Nautical Media
An Historical Ethnography of Ships and Control Rooms
Abstract
Over the last 70 years, media have become increasingly central to nautical mobility. Asher Boersma describes how, in the 1960s and 1970s, the focus of the Western European infrastructuring state shifted from dramatic physical intervention to control rooms, which both benefited from and drove the mediatisation of navigation, especially radar. He shows that, in the 1980s, conflicts between operators and management were manifested and resolved in the design of early simulators, and traces how the digitalisation of bridges and wheelhouses decentralised control again, away from shore. The nucleus of change in transport infrastructure has been where it is scaled, in control rooms and on ships, and that scaling is primarily what nautical media allow.
Keywords
Shipping; Media; Control; Ethnography; Infrastructure; Digitalization; Technology; Media History; Digital Media; Sociology of Work and Industry; History of Technology; Media StudiesDOI
10.14361/9783839473733ISBN
9783839473733, 9783837673739, 9783732873739, 9783839473733Publisher
transcript VerlagPublisher website
https://www.transcript-verlag.de/Publication date and place
2024Imprint
transcript VerlagSeries
Media in Action, 8Classification
Media studies
Media studies: internet, digital media and society
Sociology: work and labour