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Biomimetic Geopolitics: The Earth, Inside Out

Johnson, Elizabeth

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Abstract

This paper analyzes how biomimetic innovations reveal a recursive knot between biological knowledge production, technological innovation, and wider material environments and histories. It focuses on the so-called RoboLobster project and the role of biomimetic technology within US military strategy. I consider how military biomimetics orients certain perspectives on nonhuman biologies, reframing them not only as active elements in political strategy, but also recoding their life activities through the language of operability. This, I suggest reconceptualizes bioscience and its labors as productive assets through a lens of bio-operability and eco-securitization. Through a language of operability, analyses of life are made synonymous with capacities to adapt to environmental conditions. In the process, not only have the epistemic cultures of bioscience and technological innovation become recursively entwined, they are enfolded within a view of the earth prefigured as a battlefield and its inhabitants viewed as active agents of transformative potential on it. These transformative potentials are not driven by accumulation, but by a logic of the operational dominance over space and environmental conditions.

Citation

Johnson, E. (2020). Biomimetic Geopolitics: The Earth, Inside Out. Techniques & culture, 73, Article 13832

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Jun 26, 2020
Publication Date 2020
Deposit Date Jul 3, 2020
Publicly Available Date Mar 28, 2024
Journal Techniques & culture
Print ISSN 0248-6016
Publisher Éditions de l'EHESS
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 73
Article Number 13832
Publisher URL https://journals.openedition.org/tc/13832

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Copyright Statement
Johnson, E. 2020 « Biomimetic Geopolitics: The Earth, Inside Out » in L. Kamili, P. Pitrou & F. Provost, Techniques&Culture 73 « Biomimétismes » (suppléments). [En ligne] : http://journals.openedition.org/tc/13832





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