Incomputable Earth radically interrogates the political epistemology underlying the Anthropocene hypothesis. This open access volume examines how this hypothesis functions as a master concept that simultaneously diagnoses human impact on Earth's climate while prescribing technoscientific solutions rooted in Western computational thinking.
Against the backdrop of new regimes of algorithmic classification and prediction, Incomputable Earth addresses the crucial need to rethink the meaning and inter-relationality of such terms as 'extraction', 'computation', and 'planetarity'. Beyond theory, it examines what cognitive and political capacities we need to grapple with the implications of this parallel intensification of datafication and the Anthropocene.
Through five interconnected sections, international scholars, artists, and theorists reveal how the Anthropocene hypothesis is inextricably linked to colonial histories of computation, emerging alongside the expansion of digital technological systems and new regimes of data positivism.
Examining new forms of subjectivity and resistance, this timely volume tackles urgent topics, from the racialized politics of climate change to feminist ecologies and planetary financialization. In an original, hybrid format reflecting its interdisciplinary nature, Incomputable Earth offers a vital intervention into the past, present, and future of computation and its inescapable impact upon our social, political, and planetary life.
This book emerges from the artistic research project "The Incomputable-Art in the Age of Algorithms," instigated at the IZK - Institute for Contemporary Art, Graz University of Technology, and funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF, the Austrian Federal Ministry of Arts, Culture, Civil Service and Sport, and the Styrian Provincial Government Department of Economy, Tourism, Science and Research.
This book is available open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com It is funded by The Austrian Science Fund (FWF).
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Incomputable Earth is a vital and timely intervention that powerfully challenges the dominant narratives of techno-solutionism and Anthropocenic inevitability. By unearthing the entangled histories of computation, colonialism, and ecological crisis, this volume opens space for plural, radical imaginaries beyond extractivism -digital or otherwise. It resonates deeply with post-development and degrowth perspectives that reject the depoliticisation of climate and technology discourse. In assembling an inspiring constellation of critical thinkers and artists, the book becomes itself an act of resistance and collective reimagination. This is a necessary call for action related to ecological and epistemic justice: Decolonise digital futures! * Federico Demaria, School of Economics, Universitat de Barcelona; co-editor of Pluriverse and Degrowth * Incomputable Earth is a blazing intervention into the Anthropocenes mono-epistemic trap. This electrifying collection dismantles the cybernetic fantasies of planetary control, exposing their roots in capitals real abstractions that reduce life to computable units. From feminist critiques to decolonial cosmologies, these essays weave a world-ecology of resistance, rejecting the sterile globe of technocratic governance for a democratic Earth of reciprocal relations. Here, the incomputableepistemological excess, political remainders, generative potentialsignites a counterhegemonic praxis that honors the messy, mindful and miraculous web of life. A vital call to reclaim abstraction from capitals grip, this book is a manifesto for a revolutionary ecology that dares to imagine millions of incomputable Earths. * Jason W. Moore, author of Capitalism in the Web of Life * In Incomputable Earth, the diverse contributions of artists, art theorists, scholars, and activists challenge the ideological distortions and exploitative practices of global capitalism. A powerful mix of indignant perspectives ranging from political economy to posthumanism unite in a profound critique of the Anthropocene transformation of the world into an abstract machine. There are many gems of undisciplined brilliance. What unites these imaginative efforts to confront extractive capitalism is their identification of the aspirations for technological control as a pivotal site of analytical innovation. * Alf Hornborg, Professor Emeritus of Human Ecology, Lund University, and author of The Magic of Technology: The Machine as a Transformation of Slavery *
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Investigating the link between environmental breakdown and the increasing development of digital technologies, this is a vital intervention into what this means for our social, political, and planetary future.
List of Illustrations
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
Series Preface
1. Introduction: The Anthropocene Hypothesis and the Incomputable, Antonia
Majaca
Part I: The Political Economy of Anthropocene Technologies
2. Externality and Necessity Between Materialism and Ecology, Marina
Vishmidt
3. Between the Planet and the Market, Gary Zhexi Zhang
4. The Automaton of the Anthropocene: On Carbosilicon Machines and
Cyberfossil Capital, Matteo Pasquinelli
5. Anatomy of an AI System: The Amazon Echo as an Anatomical Map of Human
Labor, Data, and Planetary Resources, Kate Crawford and Vladan Joler
Part II: The Epistemologies of Cosmotechne
6. Black Ecologies: An Opening, an Offering, Imani Jacqueline Brown
7. Pluriversal Horizons: Notes for an Onto-epistemic Reorientation of
Technology, Arturo Escobar, Michal Osterweil, and Kriti Sharma
8. Systems Representing Themselves, Juaniko Moreno
9. A Conversation on Art and Cosmotechnics, Yuk Hui and Brian Kuan Wood
10. The Rise of the Coyote: Towards a Socio-Technological Approach to
Worldmaking, Sara Garzón
Part III: Artificial Earth
11. The Artificial Earth: A Conceptual Morphology, Conrad Moriarty-Cole and
James Phillips
12. The Environment Is Not a System, Tega Brain
13. At the Limits of Computational Technocracy, Victor G. García-Castañeda
14. Prologue to the Sky River, Elise Misao Hunchuck, Marco Ferrari, and
Jingru (Cyan) Cheng
15. Designed to Disappear: On the Ambiguity of Nature in Dutch Coastal
Engineering, Michaela Büsse and Konstantin Mitrokhov
Part IV: Planetary Scientia
16. Poetics of Science / Dialogic Curiosities / Incomputabilities, Fields
Harrington and Katherine McKittrick
17. At the End of Autopoiesis: Nonaxiomatic Patterns and Millions of
Incomputable Earths, Luciana Parisi
18. Subaquatic Sensoriums and the Incomputable Ocean, Margarida Mendes
19. Pending Xenophora, Mari Bastashevski
Part V: For the End of This World
20. Nature, Estranged from the Idea: Gendered Metaphors and Evolutionary
Allegories in the Long Nineteenth Century, Ana Teixeira Pinto
21. The Time Machine Stops, Kevin Walker
22. The Pain of Thinking at Light Speed: Posthuman Play as Response to I
Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream, Conor McKeown
23. Organic Technologies in the Works of Patricia Domíguez, Daniela Zyman
Bibliography
Index
Antonia Majaca is a research fellow in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Ca Foscari in Venice. She was principal investigator for the research project Incomputable (20152021) at the IZK Institute for Contemporary Art, Graz University of Technology.