Event overview
Public Programme lecture with Thomas Dekeyser
The history of technology is often told as a history of progress, moving optimistically and inevitably from one emancipatory invention to the next. Techno-Negative turns this story on its head, taking us on a journey to the critical junctures where people have pointedly rejected and tried to undo, rather than adopt, new technologies. Beginning with Archimedes’s decision to destroy his own war machines, this lecture explores the will to negate technology as a deep—but persistently condemned—current in history.
As he presents a new theory of technological power, Thomas Dekeyser argues that technologies, never neutral, operate as “ontological policing,” drawing the boundaries of humanness as they are unequally leveraged by select groups. Looking beyond the Luddites to medieval monks banning tools, seventeenth-century loom burners, revolutionary lantern smashers, and computer arsonists, Dekeyser shows how people have long recognized and resisted the machine as a violent, sometimes deadly force implicated in defining who counts as human and whose lives (and ways of life) are worth saving.
Thomas Dekeyser is lecturer in human geography at the University of Southampton.
Dates & times
| Date | Time | Add to calendar |
|---|---|---|
| 26 Feb 2026 | 5:00pm - 7:00pm |
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