Historical studies of surveillance have emphasised how technology is used to control space. This innovative collection examines how new monitoring technologies are also affecting the experience of time.
Drawing on Henri Lefebvre’s concept of rhythm, the book brings together ethnographic research from Europe, China and the US, to show how digital monitoring is transforming spatio-temporal relations across the Global North.
As digital technologies continue to reshape the rhythms of life, this book makes a valuable contribution to both anthropology and surveillance studies.
विषयसूची
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Rhythm and Vigilance
Vita Peacock
Part One: Care and Wellbeing
1. Tinkering with Time and Technologies in Dementia Care – Astrid Meyer, Stinne Aaløkke Ballegaard, and Anders Albrechtslund
2. “I don’t have time to watch everybody”: Location-Based Monitoring, Timescapes and Family Life in Germany – Claire Dungey
3. Watching Our Selves: Digital Health and Self-Monitoring in Britain – Mikkel Kenni Bruun
Part Two: Real-Time Monitoring
4. Divergent Temporal Dynamics and Time Work Among Delivery Workers in Denmark and Malta – Kalle Kusk
5. Uncertain Times: Citizen app and Personalisation of Security in New York City – Alice Riddell
6. Synchronising Orbits and Deep Learning Algorithms: Satellite Surveillance and Civil Sea Rescue Missions in the Mediterranean – Andreas Stoiber
7. Surveillance in Small Acts: Health Code Rituals during the Covid-19 Pandemic in Xiamen, China. – Karolina Kupinska
Part Three: Systems past, present and future
8. Privacy as Unfolding: German Netzpolitik and the Legacy of Colonial Registration – Vita Peacock
9. Growth’s Imagination: Start-ups and the Cruel Intimacy of the Internet’s Business Model – Lake Polan
10. Playtime: Monitoring Swindlers in Non-Fungible Token Sociality – Matan Shapiro
Afterword: Watching, Waiting, Speculating – Sun-ha Hong