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46 Digital Modeling and the Climate Crisis

  • Rolien Hoyng
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Abstract

The climate crisis is sensed and experienced through digital models. Mapping the diffractive mediations and the differential experiences that models as part of climate technologies afford, opens up political and ethical questions over climate justice. This chapter locates the politics of digital models in interplays of un/certainties as well as dynamics between speculation and quantification. I discuss two key examples. First, the dominant, quantified and certainty-asserting discourse on climate change exists in opposition to climate denialism, yet this paradigm may involve its own kind of quantified denialism regarding planetary uncertainty implied in notions of the Anthropocene. Second, AgriTech’s models in smart farming support the transposition of the climate-induced radical uncertainty that farmers face into figures of calculated risks. But this raises questions over what kinds of risks become calculated and subsequentially financialized, whereas other uncalculated forms of harm remain externalized, increasing precarity. Climate computation and quantification enable certain forms of agency, but at the expense of learning to act in the face of uncertainty.

Abstract

The climate crisis is sensed and experienced through digital models. Mapping the diffractive mediations and the differential experiences that models as part of climate technologies afford, opens up political and ethical questions over climate justice. This chapter locates the politics of digital models in interplays of un/certainties as well as dynamics between speculation and quantification. I discuss two key examples. First, the dominant, quantified and certainty-asserting discourse on climate change exists in opposition to climate denialism, yet this paradigm may involve its own kind of quantified denialism regarding planetary uncertainty implied in notions of the Anthropocene. Second, AgriTech’s models in smart farming support the transposition of the climate-induced radical uncertainty that farmers face into figures of calculated risks. But this raises questions over what kinds of risks become calculated and subsequentially financialized, whereas other uncalculated forms of harm remain externalized, increasing precarity. Climate computation and quantification enable certain forms of agency, but at the expense of learning to act in the face of uncertainty.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. 1 Introduction: What Are Digital Cultures? 1
  4. Part I Methods and Approaches
  5. 2 On Methods 11
  6. 3 Digital Textuality 17
  7. 4 The Political Economy of Digital Media 23
  8. 5 Media Archaeology and Media Genealogy 33
  9. 6 Digital Ethnography 43
  10. 7 Prescriptive Media and Autoethnographies of the Self 61
  11. 8 Hybrid Space Revisited 75
  12. 9 Software Studies 83
  13. 10 Computer Programming as a Method for the Study of Digital Cultures 89
  14. 11 Decolonial Media Studies 97
  15. 12 Repair 115
  16. 13 Digital Ontology 123
  17. 14 Analyzing Digital Media Practices to Define Digital Media Literacy 133
  18. Part II Histories
  19. 15 History and Digital Cultures 145
  20. 16 Lessons from the Hologram 151
  21. 17 Information Theory and its Detractors 161
  22. 18 Interface 171
  23. 19 Barcodes and Digital/Physical Hybrids 181
  24. 20 Sharing 189
  25. 21 Advertising and Branding 197
  26. 22 Automation and Inequality 211
  27. Part III Identities
  28. 23 Digital Identities 225
  29. 24 Digital Culture and Race 235
  30. 25 The Digital Closet and Queer Community Online 245
  31. 26 Tactical Queer Identity in China 255
  32. 27 Rurality, Gender, and Short-Video Platforms in China 263
  33. 28 Digital Nomads 277
  34. 29 Boundaries of Digital Infrastructures in India 285
  35. 30 Sensual Ethos and Digital Intimacies in Brazilian Camming 295
  36. 31 Embodiment and Representation in Social VR 305
  37. 32 The Manosphere 313
  38. 33 Digital Hate 323
  39. Part IV Aesthetics
  40. 34 Digital Aesthetics and Collective Judgment 333
  41. 35 Screens and Power 341
  42. 36 Framing Digital Culture 351
  43. 37 Beyond the Frame 361
  44. 38 The Weird Internet and Speculative Knowledge 371
  45. 39 The Weirdness of Generative AI 387
  46. 40 Supercuts 397
  47. 41 Futurisms Beyond Western Cultural Imaginaries 407
  48. 42 Color in Digital Culture 419
  49. Part V Materialities and Infrastructures
  50. 43 The Materiality of the Digital 429
  51. 44 The Logistical Episteme 439
  52. 45 Degrowth and Digital Culture 455
  53. 46 Digital Modeling and the Climate Crisis 467
  54. 47 Telehealth 477
  55. 48 The Culture and Cultures of Twitch 483
  56. 49 Edge Computing 491
  57. 50 Humanoid Robots 497
  58. Contributors 511
  59. Index
Heruntergeladen am 9.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111316857-046/html
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