CONCEPT
Permanent Liminality
The condition—unprecedented in Turner's original framework—of obligatory threshold-dwelling without temporal bounds. The AI transition combines liminal intensity with liminoid openendedness, producing chronic structural dissolution.
Permanent liminality names the structural condition that emerges when liminal transitions become chronic—when the threshold phase extends indefinitely without resolution into stable structure. Turner distinguished the liminal (obligatory, collective, temporally bounded ritual transitions) from the liminoid (voluntary, individual, unbounded modern threshold experiences). Traditional liminality was contained by ritual structures that determined duration; modern liminoid experience was bounded by individual choice (you can leave the theater, finish the pilgrimage). Permanent liminality combines the worst features of both: it is obligatory (you cannot opt out of the AI transition) and unbounded (no inherent end-point, continuous re-opening of thresholds). This hybrid produces a condition Turner's original framework did not anticipate: people required to live permanently in the threshold without the ritual containers that would transform chronic dissolution into stable identity.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Turner introduced the liminal-liminoid distinction late in his career to account for the difference between tribal initiations and modern experiences like carnival, pilgrimage, art-making, political protest. These modern threshold experiences shared liminal features (categorical suspension, communitas, altered consciousness) but