{"id":1913,"date":"2017-06-16T15:42:05","date_gmt":"2017-06-16T14:42:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lancaster.ac.uk\/cemore\/?p=1913"},"modified":"2022-08-01T11:52:54","modified_gmt":"2022-08-01T10:52:54","slug":"automation-labour-and-future-mobilities","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lancaster.ac.uk\/cemore\/automation-labour-and-future-mobilities\/","title":{"rendered":"Automation, Labour and Future Mobilities"},"content":{"rendered":"

This reading group is an opportunity for us to explore how mobilities research is responding to pressing questions about robots, automation, and our technological futures. From the new kinds of micro-bodily movements that are created by these technologies, up to the larger-scale movements of workers who have been displaced by them, a mobilities perspective provides a unique way of anticipating and understanding the complex socio-technical futures that robotics is giving rise to.<\/p>\n

There is one main paper to read by Bernard Stiegler, a philosopher-sociologist who has contributed significantly to conceptual debates on automation and labour: Bernard Stiegler, Introduction to Automatic Society 1: The Future of Work. Cambridge: Polity. [published in La Deleuziana: Online Journal of Philosophy, no. 1 (2015)]<\/p>\n

There are four supplementary papers for those of you who are interested in other ways that people are writing about automation. These papers come from a range of disciplines and are meant to engage us, as mobilities researchers, in some of the broader theoretical and methodological questions circulating right now:<\/p>\n