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Liquid Life: On Non-Linear Materiality

Rachel Armstrong

Published on December 18, 2019 by punctum books

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Pages
600 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-950192-17-5 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-950192-18-2 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2019935887
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: ARC009000
Thema subject codes
THEMA: PSD, QDTJ

If we lived in a liquid world, the concept of a “machine” would make no sense. Liquid life is metaphor and apparatus that discusses the consequences of thinking, working, and living through liquids. It is an irreducible, paradoxical, parallel, planetary-scale material condition, unevenly distributed spatially, but temporally continuous. It is what remains when logical explanations can no longer account for the experiences that we recognize as part of “being alive.”

Liquid Life references a third-millennial understanding of matter that seeks to restore the agency of the liquid soul for an ecological era, which has been banished by reductionist, “brute” materialist discourses and mechanical models of life. Offering an alternative worldview of the living realm through a “new materialist” and “liquid” study of matter, Armstrong conjures forth examples of creatures that do not obey mechanistic concepts like predictability, efficiency, and rationality. With the advent of molecular science, an increasingly persuasive ontology of liquid technologies can be identified. Through the lens of lifelike dynamic droplets, the agency for these systems exists at the interfaces between different fields of matter/energy that respond to highly local effects, with no need for a central organizing system.

Liquid Life seeks an alternative partnership between humanity and the natural world. It provokes a re-invention of the languages of the living realm to open up alternative spaces for exploration, including contributor Rolf Hughes’ “angelology” of language, which explores the transformative invocations of prose poetry, and Simone Ferracina’s graphical notations that help shape our concepts of metabolism, upcycling, and designing with fluids. A conceptual and practical toolset for thinking and designing, liquid life reunites us with the irreducible “soul substance” of living things, which will neither be simply “solved,” nor go away.

Biographies

  • Rachel Armstrong

    (Author) (opens in new tab)

    Newcastle University

    Rachel Armstrong (EAG founder) is Professor of Experimental Architecture at Newcastle University, as well as a Rising Waters II Fellow for the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation (April-May 2016), a TWOTY futurist (2015), Fellow of the British Interplanetary Society, and Senior TED Fellow (2010). Rachel is also coordinator of the Living Architecture project, an EU-funded project that establishes the principles for our buildings to share some of the properties of living things (e.g., metabolism), operating at the intersection of architecture, building construction, bio-energy and synthetic biology. She is also the author of Vibrant Architecture: Matter as CoDesigner of Living Structures (De Gruyter, 2015), Star Ark: A Living, Self-Sustaining Spaceship (Springer, 2017), and Soft Living Architecture: An Alternative View of Bio-informed Design Practice (Bloomsbury, 2018).

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Genres

  • Biosphere
  • Built Environments
  • Philosophy

Keywords

  • angelology. materialism
  • biology
  • design theory
  • ecology
  • molecular science
  • soft architecture