Felix Stalder on Sun, 7 Sep 1997 00:56:41 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> More on Bruno Latour 1/2 |
[This is a text on Latour and his Actor Network Theory. It might be interesting to complement Geert's and Pit's interview recently sent over nettime. The aim of this text is twofold. First, it tries to overcome some of Latour's ideosyncracies and then it tries to expand his concepts to explicitly fit the analysis of communication networks. The text is quite long (7000 words) and I have broken it into two pieces. This e-mail contains the first and the second section, the second e-mail the third and the forth section. This next is a shortened version of a longer, academic (referenced quotes, footnotes, extensive bibliography) paper which I am happy to provide on request.] 1. Introduction 2. The Dynamics of Actor-Networks Emergence Development Stabilization 3. Neighbouring Theories Systems Theory and the Concept of the Border Evolution and the Dynamics of Systems Complexity and the Evolution of Order 4. Conclusion __1. Introduction__ A major methodological trap lurks beneath attempts to conceptualize the processes that come into play when existing social concepts are reinvented or new ones are introduced in the context of rapid technological and social change: the search for what Frederic Jameson called "the ultimately determining instance". This instance is most often looked for in the dichotomy of society and technology. Approaches which lean toward society being this instance begin with the assumption that technology and its resulting consequences are planned and inaugurated by social actors, most often large institutional entities. The main focus is either on the political economy of the object of study or on the social construction of the artifact of interest. Particularly the latter, the Social Construction of Technology (SCOT), "points to technology as being through and through social." The most extreme position on this side of the spectrum is "social determinism". On the other hand, approaches leaning towards technology as this instance assume that technology develops according to its own internal necessity and out of dynamics beyond human control. It is focussed on the impact of technology which is seen as the distinguishing element between the past and the future. At the extreme end of that side of the spectrum is "technological determinism". Characteristic for both models is a clear distinction between society on one side and technology on the other. The main disagreement lies in the question, which is leading which? Is technology constructed of society or society made up of technology? An interesting approach to thinking about the social and technological development all at once has been developed as "Actor-Network Theory". This approach is one stream within the Social Construction of Technology, a recent movement in the history and sociology of science and technology. It is most prominently associated with the French sociologists of science Bruno Latour and Michel Callon. The theory's aim is to describe a society of humans and non-humans as equal actors tied together into networks built and maintained in order to achieve a particular goal, for example the development of a product. For Bruno Latour the Actor-Network Theory attempts to overcome what he sees as the major shortfall of Modernism and Postmodernism: the slicing of a continuous, "hybrid" reality into analytical domains. The epistemology of Modernism divided nature and society into two incommensurable poles. Nature was only observed, never man-made; whereas society was only made by humans. The two poles were indirectly connected by language which allowed us to make stable references to either one of them. Postmodernism separated the middle ground, language, from both poles by declaring it autonomous. This autonomous domain has been described as free-floating signs (Baudrillard) or as self-referential texts and language games (Derrida). It is Latour's goal to show that the separation introduced by Modernism and extended by Postmodernism is artificial. Because (technological) reality is "simultaneously real, like nature, narrated, like discourse, and collective, like society" he does not follow the clean divisions envisioned by Modernism and recently claimed that Modernity never happened, that _We Have Never Been Modern_. The Actor network theory uses a somewhat unusual vocabulary. The following is a short "explanation" of the central terms. __Actor__ Actors are "entities that do things" (Latour, 1992a, p. 241). "The distinction between humans and non-humans, embodied or disembodied skills, impersonation or 'machination', are less interesting than the complete chain along which competences and actions are distributed." (p.243) The more heterogeneous elements a text or object is implicitly or explicitly able to align, the more it becomes. A coin, for example, is able to mobilize the reputation of a whole national economy to simplify mundane transactions, such as buying a pack of cigarettes. If the coin cannot mobilize those elements because it is forged, or if the mobilized elements are weak, because the government is in discredit, the coin loses some or all its power, which resides its unquestioned value. A coin is an actor because it can mobilize a network of heterogeneous allies to do things, to store and exchange value. In a valid coin this network of allies is tightly sealed and it is almost impossible to question the connections of those networks for an individual using the coins (and thus becoming a part of the network of the coins)1. A coin is in this sense a "black box". __Black Box__ "A black box contains that which no longer needs to be considered, those things whose contents have become a matter of indifference." (Callon, Latour, 1981 p.285) A black box, therefore, is any setting2 that, no matter how complex it is or how contested its history has been, is now so stable and certain that it can be treated as a fact where only the input and output counts. __Network__ Besides actor, network is the second central concept-hence the name Actor-Network Theory. The term network is defined as a "group of unspecified relationships among entities of which the nature itself is undetermined." (Callon, 1993, p.263) A network ties together two systems of alliances: People: everyone who is involved in the invention, construction, distribution, and usage of an artifact: describing this system leads to a "sociogram". Things: all the pieces that were already on stage or had to be brought into place in order to connect the people. Describing this system leads to a "technogram". However, while it is useful for clarification