Pervasive Citizenship through #SenseCommons

Casey Boyle The University of Texas at Austin

Abstract

This essay proposes that the rise of sentient cities inaugurates an era of pervasive citizenship wherein individual citizens function as wearable devices for a collective body. To understand what rhetorical practices are available in this problematic, the essay proceeds in three parts. First, it surveys how information systems help determine rhetoric through and as a kind of systems theory. Second, the essay traces how technologies and techniques that form individual bodies are now emerging at larger scales and shape collective bodies. Through several examples, the essay shows how these multipartner ventures to install data collection sensors in cities are informing a new problematic that we term #SenseCommons. Third, the project offers extradisciplinary resources for rhetorically navigating today’s increasingly pervasive information spaces. Ultimately, this essay proposes that the emergence of sentient cities introduces a system of continuous rhetoric whose primary function is not to persuade but to inform.

Journal
Rhetoric Society Quarterly
Published
2016-05-26
DOI
10.1080/02773945.2016.1171695
Open Access
Closed

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (4)

  1. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  2. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  3. Technical Communication Quarterly
  4. Rhetoric Review

Cites in this index (1)

  1. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
Also cites 9 works outside this index ↓
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  9. The Genuine Teachers of this Art: Rhetorical Education in Antiquity
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