Screens in the sky: SAGE,surveillance, and the automation of perceptual,mnemonic, and epistemological labor |
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Authors: | Jeremy Packer |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Communication , North Carolina State University , St Raleigh , NC , USA jpacker@ncsu.edu |
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Abstract: | This essay investigates the centrality of the U.S. Military in the process of automating the labor of surveillance. The creation of Semi-Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE), an anti-nuclear defense system developed in the 1950s, marked the computerization of the perceptual, mnemonic, and epistemological labor that is necessary for surveillance and is emblematic of screening technologies. The essay situates SAGE in a long history of military surveillance that depended upon media technologies. Building upon the work of Michel Foucault and Freidrich Kittler, it is argued that media are essential for understanding how surveillance is problematized for security. |
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Keywords: | surveillance labor automation labor digital media SAGE air defense Foucault Kittler |
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