Crises and Technological Futures: Experiences, Emotion, and Action
Journal article, 2020

We have grown accustomed to the near-constant invocation of "crisis" as part of our everyday media consumption. During periods of insecurity, historically contingent crisis imaginaries tend to evolve, linking developments in the historical present to cultural memories of a fearful past and visions of an unwanted future. A historical understanding of these imaginaries, along with their societal and material aftermath-including their impact in relation to political choice and decision-making-is imperative for the history of technology. This article aims to problematize the complex relationship between crisis imaginaries and technological futures acknowledging the triple temporality of crises. In order to shed light on the rich potential of historical research into the entanglements of past- and future-oriented crisis narratives, we exemplify this approach in three empirical research themes: security and the experience of past and future; fears as drivers of technological development; political decision-making and the future of space mining.

Author

Karena Kalmbach

Eindhoven University of Technology

Andreas Marklund

ENIGMA - Museum of Communication

Anna Åberg

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Science, Technology and Society

Technology and Culture

0040-165X (ISSN) 1097-3729 (eISSN)

Vol. 61 1 272-281

Subject Categories

History of Technology

DOI

10.1353/tech.2020.0001

PubMed

32249223

More information

Latest update

11/30/2021