Social Space experts
Last updated
Last updated
In this chapter:
Exercise
Keller on infrastructure space
Judith on examined life
Sebastian on design against productivity
Rem on the future of the city
Jeff on the walkable city
Hito on how not to be seen
Jared on collapsing societies
Saskia on expulsions
Lorraine on rules and norms
"Actors have a script, but their real work lies in crafting an action, usually with an infinitive expression." - Extrastatecraft, Keller Easterling, p91
Keller Easterling is an American architect, urbanist, writer, and teacher. Her latest book, Enduring Innocence: Global Architecture and Its Political Masquerades, researches familiar spatial products that have landed in precarious political situations around the world. Very interesting if you would like to look at space, social space and infrastructure space on a global scale.
Judith Butler and Sunaura Taylor went for a walk and engaged in a terrific conversation about disability as not merely some physical status but largely a social status, and that is also true for so called "able-bodied" persons.
Dr. Sebastian Deterding is a designer and researcher working on playful, gameful, and motivational design (or gamification) for human flourishing. He is broadly interested in how code shapes conduct: how software and games pervade everyday life, and what ramifications this holds for individuals, communities, ethics, and design.
Provocative, perceptive, blistering and often witheringly witty, Rem Koolhaas's writing has changed the way we look at cities, just as much as his architecture has forced us to reassess what buildings can be and how they can embody radical ideas.
Jeff Speck is a city planner and urban designer who, through writing, public service, and built work, advocates internationally for smart growth and sustainable design.
Hito Steyerl is a German artist, writer and theorist known for taking a strong political stand and being unafraid to challenge the power of the art market, has been named the most influential person in contemporary art.
Why do societies fail? With lessons from the Norse of Iron Age Greenland, deforested Easter Island and present-day Montana, Jared Diamond talks about the signs that collapse is near, and how -- if we see it in time -- we can prevent it.
Saskia Sassen is redefining power through the language of expulsions and incorporation. Speaking about her recent book Expulsions, Sassen argues that existing academic and intellectual categories fail to capture current political, economic, and social turmoil.