Natasha Lushetich

University of Dundee
  •  46
    This article queries the notion of performance as a sustained act of commemoration, and, thus, implicitly, atonement and forgetting. Laying aside potential considerations of guilt and/or victimisation inherent in the spatio-temporal superimposition of a World War II modality of existence on an affluent, and, by comparison, peaceful part of the world, my investigation focuses on three mutually related areas of performance: the body’s hidden somaticity, the co-becoming of the self and time; and wa…Read more
  •  15
    Contingency and plasticity in everyday technologies (edited book)
    Rowman & Littlefield. 2023.
    This book theorises technology and its host of social, material, and epistemic transformation techniques, tools, and methods as indeterminate through sixteen methodologically diverse contributions from media philosophy, art and architectural theory, mathematics, computer science, and anthropology scholars.
  •  15
    Reimagining AI: Introduction
    with Dominic Smith, Tina Röck, Edzia Carvalho, Kenny Lewis, and Gabriele Schweikert
    Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 9 (2): 87-99. 2022.
    The expression “AI” has become as commonplace as “computer.” While many people have a relatively clear idea of what an AI system or a computer does or can do, fewer have an idea of how precisely th...
  •  12
    Contributors to this book include key theorists and practitioners from media theory, Native Science, bio-media and sound art, philosophy, art history and design informatics. Collectively, they examine the becoming-technique of animal-human- machinic perceptibilities; and micro-perceptions that lie beneath the threshold of known perceptions yet create energetic vibrations. Who, what, and where perceives, and how? What are the sedimentations, inscriptions and axiologies of animal, human and machin…Read more
  •  5
    The Aesthetics of Necropolitics (edited book)
    Rowman & Littlefield International. 2018.
    The collection comprises contributions from leading artist-theorists in the fields of necropolitics and tactical media, and from increasingly influential scholars of biomediality and urban performativity
  • On Dust: Memory as Performance and Materiality
    Contemporary Aesthetics 16 (1). 2018.