[Air-L] New book: Invocational media: Reconceptualising the computer

Chris Chesher chris.chesher at sydney.edu.au
Wed Jan 3 14:47:09 PST 2024


New book:
Invocational media: reconceptualising the computer
Chris Chesher
Bloomsbury
Invocational Media: Reconceptualising the Computer: Chris Chesher: Bloomsbury Academic<https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/invocational-media-9781501363627/>

Invocational Media critiques the sociotechnical power of digital technologies by introducing the concept of invocational media.

This book challenges the foundations of computer science by offering invocation as a powerful new way of conceptualising digital technologies. Drawing on media philosophy, Deleuze, Guattari, Heidegger, Latour, Austin, Innis and McLuhan, it critiques the representationalism of data processing, artificial intelligence and virtual reality. Invocational media seem to empower individuals, but necessarily subject users to corporate and government monopolies of invocation. They offer many 'solutions', but only by reducing everything to the same kind of act. They complicate agency in their indifference as to whether invokers are human or non-human. With robotics they invoke material form to act physically and autonomously. People willingly make themselves invocable to surveillance and control by creating their own profiles and marking themselves with biometrics. This ground-breaking book will change how you think about digital media by showing they are, in fact, invocational media.


Turning away from computational media as "digital" and instead theorizing computers through their capacity to invoke, to call things up and respond, Chris Chesher's Invocational Media provides a staggeringly original perspective on technology that thrillingly reimagines almost all foundations of digital culture.
― Grant Bollmer, Associate Professor of Media Studies, NC State University, USA
In a time where we are all mesmerized by the magic of ChatGPT and similar AI technologies, Chris Chesher's book is highly welcomed and timely. Using the concept of invocation and engaging with a wide range of relevant media philosophy, Invocational Media offers an interesting and highly original way to theorize how we design, experience and interact with digital technologies and, more precisely, how they design us. This is an important contribution to the philosophy of media and compulsory reading for everyone puzzled by the mystery of contemporary AI.
― Mark Coeckelbergh, Professor of Philosophy of Media and Technology at the University of Vienna, Austria

Just at the moment when the interactive interface is newly ascendant and we thought that all had been said, along comes this gift of a book. Thinking with the generative trope of invocational media, Chesher refigures the power and limits of computation. Invocational Media offers a history of the present of human-computer interaction, and a proposal for how we can rearticulate its future. It will be of interest to anyone engaged with the invocations, avocations and evocations that comprise relations at and through the interface.
― Lucy Suchman, Professor Emerita of Sociology, Lancaster University, UK



---
DR CHRIS CHESHER | Senior Lecturer in Digital Cultures
Discipline of Media and Communications
School of Art, Communication and English | Faculty of Arts

THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY
Rm N222, Woolley A20 | The University of Sydney | NSW | 2006
T +61 2 9036 6173 | F +61 2 9351 2434  | M+61 404 095 480
E chris.chesher at sydney.edu.au<mailto:chris.chesher at sydney.edu.au>
https://www.sydney.edu.au/arts/about/our-people/academic-staff/chris-chesher.html
Recent publications:
Chesher, C. (2023) Invocational Media: Reconceptualising the Computer
https://www.bloomsbury.com/au/invocational-media-9781501363627/



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