Beyond the Human Gaze
Materiality and the Deanthropologization of Vision
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54195/technophany.24390Keywords:
individuation, organology, vision, digital images, Collective AgencyAbstract
This article examines how contemporary media technologies transform the conditions of visuality, challenging anthropocentric models of perception historically grounded in the human gaze. Drawing on the philosophies of Gilbert Simondon and Bernard Stiegler, it argues that vision is not merely extended by technical apparatuses but reconfigured through processes of technological individuation and transindividuation. From optical devices and perspectival systems to algorithmic media and machine vision, the image progressively detaches from embodied human perception and becomes an operational entity within technical infrastructures. Through an analysis of historical and contemporary media systems, the article develops the concept of distant visuality to describe modes of seeing that function beyond phenomenological experience. In this context, vision emerges as a distributed process shaped by material, computational and mnemonic systems, marking a transition toward the deanthropologization of perception and the emergence of posthuman and nonhuman regimes of visuality.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Renzo Filinich

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

