CONCEPT
Smooth and Striated Space
Deleuze and Guattari's spatial ontology — the distinction between organized, measured, segmented space and continuous, heterogeneous, navigable space — now operating within every AI interface whose apparent smoothness conceals algorithmic striation.
In
A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari developed a spatial vocabulary to describe two different modes of organizing the world. Striated space is the space of
the grid, the map, the coordinate system — space that is measured, divided, and organized into fixed segments. The disciplinary institutions operated through striated space: the factory divided into stations, the school day divided into periods, the prison divided into cells. Smooth space is the space of the nomad, the ocean, the desert — continuous, heterogeneous, navigated by feel and direction rather than by fixed coordinates. Control societies, paradoxically, appear to produce smooth space — the borderless internet, the fluid corporation, the seamless digital experience — but Deleuze's analysis reveals that this smoothness is often a deception: beneath the apparent fluidity, algorithms stripe every surface with invisible coordinates.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Deleuze and Guattari were careful that smooth and striated are not value-laden terms in themselves. Smooth space