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Papers by Jan M Padios

Research paper thumbnail of Mining the mind: emotional extraction, productivity, and predictability in the twenty-first century, Cultural Studies (2017), DOI: 10.1080/09502386.2017.1303426

Surveying recent developments in management and work culture, computing and social media, and sci... more Surveying recent developments in management and work culture, computing and social media, and science and psychology, this article speculates on the concept of emotional extraction. Emotional extraction is defined in two ways. One iteration involves the transfer of emotional resources from one individual or group to another, such as that which occurs in the work of caring for others, but which also increasingly occurs in the work of producing new technology, such as emotionally aware computers. A second instance of emotional extraction entails the use of emotion knowledge – or theories about emotions, such as emotional intelligence – to generate conclusions or predictions about human behaviour. Emotional extraction in service work, management, marketing, social media, artificial intelligence, and neuroscience are discussed. ‘Mining the mind’ focuses in particular on emotional extraction that enhances both productivity and predictability, in turn tracing how emotionally extractive sites are implicated within the production and hierarchical valuation of difference – especially racial and gendered, but also neural difference – in everyday life. The article aims to offer scholars in cultural studies, as well as critical race theory, feminist theory, and critical disability studies, ways to think about this newly intensifying resource extraction and the intersections of culture, capital, and human experience that such extraction indexes and makes possible.

Research paper thumbnail of "Queer Confessions: Transgression, Affect, and National Crisis in the Philippines' Call Center Industry", The Center for Art + Thought

Please click on the link provided above for on-line access to the paper.

Research paper thumbnail of "The Filipino Call Center Agent", Figures of Southeast Asian Modernity, Joshua Barker, Eric Harms, and Johan Lindquist, eds (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2013), pp. 38-4

Research paper thumbnail of "Dial ‘C’ for Culture: Telecommunications, Gender, and the Transnational Migrant Market", Circuits of Visibility: Transnational Media Cultures and Gendered Formations, Radha Hegde, ed (New York: New York University Press, 2011), pp. 212-230

Research paper thumbnail of "Can You Hear Us Now? Ringtones and Politics in the Contemporary Philippines", The Oxford Handbook of Mobile Music and Sound Studies, Jason Stanyek and Sumanth Gopinath, eds Vol. 1, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 359-381

This chapter examines the emergence of the political ringtone in the Philippines in the neolibera... more This chapter examines the emergence of the political ringtone in the Philippines in the neoliberal era. It argues that the popularity of the “Hello Garci” and “Sorry Po” ringtones in the midst of the Arroyo election scandal signaled the convergence of significant transformations in technology, culture, and politics in the Philippines that began in the mid-1990s. By focusing on the work of TXTPower, a Manila-based consumer and citizen advocacy group for mobile phone users and political opposition to the Arroyo administration, it also contends that these transformations indicate that neoliberalism does not constitute a refashioning of liberal
democratic institutions, but a threat to them.

Book Reviews by Jan M Padios

Research paper thumbnail of Rey Chow, Not Like a Native Speaker: Languaging as a Postcolonial Experience

Research paper thumbnail of Mining the mind: emotional extraction, productivity, and predictability in the twenty-first century, Cultural Studies (2017), DOI: 10.1080/09502386.2017.1303426

Surveying recent developments in management and work culture, computing and social media, and sci... more Surveying recent developments in management and work culture, computing and social media, and science and psychology, this article speculates on the concept of emotional extraction. Emotional extraction is defined in two ways. One iteration involves the transfer of emotional resources from one individual or group to another, such as that which occurs in the work of caring for others, but which also increasingly occurs in the work of producing new technology, such as emotionally aware computers. A second instance of emotional extraction entails the use of emotion knowledge – or theories about emotions, such as emotional intelligence – to generate conclusions or predictions about human behaviour. Emotional extraction in service work, management, marketing, social media, artificial intelligence, and neuroscience are discussed. ‘Mining the mind’ focuses in particular on emotional extraction that enhances both productivity and predictability, in turn tracing how emotionally extractive sites are implicated within the production and hierarchical valuation of difference – especially racial and gendered, but also neural difference – in everyday life. The article aims to offer scholars in cultural studies, as well as critical race theory, feminist theory, and critical disability studies, ways to think about this newly intensifying resource extraction and the intersections of culture, capital, and human experience that such extraction indexes and makes possible.

Research paper thumbnail of "Queer Confessions: Transgression, Affect, and National Crisis in the Philippines' Call Center Industry", The Center for Art + Thought

Please click on the link provided above for on-line access to the paper.

Research paper thumbnail of "The Filipino Call Center Agent", Figures of Southeast Asian Modernity, Joshua Barker, Eric Harms, and Johan Lindquist, eds (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2013), pp. 38-4

Research paper thumbnail of "Dial ‘C’ for Culture: Telecommunications, Gender, and the Transnational Migrant Market", Circuits of Visibility: Transnational Media Cultures and Gendered Formations, Radha Hegde, ed (New York: New York University Press, 2011), pp. 212-230

Research paper thumbnail of "Can You Hear Us Now? Ringtones and Politics in the Contemporary Philippines", The Oxford Handbook of Mobile Music and Sound Studies, Jason Stanyek and Sumanth Gopinath, eds Vol. 1, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 359-381

This chapter examines the emergence of the political ringtone in the Philippines in the neolibera... more This chapter examines the emergence of the political ringtone in the Philippines in the neoliberal era. It argues that the popularity of the “Hello Garci” and “Sorry Po” ringtones in the midst of the Arroyo election scandal signaled the convergence of significant transformations in technology, culture, and politics in the Philippines that began in the mid-1990s. By focusing on the work of TXTPower, a Manila-based consumer and citizen advocacy group for mobile phone users and political opposition to the Arroyo administration, it also contends that these transformations indicate that neoliberalism does not constitute a refashioning of liberal
democratic institutions, but a threat to them.

Research paper thumbnail of Rey Chow, Not Like a Native Speaker: Languaging as a Postcolonial Experience