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[Commlist] CFP: “Digital Pedagogies Post-Covid-19”, Convergence Journal special issue
Mon Sep 20 23:08:59 GMT 2021
CFP: “Digital Pedagogies Post-Covid-19”
Deadline for abstracts: October 1, 2021 / Expected date of publication:
December 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic has forced academe to rethink the role digital and
internet technologies play in and with the pedagogical process. For
better or worse, the internet as institution has disrupted classical and
traditional notions of learning. As evidenced by the pandemic, we are
all falling behind in this paradigmatic shift in pedagogical
understanding and approach. According to some (Ulmer, 2003; Serres,
2015; Hayles, 2007), the exigency of such a reconsideration arrives as
utterly overdue. While the otherwise future of online learning has
already arrived, COVID-19 has demonstrated that we are still yet living
in the past.
Understanding our era as an apparatus or paradigm (Ulmer 1998)—at least
with regard to digital technologies in general, the internet in
particular—we must give attention to emerging patterns of activity,
belief, logic, and even neurology. While some theorists have warned
about the danger of digital technologies causing disorientation
(Stiegler, 2008), the soul at work (Berardi, 2009), violence (Virilio,
1986), or general detriment (Carr, 2010), we should be reminded of the
concept of appropriation, as given by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari
(Deleuze and Guattari, 1983, 1987). Digital technologies are what we
make of them, and this includes digital pedagogy. Digital pedagogy thus
again returns us to the pharmakon: a poison, or a cure—or both. As such,
the aim of education is to remedy the influence of digital media and
immunize us against it, even if by way of digital education.
This special issue explores the potentials and dangers that digital
technologies hold for pedagogy and education. In the wake of the
COVID-19 pandemic and the “Zoomification” of teaching, we aim to
reassess the key issues facing digital pedagogy today. Our interest lies
in analyzing the significance of the generational shift in the modes of
cognitive processing and behavioral patterning engendered by digital
technologies (the internet, video games, augmented reality, virtual
reality, etc.). We are especially interested in how digital pedagogy can
be understood in terms of individual (in)capacities relative to the
institutional and disciplinary context of education writ large. In
short, this special issue seeks to “explicate the future [of pedagogy]
implicated in the new technologies” (Serres, 2015). And new technologies
seem to emerge with greater speed and velocity than our response and
appropriation of them—especially with regard to pedagogy.
The editors welcome contributions from a range of interdisciplinary
perspectives that explore questions regarding digital pedagogy, such as:
·What is the current and future role of digital pedagogy, including but
not limited to augmented reality, virtual reality, haptic technologies,
etc.?
·What roles does emotion, affect, and embodiment play in “remote” or
“virtual” online learning environments?
·How can digital pedagogy be informed by feminist, critical race,
post-colonial, and Marxist approaches to education?
·How should digital pedagogies attend to what has been termed the
“post-truth” condition (Fuller, 2020; McIntrye, 2018; Ball, 2017)?
·How can the transition from orality to literacy help us understand the
transitional state of our educational institutions and contribute to the
invention of post-literate pedagogies?
·How can we understand post-literacy, multi-modality, and electracy
(Ulmer, 2003) in the necessary context of emergent digital technologies
and pedagogies?
Deadline for abstracts: October 1, 2021
Please send a 500-word abstract and a 100-word bio to the guest editors:
(j.markelj /at/ uva.nl) and (ssndvall /at/ memphis.edu). We would particularly welcome
contributions from scholars based in the global south or whose research
relates directly to those contexts.
Authors of accepted abstracts will be invited to send full contributions
by March 2022.
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