Hi folks

I wanted to share the editorial introducing my guest editor stint at 
Furtherfield #dreamjob


Full text below, but u can check it on Furtherfield site too 
http://bit.ly/10mindbt :) :)


10 minutes of doubt

Do you believe everything you said today? How can you trust what you feel? What 
is it about today’s truth that makes it so difficult to believe?

The journalistic affectation for pre-fixing all manner of phenomena with the 
term ‘post-’ has become commonplace over the last few decades. Post-capitalism, 
post-growth, post-normal, post-internet, post-work and post-truth are all 
concepts crystalizing around a pervasive sense of uncertainty, instability and 
social unrest. While I have the honour of guest editing the Furtherfield 
website for the next few months, I am hoping to bring together a number of 
writers, artists and thinkers who will, in various ways, explore two of the 
‘post-s’ I find most urgent and compelling: post-truth and post-work.

Post-truth

Consolidated by Brexit and the US presidential campaign, and designated as word 
of the year 2016 by the Oxford 
Dictionary<https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/word-of-the-year/word-of-the-year-2016>,
 ‘post-truth’ is now a term deeply engrained in the social and political 
imaginary. Since ‘post’ can signify the internalization of phenomena (the 
internet is inside us all), one might even say we are post-post-truth, living 
with it as a general condition of our reality. The post-truth condition 
privileges narrative over facts, appealing to people’s beliefs, ideologies, 
prejudices and assumptions, rather than presenting them with ‘evidence’. This 
is, of course, nothing new – facts have never been anything without subjective 
processes of interpretation, contextualization, manipulation and propaganda. As 
Simon Jenkins points 
out<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/jan/26/post-truth-politics-online-facts-donald-trump-lies>,
 ‘Of all golden-age fallacies, none is dafter than that there was a time when 
politicians purveyed unvarnished truth’ – lies are, he suggests, the ‘raw 
material’ of political narrative.

[Trump saying Hilary Clinton was amazing while the crowd chant 'lock her up']

Social media holds the potential to both exacerbate and alleviate the chaos of 
post-truth reality. On the one hand the echo-chambers created by partisan 
social media feeds limit and blinker us; on the other, social media is a weapon 
being deployed by armies of citizen journalists and 
organizations<https://www.bellingcat.com/> committed to 
fact-checking<https://exposingtheinvisible.org/resources/inspiration/fact-checking-social-media>
 and exposing political lies and obfuscation. To feel uncomfortable about the 
confusion and psychological strain arising from the post-truth condition is 
surely a reasonable human response. As Professor Dan Kahan 
suggests<http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04m7zrs>:

‘we should be anxious that in a certain kind of environment, where facts become 
invested with significance that turns them almost into badges of membership in 
and loyalty to groups, that we’re not going to be making sense of the 
information in a way that we can trust. We’re going to be unconsciously fitting 
what we see to the stake we have in maintaining our standing in the group, and 
I don’t think that’s what anyone wants to do with their reason'

What Kahan points to here is, I think, an opportunity to reflect carefully on 
the stake we have in maintaining our sense of identity and belonging through 
the ‘facts’ we choose to believe. Despite the discomfort we may feel, might 
there be a way to take advantage of this cultural moment? Perhaps recognizing 
our own doubts about credibility can become a fruitful catalyst for adjusting 
our sense of responsibility to engage with a range of news sources, listen to 
opposing points of view, and critically evaluate the information we are 
presented with. In fact, Kahan prescribes 10 minutes of doubt every morning to 
deal with the anxiety that arises from a feeling that you can’t trust your own 
feelings.

Post-work

Can we have a good life without work, or is work part of what it means to live 
a decent life? What would you do if you didn’t have to work?

One of the most significant societal shifts taking place due to the advancement 
of technology is the transformation of what it means to work, and to be a 
worker. The nine to five is dead (or soon will be), and work is being radically 
transformed as a new global workforce comes online, technological innovations 
advance at super high speed, and new business models emerge. Automation is now 
a firm feature of mainstream discourse, and depictions of robots replacing jobs 
are everywhere in the global media imaginary.

