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Signaling Stigma: How Support Technology Induces Bodily Inequalities in Interaction

[conference paper]


This document is a part of the following document:
Proceedings of the Weizenbaum Conference 2019 "Challenges of Digital Inequality - Digital Education, Digital Work, Digital Life"

Karafillidis, Athanasios

Abstract

This paper contends that support technologies and their relevant artifacts recast bodily relations and thereby produce differing bodies in situations. In this vein, it sketches three main forms of physical human-machine relations (substitution, augmentation, support) and then introduces the concept ... view more

This paper contends that support technologies and their relevant artifacts recast bodily relations and thereby produce differing bodies in situations. In this vein, it sketches three main forms of physical human-machine relations (substitution, augmentation, support) and then introduces the concept of signaling stigma that allows to observe the situated management of new technological markers of difference. It concludes with suggestions for further research building on this approach to uncover the interactional foundations for what might grow into manifest inequalities - beyond the still important issues of personal data rights and access to technology.... view less

Keywords
man-machine system; interaction; stigma; inequality; technical development; digitalization; body

Classification
Technology Assessment

Free Keywords
Support Technology; Physical Support; Human-Machine Interaction; Stigma Management; Weizenbaum-Institut; Weizenbaum Institute

Collection Title
Proceedings of the Weizenbaum Conference 2019 "Challenges of Digital Inequality - Digital Education, Digital Work, Digital Life"

Conference
2. Weizenbaum Conference. Berlin, 2019

Document language
English

Publication Year
2019

City
Berlin

Page/Pages
4 p.

Status
Primary Publication; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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Home  |  Legal notices  |  Operational concept  |  Privacy policy
© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.