Publication:

Investments in the imaginary: Commercial drone speculations and relations

Date

Date

Date
2021
Journal Article
Published version
cris.lastimport.scopus2025-06-14T03:37:52Z
cris.lastimport.wos2025-07-26T01:46:29Z
dc.contributor.institutionUniversity of Zurich
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-17T16:30:57Z
dc.date.available2022-02-17T16:30:57Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.description.abstract

Drones are increasingly understood and imagined as important actors, inhabiting and transforming aerial space. From their entrenched establishment within battlefield operations, drones have spawned into a diverse ecosystem of platforms and applications, increasingly punctuating domestic urban airspace. While occupying a status as exemplars of urban innovation, the drone poses, and remains bound to, a range of techno-cultural contestations – from challenges around airspace integration, to concerns around privacy, safety and pollution. Thinking with commercial drone futures, and specifically the logistics sector, this article interrogates the role of speculation in this unfolding techno-landscape. In so doing we turn to two key sites through which the drone is anticipated – namely patents and adverts – as lenses through which to investigate projected visualisations underpinning the emergent, envisioned and anticipated drone. We argue that such drone speculations do not simply and solely envision new means of circulating goods, people and information, but rather embody and act to promote a particular set of aerial desires and social relations. Critically unpacking envisioned notions of frictionless mobility, instant consumption, and the appropriation of vertical spaces and spectra, we argue that such speculative sites and practices importantly participate in a techno-fetishist agenda positing drone technology as a privileged and panacea agent of futurity, while often eliding its implications.

dc.identifier.doi10.1332/204378920X16067521422126
dc.identifier.issn2326-9995
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-85103078177
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.zora.uzh.ch/handle/20.500.14742/193730
dc.identifier.wos000788382000005
dc.language.isoeng
dc.subject.ddc790 Sports, games & entertainment
dc.subject.ddc390 Customs, etiquette & folklore
dc.subject.ddc300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology
dc.title

Investments in the imaginary: Commercial drone speculations and relations

dc.typearticle
dcterms.accessRightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.journaltitleGlobal Discourse
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.number1-2
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.originalpublishernameTaylor & Francis
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.pageend62
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.pagestart39
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.volume11
dspace.entity.typePublicationen
uzh.contributor.affiliationRoyal Holloway University of London
uzh.contributor.affiliationUniversity of Zurich
uzh.contributor.authorJackman, Anna
uzh.contributor.authorJablonowski, Maximilian
uzh.contributor.correspondenceYes
uzh.contributor.correspondenceNo
uzh.document.availabilityno_document
uzh.eprint.datestamp2022-02-17 16:30:57
uzh.eprint.lastmod2025-07-26 01:52:10
uzh.eprint.statusChange2022-02-17 16:30:57
uzh.harvester.ethNo
uzh.harvester.nbNo
uzh.jdb.eprintsId34640
uzh.oastatus.unpaywallclosed
uzh.oastatus.zoraClosed
uzh.publication.citationJackman, Anna; Jablonowski, Maximilian (2021). Investments in the imaginary: Commercial drone speculations and relations. Global Discourse, 11(1-2):39-62.
uzh.publication.freeAccessAtdoi
uzh.publication.originalworkoriginal
uzh.publication.publishedStatusfinal
uzh.scopus.impact13
uzh.scopus.subjectsSociology and Political Science
uzh.scopus.subjectsPolitical Science and International Relations
uzh.workflow.chairSubjectPopuläre Kulturen
uzh.workflow.doajuzh.workflow.doaj.false
uzh.workflow.eprintid216060
uzh.workflow.fulltextStatusnone
uzh.workflow.revisions40
uzh.workflow.rightsCheckkeininfo
uzh.workflow.statusarchive
uzh.wos.impact13
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