CFP Platform: journal of media and communication - automating conduct
Call For Papers 2012
"Automating Conduct: Autonomy in Control" (Vol 4, Issue 2)
Abstract Submissions Due: APRIL 26 2012
Full Paper Submissions Due: JULY 22 2012
for submission info see http://journals.culture-communication.unimelb.edu.au/platform/call_papers.html
Platform encourages all contributions related to media studies, with special consideration given to engagement with the cultures, politics and social issues layered within automation and transparency.
The freedoms of control that circulate in the digital networked society imbue modalities of both transparency and automation. The coupling of high technological automation with a heightened sense of surveillance implies certain forms of automated conduct as necessary, but not sufficient, for autonomy in spatiotemporal, psychological, economic and aesthetic dimensions of subjectivity and polity. Thus, locating autonomy, automation and transparency in the network becomes a critical project in both respects of the word. After WikiLeaks, can freedom be a creature of the light or the dark? Is autonomy found in the open or in the hidden and unique?
What are the critical responses to automated agents that ubiquitously categorise and increasingly contribute to the construction of our social-world and its boundaries? How do they create terror and police the social, while effectively engaging themselves in 'boundary work'? Together, automation and transparency create: issues of privacy in surveillance for mediated and inhabited spaces, asymmetries of access and temptation (e.g. online shopping & dating), and fundamental implications for literacy, living, and society.
We encourage contributors to ask what opacities, reflexes, subjectivities and politics are available in what Robert Samuels (2009) terms 'automodernity' as society approaches indistinguishability between either of David Brin's (1996) allegorical cities of automated transparency?
PLATFORM encourages the submission of empirical and theoretical work engaging with these themes of freedom, control, transparency and automation including but not limited to:
- Automation and/or transparency as a facet of everyday life
- New technologies of automation and transparency and their affect on artists, protestors, publishers, and the police
- Automodernity and/or the aestehtics of the automatic
- Transparency and its impact on the potential to 'represent'
- Automation and/or transparency as (counter) hegemonic instruments
- Challenges to social, political, and economic assumptions including relations to, and means of, production (P2P, FOSS, Venture Communism etc.)
- The impact of automation and/or transparency on media production and consumption
- Processes and practices of privacy within automated surveillance
- The impact of automation and/or transparency on reading/writing/learning
- Automation and its impact on the body (automation as prosthesis, as memory)
- Legal/IP/ethical considerations in media automation and/or transparency
- Methodological considerations for automation and/or transparency in research
- Other critiques working across diverse fields in media and communication studies are welcome
Please send all enquires and submissions to platformjmc@gmail.com.
We recommend that prospective authors submit abstracts well before the abstract deadline of April 26, 2012 to allow for feedback and suggestions from the editors. All submissions should be from early career researchers (defined as being within a few years of completing their Ph.D) or current graduate students undertaking their Masters, Ph.D. or international equivalent.
All eligible submissions will be sent for double-blind peer-review. Early submission is highly encouraged as the review process will commence on submission.
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