[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Call for Abstracts - The Network Society Today: (Revisiting) the Information Age Trilogy
Thu May 16 21:51:23 GMT 2019
/Call for abstracts - Workshop/
*The Network Society Today: (Revisiting) the Information Age Trilogy
*(Barcelona, 10-11/June/2020)
http://in3.blogs.uoc.edu/2019/05/14/call-for-abstracts-network-society-today/
/[Apologies for cross-posting. Feel free to share]/
Manuel Castells The Information Age
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Information_Age:_Economy,_Society_and_Culture> Trilogy has been
one of the most influential works to understand the societal change in
the awake of the digital revolution of the last decades. It is, as
Frank Webster (2002: 97) points out, one of “the most illuminating,
imaginative and intellectually rigorous account of the major features
and dynamics of the world today”. The theory of the network society
developed in these books “open[ed] up new perspectives on a word
reconstituting itself around a series of networks strung around the
globe on the basis of advanced communication technologies” (Stalder,
2006: 1). Indeed, the work of Manuel Castells has influenced a
generation of scholars, shaped a research agenda and has got important
repercussions beyond academia (Bell, 2007).
Yet, more than two decades after the launch of his theory, the network
society and the information age have been developing at a faster pace
that anyone suspected in terms of: socio-technological and economic
transformation (e.g. platform capitalism, sharing economy, robotization,
algorithmic driven society, artificial intelligence and IoT, etc.),
power geometries, new identities and socio-political contestation (e.g.
populism, /indignados/, /gilet jaunes/, alt-right, technopolitics, /buen
vivir/, #meetoo, LGBTIQ, black-lives-matters, youth for climate change,
etc.) and new geopolitics and geographies of inequality and power (the
rise of China as global power, multipolarity, the emergence of the
Global South, the uneven impact of environmental crises, etc.).
At the same time, during the last decades a number of theoretical and
epistemological trends have developed or consolidated in the social
sciences that can be read as either influenced by or challenging the
Trilogy position. Among others, the rise of network theories, mobilities
paradigm, communication and power theory, technopolitics,
post-colonialism or the relation between digital societies and nature.
In this regard, as 2021 will mark the 25th anniversary of the
publication of the first volume of Manuel Castells’, it is time to
revisit the trilogy and explore the relevance of Castells’ pioneering
work in the light of the current state of the network society and of the
ways to research about it. Thus, our aim is to gather together scholars
from a wide range of disciplines – Including Castells himself – to
engage with the Trilogy and debate on its contributions, legacies but as
well shortcomings and new developments not envisioned at the time of its
launch to try to develop a critical perspective on future trajectories
of the network society and the information age.
We welcome contributions that sympathetically and/or critically engage
with the Trilogy in any theoretical, methodological or empirical topic
around the contemporary developments of the network society. Examples of
areas and themes that we would like to discuss (but are not limited to) are:
* Information, data, datafication and the (new) sources of economic value
* Networks, space-times, economy and society
* Contesting the network society power configurations: politics,
social movements and new identities.
* The network society in the world: uneven geographies and geopolitics
of the information age.
* The Trilogy of the Network Society in front of the new turns in
social sciences.
* The influence on the epistemic communities either geographically
(e.g. Latin America, Europe, Asia…) or disciplinary (Sociology,
media, geography, STS…)
*Important dates*
* 23/06/2019 →Abstract submission. 500 words + up to 5 keywords
Submit your proposals to (netsociety /at/ uoc.edu) <mailto:(netsociety /at/ uoc.edu)>
* 23/07/2019 →Communication of abstract acceptance
* 20/3/2020 →Full paper submission: 5.000 – 8.000 words (mandatory).
Papers will be the basis for the comments and discussion during the
workshop. They will be submitted to a special issue / edited book
*Practical Information*
Confirmed keynote speakers:
* Prof. Manuel Castells (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, University
of Southern California)
* Prof. Fernando Calderón (FLACSO, Facultad Latinoamericana de
Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional San Martín Argentina)
* Prof. Ida Susser (The City University of New York)
* Prof. John Thompson (University of Cambridge)
The workshop is free of charge. Food will be provided at the conference
for presenters. Accommodation and transportation are not included.
The workshop presentations should be the basis for a special issue in an
international peer-review journal by 2021 to discuss the work of Manuel
Castells in the 25th anniversary of the launch of the first volume.
*Organization Committee* (IN3 - Open Unversity of Catalonia)
* Mireia Fernández-Ardèvol
* Ramon Ribera-Fumaz
* David Megías
*Organization*
This workshop is organized by the IN3 – Internet Interdisciplinary
Institute, Open University of Catalonia. The workshop constitutes a
central part of the IN3’s 20th anniversary.
Further info and queries: (netsociety /at/ uoc.edu) <mailto:(netsociety /at/ uoc.edu)>
**************************
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]