TY - JOUR
T1 - Dispositions towards automation
T2 - Capital, technology, and labour relations in aeromobilities
AU - Lin, Weiqiang
AU - Adey, Peter
AU - Harris, Tina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2022.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - With the rapid rise of supercomputers, artificial intelligence, and advanced forms of robotics, recent years have seen a resurgence in interest in automation in the academy. In geography, scholars have yielded some important insights on the mottled relations between humans and machines as capital moves towards a more high-tech form of production. In this paper, we seek to extend these debates by delving into how labour's relations with automation do not always reactively vacillate between capitulation and adaptation. Instead, they are more ambiguously swayed by broader ‘dispositions towards automation’, which are generated either through practice, or by machines themselves that are designed to appeal to human desires and wants. Drawing on examples from aeromobilities and, particularly, airports, this paper shows how various in-process tendencies, or ‘points of meeting’, of human-technology assemblages enable and creatively rework automation in ways that are culturally specific and ideologically supportive of capital. We consider five different dispositions – namely, enchantment, aspiration, experimentation, gamification, and acquiescence – as starting points for further dialogues on technological relations and resistances in geography.
AB - With the rapid rise of supercomputers, artificial intelligence, and advanced forms of robotics, recent years have seen a resurgence in interest in automation in the academy. In geography, scholars have yielded some important insights on the mottled relations between humans and machines as capital moves towards a more high-tech form of production. In this paper, we seek to extend these debates by delving into how labour's relations with automation do not always reactively vacillate between capitulation and adaptation. Instead, they are more ambiguously swayed by broader ‘dispositions towards automation’, which are generated either through practice, or by machines themselves that are designed to appeal to human desires and wants. Drawing on examples from aeromobilities and, particularly, airports, this paper shows how various in-process tendencies, or ‘points of meeting’, of human-technology assemblages enable and creatively rework automation in ways that are culturally specific and ideologically supportive of capital. We consider five different dispositions – namely, enchantment, aspiration, experimentation, gamification, and acquiescence – as starting points for further dialogues on technological relations and resistances in geography.
KW - Aeromobilities
KW - assemblage
KW - automation
KW - capital
KW - disposition
KW - infrastructure
KW - labour
KW - technology
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85137254394
U2 - 10.1177/20438206221121652
DO - 10.1177/20438206221121652
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85137254394
SN - 2043-8206
VL - 14
SP - 51
EP - 70
JO - Dialogues in Human Geography
JF - Dialogues in Human Geography
IS - 1
ER -