ABSTRACT

This book undertakes a redefinition of the relationship between space and representation, beginning with a revised understanding of both concepts according to a performative, non-representational perspective. Here, representation is not refused, but performed differently and in reciprocity with an articulation of technospaces. I argue the latter (defined here as the sociotechnical environments in which humans and machines relate and intersect) are dynamic and contingent formations whose emergence cannot be disjoined from the generativity of the mediations that traverse them, making recourse to external, preformed representations impossible since technospaces develop together with representations thanks to the creative capacity at their core.