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[ecrea] Collecting, Sorting, Ordering. Practices of Listing in Popular Culture. Oct 27-28
Wed Oct 19 12:18:17 GMT 2016
*Collecting, Sorting, Ordering. Practices of Listing in Popular Culture.*
*University of Siegen*
*Conference, 27-28 Oct 2016*
http://popkultur.uni-siegen.de/listing
Lists are known as a medium of order which contributes significantly to
the ways in which we organise and classify knowledge. In online and
social media, lists are currently experiencing a remarking
proliferation. Digital cultures have brought about “new” types of lists,
which are data intensive, algorithmic and dynamic, but also share with
significant formal and functional similarities with lists prevalent in
bureaucratic organizations, popular culture or literature. The ubiquity
of lists and their proliferating functions in everyday life asks
researchers to revisit what lists are, both empirically and
conceptually, to explore what differentiates them from tables,
catalogues or databases, but also to account for what lists do and what
we do we with them. The objective of the conference is to approach lists
from an interdisciplinary perspective as performative, epistemological
processes and to explore how their minimalist form can enable
proliferating functionalities.
Three key observations are central to our approach:
* Lists assemble and create relations: Lists rely on connecting
previously distinct objects, persons, attributes into new units or
sets of relations. They enable connectivity between heterogeneous
elements.
* Lists sort, order and value: Lists that rely on ordinal data or seek
to create rankings not only assemble, but also evaluate and valorise
the assembled elements based on selected criteria of relevance,
meaning or worth. In popular culture lists operate as condition for
the possibility of popularity as they order, sort, hierarchize and
quantify aggregated decisions and taste.
* Lists contribute to the making of paradigms based on sorting,
selecting and valuation as well as inclusion and exclusion. The
narratives afforded by lists exceed the individual qualities and
capacities of their elements and rely on the making of specifically
motivated connections between them. In that sense, lists are
dependent, continuous and in need of completion.
The conference brings together an interdisciplinary range of scholars
from media studies, sociology, mathematics, philosophy, literature to
discuss how to approach lists in contemporary (popular) culture both
empirically and conceptually. We approach lists as performative
processes of knowledge and value making and as situated in specific
contexts and debates, which select, sort and transform what we know
through socio-technical operations. Doing so, lists gain their very own
aesthetic qualities, which reflect their making, but also create
inscriptions.
*Schedule*
*Thursday, Oct 27*
13:30 Welcome and introduction
14:00-15:00 Elena Esposito (Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia) -
Organising without understanding. Lists in divinatory and in digital
cultures
15:00-16:00 Urs Stäheli (Sociology, University of Hamburg) - Travelling
by Lists: Listmaking and Logistics in Tourism
16:00-16:30 Coffee and tea
16:30-17:30 Gerd Stumme (Computer Science, University of Kassel) -
Automated Making of Lists
17:30-18:30 Adrian Mackenzie (Sociology, Lancaster University) -
Streams, pipelines and trees: living with unending lists
*Friday, Oct 28*
10:00-11:00 Sabine Mainberger (Literature Studies, University of Bonn) -
“… and so much more”. The potential of lists and some shortcomings of theory
11:00-11:30 Coffee and tea
11:30-12:30 Andrea Mennicken (Accounting, The London School of Economics
and Political Science) Numbers and Lists: Ratings and Rankings in
Healthcare and the Correctional Services
12:30-14:00 Lunch
14:00-15:00 Philipp Ullmann (Mathematics, Goethe University Frankfurt) -
Of Lists and Mathematics – a Digression
15:00-15:30 Coffee and tea
15:30-16:30 Celia Lury (CIM, Warwick University) - How a list becomes a
series: the making of serial logics
Each session includes a 25-30 min talk followed by discussion
*Location:*
Artur-Woll-Haus (AE) Siegen University, Am Eichenhang 50, 57076 Siegen
*Directions:*
https://www.uni-siegen.de/start/kontakt/anfahrt_und_lageplaene/a_w_haus.html.en?lang=en
*Hosts*
Carolin Gerlitz (University of Siegen, Media Studies)
Markus A. Helmerich (University of Siegen, Mathematics)
Johannes Paßmann (University of Siegen, New German Literature, Media-
and Cultural Studies)
Matthias Schaffrick (University of Siegen, New German Literature)
*Contact and Registration*
Johannes Paßmann
University of Siegen
Adolf-Reichwein-Straße 2
57068 Siegen
(Johannes.Passmann /at/ uni-siegen.de) <mailto:(Johannes.Passmann /at/ uni-siegen.de)>
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