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[ecrea] Switch: National Culture in the Digital Age CFP - 12-14 October 2012
Thu Feb 16 21:54:34 GMT 2012
*Switch: National Culture in the Digital Age CFP - 12-14 October 2012 *
How will national cultures survive in the digital age? Will they be
subsumed in the centripetal pull of global monoculture? Or will
counter-currents and hybrid combinations thrive in a transmedia world?
2012 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the establishment of RTÉ TV –
Ireland’s public television network charged with broadcasting the nation
to itself: ‘a window and mirror to an evolving nation’. This year also
sees the end of analogue television transmission in Ireland, marking
another milestone in the nation’s switchover to digital. Beyond
technological advances, this switch from existing communication models
to convergent networks may well have a far-reaching impact on the idea
of the nation as a finite and highly centralized construct.
Against the backdrop of this transition the Huston School of Film &
Digital Media, NUI Galway will hold a three-day conference to explore
the impact of digital technologies on national culture in Ireland and
elsewhere. A central consideration of this conference will be how
changes in communication and creative practices reposition national
culture – in its broadest sense - in a digital age.
Since its establishment in 2003 the Huston School of Film & Digital
Media has been at the forefront of digital media research. In 2006 the
school introduced an MA in Digital Media and a symposium on digital
narratives was held in 2007. In 2011 the school funded twelve Digital
Arts and Humanities PhD students with the Moore Institute.
Papers are invited that discuss any aspect of National Culture in the
Digital Age, including, but not limited to, the following:
A) Convergence Culture
Papers are invited that consider how old and new media collide, compete
and work together in this era of media and technological convergence.
Topics might include digital archives, approaches to the digital
humanities, online newspapers, video on demand and ebooks.
B) Participation
Some see the web as a utopian realisation of the public sphere. Others
suggest that it simply mirrors and reinforces real world inequalities.
Papers are sought which consider this tension in relation to Ireland in
the digital age. Topics might include: Piracy, Globalisation, Cultural
Distribution and Access, The Digital Divide, Social Networking,
Education, Electronic Tribes and Citizen Journalism.
C) Narrative
Do the possibilities offered by digital technologies (e.g. remixes,
hyperlinks and open world gaming) constitute a shift away from
traditional narratives to new forms of storytelling?
D) Medium Specificity
In an era where technologies convergence and audiences are migratory
have the boundaries between unique means of expression (e.g. film,
theatre and literature) begun to dissolve? Papers are invited that
consider this development in relation to national cultural production.
The conference will be held on 12-14 October 2012.
Please submit abstracts of no more than 300 words, an academic bio and
contact details to the organisers Liam Burke and Tony Tracy:
(irishdigitalculture /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(irishdigitalculture /at/ gmail.com)> by
4 May 2012.
Papers will be 20 minutes and panels will be thematically linked.
It is the intention of the organisers to publish an edited collection,
which will include articles from this conference.
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