purposes to separate the two levels analytically, it is not appropriate to study these systems separately because they are highly interconnected. A change on one level will simultaneously change the other. Each modification in one system of alliances is visible in the other. Each alteration in the technogram is made to overcome a limitation in the sociogram and vice versa (Latour, 1987, p. 138-139). Actor and network are mutually constitutive. An actor can not act without an network and a network consists of actors. This relationship is highlighted in yet another definition of actor as "any element which bends space around itself, makes other elements dependent upon itself and translates their will into a language of its own." (Callon, Latour, 1981, p.286) Actor and network constantly redefine each other, one is dependent on the other. Michel Callon (1987, p.93) details the interrelation between the two: "the actor network is reducible neither to an actor alone nor to a network. Like a network it is composed of a series of heterogeneous elements, animate and inanimate, that have been linked to one another for certain period of time. ... An actor network is simultaneously an actor whose activity is networking heterogeneous elements and a network that is able to redefine and transform what it is made of." The size or importance of an actor is dependent on the size of the networks he/she/it can command and the size of the networks depends on the number of actors it can align. Since networks consist of a (large) number of actors which have different possibilities to influence other members of the same network, the specific power of an actor depends on the position within his/her/its network. There is no structural difference between large and small actors, between a major institution or a single individual or even a thing as mundane as a door opener (Latour, 1992). This does not say that they are all equal. This simply means that the main differences between micro and macro actors is the size of the network they can bring into place for a particular goal, that is the number of actors they can arrange according to their objectives. These objectives can be a strategic choice of options, adaptive necessities or built-in properties of a certain piece of equipment. Properties of a setting, the fact that it makes certain things possible and others impossible, are called prescriptions. __Prescription__ Prescription is what a device allows or forbids from the actors(humans and non-humans(that it anticipates; it is the morality of a setting both negative (what it prescribes) and positive (what it permits). _Intermediary_ Intermediaries provide the still missing link which connects actors into a network and defines the network itself. Actors form networks by circulating intermediaries among themselves, thus defining the respective position of the actors within the networks and in doing so constituting the actors and the networks themselves. An intermediary is anything that "passes between actors in the course of relatively stable transactions." (Bijker, Law, 1992 p.25) It can be a text, a product, a service, or money. Intermediaries are the language of the network. Through intermediaries actors communicate with one another and that is the way actors translate their intentions into other actors. Considering the definition of actors as any element "which makes other elements dependent upon itself and translates their will into a language of its own" (Callon, Latour, 1981, p.286), the possibility to command intermediaries lies at the heart of action itself, which is translating an actor's will into other actors. __2. The Dynamics of Actor-Networks__ In the dynamics of networks three phases can be distinguished. While there is not necessarily any need that they be separated, it is useful to construct them as analytical idealtypes of the stages a network may undergo during its lifetime. _Emergence_ Networks are put into place by actors. However, since there is no actor without a network, new networks emerge out of already existing ones. Sometimes this happens through subtle changes, sometime as the results of revolutionary developments which might push into the background the element of continuity that is part of every dynamic. At the beginning, therefore, stands an intermediary which is brought into circulation by a network in order to align more/different actors for the network's own interest. In other words, the attempt of an existing actor to grow and include new domains can be a good starting point to observe the emergence of a network. Networks allow actors to translate their objectives, be it conscious human choice or prescription of an object, into other actors and adding the other actors' power to their own. "By translation we understand all the negotiations, intrigues, calculations, acts of persuasion and violence thanks to which an actor or force takes, or causes to be conferred to itself, authority to speak or act on behalf of another actor or force." Networks emerge and are shaped by aligning more and more actors. In this way an actor can grow. The importance of an actor depends therefore on the number of actor within his/her/its networks which he/she/it can employ to a particular purpose. Actors are isomorphic, which means their size and shape is not a priori but the result of a long development. There is no fundamental difference between a large structure and a small actor, the only difference is in the number of actors that can be employed. It is a mistake to take differences in size of a network for differences in level, because networks always connect at the same time what conventional sociology differentiates into micro and macro levels. This interconnection renders such a distinction less significant, because "that which is large is that which has successfully translated others and has therefore grown. Since size is nothing more than the end-product of translation, the need for two analytical vocabularies is thus avoided." Networks are made up of what they network-actors which are always localized-yet these networks can extend around the globe. Networks can be so large and stable that they appear to be independent from the actors. This, however, is a misconception. While they can (and do) seriously constrain the range of action for certain actors, they always need actors. Any given actor might be replaceable, but only by another actor. There is, therefore, no gap between the individual and the structure which is made up of individuals which are made up of structure which is made up of individuals and so on, endlessly. For Bruno Latour "the two extremes, local and global, are much less interesting