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[ecrea] CFP The Sense of Time in a Hyper-Mobile Digital Age Nostalgia, Presentism and Hope
Fri Sep 01 09:00:05 GMT 2017
Call For Paper: International Conference
The Sense of Time in a Hyper-Mobile Digital Age
Nostalgia, Presentism and Hope
18-20 May 2018
Doshisha University, Kyoto
Co-organized by Monash Asia Institute, Monash University &
Department of Media, Journalism and Communications, Doshisha University
We are living in a globalized world where the scale and speed of social
change has been ever-escalated, cross-border human mobilities have been
intensifying, and digital communications have been drastically
transforming the mode of mediation and connectivity. These evolutions
engender the complication of our sense of "now and then" in conjunction
with that of "here and there” in ways to substantially transform the
mode and meaning of recollecting the past, perceiving the present and
imagining the future. This conference aims to consider whether and how
the perception of past, present and future has been transformed in a
hyper-mobile digital age.
While growing mobilities such as migration, tourism, expatriation,
studying abroad and encourage people to experience plural forms of
social life, transnational crisscrossing of visual images that represent
diverse modes of "now and then" across the world further gives us much
repertoire to long for what used to be and contemplate on the present
and future. Sophisticated visualization and documentation of the
(non-existing) past has also become a marketing trend of commercial
media. Moreover, revolutionary development of digital communication
technologies has a profound impact on how we recollect the past,
perceive the present and imagine the future in more individualized ways.
Does individualized action of recollecting the immediate past or
embryonic present discount the potential of collective memory as a
self-reflexive reference point? Does it make us ahistorical being,
deterring us from appreciating how the present has been dynamically
constructed through various historical accidents and intermingling
actions by diverse social subjects and institutions and appreciating
unrealized progressive possibilities of social advancements? Or an
individualized mode of nostalgia has a great capability to make people
more positive about life, more tolerant and caring for others and less
wary of interpersonal relationship, as personality psychologists insist?
Whether and how does the emerging perception of past, present and future
relate to the time-space compression that market-driven globalization
processes have been intensifying? How the digitalized sense of time
flows works in tandem with shrinking time frame to recollect and foresee
with accelerating speed of change and socio-economic insecurity and
frustration that accompany? While the ever-escalating speed of change
and scale of movement evokes the desire of slowing down, whether and how
is it associated with nostalgic recollection and/or future prospects?
The Sense of Time in a Hyper-Mobile Digital Age aims to critically
examine these issues and facilitate cross-regional and interdisciplinary
exchange among researchers working on them in the disciplines and fields
of cultural studies, anthropology, sociology, geography, intercultural
communication, and so on. Selected papers will be published in an edited
volume or a journal special issue.We will consider the inclusion of
papers that discuss the shifting sense of time in relation to the
development of digital and social media and the rise of data industry in
conjunction with the intensification of mobilities and cross-border
connections and far-reaching socio-economic fluctuation and predicament.
We expect papers that consider these issues by attending to intersecting
socio-cultural backgrounds such as generation, gender, sexuality, class,
ethnicity, mobility experience and region of dwelling (including urban
and rural). We will accept proposals of any national/regional context,
but we especially encourage the submission of the proposals on Asian
contexts.
Confirmed speakers include: Göran Bolin (Södertörn University), Marwan
Kraidy (University of Pennsylvania), Shin Mizukoshi (University of
Tokyo), Jack Qiu (Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Please send your paper proposals (less than 200 words) with your
affiliation details and e-mail address no later than 30 September 2017
to: (MAI-Enquiries /at/ monash.edu) <mailto:(MAI-Enquiries /at/ monash.edu)>
Please clearly put “Proposal for DIGITAL TIME” in the subject line.
Acceptance of proposal will be notified by the end of October.
Please kindly be advised that we will not be able to offer financial
support for participants’ travel costs. You can find more details of the
workshop and the venue at the webpage of Monash Asia Institute:
http://artsonline.monash.edu.au/mai/
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