CONCEPT
Diffraction (Methodology)
Barad's alternative to <em>reflection</em> as a methodology of thought — reading texts and phenomena <em>through</em> each other to produce interference patterns rather than comparisons.
Diffraction is Barad's methodological proposal for engaging competing frameworks, texts, or phenomena without forcing them into the reflective structure of same-and-different. In optics, diffraction is the phenomenon that occurs when waves pass through an opening or encounter an obstacle: they spread out and interfere with each other, producing bands of constructive and destructive interference rather than simple reflections. Barad proposes this as a methodological model: read two frameworks through each other, attend to where they amplify each other, where they cancel each other out, and what new patterns emerge from the superposition that neither framework alone could produce. The approach is particularly powerful for reading Byung-Chul Han's diagnosis of pathological smoothness and Csikszentmihalyi's psychology of flow through each other — producing an analytic topology of AI-assisted creation that neither framework alone can achieve.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Reflection, as a methodological metaphor, preserves the independence of what is compared. To reflect one framework onto another is to ask whether they mirror each other, produce the same image, agree on their
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