Dispositions towards automation: Capital, technology, and labour relations in aeromobilities

Author:

Lin Weiqiang1ORCID,Adey Peter2,Harris Tina3

Affiliation:

1. National University of Singapore, Singapore

2. Royal Holloway, University of London, UK

3. University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

Abstract

With the rapid rise of supercomputers, artificial intelligence, and advanced forms of robotics, recent years have seen a resurgence in interest in automation in the academy. In geography, scholars have yielded some important insights on the mottled relations between humans and machines as capital moves towards a more high-tech form of production. In this paper, we seek to extend these debates by delving into how labour's relations with automation do not always reactively vacillate between capitulation and adaptation. Instead, they are more ambiguously swayed by broader ‘dispositions towards automation’, which are generated either through practice, or by machines themselves that are designed to appeal to human desires and wants. Drawing on examples from aeromobilities and, particularly, airports, this paper shows how various in-process tendencies, or ‘points of meeting’, of human-technology assemblages enable and creatively rework automation in ways that are culturally specific and ideologically supportive of capital. We consider five different dispositions – namely, enchantment, aspiration, experimentation, gamification, and acquiescence – as starting points for further dialogues on technological relations and resistances in geography.

Funder

Ministry of Education

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Geography, Planning and Development

Cited by 10 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Digital geographies 1: Reality bytes;Progress in Human Geography;2024-08-23

2. Now boarding: Towards new geographies of aeromobility;Progress in Human Geography;2024-06-20

3. The politics of deautomation: Being disaffected by platform capitalism;Environment and Planning D: Society and Space;2023-11-03

4. Geographies of artificial intelligence: Labor, surveillance, and activism;Human Geography;2023-10-23

5. Situating and expanding the scope of dispositions towards automation;Dialogues in Human Geography;2023-07-30

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