than the intermediary arrangements that we are calling networks." _Development_ A network can develop into two different directions, towards convergence or towards divergence of its actors. Adding new actors to a network increases at first their divergence. The processes of translation by which the will of one actor is transferred to another actor become initially more difficult because each new actor is already included in other networks that might have aligned him/her/it for different goals. What to do in and how to account for new situations, how to assess the meaning of an intermediary is unclear at the beginning. There is a process of mutual shaping between a new actor and an existing network. In the end neither the network nor the actor now included remains the same. The changes can be so subtle that they negligible or they might be massive for either one or for both of them. For networks to operate successfully, the circulation of intermediaries needs to be coordinated this means the included actors do not, or may only to a limited extend, contest their own translation. Actors thrive toward an internal agreement which allows for an optimal circulation of intermediaries, because their strength depends on the coordination within the networks. In networks where the actors have successfully converged, i.e. are strongly coordinated, the network as a whole stands behind any one of the actors who make it up. The way agreement can be reached, the scope of the translations possible, shapes the form of the network. In other words, "the network is constructed according to the translation's own logic." The stronger the coordination of the circulation is, the more the different elements are aligned, the more stable and predictable it becomes. The more stable a network is, the better it defines its components, the smaller is the leeway for other networks to untie the connections in order to redefine an actor for his/her/its own purposes. The setting turns into a black box. Actors do not necessarily need to be successful in their attempt to optimize the circulation of intermediaries. The translation process can be denied. People might not want to become users and not buy a product, or they might stop being willful citizens and overthrow their government. A machine can fall apart because of a construction error, new invention may render old solutions obsolete and channel money and other resources into new directions. The circulation of intermediaries within a network, then, becomes more and more difficult and the alignment of actors becomes weaker and weaker, the actors begin to diverge and the setting to disintegrate. The black box loses its integrity, the edges become fuzzy. Convergence and divergence point at the directions into which a network can move, either towards a stabilizing itself or towards disintegration in which it becomes easier and easier to reverse its connections. Convergence in a network does not mean that every element acts or becomes the same, it "simply means that any one actor's activity fits easily with those of the other actors, despite their heterogeneity." _Stabilization_ An actor-network thrives for stabilization because none of the entities which make it up would exist without that network in that form. The promotion of a network is a way to ensure the actor's existence and development. It is, therefore, in the interest of all actors within a particular network to stabilize the network which guarantees their own survival to a higher or lower extent. The stability of a network depends on the "impossibility it creates of returning to a situation in which its [current form] was only one possible option among others". In other words, stabilization, or closure "means that the interpretive flexibility diminishes. Consensus among the different relevant social groups [or more broadly, actors] about the dominant meaning of an artifact merges and the 'pluralism of artifacts' decreases." Once forged into an artifact, embedded social relations remain stable as long the artifact it used. Bruno Latour details in his programmatic essay, Technology Is Society Made Durable, how the social relations embedded in artifacts are a stabilizing factor of society: "Society and technology are not two ontologically distinct entities but more like phases of the same essential action. By replacing those two arbitrary divisions with syntagm and paradigm, we may draw a few more methodological conclusions. The description of socio-technical networks is often opposed to their explanation, which is supposed to come afterwards. ... If we display a socio-technical network - defining trajectories by actants' association and substitution, defining actants by all the trajectories in which they enter, by following translations and, finally, by varying the observer's point of view - we have no need to look for any additional causes. The explanation emerges once the description is saturated. ... There is no need to go searching for mysterious or global causes outside networks. If something is missing, it is because something is missing. Period." Heterogeneity is another, central aspect of a stable network. The more the diverse elements are interrelated, the more complex and stable a network becomes, because each element is kept in place a number of elements each one concerned with a different aspect of the element which is kept in place. In order to disconnect an actor from a network, many connections have to be untied now. The size and the heterogeneity of a network are related. The larger it becomes the more heterogeneous it becomes because it develops additional elements just to keep all other elements in place. In the language of the systems theory this development is called "differentiation". The network starts to develop its own trajectory, supported by its elements which themselves depend on the network as environment. A network therefore starts to "become heavy with norms of all sorts" in the course of stabilization. Its means, of course, nothing else than that more actors are integrated or created. I have now reached some of the outer limits of the Actor-Network-Theory as far as it has been developed today. Concepts like differentiation and path dependence, however, form links to neighbouring concepts that are themselves concerned with the development of heterogeneous and interdependent elements and how, based on local actors, global order can emerge. The following section examines a few of those concepts in order to further develop the scope of the network metaphor as an analytical tool. -- |||||||||||||| http://www.fis.utoronto.ca/~stalder |||||||||||||| --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de