such an under-standing helps us conceptualize maps and images as not merely depicting the “reality” they set out to represent but also, more agentially, as participat-ing intra-actively, as implicated in “matters of practices, doings, and actions” (Barad, Meeting 135)
This is a helpful articulation of intra-action in action, so to speak; that is, of how material-discursive practices emerge with the becoming of the world. In Barad’s terms, I wonder if the camera or image technology might be said to be the apparatus? When the apparatus is changed or modified, we get—and also, crucially, participate in— a different view of the world.