State to Stateless Machines: : A Trajectory.
[Place of publication not identified] : Aksioma Institute for Contemporary Art, 2019.
[Place of publication not identified] : State Machines, 2019.
1 online resource
PostScriptUM ; 33
"James Bridle (one of Wired magazine's 100 most influential people in Europe) is an artist and writer working across technologies and disciplines. In 2018, he curated the exhibition and conference Transnationalisms, produced by Aksioma in the framework of the international cooperation project State Machines. Bridle has spent the recent years researching citizenship-by-investment and related technologies: special economic zones and free trade areas, freeports and seasteads, blockchain and other supposedly emancipatory but inhuman and asset-based protocols for identity management. At every level, the mass movement of peoples and the rise of planetary-scale computation is changing the way we think and understand national identity. The state as we know it is coming to an end: in this essay, starting from the increasing exchange of national identities available to the very rich, the author draws the trajectory of State to stateless machine."-- provided by distributor.
Art and technology.
Economics.
Art et technologie.
Économie politique.
economics.
Tracts (Ephemera)
Pamphlets
Bridle, James, contributor.
Cachia, Rebecca, contributor.
Grdina, Sonja, contributor.
Okretič, Marcela, contributor.
Umek, Luka, contributor.
Library Stack, supplier.
Sign up to get news from us
Thank you for signing up. You'll begin to receive emails from us shortly.
We’re not able to update your preferences at the moment. Please try again later.
You’ve already subscribed with this email address. If you’d like to subscribe with another, please try again.
This email was permanently deleted from our database. If you’d like to resubscribe with this email, please contact us
Please complete the form below to buy:
[Title of the book, authors]
ISBN: [ISBN of the book]
Price [Price of book]
Thank you for placing an order. We will contact you shortly.
We’re not able to process your request at the moment. Please try again later.