Dear colleagues,

Join us for a workshop on TELLING STORIES WITH STONES at the EASST-4S 2024 
conference Making and Doing Transformations at Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam, 
July 16-19, 2024.

The title and short abstract of the workshop are as follows (the long abstract 
follows below):

The Materials Library as Contact Zone – Telling (technology) stories with 
stones: Many of the materials in our digital technologies originate from stones 
containing minerals and metals. What do we know about these stones? What 
(his)stories can we tell about them? In this workshop, we will build a 
materials library of stones and stories that may inspire more sustainable 
futures.

For more information and proposals: 
https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easst-4s2024/p/14448 
<https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easst-4s2024/p/14448> 

The deadline for proposals is February 12.

Please forward this message if you know of others who might be interested in 
this call.

We hope to hear from you and hopefully see each other in Amsterdam.

Greetings,

Maja van der Velden
Andrea Gasparini


Sustainability Lab <https://sustainabilitylab.uio.no/>
Dept. of Informatics
Regenerative Technologies RG 
<https://www.mn.uio.no/ifi/english/research/groups/rt/>
University of Oslo

Long abstract:

Many of the materials of our digital technologies originate from stones 
(rocks), such as gold, copper, tin, zinc, cobalt, coltan, lithium, etc. There 
are different ways of knowing them. Geologists know these materials differently 
than chemists. Anthropologists know them differently than human rights workers. 
Tech designers know them differently than Indigenous communities. In this 
workshop, we will together build a materials library for the digital world. It 
will consist of stones and their (his)stories, creating a contact zone of 
different ways of knowing the minerals and metals, and their role in the design 
and life cycle of digital technologies.
Mary Louise Pratt (1991) described contact zones as “the social spaces where 
cultures meet, clash, and grapple with each other, often in contexts of highly 
asymmetrical relations of power, such as colonialism, slavery, or their 
aftermaths as they are lived out in many parts of the world today”. The 
materials library we will create together during the workshop may become such a 
contact zone, in which different disciplines and communities meet, with their 
different ways of knowing about the many aspects of the extraction of the 
stones, the processing of their metals and minerals, and their interactions 
with technology design. When we present our stories in our own words, avoiding 
unitary language, and share the stones with the other participants, new stories 
may become possible that may inspire different technology designs and use for 
more sustainable futures.

We invite contributions in different formats, oral, artistic, creative, slides, 
histories, short essays or short position papers, etc. We do want every 
participant to bring an example of the stone (rock) in question. If this is not 
possible, the convenors of the workshop will try to obtain a sample and bring 
it to the workshop.

Pratt, M.L. (1991). "Arts of the Contact Zone”. In: Professions, p. 33-40. 
Online: https://www.jstor.org/stable/25595469 
<https://www.jstor.org/stable/25595469>
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