*"Electronic Techtonics: Thinking at the Interface"*
*
*
*HASTAC International Conference*
*April 19-21, 2007*
*www.hastac.org*


We are now soliciting papers and panel proposals for "Electronic 
Techtonics: Thinking at the Interface," the first international 
conference of HASTAC ("haystack": Humanities, Arts, Science and 
Technology Advanced Collaboratory).  The interdisciplinary conference 
will be held April 19-21, 2007, in Durham, North Carolina, co-sponsored 
by Duke University and RENCI (Renaissance Computing Institute). Details 
concerning registration fees, hotel accommodations, and the full 
conference agenda will be posted to _www.hastac.org_ 
<http://www.hastac.org/> as they become available.

ABOUT THE CONFERENCE
"Electronic Techtonics:  Thinking at the Interface" is one of the 
culminating events for the In|Formation Year that began in June 2006 and 
extends through May of 2007./ (See the HASTAC website for a calendar of 
 In|Formation Year events, plus open source archived materials suitable 
for downloading for courses or campus events.)/

The keynote address will be delivered by visionary information scientist 
John Seely Brown (/The Social Life of Information)/ at the Nasher Museum 
of Art at Duke. Other events include a talk by legal theorist James 
Boyle (co-founder of the Center for the Study of the Public Domain, 
Creative Commons, and Science Commons), a conversation among leaders of 
innovative digital humanities projects led by John Unsworth (chair of 
the ACLS "Cyberinfrastructure and the Humanities and Social Sciences" 
commission), and a presentation by media artist and research pioneer 
Rebecca Allen. The conference will also include refereed scholarly and 
scientific papers, multimedia performances, an exhibit hall of 
innovative software and hardware, plus tours of art and scientific 
installations in virtual reality, learning-game, and interactive sensor 
space environments.

CALL FOR PAPERS
Six sessions will be devoted to panels with refereed papers on aspects 
of "interface" spanning media arts, engineering, and the human, social, 
natural, and computational sciences.  Panels will be topical and 
cross-disciplinary; they will be comprised of papers that are themselves 
interdisciplinary as well as specialized disciplinary papers presented 
in juxtaposition with one another.  

We will consider proposals for full panels (three or four papers), for 
paired cross-disciplinary papers on a shared topic, or for single papers.  /

Topics:/ Panels might address interfaces between humans and computers, 
mind and brain, real and virtual worlds, science and fiction, consumers 
and producers, text-archives and multi-media, youth and adults, 
disciplines, institutions, communities, identities, media, cultures, 
 technologies, theories, and practices.  
/Other possible topics/:  the body as interface, neuroaesthetics and 
neurocognition, prosthetics, mind-controlled devices, immersion, 
emergence, presence, telepresence, sensor spaces, virtual reality, 
social networking, games, experimental learning environments, 
human/non-human situations and actors, interactive communication and 
control, access, borders, intellectual property, porosity, race and 
ethnicity, difference, Afro-Geeks and Afro-Futurism, identity, gender, 
sexuality, credibility, mapping and trafficking, civic engagement, 
social activism, cyberactivism, plus all of the other In|Formation Year 
topics:  in|common, interplay, in|community, interaction, injustice, 
integration, invitation, innovation.  /

Proposal Submissions:  /Please send 500-1000 word paper and/or panel 
proposals to _info at hastac.org_ <mailto:info at hastac.org>.  /

Deadline for Proposals/:  December 1, 2006.  

Full-length papers or power-point presentations will be posted on the 
HASTAC website prior to the conference. The sessions themselves will be 
devoted to synopses of the work, followed by a response designed to 
elicit audience participation.  Attendees whose papers are not accepted 
will be encouraged to display their work at a digital poster session.  
/
CONFERENCE REGISTRATION
Registration will be limited to 150 people.  /HASTAC will announce a 
priority registration period for HASTAC In|Formation Year site leaders, 
followed by open registration.  /

SCHOLARSHIPS/
Some scholarship funding will be available to graduate students to help 
defray fees and conference costs.
For additional information as well as copies of the In|Formation Year 
poster, contact Jonathan Tarr, HASTAC Project Manager (info at hastac.org 
or 919 684-8471).

-- 

John J. Taormina
Director, Visual Resources Center
Dept. of Art, Art History & Visual Studies
Duke University
Box 90764
112 East Duke Building
Durham  NC 27708-0764

Ph: 919-684-2501
E-mail: taormina at duke.edu
http://www.duke.edu/web/art/

"The spice must flow."
-Frank Herbert,/ Dune/



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