@u2764 There's a reason my critique, the other day, of "space" (as a model) hinges on an interrogation of "embodied membership". Our Lakoffean urge to anchor in metaphors of embodied cognition can lead us astray.
Which is not to say there isn't an embodied metaphor that will better grok and grapple online whateverthisis, but perhaps that metaphor rests in something bodies do, rather than where bodies are.
Annemarie Mol might be helpful here.
@katebowles @Tdorey @u2764 Looking to analogues between online whateverthisis and physical spaces, or perhaps more properly, physical *places*, is always useful.
The question is, are such analogues simultaneously univocal? Or can we say that online whateverthisis is, quite usefully comparable to space, while also holding that online whateveritis, itself, is not best understood as space in any meaningful sense?
@katebowles @Tdorey @u2764 Yes, place gets us closer to online whateverthisis than does space as a theoretical construct, and there's been a lot of work done dealing with enactments of place that don't map easily to our intuitive understanding of space, even without complicating matters by involving a bunch of jupped up Analytical Engines.
Nonetheless, I would argue that this is still an analogical, rather than a univocal, approach to online whateverthisis.
@travisaholland @Tdorey @u2764 @beadsland I had a laborious way of getting to mastodon through a Twitter search and then catching a ride on a link. Serendipitously it took me to all sorts of other things in that search timeline. So I'm thinking about how what looks like a navigational fail also takes you through odd neighbourhoods by chance.
The bodega is there, but you walk past it in different directions, and with different destinations in mind, and in different moods.
@katebowles @Tdorey @u2764 @travisaholland Nice.
Compare Lawlor's synthesis, in Implications of Immanence, of Derrida's "moment of blindness" with Foucault's "miniscule hiatus".
Granted, Lawlor might more properly be said to be pointing toward a dislocation in time, rather than a doubling of place, but nonetheless, both contemplations of media grapple with a decoupling of subject-of-media from subject-in-relation-to-media.
@beadsland @travisaholland @u2764 @Tdorey This is also where I think Nick Couldry is heading with discussion of media practice, rather than media consumption (or even presumption). Broadcast media make pop-up social space appear; social media spin out networked pathways.
Human bodies, lives in the moment of being lived, anchor both.
You are all where you are; where I am a bird is singing outside the window.
@katebowles @u2764 @Tdorey @travisaholland The key takeaway, here, for any attempt to arrive at a theory of Internet "spaces", even if only as strawman, is that any such theory must surely be grounded in a theory of media spaces or places, generally, from drawing and paintings to print and television.
No matter how ubiquitous the vernacular of Internet "spaces", the phenomenology, IMHO, is at best a speciation of that for the genera of media, as such, not an exceptionalism.