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[Commlist] cfp - Media Infrastructures in the Middle East
Mon Jun 17 10:23:18 GMT 2019
CALL FOR PAPERS:
Media Infrastructures in the Middle East
Organized by the Media Studies Program
American University of Beirut
January 9 to 11, 2020
Over the last decade, and in the wake of popular protest movements and
uprisings that swept the region, scholarship on the Middle East has come
a long way in recognizing the contested and pivotal role of media in
shaping the political imaginaries and repertoires of action across the
region. From the 2009 Green movement in Iran, to the 2011 Arab
uprisings, to the 2013 Gezi Park protests in Turkey, Middle East
scholars across disciplines increasingly turned their attention to the
role of media – and social media in particular – in political
organization, mobilization, and dissent under authoritarian regimes.
Across these varied contexts, where political activity is largely
restricted and freedom of expression violently repressed, new media such
as social networking platforms and mobile technology were credited with
heralding a new era of political participation and dissent. The
revolution, some argued, will be tweeted, and the socially-mediated
network, many noted, managed to leverage individual discontent for
collective action.
With the aim of interrogating this techno-utopian outlook, amidst the
entrenched inequalities and repressive politics that continue to plague
the region, this conference seeks to move the conversation from the
front-end to the back-end of media: from networks, as it were, to
infrastructures. How does a focus on the material conditions and labor
that channel and process communication flows unsettle what we understand
media to be and what they can accomplish in the Middle East? How can an
inquiry into media infrastructures inform our understanding of the
economic, political, and cultural boundaries and flows that constitute
the Middle East as region? And, what are the political stakes of this
infrastructural turn?
If infrastructure is the “basic physical and organizational structures
and facilities…needed for the operation of a society or enterprise,”
then we can think of media infrastructures along these same lines – as
the building blocks of our entire mediascape. Platforms, data centers,
software, algorithms, and human labor shape and transform media
industries and everyday media practices. This conference explores how
these technological and organizational infrastructures are embedded
within and reproduce power relations and inequalities, but also how they
condition human agency and struggles for social justice.
We are particularly interested in papers that examine the social,
material, cultural and political dimensions of media infrastructures
(digital or otherwise), and related issues, such as the built and
natural environments, surveillance, privacy, interconnectivity, labor
conditions, access, and the reproduction or disruption of social
inequalities.
Other topics that papers might explore in relation to the conference
theme are:
Technological development
Conflict and Displacement
Accessibility
Surveillance
Counter surveillance
Online violence
Information infrastructures
The politics of platforms
Labor conditions
Economies of repair and breakdown
Digital platforms as infrastructure
Social, political and epistemological consequences
Impact on communication and circulation of data
Online participation and mobility
Knowledge production
And other related themes
We invite submissions (maximum 400 words) on the variety of topics
listed above, or others that engage with the conference theme.
Submissions should include: author name(s), affiliation, email address,
paper title, and a brief bio, and be emailed to (mediastudies /at/ aub.edu.lb)
<mailto:(mediastudies /at/ aub.edu.lb)> no later than July 31st.
Decisions on acceptances of abstracts will be communicated by mid to
late August.
A limited number of modest travel subsidies may be available. Applicants
should identify in their email if they would like to be considered.
For further information, please contact the organizers: The Media
Studies Program at the American University of Beirut at the email
address listed above.
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