ABSTRACT
Taking up the challenges of the datafication of culture, as well as of the scholarship of cultural inquiry itself, this collection contributes to the critical debate about data and algorithms. How can we understand the quality and significance of current socio-technical transformations that result from datafication and algorithmization? How can we explore the changing conditions and contours for living within such new and changing frameworks? How can, or should we, think and act within, but also in response to these conditions?, This collection brings together various perspectives on the datafication and algorithmization of culture from debates and disciplines within the field of cultural inquiry, specifically (new) media studies, game studies, urban studies, screen studies, and gender and postcolonial studies. It proposes conceptual and methodological directions for exploring where, when, and how data and algorithms (re)shape cultural practices, create (in)justice, and (co)produce knowledge
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part 1|91 pages
Practices
chapter 1|17 pages
Coffee Roasters' Data Vernacular
chapter 2|17 pages
The Agricultural Data Imaginary
chapter 4|18 pages
Streaming against the Environment
chapter 5|17 pages
Out of the Bin, into the Open
part 2|66 pages
Justice
chapter 7|17 pages
The Datafication of Racialization and the Pursuit of Equality
chapter 8|13 pages
Caged by Data
chapter 9|14 pages
Dirty Computers versus the New Jim Code
part 3|67 pages
Knowledges
chapter 10|18 pages
How Eva Louise Young (1861–1939) Found Me
chapter 12|17 pages
Data and Algorithms in Transition
chapter 13|13 pages
Schooled by Dashboards?
part 4|32 pages
Agendas
