Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Soverei...

Electronic data

Links

View graph of relations

Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty. / Fish, Adam Richard; Garrett, Bradley L.; Case, Oliver.
In: InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture, No. 27, 27, 01.12.2017.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Fish, AR, Garrett, BL & Case, O 2017, 'Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty', InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture, no. 27, 27. <http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/extended-flight-the-emergence-of-drone-sovereignty/>

APA

Fish, A. R., Garrett, B. L., & Case, O. (2017). Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty. InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture, (27), Article 27. http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/extended-flight-the-emergence-of-drone-sovereignty/

Vancouver

Fish AR, Garrett BL, Case O. Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty. InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture. 2017 Dec 1;(27):27.

Author

Fish, Adam Richard ; Garrett, Bradley L. ; Case, Oliver. / Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty. In: InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture. 2017 ; No. 27.

Bibtex

@article{d929dcc96ac240f0afb2e38d4419f481,
title = "Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty",
abstract = " Landeyjarsandur, Iceland is a long expanse of black beach stretching down the southern coast of Iceland 1.5 hours southeast of Reykjavik. We took the journey to this place with two Icelandic internet engineers to make a film about how North Atlantic islands are linked by communication networks consisting of fibre-optical cables and cable stations. Landeyjarsandur{\textquoteright}s features are largely organic – even the remains of long-abandoned fishing boats and washed up cultural objects seem to have long folded themselves into the environmental matrix. One feature remains distinct however: a small well-fortified building that houses the submarine communications cable landing point between Denmark and Greenland. Part of our methodology was to deploy drones with high-quality videos cameras to follow the cables from the air. However, in taking to the air, we experienced a methodological disjunction, a moment when our expectations and desires as pilots were outstripped by an event. This article, and the accompanying film, is about a situation where our previous experience of autonomy in relationship to the drone–that it listened to us and followed our direction–was replaced, however temporarily, by drone sovereignty, wherein it appeared to have agency in the atmosphere.",
author = "Fish, {Adam Richard} and Garrett, {Bradley L.} and Oliver Case",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
day = "1",
language = "English",
journal = "InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture",
issn = "1097-3710",
number = "27",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Extended Flight: The Emergence of Drone Sovereignty

AU - Fish, Adam Richard

AU - Garrett, Bradley L.

AU - Case, Oliver

PY - 2017/12/1

Y1 - 2017/12/1

N2 - Landeyjarsandur, Iceland is a long expanse of black beach stretching down the southern coast of Iceland 1.5 hours southeast of Reykjavik. We took the journey to this place with two Icelandic internet engineers to make a film about how North Atlantic islands are linked by communication networks consisting of fibre-optical cables and cable stations. Landeyjarsandur’s features are largely organic – even the remains of long-abandoned fishing boats and washed up cultural objects seem to have long folded themselves into the environmental matrix. One feature remains distinct however: a small well-fortified building that houses the submarine communications cable landing point between Denmark and Greenland. Part of our methodology was to deploy drones with high-quality videos cameras to follow the cables from the air. However, in taking to the air, we experienced a methodological disjunction, a moment when our expectations and desires as pilots were outstripped by an event. This article, and the accompanying film, is about a situation where our previous experience of autonomy in relationship to the drone–that it listened to us and followed our direction–was replaced, however temporarily, by drone sovereignty, wherein it appeared to have agency in the atmosphere.

AB - Landeyjarsandur, Iceland is a long expanse of black beach stretching down the southern coast of Iceland 1.5 hours southeast of Reykjavik. We took the journey to this place with two Icelandic internet engineers to make a film about how North Atlantic islands are linked by communication networks consisting of fibre-optical cables and cable stations. Landeyjarsandur’s features are largely organic – even the remains of long-abandoned fishing boats and washed up cultural objects seem to have long folded themselves into the environmental matrix. One feature remains distinct however: a small well-fortified building that houses the submarine communications cable landing point between Denmark and Greenland. Part of our methodology was to deploy drones with high-quality videos cameras to follow the cables from the air. However, in taking to the air, we experienced a methodological disjunction, a moment when our expectations and desires as pilots were outstripped by an event. This article, and the accompanying film, is about a situation where our previous experience of autonomy in relationship to the drone–that it listened to us and followed our direction–was replaced, however temporarily, by drone sovereignty, wherein it appeared to have agency in the atmosphere.

M3 - Journal article

JO - InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture

JF - InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture

SN - 1097-3710

IS - 27

M1 - 27

ER -