Author Archives: Denis Sivkov

Denis Sivkov is a lecturer in anthropology at the Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences. He holds a PhD in philosophy (2006) and is an anthropologist and STS scholar in the field of social studies of outer space. Denis researches grassroots space exploration initiatives by space enthusiasts, writing about folk practices, amateurism and the local in the context of space exploration.
Satellite view of Earth with an x marking a location.

Space Selfie: Rethinking Scalarity Between Orbit and Home

We are in Ruzaevka, a small town near Saransk, the regional capital of Mordovia, Russia. Ham radio operator Dmitry Pashkov, photographer Sergei Karpov, and I climb the roof of the local technical college. Sergei and I are on the roof because we are interested in so-called bottom-up space exploration. Dmitry works at this college as an IT specialist. It is a cloudy day in March, and there is a cold wind on the roof, still icy from the winter. Dmitry promises to show us how to get an image of the European part of Russia using an American weather satellite. (read more...)