You Are Here! Playful Mapping and A Cartography of Layers: Nanna Verhoeff
You Are Here! Playful Mapping and A Cartography of Layers: Nanna Verhoeff
You Are Here! Playful Mapping and A Cartography of Layers: Nanna Verhoeff
Nanna Verhoeff
Utrecht University
n.verhoeff@uu.nl
Introduction
The quintessential phrase of you are here is used not only in maps to pro-
vide a deictic center (Pierce) for reading the map, by synchronizing the
presence of the map-user in time and space with the virtual positioning of
him/her in the map. The phrase also invokes the playful act of stating the
presence of the player in spatial games like hide and seek, or digital equiva-
lents in location-based games. It is a statement that relays relative (spatio-
temporal) positing as well as its inclusive potential for both going and do-
ing: the knot of presence and performativity so central in both navigation
and play. Elsewhere, I have began to conceptualize the temporality of deixis
1
in cartographic interfaces of augmented reality and location-based gaming
(Verhoeff 2012). Here, I will zoom in on the consequences of our considera-
tion of a time-based notion of the cartographic interface, the deictic essence
of play, and the performative impulse that characterizes the map as a tool
for navigation. November, Camacho-Hubner and Latour (2010) evaluate
digital cartography as what they call a navigational definition of the map,
which includes anticipation, participation, reflexivity and feedback. This
yields a differentiation between a navigational versus mimetic, interpreta-
tion of the map as representation, as well as a ludic and performative un-
derstanding of navigation. Following this ludic and navigational definition
of the map, and by foregrounding the nature of performativity, the object of
my approach in this paper is to conceptualize the way in which ludic prac-
tices of navigation (co-)construct a cartography of layers.
Performativity
I propose to take a closer look at the specifics of performativity (Austin
1955; Bal 2002; Dixon 2007) as pertaining to performative cartography
(Crampton 2009), within what we may call a dispositif of navigation. Tak-
en as a performative engagement with cartographic, screen-based technol-
ogies, I wish to emphasize how this comprises a combination of agency and
the resulting experience of screenspace, so exemplary of the mobile screen
as interface for navigation. Performativity takes, or literally - makes place
in the paradoxical space between the affordances and constraints of tech-
nology (including possibilities for interaction) and the experience of indi-
vidual agency. I call this cultural form or dispositif a visual regime of navi-
gation. It is, precisely, this dialectic of doing or "making", and experienc-
ing which characterizes navigation as a specifically haptic and, simulta-
neously, explorative and (literally) creative and, as I would argue, essen-
tially playful - mode of spect-actorship, to borrow a term from the history of
the theater and performance theory for the specific spectator-subject con-
structed in participatory interactivity rather than based on a traditional
immersive subject position (Boal 1979; 2002; Frasca 2004; Wardrip-Fruin
and Montfort 2003).
Departing from the centrality of the screen-navigator, I explore the lay-
eredness of the navigational dispositif of the mobile screen as multi-
directional: a pointing towards past, present, possible or emergent future,
or destination. I argue for a shift in thinking about images as fixating
movement into representation (the "image" on screen), towards a concep-
tion of the screen/image as presentational reference for performativity:
for movement, experimentation, and possibility (the navigational). This
2
entails an approach to the layeredness of the screen/image best understood
in terms of a spatiotemporal cartographic and archeological logic, and one
that is in its essence performative. And, specifically relevant here: playful.
In my recent book on screens and mobility (2012) I have analyzed princi-
ples of the visual regime of navigation and performative cartography. Tak-
ing augmented reality browsing on smartphones as my prime example, I
have argued for a reconsideration of the index (Pierce) as either pointing to
the past (the trace) or the present (deixis), by arguing how, in navigation
with the mobile screen, the index as tag encapsulates the future-oriented
thrust of destination.
3
time and space within which the navigator moves, by using cartography
and archeology as conceptual metaphors for the mobile dispositif of navi-
gational screen practices.
