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[ecrea] cfp - What is Technology? Value • Velocity • Vortex
Sun Oct 28 07:36:18 GMT 2018
*WHAT IS TECHNOLOGY?**
*Value • Velocity • Vortex
*UNIVERSITY OF OREGON IN PORTLAND
*April 11-13, 2019
*/What is Technology?/**(2019)*will examine the vortices of interaction
among practical arts and tools, techniques and processes, moral
knowledge and imagination to navigate our everchanging
media/life/universe. In a broad sense, technology can be understood as
methods of intelligent inquiry and problem-solving in all domains of
human life. The conference-experience will enact a collaborative network
of transdisciplinary research by cultivating /communication/ as the
heart of science, technology, engineering, art, mathematics, and
environments.
The ninth annual /What is…?/ will bring together natural and social
scientists, scholars, government officials, industry professionals,
artists and designers, as well as alumni, students, community
organizations, and the public. We invite proposals for scholarly papers,
panels, and installations on a wide variety of issues and topics. Please
see /whatis.uoregon.edu <http://whatis.uoregon.edu>/ for additional details.
*Proposals may address the following questions (as well as others):
*• How are technologies and values related? What are velocities of
technology (e.g., acceleration studies)?
• What are the forces of technology? Is there only one form of
technology or different kinds?
• What are current approaches to the study of technologies? How is
technology interpreted through various lenses (e.g. critical theory,
cultural studies, eco-phenomenology, feminism, globalization,
intersectionality, journalism, media studies, metamodernism, new
materialism, political economy, posthumanism, rhetoric, semiotics, etc.)?
• What are philosophies of technology? Where do technology and ethics
interface/interact?
• What is Science and Technology Studies (STS)? What are the Digital
Humanities (DH)? What is the relationship between Science, Technology,
Engineering, Mathematics (STEM), and communication/media/film studies,
or other disciplines in the humanities (e.g. anthropology, archaeology,
comparative literature, curatorial studies, library studies, psychology,
sociology)? What is STEM+C (Computing), E-STEM (Environmental), or STEMM
(Medicine)?
• How does technology relate to—or converge—music, art, design,
architecture, and/or craft, e.g. STEAM (Arts)?
• How do technologies’ scale, pace, and pattern transform/limit their
impact? What are techné and/or technics?
• What are immersive technologies (e.g. apps, Augmented/Virtual/Mixed
Realities, IoT, gamification, etc.)?
• What are the implications of emerging technologies (e.g. AGI, creative
coding, holography, information literacy, nano-bio-info-cogno,
predictive analytics, regenerative medicine, risk analysis, robotics, 3D
bio-printing, etc.)?
• How are the natural sciences and technology coming together (e.g.
artificial biology, bioinspired design, biomimicry, data science,
ecological system analysis, environmental analysis, etc.)? Is biology
itself technology?
• How do technologies obscure and/or highlight issues of gender, race,
class, and/or indigeneity? What are indigenous knowledge and
technologies? What is emerging research on equity, access, and learning?
• What are the positive/negative consequences of media technologies for
the public interest?
• What relationships are there between technology and warfare,
innovation and defense, etc.? What are emerging discourses of
cyberinfrastructure, cyberlearning, cybertraining, or cybersecurity, etc.?
• How is technology related to disability studies,
accessibility/alter-abled education, accessible/assistive technologies,
and mobility? How does technology relate to birth/life/aging/death,
and/or contemplation/well-being?
• What are technological determinism, technological realism, and
technological humanism? technophilia versus technophobia, technological
utopianism versus dystopianism, and/or technological singularity versus
multiplicity?
• How is collective intelligence, and/or collective wisdom, engaging
and/or changing our lives?
• How might technologies contribute to socio-technical community
resilience and/or thriving communities?
Send 150–200 word abstracts for papers, panels, or installations by
*DECEMBER 21, 2018*, to:
Janet Wasko • (jwasko /at/ uoregon.edu) <mailto:(jwasko /at/ uoregon.edu)>
University of Oregon • Eugene, Oregon • 97403-1275 • USA
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