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[Commlist] CFP Digital Truth-Making
Tue Jan 21 09:23:47 GMT 2020
Call for Papers:
Digital Truth-Making
Ethnographic Perspectives on Practices, Infrastructures and Affordances
of Truth-Making in Digital Societies
7th conference of the Section “Digitization in Everyday Life” of the
German Association of Cultural Anthropology and Folklore Studies (dgv)
Institute for European Ethnology & Centre for Anthropological Research
on Museums and Heritage (CARMAH), Humboldt University of Berlin (Germany)
7-9 October 2020
Organizers: Christoph Bareither, Dennis Eckhardt, Alexander Harder,
Julia Molin
Submission Deadline: January 31st 2020
Over the last two decades, the ubiquity of digital infrastructures has
brought about numerous drastic changes to a globalized world. One of the
most pressing socio-political questions on a global scale is how
digitization has changed the ways in which particular truths are enacted
and established in everyday life. On the one hand, this addresses the
practices of truth-making in political contexts: "post-truth" and "fake
news" not only dominated the last US presidential election, but have
also long since become decisive factors in political upheaval in Europe,
South America and Asia. Social media have become crucial platforms for
political meaning-making as well as the constitution of emotional
beliefs and “alternative facts”. But the question of the specifics of
practices of digital truth-making also encompasses much more than the
sphere of the political. In the context of platform economies or crypto
currency, for example, new ways of measuring and comparing the value of
goods have prevailed that create economic value and thus constitute
economic truths. In the field of health, software programs and apps have
long been institutionalized as instrument of biological measuring and
thus make and re-shape the truths of our bodies. In science, the truth
of climate change has become an extremely contested object of digital
(often visual) meaning-making. And in the field of memory cultures,
numerous digital platforms have emerged as repositories of cultural
heritage, while implicitly or explicitly curating the truth of
particular histories. The list could be continued.
Following these and further examples, the 7th conference of the
dgv-working group “Digitization in Everyday Life”
(http://www.goingdigital.de/ <http://www.goingdigital.de/>) at the
Humboldt University of Berlin will examine concrete practices of digital
truth-making. These practices always build on complex digital
infrastructures whose specific quality with regard to truth-making is
increasingly dependent on the relation of human practice and programmed
algorithms. Today, these digital algorithms and the policies inscribed
in them decisively contribute to and shape everyday truths. Taking this
into account, we aim for a discussion of the particular role of
algorithmic affordances in relation to everyday practices and how truths
are constituted in-between these dimensions.
We invite papers from a broad range of disciplines to tackle these
questions. The main focus of the conference, however, lies in the
potential of ethnographic methods to answer them. While questions of
truth-making related to digital technologies are often approached
through large quantitative data sets, we argue that it is the how of
digital truth-making that requires particular attention. Ethnographic
approaches, combining “online” and “offline” analysis, are well-suited
to address this question. We therefore explicitly not only welcome
papers in the aforementioned empirical fields, but also papers
addressing crucial methodological questions. Alternatively, we welcome
proposals for workshops (of 90 minutes) addressing such methodological
questions. In particular, we are interested in how ethnographic research
can unfold its potential in analysing the entanglements of digital
infrastructures, their algorithms and everyday media practices with
regard to digital truth-making.
Please send your paper and/or workshop proposals (including your name,
email address, paper title and abstract not exceeding 300 words) until
January 31st 2020 to (digital-truth-making.ethno /at/ hu-berlin.de)
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