I call such a sign an index, a pointing finger being the type of the
class. The index asserts nothing; it only says "There!" It takes hold
of our eyes, as it were, and forcibly directs them to a particular ob-
ject, and there it stops. Demonstrative and relative pronouns are
nearly pure indices, because they denote things without describing
them [] (Peirce 1885: 181)
4
a connection between these layers: the here-and-now in the present, its
traces in the past, and the future toward which the subject moves a con-
nection, which emerges and evolves in the process of navigation. As such,
navigation involves a layered temporality, establishing the subject as the
mobile, deictic center. The interface serves to make this spatio-temporal
logic operable; or what Zoltn Dragon calls the techno-logic of performative
cartography as one that, in his words, simultaneously gives birth to both
space and subject. (Dragon 2013: 10)
This interfacing takes place within a mobile dispositif, or screening situa-
tion that encompasses both the perceptual positioning of the (mobile) user,
and the physical, interactive interfacing with the screen. This screening ar-
rangement-in-motion establishes a mobile sphere: a hybrid (De Lange
2009; De Souza e Silva 2006) private/public space that is marked by indi-
vidual mobility and networked connectivity, a personalized space con-
structed within the mobile arrangement of user, location, and device. In a
marked difference to the analogue map on the one hand, and the (classic)
cinematic and televisual screen on the other, the mobile screen enables a
navigation of both the interface itself and the geo-physical space surround-
ing its user, layering and mobilizing the dispositif. A haptic and visceral in-
terface, it encapsulates the user and the machine within a mobile dispositif
of navigation. Hence, it positions the navigator within a mobile sphere im-
plying a performative ambulant and haptic locatedness. This puts the user
at the center of a deictic network.
The close connection between screens and maps and the pertinence of deix-
is in a performative conception of cartography becomes clear in Tom Con-
leys discussion of the analogy between the cinema screen and cartography
as locational imaginings. Conley points out that cartographic media locate
subjects within the places they represent. Deictic meaning cannot be un-
derstood without taking into account the situation of utterance or the image
itself. This leads to the key phrase you are here that defines the carto-
graphic act (Conley 2007: 2).
As such, the mobile screen is in essence a cartographic interface for the
simultaneous navigation of both on-screen and off-screen space. Indeed,
navigation as orientation entails constantly registering presence (where am
I?). But rather than focusing on the trace of the past, navigation is geared
towards deciding where to go next. For this, that the navigator decodes the
(imaginary) phrase you are here (signified by an arrow or another icon)
on the screen/map, into I am here. The map is only usable once the sub-
ject knows where the I exactly is positioned. The act of establishing a deictic
center is at the heart of navigation.
5
I contend that performativity particularly in this context, but more gener-
ally speaking as well requires an activation of deixis: positioning a deictic
center within a visual, spatial field is a primary result of performativity. In-
teractive navigation with the smartphone visualizes this situation in two
ways. The screen visualized the user s position as focalizer (Bal 2009) of
the map. It also reflects back what the user does, what itinerary the user
creates and simultaneously travels. In short, what space she makes. That is
where the eye/I is.
Hence, in navigation destination (where will I go?) becomes the new cen-
ter of indexicality. Space is constructed in this indexical reading of space
where these three temporalities merge.
6
Figure 2. StreetMuseum.nl app for smartphones is a Dutch version of the success-
ful StreetMuseum of London app, also using archival photographs for a seamless
stitching together of the past and the present in augmented reality.
7
As such these new moving-image technologies are used to not simply over-
come inherent (spatiotemporal) distance but to explore the relationship
between the different temporal and spatial domains of the image-object
and the image-subject, and in this process, to put the subject back in touch
with the object.
Following a psychoanalytical approach, once dominant in visual culture
studies, we could argue how deictic address of the image both gives and
takes: providing voyeuristic pleasures, yet at the cost of enslavement in the
passive acceptance of the limitations of the pre-structured gaze that the
dispositif arranges for us. Yet, from a phenomenological perspective we can
see deixis as opening up a dialogic and haptic engagement with the image in
movement, in performativity. This conception follows earlier theories of the
moving image. Vivian Sobchack (1992) has developed this perspective on
haptic perception of the cinematic screen in her use of Maurice Merleau-
Pontys phenomenology for a theory of cinematic spectatorship with the
ambition to bridge the theorized gap between viewer and screen, put for-
ward in the psychoanalytical film theory of, most notably, Christian Metz
and Jean-Louis Baudry. This theory of visuality gives the spectator a pas-
sive position, written into the dispositif of classical cinema. From a phe-
nomenological perspective, Laura U Marks (2002) also makes a claim for
haptic visuality as a way of looking within a more intimate and dialogic re-
lationship between image on the one hand, and the spectator on the other.
In her view, haptic perception is less based on mastery than optical visuali-
ty, allowing for a more intimate form of criticism. This is considered a di-
rect consequence of spatial difference: the proximity of touch is considered
more intimate and less controlling than the distancing gaze. I want to cau-
tion for thinking too much in stark oppositions, though: touch can also be
construed as invasive, and distance not only as controlling but also as mod-
esty. But indeed distinguishing different modes of contact and in some
cases ambivalence between different dispositifs, or visual regimes makes
clear how complex the relationship between visual subject and object can
be.
