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Residual Categories: Silence, Absence and Being an Other 

Star, Susan Leigh

Zeitschrift für Medien- und Kulturforschung, Bd. 1 (2010), Iss. 1: S. 201–219

2 Citations (CrossRef)

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Bibliografische Daten

Star, Susan Leigh

Cited By

  1. Privat – öffentlich – politisch: Gesellschaftstheorien in feministischer Perspektive

    Resonanzspezialistinnen in der Krise. Blinde Flecken in Hartmut Rosas Resonanztheorie

    Landweer, Hilge

    2022

    https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-35401-5_11 [Citations: 0]
  2. A critique of the crowd psychological heritage in early sociology, classic phenomenology and recent social psychology

    Thonhauser, Gerhard

    Continental Philosophy Review, Bd. 55 (2022), Heft 3 S.371

    https://doi.org/10.1007/s11007-022-09566-z [Citations: 0]

Abstract

Residual categories such as »not elsewhere categorized« densely populate modern information systems. This article roughly categories two types of modern information surveillance and notification systems, statistical and event-based. It examines the nature of residual categories arising from each, and proposes some methodological considerations for how these impact moral order within information infrastructure. The article concludes with comments about how the inclusion of lived experience might ameliorate a sort of moral gridlock often encountered today in large-scale information systems.

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