2020
DOI: 10.1080/1472586x.2020.1843285
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The citizen drone: protest, sousveillance and droneviewing

Abstract: In this article we will discuss the use of drones, as well as the visual simulation of drone afforded aesthetics, by activists, artists and protesters. We use the existing literature of surveillance studies and visual studies to examine how exactly a drone-afforded visibility emerges and how it mediates the visibility of a particular community or space of contention. We draw on the concepts of "surveillance capacities" and (counter) visibility practices to analyze the process and production of drone (and drone… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
(16 reference statements)
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“…We are increasingly sharing data (whether we know it or not), especially visual records about our travelling. And while some cities are trying to campaign against ‘selfies’ and ‘hashtagging’ (see Zuev and Bratchford, 2020) they are themselves involved in creating visual experiences for tourists to erleben (to live through) in a different way and record it. These recordings and image-streams are flowing vast distances, they reveal features about our close and distant others, our food habits and places we visit and enjoy.…”
Section: Future Research Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We are increasingly sharing data (whether we know it or not), especially visual records about our travelling. And while some cities are trying to campaign against ‘selfies’ and ‘hashtagging’ (see Zuev and Bratchford, 2020) they are themselves involved in creating visual experiences for tourists to erleben (to live through) in a different way and record it. These recordings and image-streams are flowing vast distances, they reveal features about our close and distant others, our food habits and places we visit and enjoy.…”
Section: Future Research Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This focus has led to a research gap, however, regarding civilian drone aesthetics and their role in counter-culture tactics in war and social conflicts. Further, while the existing research on collective action and drones does tackle drone aesthetics and the production of and disputes over visual regimes (Viernes, 2020; Zuev and Bratchford, 2020), the sensual perceptions shaping affective orders have been underexplored. Given this gap regarding how civilian drone aesthetics can enact affective politics, by applying the insights of actor-network theory and new materialism to the case of the disappeared students of Ayotzinapa and the protests surrounding it, I first analyze the political affects that drone aesthetics can spark in social conflicts and the role they may have in political communication against the state.…”
Section: Drones As Affective Actor-networkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Through Droncita, Rexiste proposes a visual aesthetics that seeks to challenge the hierarchical metaphor of the state, which like the sovereign of Hobbes’ Leviathan usually appears to be above society, though it too is part of the body politic. Droncita’s civilian drone view from above, however, constitutes a visual narrative to turn this vertical metaphor on its head by enacting counter-cultural surveillance practices (Zuev and Bratchford, 2020). In the following protests against the Ayotzinapa cover-up, for example, Rexiste deployed material objects, such as a Mexican flag with the letters RIP, to evoke fear of the dead (see Figure 4), while Droncita offered a view from above.…”
Section: Collective Action For Ayotzinapamentioning
confidence: 99%
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