I have pointed out how digital navigation can be understood as a cultural
trope which makes our sense of presence centrally deictic, determining
ones current position, with a forward-slanted orientation towards possibil-
ity and destination. This performative, and as we may argue, inherently
playful trope builds on a logic of layers, breaking with the regime of fixed
framing in representation. Moreover, a deictic approach and a reconsidera-
tion of its materiality opens up an understanding of a thickening of time
and space in the engagement with the image. This is where the direct con-
nection between on-screen and off-screen presence in augmented reality on
the mobile screen, as a result of the responsive and location-awareness of
8
the layered interface, diverges from the tangibility effect as experiential
property of classical representation. The visual regime of navigation entails
process, mutability, and mobility. This makes the assumption of stability
implied in the concept of representation less adequate to account for the
relationship between the performativity of navigation and its cartography.
Instead of foregrounding the preposition re of repetition, or reproduction,
in representation, I suggest conceptualize the pre of presentation. This is
not only the pre- of making present (as in present-ation) but also in the
temporal dimension of the processes before, or pre-presentation: the pro-
cess of becoming in which both the image and subjective presence come
into being.
Conclusion
After having explored the kaleidoscopic as a model for understanding early
cinema (Verhoeff 2006), and tracing the visual regime of navigation both
diachronically and synchronically in my study of mobile and urban screens
(Verhoeff 2012), in my current project I aim to explore the many different
ways we can recognize the logic of layers at work in our contemporary cul-
ture, and, perhaps more fundamentally, in the way we navigate, engage
with, and understand the spatio-temporal world. In essence, I take layered-
ness as the intersection of the cartographic, the archeological, and philo-
sophical. As such, its logic is underlying what Manovich (2001) has called
cultural interfaces interfaces that construct a model of the world.
We use different terms or metaphors to invoke the complexity of layered-
ness: in cartographic, archeological, or archival terms; in forms of augmen-
tation, complexity, hybridity, fragmentation; in geography, history, and
anatomy; in extension or remediation; and in formations such as text, hy-
pertext, or texture. It operated as metaphor, or as metonym. It is thought in
polyphony of arrangements and compositions. And we think within the
framework of different conceptualizations of layers: temporal, spatial, con-
ceptual,; in planes, slices, levels or stages, dimensions; in synchronic or dia-
chronic, or vertical and horizontal organizations. As a wider cultural trope
can recognize a logic of layers in domains such as cartography, science, phi-
losophy, architecture, arts and design, music, choreography, theater and
performance, photography, cinema, and (digital) animation. What is per-
haps most intriguing, is how layeredness in visualization and design is often
very much about how we think: how we think about space and time, in rela-
tion to ourselves as a subject of both perception and of active, performative
engagement, surrounded by the contours of invisibility and silence, incom-
petency, and incomprehensibility.
9
But is this all reason to cheer? In a review of my book, art historian Svetlana
Alpers (2012) has suggested that immersing ourselves in navigation, per-
formative engagement entails a loss: a loss of ourselves as viewing subject.
The visual regime of navigation may, perhaps, entail a loss of a distance in
looking. But rather than focusing loss only, we can ask how looking, includ-
ing performative looking in navigation, intersects with complexity and am-
bivalence. The process of exploration and the navigation of layers seems to
entail both gain and loss.
We tend to see layers as an augmentation of complexity on the one hand,
and a limitation in overview as well as fragmentation on the other. How we
evaluate this game of loss and gain depends on our desires. Today much of
our desire is about gaining access: access to what was already there but was
never possible to become present. We find our desire in the creative, playful
and experiential process of discovery (or recovery) reconstruction, and in-
terpretation. Limitations in access physical or epistemological can
make us experience perhaps not so much its fulfillment, but that desire it-
self.
So when we ask the question of why are we so intrigued by layers, the an-
swers may be that it is in the process of navigation that we experience the
inherent limitation of access, of overview, and full understanding. And that
may very well be exactly the attraction of fragmentation and the intersec-
tion of access and limitation: it gives us the chance to experience our desire
for navigation. And as usual, desire is best experienced in the face of obsta-
cles, in the process and not fulfillment. To use Emersons famous dictum:
the performativity of navigation, is perhaps indeed, a journey, not a desti-
nation.
The research leading to these results has received funding from the Euro-
pean Research Council under the European Community's Seventh Frame-
work Programme (FP7/2007-2013) / ERC Grant agreement n 283464.
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