Indeterminate Futures / The
Future of Indeterminacy
Transdisciplinary Conference
13 – 15 November 2020, University of Dundee, Scotland
Keynotes: Karen Barad, Franco Berardi, Xin Wei Sha, Vladimir Tasić
The future is no longer seen as open. It’s seen as precarious on
the one hand, and technologically over-determined on the other.
Economic uncertainty, the rise of the risk society, the culture of
fear and neoliberal necropolitics are seen as a serious threat.
The risk society attributes all hazards to human decisions; the
culture of fear cultivates the tendency to catastrophise;
neoliberal necropolitics welds technology to the exploitation of
natural and social reserves in an irreversible way. Amidst the
general climate of ‘instrumentarianism’ (Zuboff 2019), paradoxes
like ‘the cancelled future’ (Berardi 2014) or ‘automated
deregulation’ (Steyerl 2019) are synonymous with permanent crisis,
disorder, and the 'end of free will' (Han 2017).
Indeterminacy – often associated with but not identical to
unknowability and liminality – doesn’t merely defy the
‘order-disorder’, ‘certainty-uncertainty’ binary creating a
‘both-and’ and ‘neither-nor’ space in which a cat can be both dead
and alive, as in Schrödinger’s experiment. Indeterminacy is a
self-perpetuating dynamic of change with no spatial or temporal
constancy – a vibrant multiplicity of parallel potentialities and
realities. Initially derived from Bohr’s quantum indeterminacy,
Gödel's undecidability, and Stengers and Prirogine's non-linear
dynamics, indeterminacy upsets stable structures and ossified
power regimes which is why it was embraced as a liberating
epistemic force by many 20th century artists and theorists: Jarry,
Boulez, Cage, Ichinayagi, Situationists International, Xenakis,
Fluxus, Knowbotic Research, Derrida, Guattari, Hayles, Varela and
Latour, to mention but a few.
In the digital age, in accelerated, informational capitalism, the
situation is very different. First, permanent change is the rule.
Second, art, culture, and (bio)politics are no longer separate;
they are fused in the infosphere. Consisting of datification,
algorithmic predetermination, cultural production, symbolic and
affective regimes, the infosphere has modified the language of
thought and action. It has also modified the structure of reality.
The aim of this transdisciplinary conference is to evaluate the
current and future epistemic and ontological potential of
spatio-temporal, cultural-mnemonic and socio-political forms of
indeterminacy. To this end, we ask questions such as:
• How do contemporary digital thinking-making practices articulate
the relationship between design and chance, system and impulse,
repeatability and irreversibility, rule, iteration and
variability?
• How does temporal indeterminacy, as defined by quantum physics,
relate to indigenous conceptions of space-time and matter? (Barad
2018)
• How do ‘an-archives’ – heaps of disparate, perpetually
multiplied images (Hansen 2011) – pattern cultural memory?
• What are the repercussions of medial efficacy – the fact that
algorithms are _not_ mathematical ideas imposed on concrete data,
as is often thought, but diagrams that _emerge_ from repetition
and the processual organisation of space-time, objects and
actions?
• What is the relationship between indeterminacy and
neuroplasticity, our embodied and extended brains/minds’
adaptability to new perceptual milieus? (Malabou 2006)
• How do deterministic technical milieus and the growing mass of
unstructured data configure #datapolitik – a set of operations
that regulate space-time through the cybernetic feedback loop,
tracking, capture, and feelings of safety or threat? (Panagia
2017)
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We invite proposals for 20 min papers, provocations, creative
contributions, re-enactments of scientific experiments and
proposals for curated panels from the fields of art, media
(theory), physics, mathematics, philosophy, cultural studies,
memory studies, digital humanities, and anthropology. Possible
topics include but are not limited to:
• Indeterminate (historical or contemporary) artistic
methodologies, e.g. convolutions, _destinerrance_, obfuscation,
culture jamming, databending
• Aleatory composition in music, _event scores_, performance and
psychogeography
• Indeterminacy, observation and measurement
• Entangled (virtual or material) patternings and the collapse of
micro-macro, general-specific perspectives
• Superposition and multiple spatio-temporal histories
• The role of repetition, velocity and scale in machine learning
and algorithmic ‘promiscuity’
• Computers as inherently re-iterative, indeterminate machines
• Logical aberrations in AI classificatory systems, e.g. those
used in affective computing
• Errors/slippages in deterministic technologies (e.g. biometrics
or facial recognition software) and their relationship to judgment
and digital inscription
• Retroversion and the ambiguity of meaning in digital and legal
discourse
• Big data and the indeterminacy of inference
• Glitch and the draining of cultural memory or erasure as tracing
• Indeterminacy and the technological unconscious
• Digital grammatisation of existence (Stiegler) and critical,
micro-context-responsive computing
• Posthumanist performativity (Barad)
• The indeterminacy of waste in ecology, topology and anthropology
• Indeterminacy and social identity (e.g. gender)
• The dynamics of liminality as a space-time of transformation
• The history of indeterminacy in physics, mathematics and
philosophy
• Indeterminacy as ethics and aesthetics
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Panel proposal deadline: 20 April 2020 (1000 w proposal + 450
speaker bios)
Individual presentation deadline: 1 May 2020 (350 w abstract + 150
bio)
Notification of Acceptance: 10 May 2020
Please email abstracts with ‘Indeterminacy Conference’ in the
subject to Natasha Lushetich:
n.lus...@dundee.ac.uk.
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This conference is hosted by the AHRC-funded project _The Future
of Indeterminacy: Datification, Memory, Biopolitics_. A limited
number of bursaries will be available for PhD researchers. If you
would like to be considered please send a 4-page CV + 500 w
description of your research together with your abstract.
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Iain Campbell
Postdoctoral Research Assistant, Contemporary Art Practice
University of Dundee