Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Conference contribution/Paper › peer-review
Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Conference contribution/Paper › peer-review
}
TY - GEN
T1 - A space odyssey of cyber-physical marketization
AU - Windahl, Charlotta
AU - Mason, Katy
PY - 2024/7/4
Y1 - 2024/7/4
N2 - This paper reveals how the reproduction of ‘appropriate space’ is designed -in to cyber-physical market offerings through the marketization process. Drawing on a longitudinal ethnographic study of the extended reality tumour evolution project (XRTEP) – involving a popup room, HoloLens technologies, a donor body, a digital ‘body’ twin and spatial-temporal clinical data – we reveal how the contestations of normalised practices from outside the world of markets(from genomics, clinical medicine, architecture and digital design), designed-inthe reproduction of ‘appropriate’ moral space (Lefebvre , 1991: 59), to an innovative learning product. Starting from the premise that technological innovation is a marketization practice – making the market and the technology in relation to each other, simultaneously, through co-produced, coordinated activities and contestations – this paper contributes to extant understanding of marketization by revealing (i) the reproduction of appropriate space as a central element of cyber-physical products, (ii) the marketization process as a means ofconceptualising and designing-in ‘appropriates spaces’ with its own moral order, and (iii) the marketable object as a carrier of moral orders and transformed sociomaterial practices.
AB - This paper reveals how the reproduction of ‘appropriate space’ is designed -in to cyber-physical market offerings through the marketization process. Drawing on a longitudinal ethnographic study of the extended reality tumour evolution project (XRTEP) – involving a popup room, HoloLens technologies, a donor body, a digital ‘body’ twin and spatial-temporal clinical data – we reveal how the contestations of normalised practices from outside the world of markets(from genomics, clinical medicine, architecture and digital design), designed-inthe reproduction of ‘appropriate’ moral space (Lefebvre , 1991: 59), to an innovative learning product. Starting from the premise that technological innovation is a marketization practice – making the market and the technology in relation to each other, simultaneously, through co-produced, coordinated activities and contestations – this paper contributes to extant understanding of marketization by revealing (i) the reproduction of appropriate space as a central element of cyber-physical products, (ii) the marketization process as a means ofconceptualising and designing-in ‘appropriates spaces’ with its own moral order, and (iii) the marketable object as a carrier of moral orders and transformed sociomaterial practices.
M3 - Conference contribution/Paper
BT - European Group of Organization Studies
PB - EGOS
ER -