Summary
This essay engages with alternative regimes of invisibility by investigating the things that are kept, and the practices that take place in basements of eastern Estonia. The use of hiding infrastructures is here taken as part of wider claims about epistemic disobedience and resistance of any social control over our interiority. Ethnographic descriptions show the way placing things underground is an enactment of inattention at the intersection between different forms of value, temporality, and representation. The right to opacity is thus presented as a way of resisting the hegemonic terms of engagement, preserving diversity against the central modern gaze that constantly demands clarity and accountability.
Pere Morell i Torra
18.04.2024
24.04.2024
Paulo Gabriel Hilu da Rocha Pinto
27.03.2024
M. Belén Ortega-Senet
13.03.2024
Abdellah Hammoudi
Tradução de Ilham Houass e Diane Abd-El-Karim
Revisto por Francisco Freire e Abdallah Hammoudi
12.03.2024
Simone Frangella
Max Ruben Ramos
05.03.2024
Raquel Gil Carvalheira
04.03.2024
Caroline Brettell
Marta Rosales
Sónia Ferreira
27.02.2024
Vincenzo Scamardella
06.02.2024
Paulo Victor Leite Lopes
06.02.2024
Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette
23.01.2024
Catarina Frois
06.12.2023
Pedro Figueiredo Neto and Ricardo Falcão
22.11.2023
Jarrett Zigon
16.11.2023
Ramón Sarró
10.10.2023
Ramón Sarró
10.10.2023
João Leal
Luís Cunha
Humberto Martins
03.10.2023
Mariana Tello Weiss
28.09.2023
Tamta Khalvashi
28.09.2023
Hermione Spriggs
21.09.2023
Raquel Mendes Pereira
19.09.2023
Patrick Laviolette
29.08.2023
Miguel Vale de Almeida
25.08.2023
Victor Hugo de Souza Barreto
28.06.2023
Francisco Martínez
21.06.2023
Ruy Llera Blanes
Luís Silva
Francisco Freire
Antonio Maria Pusceddu
Antónia Lima
Paulo Mendes
21.06.2023