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Willard Uncapher

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What is a network? How do we study 'things' that are networked together? What does it mean to be part of a network? How might we consider networks represent a distinct way of looking at new media (as opposed to mass media or interpersonal media)? How can we think about power in networks? This is a complicated question which can involve fields and disciplines as disparate as biology, cybernetics, sociology, hierarchy theory, contemplative practices, historical and ethnographic analysis. These different fields are drawn upon in the following pages, and are woven together into something that is a network that must acknowledge power, place, and paradox.

My work contributes to a new generation of 'network analysis.' While the first generation of network analysis seeks to address and identify the problems, attributes, and typologies of 'connection' within networks, our work will address questions of boundary, power, and morphology of networks. The first generation often uses computer programs to map out connections within a social or other network, assigns values related to frequency, strength, and nature of connection. These studies have a profound importance as we increasingly manifest a new kind of 'network culture' in alliance with technocultural innovations. However, the new studies of networks looks to flow and connection, but also to organization, control, and evolution. It reintroduces questions of hierarchy, but in connections with entities such as strange loops, evasive boundaries, and patchy information ecologies.

Where do the boundaries come from, and what does the boundary of a network or a system mean? Boundary questions are important whether one is interested in philosophical works as those of Derrida, Foucault, or Baudrillard, whether one is interested in community development and the importance of communication, whether one is interested in education and the question of the impact of 'information technologies,' whether one is interested in the critique explorations, and tactics of art, whether one is interested in interface, self, or identify. Key to my work are consideration of cultural complexity, the materiality of information, regionalism, and interdependence. My work also can draw upon issues of media history, and Buddhist and other Asian perspectives, and contemporary European philosophy.

How can we relate our new understanding to an understanding of 'global' flows of culture and capital, people and ideologies? How can the 'emerging global grassroots infrastructure' deal with global threats to cultural and natural sustainability and intelligent transformations? Why are civil liberties so important? What is an 'epistemology and politics of scale?' This site outlines some of my own research and frameworks. I will be putting a long work on the politics and epistemology of scale online soon, as well as work related to my field research in rural and developing areas.

Themes: Teaching / Networks & Systems / Dynamic Hierarchy Theory / Globalization / Space-Place / Place-Bioregionalism / Art as Critique / Art as Experiment / Contemplation / Deconstruction / Postmodernism & Compassion / Curriculum Design / Nature, Sustainability, & Animal Rights / History & Technoculture / 2nd Generation Cyborg Theory / Cyberg Environmentalism / Literacy / Community Development / Civil Liberties / Digital & Analog Interface / Socio-Cultural Theory & Research / Reviews & Papers


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Research/New Theory


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Teaching and Curriculum Development


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Selected Writings


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Research Interests with links


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Misc. Links


Topics Top | Themes | Teaching & Curriculum Development | Selected Writings | Research Interests | More Links | Contact

Current Gallery Space: My Travels to Tibet


Topics Top | Themes | Teaching & Curriculum Development | Selected Writings | Research Interests | More Links | Contact

Address:
Willard Uncapher, Network Emergence, and recently, Visting Assistant Professor and Lecturer, Univ. of Colorado at Boulder. Home: 8706 Kendall Court, Arvada, CO 80003; mailto:willard@well.com