The Bank of England’s chief economist recently projected that 15 million UK 
jobs will be lost to automation in the next 2 
decades<http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Pages/speeches/2015/864.aspx>,
 which is equivalent to approximately 80 million US jobs. 47% of white collar 
jobs are predicted to be lost to automation by 2035, according to a 2016 report 
by Citi GPS and the Oxford Martin School at the University of 
Oxford<http://www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/downloads/reports/Citi_GPS_Technology_Work_2.pdf>.
 It is not just routine tasks that will be replaced - asset management, 
analytics, patient care, law, construction and financial trading can all be 
done (and is being done) by robots. Mining giant Rio Tinto already uses 45 
240-ton driverless trucks to move iron ore in two Australian 
mines<http://www.riotinto.com/ourcommitment/spotlight-18130_18328.aspx>, saying 
it is cheaper and safer than using human drivers.

At the same time as these developments are evolving at break neck speed, we are 
living in an increasingly unequal world, where the gap between the rich and 
poor is getting bigger. According to a recent Oxfam 
report<http://www.oxfam.org.uk/media-centre/press-releases/2016/01/62-people-own-same-as-half-world-says-oxfam-inequality-report-davos-world-economic-forum>,
 62 identifiable individuals own same wealth as poorest 50% of the world’s 
population – that’s 3.6 billion people. And 1% of the world’s population own 
more than the rest of us combined. Capital grows faster than labour, so if 
you’re already rich, your money earns more than your labour ever could, which 
reinforces existing wealth inequality. Furthermore, extreme inequality involves 
people thinking greedily about finite resources, and not seeing personal greed 
as having wider consequences. If people see that the 1% own more than the rest, 
there’s danger their response is to play same game and look to join that 1% (or 
5%/10%)

Not everyone is equally equipped to deal with the changes ahead, but since 
artists, designers and critical thinkers are amongst the best-resourced to do 
so, I see it as our responsibility to consider how we can help others deal with 
what lies ahead. As with confronting post-truth reality, acknowledging a 
post-work future can be seen as an opportunity to forge a better path forward 
for ourselves and others. We might take a cue from what we know about 
post-truth, and try to create narratives (backed up by collectively verified 
facts) that persuade the world to proceed towards an equitable world of work 
where solidarity and cooperation can thrive.

10 minutes of doubt

The articles gathered over the next two months as part of my guest editorship 
of Furtherfield might be understood as moments of corrective doubt. They are an 
opportunity to speculate about issues of truth and labour, and to proceed as 
artists should – by imagining alternative realities and evolving conceptual, 
aesthetic and practical ways to inhabit them. You can expect revelations about 
the labour conditions of those who work for contemporary artists from Ronald 
Flanagan, reflections on robots in the workplace from Katharine 
Dwyer<https://twitter.com/tumble33>, and an interview about the repopulation of 
Monopoly with cryptocurrencies from Francesca 
Baglietto<https://twitter.com/frencis85>. Filippo 
Lorenzin<https://twitter.com/fi_lor> will consider Dada as a response to the 
post-truth condition, Carleigh Morgan<https://twitter.com/CyborgReine> will 
consider what makes good curatorial practice in this contemporary moment, 
reorienting current discussions away from free speech absolutism vs censorship 
to questions of judgement and responsibility. Alex 
McLean<https://twitter.com/yaxu> will use the metaphor of weaving to consider 
the role of craft in a post-work society. How might coding be understood as a 
form of textile liberated from its militaristic origins? Chloe 
Stavrou<https://www.instagram.com/kinezaaa/> will consider the potential 
objectification of ‘Greekness’ through a series of interviews relating to 
Documenta 14, Athens.

Happy doubting to all.

Where this email is unrelated to the business of University of the Arts London 
the opinions expressed in it are the opinions of the sender and do not 
necessarily constitute those of University of the Arts London.
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