Public Event: »Social Media – Social Revolts?«

Critical perspectives on the uses of web and media networks by recent social 
movements // ‘Digital Governance // Experiences, insights and consequences from 
the 'Arab Spring' and the 'Blackberry Riots'

(This event will be held in English – with German translation) 

Tuesday 15 November 2011, 20:00
Hoersaal 5, Scharnhorststrasse 1, D-21335 Lueneburg

Organised in conjunction with the workshop »does not compute – building a 
post-media lab«
In association with Moving Image Lab, Leuphana University of Lueneburg, 
Kunstraum Lueneburg & Mute

Panel Discussion with:
Graham Harwood (Media artist, Southend-on-Sea, London)
Anne Roth (Journalist and Blogger, Berlin)
Aalam Wassef (Blogger, Media-artist and -activist, Paris/Cairo)

Some describe the uprisings that swept across Egypt and other Arab and North 
African countries as the ‘Facebook revolution’; some are calling the riots that 
convulsed England this August the ‘Blackberry Riots’. More considered 
commentators cast doubt on the notion that social media were decisive in 
producing this cycle of unrest. What is certain, however, is that social media 
– from Twitter to Facebook, YouTube to Internet blogs as well as the 
availability of 'smart' mobile phones – have changed the forms of social 
contact, as well as the reach of social movements. It is also certain that 
social media itself has become an ever greater part of the discussion about 
national and international borders, social organisation, basic rights and 
democracy.
In this context the export of network-monitoring softwares like ‘Finfisher’, 
co-produced in Germany, to countries such as Egypt is more than just another 
instance of the commodification of ‘security’ and often repression. It is also 
the symptom of a wider ethical and democratic crisis relating to the definition 
of private and public spheres, the new 'nature' of communication, the juridical 
presumption of innocence, and even the politically contested concept of 
'citizenship' or ‘corporate social responsibility’.
Since the materiality, codes of conduct and practical activity comprising 
public and private life have been so radically transformed by digital networks, 
we need to step back and reconsider which foundational conceptions of democracy 
still apply. This event will strive to reach a more global understanding of 
these issues by drawing together a series of partial and local perspectives and 
embedding the discussion of politics into real conditions.

Contact:
Clemens Apprich: [email protected]
Oliver Lerone Schultz: [email protected]

Kunstraum Leuphana University of Lueneburg
http://www.uni-lueneburg.de/interarchiv/index.html
#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]

Reply via email to