Voice as infrastructure
Abstract
Our research explores how voice-based technologies participate in creating affective environments in older people’s homes and seeks to address the mundane, unremarkable, and often unspoken experiences and affects related to voice-based technologies and smart homes, which is a largely absent theme in the research on this topic.
The paper makes audible interactions between voices, technologies, and homes, to exemplify some of the infrastructural and affective effects of voice-based technologies. We combine the concept of infrastructure from Science and Technology Studies with a cultural anthropological view on voice.
In our analysis we find that the use of voice-based technologies result in changes in the affective environments of the home, making it harsher and more impolite. Moreover, voice-based technologies ability to make voices travel beyond the material confines of the home, renders its boundaries more permeable, thus creating a sense of disempowerment both towards the technology, and the management of the privacy of the home.
We propose a view on voice-based interactions with technologies as emergent sonic-material infrastructures that link the realms of the technical, cultural and sociopolitical to the level of the individual, in order to understand the ways in which voice-based technologies create sites where discourses, values, and affects are made manifest in and contested through vocal, material and technical practice.
Keywords
Bibliography
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