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Situational Awareness: Deadly bioconvergence at the boundaries of bodies and machines

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Situational Awareness: Deadly bioconvergence at the boundaries of bodies and machines . / Suchman, Lucy.
In: Media Tropes, Vol. 5, No. 1, 2015, p. 1-24.

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@article{eb697efed5744071888c7e9e59293c8d,
title = "Situational Awareness: Deadly bioconvergence at the boundaries of bodies and machines ",
abstract = "This essay sets out an initial analytic framing for research in progress on the problem of {\textquoteleft}situational awareness{\textquoteright} within contemporary forms of (particularly U.S.) warfare. My focus more specifically is on the logics, rhetorics and material practices of remotely-controlled weapon systems (particularly armed drones and weaponized robots). Drawing from reports in investigative journalism, military documents, and critical scholarship, I examine connections between the emphasis in military and security discourses on keeping {\textquoteleft}our{\textquoteright} bodies safe through so called network-centric warfare, and the project of cutting the networks that might bring our wars too close to home.",
author = "Lucy Suchman",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "1--24",
journal = "Media Tropes",
issn = "1913-6005",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Situational Awareness

T2 - Deadly bioconvergence at the boundaries of bodies and machines

AU - Suchman, Lucy

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - This essay sets out an initial analytic framing for research in progress on the problem of ‘situational awareness’ within contemporary forms of (particularly U.S.) warfare. My focus more specifically is on the logics, rhetorics and material practices of remotely-controlled weapon systems (particularly armed drones and weaponized robots). Drawing from reports in investigative journalism, military documents, and critical scholarship, I examine connections between the emphasis in military and security discourses on keeping ‘our’ bodies safe through so called network-centric warfare, and the project of cutting the networks that might bring our wars too close to home.

AB - This essay sets out an initial analytic framing for research in progress on the problem of ‘situational awareness’ within contemporary forms of (particularly U.S.) warfare. My focus more specifically is on the logics, rhetorics and material practices of remotely-controlled weapon systems (particularly armed drones and weaponized robots). Drawing from reports in investigative journalism, military documents, and critical scholarship, I examine connections between the emphasis in military and security discourses on keeping ‘our’ bodies safe through so called network-centric warfare, and the project of cutting the networks that might bring our wars too close to home.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 1

EP - 24

JO - Media Tropes

JF - Media Tropes

SN - 1913-6005

IS - 1

ER -