Network Archaeology
Conference at Miami University, Oxford OH
April 19-21, 2012
Call for Papers (submissions due November 29, 2011)

This conference will bring together scholars and practitioners to explore the 
resonances between digital networks and ?older? (perhaps still emergent) 
systems of circulation; from roads to cables, from letter-writing networks to 
digital ink. Drawing on recent research in media archaeology, we see network 
archaeology as a method for re-orienting the temporality and spatiality of 
network studies. Network archaeology might pay attention to the history of 
distribution technologies, location and control of geographical resources, the 
emergence of circulatory models, proximity and morphology, network politics and 
power, and the transmission properties of media. What can we learn about 
contemporary cultural production and circulation from the examination of 
network histories? How can we conceptualize the polychronic developments of 
networks, including their growth, adaptation, and resistances? How might the 
concept of network archaeology help to re-envision and forge new paths of in
 terdisciplinary research, collaboration, and scholarship?

The conference will trace continuities and disjunctures between a variety of 
networks, including telecommunication networks, distribution systems for both 
digital and non-digital texts, transportation routes, media storage (libraries, 
databases, e-archiving), electrical grids, radio and television broadcast 
networks, the internet, and surveillance networks. We seek to address not only 
the technological, institutional, and geopolitical histories of networks, but 
also their cultural and experiential dimensions, extending to encompass the 
histories of network poetics and practice. The proceeds of the conference will 
form the basis for a substantial publication on Network Archaeology.

This conference is organized by the Miami University Humanities Center and is 
the final event in a year-long series entitled ?Networked Environments: 
Interrogating the Democratization of Media.? It is a companion to our Fall 2011 
symposium, ?Networks and Power,? on November 17-18th featuring panels, 
interventions, and keynote presentations by Wendy Chun (Brown University) and 
Lisa Parks (UC Santa Barbara), that interrogate the interrelationships between 
networked environments, both old and new, and varied forms of power. The 
?Networked Environments? series, involving an interdisciplinary group of ten 
humanities scholars, seeks to show how the network dynamics so crucial to 
contemporary political developments have deep and perhaps unexpected roots in 
the histories of earlier forms of information production and circulation.

We welcome presentations of academic research and artistic projects on 
contemporary and historical network studies. Please send abstracts of 250 words 
and a short bio to cris cheek ([email protected]) and Nicole Starosielski 
([email protected]) by November 29, 2011.

Keynote speakers include:

Lisa Gitelman, Associate Professor of Media and English at New York University, 
and author of Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines: Representing Technology 
in the Edison Era (2000), New Media, 1740-1915 (2004), and Always Already New: 
Media, History, and the Data of Culture (2008).

Richard R. John, Professor of Journalism at Columbia University, and author of 
Spreading the News: The American Postal System from Franklin to Morse (1995) 
and Network Nation: Inventing American Telecommunications (2010). 

Alan Liu, Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, 
and author of The Laws of Cool: Knowledge Work and the Culture of Information 
(2004) and Local Transcendence: Essays on Postmodern Historicism and the 
Database (2008).

Jussi Parikka, Reader in Media & Design at Winchester School of Art (University 
of Southampton), and author of Digital Contagions: A Media Archaeology of 
Computer Viruses (2007), Insect Media: An Archaeology of Animals and Technology 
(2010), and Media Archaeology: Approaches, Applications, Implications (2011).

Adrian Johns, Chair of Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science at 
University of Chicago, and auhor of The Nature of the book: print and knowledge 
in the making (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), Piracy: The 
Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenberg to Gates. (Chicago: University of 
Chicago Press, 2009)


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