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[Commlist] cfp: Methodological innovations and challenges of research on digitally connected homes
Sat Aug 14 08:38:21 GMT 2021
Methodological innovations and challenges of research on digitally
connected homes
Special Issue in Digital Creativity
Deadline for abstracts: October 4, 2021
The past few years have seen a rapid increase in the number and variety
of technologies embedded in and passing through home environments.
Researchers increasingly recognize the distinct nature of the home as a
site of research. The past four decades have seen a significant shift in
the technology environment from the "media home" (Spigel, 2001) to the
"smart home" (Woods, 2021). We have seen significant additions to the
abundant digital ecology of the home, increasing the number of digital
access-points and available services, and intensifying the
data-circulation in connected homes. The home is a site of mundane,
private, usually hidden but highly significant everyday practices (Pink
et al. 2017). Yet it is also increasingly becoming a part of national
healthcare infrastructures through the deployment of welfare
technologies, and energy policy through smart meters. During the "global
lockdown" caused by the Coronavirus Disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic,
technologies took a prominent role as the home transformed itself into a
site in which activities such as learning, parenting, work,
entertainment, and remote medical care intermingled.
The increasing complexity of the digital infrastructures and the
experiences, spaces, visions of the home in a current era of connected
homes and connected living poses particular challenges for conducting
research in such an environment. This also calls for methodological
innovations that shape how we see the home as a research site and how we
engage with it.
For this special issue, we invite contributions that make a strong
methodological contribution by highlighting the innovations and
challenges of conducting research on technology in home environments.
Papers could, for example:
· Explore cross-disciplinary methodological approaches in a
project related to the connected home.
· Develop an innovative methodological framework or research
design to address a specific research challenge concerning the
technologically connected home.
· Apply new and emergent forms and sources of digital data from
the connected home.
· Describe and evaluate research tools and techniques.
Submissions may cover issues such as:
· Participatory and co-design approaches to research related to
the home
· Novel ways of capturing, visualizing and analyzing digital
infrastructures and data connected to the home
· Multisensory and multimodal approaches to studying technologies
in the home
· Narrative methods for researching and designing in the home
· Negotiating relationships between researchers, research
participants, and technologies in the home
· Ethical dilemmas related to methods for studying technology in
the home
· Interventions as a research method to study technological
practices in the home
· Probing and elicitation techniques for uncovering practices with
technology in the home
Submissions Requirements: Submission to this special issue is a
two-stage process. Authors interested in contributing are invited to
submit an extended abstract (500 words) for review. Please email
abstracts directly to the editors listed below. Authors whose abstracts
are accepted will then be invited to submit a full paper (up to 7000
words). Full papers will be double-blind peer-reviewed for acceptance
into the special issue.
Upon acceptance of the abstract, you will be sent further authors'
guidelines based on the Digital Creativity guidelines (Instructions for
Authors) at https://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/NDCR. Note that acceptance
of abstract alone does not imply acceptance for publication in the
journal. The extended abstract should include the following information:
1) Name of author(s) with email addresses and affiliation, if applicable
2) Title of the paper 3) Body of the abstract 4) Preliminary
bibliography 5) Author(s)'s short bio(s)
Guest Editors: Henry Mainsah, Emma Slade, Dag Slettemeås, Dale
Southerton, and Ardis Storm-Mathisen
Important Dates:
Abstracts due (via email): October 4, 2021
Submission method: Please send abstracts as PDFs (and any questions) to
Henry Mainsah, (henryma /at/ oslomet.no), as well as to the editors of Digital
Creativity, (dcsubmit /at/ gmail.com).
(No payments are required from authors of accepted articles.)
We are looking forward to receiving your contributions.
References
Pink, S. Leder-Mackley, K. Morosanu, R. Mitchell, V. & Bhamra, T. (2017)
Making homes: ethnography and design. Oxford: Bloomsbury.
Spigel, L. (2001). Media homes: then and now. International Journal of
Cultural Studies, 4(4): 385-411.
Woods, H. S. (2021): Smart homes: domestic futurity as Infrastructure.
Cultural Studies, DOI: 10.1080/09502386.2021.1895254
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