others. Today we know and are able to challenge the dominant narratives around cultural heritage, because these institutions have an actual record in history and not only a story produced for the ‘about’ section of a website, like in the case of the Google Cultural Institute.

The Google Cultural Institute is not a museum, it is a database with an interface that enables to browse cultural content. Unlike the prestigious museums it collaborates with, it lacks a history situated in a specific cultural discourse. It is about fine art, world wonders and historical moments in a general sense. The Google Cultural Institute has a clear corporate and philanthropic mission but it lacks a point of view and a defined position towards the cultural material that it handles. This is not surprising since Google has always avoided to take a stand, it is all techno-determinism and the noble mission of organising the world’s information to make the world better. But “brokering and hoarding information are a dangerous form of techno-colonialism.”[2]

Searching for a cultural narrative beyond the Californian ideology, the Alphabet's search engine has been looking for different cultural narratives to insert their philanthropic services in the history of information science beyond Silicon Valley. After all, they understand that “ownership over the historical narratives and their material correlates becomes a tool for demonstrating and realizing economic claims”.[3]

Mentions of the term

  • Techno-colonialism is a term I coined back in the '90s to describe the exploitation of poorer cultures by richer ones through technology. In particular, this was focused on Internet technology, though it may apply more widely. Like ice cream, techno-colonialism comes in many flavors.[4]

Execution as de/territorialization

 * In the Google Cultural Institute, I can explore Historic Moments through “online exhibitions detailing the stories behind significant moments in human history and uncover the stories behind history’s most significant moments.” The search box is a blank field through which I explore the GCI. I search therefore I scroll. I can only explore so much; the right-click option is disabled, so I cannot save the images to my hard-disk. There is no API to go beyond these thumbnails to the source. I am a peasant user with limited access. The representation of access is a box where you can search. But exploring is not searching... if I decide not to use the search box, there is an endless feed of “Featured Content” available under the “Explore” option. I can scroll and click around the whole Google Cultural Institute without searching for anything. Exploring without direction. Enjoy culture anytime, anywhere.[5]
  * I can't save the images of the Google Cultural Institute, but only re-organize them within their interface to create “galleries.” A disclaimer is displayed in the beginning of a gallery made by a peasant user: “This user gallery has been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.” I don't want to make a gallery inside the Google Cultural Institute, I want to make my own collection. I want to save the images, print them, and create a copy of the information. I will print my own labels. I've been exploring some options, and I need to wget. I asked a friend to help me sort it out. I copied the HTML source. It is huge, approximately 65,000 lines. I manually removed everything that was not useful for me, until there were left about 100 sections each containing five lines. In them was the Title, Date, Location, Parter and Image Url. This is enough to create the labels of my collection. Save file: file. Txt. Then, I run a command line in my terminal:   wget -i file.txt. Maybe I need some other options: wget –content-disposition- -trust-server-names -i file.txt.

Relevant concepts & differences with

  • culture as data [6] - Dan Schiller and Yeo Shinjoung.
  • Techno-economic networks (TEN) - Michel Callon
  • What is the relation as well as 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. [7]

References

Template:Reflist

  1. http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/art-in-the-anthropocene/ Davis, Heather & Turpin, Etienne, eds. Art in the Anthropocene (London: Open Humanities Press. 2015), 7
  2. Bush, Randy. Psg.com On techno-colonialism. (blog) June 13, 2015. https://psg.com/on-technocolonialism.html
  3. 10. Starzmann, Maria Theresia. “Cultural Imperialism and Heritage Politics in the Event of Armed Conflict: Prospects for an ‘Activist Archaeology’”. Archaeologies. Vol. 4 No. 3 (2008):376
  4. Bush, Randy. Psg.com On techno-colonialism. (blog) June 13, 2015. https://psg.com/on-technocolonialism.html
  5. Juárez,Geraldine. Intercolonial Technogalactic" (forthcoming)
  6. Dan Schiller and Yeo Shinjoung, “Powered By Google: Widening Access And Tightening Corporate Control,” Red Art: New Utopias in Data Capitalism, Leonardo Electronic Almanac, vol. 20, No. 1, ed. by D.L. Aceti (London: Goldsmiths University Press, 2014), 52
  7. Debord, Guy-Ernest The Society of the Spectacle 1967 http://library.nothingness.org/articles/SI/en/display/77