Polyhedral: Recycling Boundary Ecologies

Authors

  • Paul Carter

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/irie185

Abstract

Foregrounding the extent to which 'place' remains resistant to the politics and poetics of 'network culture', this essay approaches place as a boundary ecology rather than as an instance of cultural invariance. It calls on readers to think about attempts to actively recycle cultural 'debris' or 'waste' through an ethics of passage instead of the kind of instrumentalist statics that prevents the development of an ontology of mobility. Contending that such a capacity to inhabit passage is compromised by the eschatological language used to communicate the implications of environmental disaster, as well as by languages of consultation that (conceptually) empty place of any creative power to incubate alternatives – events, modes of relation –, the essay stresses the mythopoetic techniques that produce places as knots or nodal points within a network of passage. The designer's task is to create the hinge mechanisms that render such boundary ecologies inhabitable imaginatively, and by materialising the nexus between creativity and change to alter our position vis-a-vis our ethical responsibilities as citizens of a shared biosphere.

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Published

2009-10-01

How to Cite

Carter, Paul. 2009. “Polyhedral: Recycling Boundary Ecologies”. The International Review of Information Ethics 11 (October). Edmonton, Canada:45-51. https://doi.org/10.29173/irie185.