167
The Poster
Volume 1 Number 2
© 2010 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/post.1.2.167_1
POST 1 (2) pp. 167–185 Intellect Limited 2010
YASMIN IBRAHIM
Queen Mary, University of London
The non-stop ‘capture’: the politics
of looking in postmodernity
Abstract
This article examines our ability to constantly capture life on the move with the convergence of technologies.
The incorporation of recording facilities in mobile telephony and our ability to connect to the Internet via
mobile devices enable us to share images on a global platform. The mobile body becomes one that can capture
images on the move. This ‘civilian gaze’ creates a ‘glass house’ society in which pervasive watching and
recording can create spaces of accountability, surveillance, risk, politics of pity, and denigration of humanity.
Mobile communications create a politics of looking in postmodernity where both new sociabilities and risks
are created with the embedding of these technologies in our everyday lives. This article examines the conse-
quences of this non-stop capture and civilian gaze for humanity in the immediate and distant future.
Introduction
In recent years, mobile telephony and recording devices have provided new ways to engage with world
and media events. The brutal beating of Rodney King, the private tourist footage of the Asian tsunami,
Keywords
postmodernity
mobile technology
image capture
gaze
convergence
surveillance
risk
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