@inbook{01df7d503f4443f3ac4c9051c744c22e,
title = "Infrastructuring bodies: Choreographies of power in the computational city",
abstract = "The aim of this chapter is to shed light on the power-related infrastructural dynamic that actualises in the interrelations of big data collection and the bodily movement of urbanites in contemporary cities. By drawing from Husserl{\textquoteright}s and Merleau-Ponty{\textquoteright}s phenomenologies of the body and combining them with recent theorisations on choreography, material media theory and critical technology studies, the authors address city dwellers{\textquoteright} embodied relations with mobile devices and ambient technologies as integral to the micro-, meso- and macro-level (re)production of urban infrastructures. By way of discussing the technologically mediated kinaesthesia and movement trajectories of lived bodies, the chapter develops a novel conceptualisation of urban choreography for exploring the mechanisms through which dwelling-in-the-city today functions in a globally extensive cybernetic feedback loop with profit-motivated and surveillant big data operations.",
keywords = "lived bodies, big data, choreography, computational city, mediated bodily movement, phenomenology, urban infrastructure",
author = "Jaana Parviainen and Seija Ridell",
year = "2021",
month = jan,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-52313-8_8",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-030-52312-1",
series = "Philosophy of Engineering and Technology",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "137--155",
editor = "Michael Nagenborg and Taylor Stone and {Gonz{\'a}lez Woge}, Margoth and Pieter Vermaas",
booktitle = "Technology and the City",
edition = "1",
}