.
Call for papers

 

After convergence, what connects?

 

:: fibreculture :: has established itself as Australasia's leading forum for 
discussion of internet theory, culture, and research. The Fibreculture Journal 
is a peer-reviewed journal that explores the issues and ideas of concern and 
interest to both the Fibreculture network and wider social formations.

 

Papers are invited for the 'After convergence' issue of the Fibreculture 
Journal, to be published early in 2008. Guest editors are Caroline Bassett 
(Sussex, UK), Maren Hartmann (Bremen, Germany) and Kate O'Riordan 
(Lancaster/Sussex, UK).

 

There are guidelines for the format and submission of contributions at 
http://journal.fibreculture.org 

 

These guidelines need to be followed in all cases. Contributions should be sent 
electronically, as word attachments, to:

 

Guest editors:
Caroline Bassett ([EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> )

Maren Hartmann ([EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  <mailto:[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]> .de)

Kate O'Riordan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) 

 

Everything that arises does not converge. A more variegated landscape emerges 
as processes of digitalization, crystallizations of an intrinsically 
technological-social, continue re-shaping cultures and re-working societies, 
not in their image, but into something new. It is increasingly obvious that 
there is no digital behemoth, no single form, no single function, no New World 
Order. Rather a series of reconfigurations, reformulations, new functions, new 
contents, new spaces, new grounds, new uses, have emerged and are emerging 
within global media networks.  

 

In response to the (not unexpected) non-arrival of the unifying beast, which is 
to say in response to the perceived exhaustion of convergence (or the 
re-definition of its limits), new disciplinary islands are being declared with 
'keep out' and 'invented here' signs all over their beaches. In other words 
there has been a balkanization of techno-cultural investigation. Thus gaming 
scholars define themselves against internet scholars, or film scholars, 
locatives stand distinct from screeners. Particular groups of sub-specialists 
claim particular modes of inquiry: ethnographers for everyday life, speculative 
theory for digital art, for instance. Indeed, entire vocabularies, originally 
invoked in a spirit of general experimentation, are now corralled, restricted 
and defended by particular groups. If these vocabularies often seize up in the 
process, refusing to say more than they were meant to say, and in particular 
refusing the unorthodox connections between the empirical and the speculative, 
the possible and the desirable, that gave them their energy in the first place, 
nobody seems to notice.

 

So, there is no behemoth. At the same time we insist that connections are 
produced and so a question we consider worth addressing is not what unites 
digital forms as one, but what connects them together as many. Further we want 
to explore how these connections are made. We are less interested in doing that 
through mainstreaming a particular critical approach (which is to say drawing 
different areas back under one critical umbrella, making that the connection), 
than we are in trying to think about exploring/defining/critiquing some of the 
shared characteristics of different digital media formations. We believe that 
despite the exhaustion of convergence metaphors, and the rise of disciplinary 
sub-divisions, these connections remain crucial.

 

 

Papers addressing but not limited to the following topics are welcome: 

 

*       Media/Medium Theory 

 

*       Difference between and specificity of New Media forms

 

*       Issues, Limits, Problems of Convergence. 

 

*       Re-thinking the vocabulary of Affect/Emotion/Perception 

 

*       Histories of New Media Theory 

 

*       'Technology and Cultural Form' revisited?

 

*       Methodologies 

 

 

Deadlines: 

 

*       250 word abstracts:       due February 28th 2007

 

*       Completed Paper:          due September 30th 2007

 

*       Expected Publication:     February 28th 2008. 

 

<<winmail.dat>>

_______________________________________________
nettime-ann mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ann

Reply via email to