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[ecrea] WIAS Workshop: Academic Labour, Digital Media and Capitalism at the University of Westminister
Wed Jan 17 13:29:37 GMT 2018
This workshop marks the publication of the special issue "Academic
Labour, Digital Media and Capitalism" in tripleC: Communication,
Capitalism & Critique. We will hear presentations by experts who have
contributed to the issue: guest editor Thomas Allmer (University of
Stirling), Karen Gregory (University of Edinburgh) and Jamie Woodcock (LSE).
Modern universities have always been embedded in capitalism in
political, economic and cultural terms. In 1971, at the culmination of
the Vietnam War, a young student pointed a question towards Noam
Chomsky: "How can you, with your very courageous attitude towards the
war in Vietnam, survive in an institution like MIT, which is known here
as one of the great war contractors and intellectual makers of this
war?" Chomsky had to admit that his workplace was a major organisation
conducting war research, thereby strengthening the political
contradictions and inequalities in capitalist societies.
Today, universities are positioning themselves as active agents of
global capital, transforming urban spaces into venues for capital
accumulation and competing for international student populations for
profit. Steep tuition fees are paid for precarious futures.
Increasingly, we see that the value of academic labour is measured in
capitalist terms and therefore subject to new forms of control,
surveillance and productivity measures. Situated in this economic and
political context, the new special issue of tripleC (edited by Thomas
Allmer and Ergin Bulut) is a collection of critical contributions that
examine universities, academic labour, digital media and capitalism.
Workshop presentations:
Anger in Academic Twitter: Sharing, Caring, and Getting Mad Online
Karen Gregory, University of Edinburgh
Digital Labour in the University: Understanding the Transformations of
Academic Work in the UK
Jamie Woodcock, LSE
Theorising and Analysing Academic Labour
Thomas Allmer, University of Stirling
The workshop will be chaired by WIAS Director and tripleC co-editor
Christian Fuchs. WIAS invites everybody interested to attend this
afternoon of talks and discussions tackling the question of academic
labour in the age of digital capitalism. A coffee break is provided.
Thomas Allmer is Lecturer in Digital Media at the University of
Stirling, Scotland, UK, and a member of the Unified Theory of
Information Research Group, Austria. His publications include Towards a
Critical Theory of Surveillance in Informational Capitalism (Peter Lang,
2012) and Critical Theory and Social Media: Between Emancipation and
Commodification (Routledge, 2015). For more information, see Thomas'
website.
Karen Gregory is a Lecturer in Digital Sociology at the University of
Edinburgh, a digital sociologist and ethnographer. She researches the
relationship between work, technology, and emerging forms of labour,
exploring the intersection of work and labor, social media use, and
contemporary spirituality. She is the co-editor of the book Digital
Sociologies (Policy Press, 2017).
Jamie Woodcock is a fellow at the LSE and author of Working The Phones.
His current research focuses on digital labour, the sociology of work,
the gig economy, resistance, and videogames. He has previously worked as
a postdoc on a research project about videogames, as well as another on
the crowdsourcing of citizen science. Jamie completed his PhD in
sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London and has held positions at
Goldsmiths, University of Leeds, University of Manchester, Queen Mary,
NYU London, and Cass Business School.
Christian Fuchs is Professor at the University of Westminster. He is the
Director of the Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI) and
Westminster Institute for Advanced Studies (WIAS). His fields of
expertise are critical digital & social media studies, Internet &
society, political economy of media and communication, information
society theory, social theory and critical theory. He co-edits the
open-access journal triple:Communication, Capitalism & Critique with
Marisol Sandoval.
Register:
http://wias.ac.uk/event/wias-workshop-academic-labour-digital-media-and-capitalism/
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