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[Commlist] CFP Contested Visibilities (ECREA DCC, GSC and VC sections)
Fri Apr 14 06:53:16 GMT 2023
Contested Visibilities: Everyday politics and online imaginaries of the body
co-organised by the Digital Culture and Communication, Gender, Sexuality
and Communication and Visual Cultures ECREA’s sections and their YECREA
representatives.
6-8 September 2023, Lusófona University, Lisbon, Portugal
Contested Visibilities: Everyday politics and online imaginaries of the body
While in the early days of the internet, the digital was often seen as
purely virtual and detached from the experience of human embodiment, our
current online landscape has challenged this view. Social media seems to
have awakened the urge to share images of our bodies. These shared
visual representations contribute to the creation of individual and
collective identities. They are tools of meaning-making and belonging in
a highly mediatised world. Their visibility can be part of advertising
campaigns, everyday interactions, intimate practices, activist
engagement and many other affective practices. These are situated in
digital cultures of affect and their inherent normativity is governed
not only by social norms but also by the particular possibilities and
algorithmic rules of platforms.
Contested online environments have also become terrain for contemporary
social justice movements and activists who both respond to and use
online visual representations for their actions. These hybrid activist
practices rely on embodied representations and combine online and
offline activities. While online spaces enable important visibility,
this visibility also carries risks and raises questions about who
prefers not to be visible and what practices of resistance can be
adopted. Digital participation is inextricably linked to embodied
characteristics (e.g., gender, ethnicity, social class, age,
(dis)ability or others). These intersecting identities can shape digital
experiences enabling them to both liberate and oppress individuals and
communities.
Keynote speakers
*
Daniela Jaramillo-Dent | University of Zurich
Daniela Jaramillo-Dent is an internet scholar with research and teaching
expertise on migration, digital media, and social justice. Her research
has explored algorithmic (in)visibility, minority representation and
inequality in digital platforms. She has contributed to and held
leadership roles in research projects at the local, national and
European levels. She has international teaching experience in fields
related to digital inequality, research methods and media literacy and
has led teaching innovation projects and training workshops for
innovative teaching in Higher Education.
*
Marloes Geboers | University of Amsterdam
Marloes Geboers’ work revolves around the visuality of warfare as
produced within and through platforms and their fast-evolving
participatory modalities. Her dissertation focused on platform affective
affordances and their role in constructing regimes of visibility
relating to the Syrian war. Alongside these topics, she authored work on
platform-afforded digital violence aimed at journalists. She blends
digital methods and automated image analyses in order to study
performative expressions that replicate, imitate or subvert propaganda
narratives in more or less tactical ways. These user practices shape and
are shaped by platform vernaculars that have a profound impact on the
way we see and experience war within contemporary media ecologies.
Marloes has a background in political science (MA) and journalism (BA),
and she has teaching experience in digital methods and the ethics of AI.
Katrin Tiinberg | Tallinn University
Katrin Tiidenberg works at the Baltic Film, Media and Arts School of
Tallinn University as a Professor of Participatory Culture. Her research
focuses on the hows and whys of people's social media practices, with a
particular emphasis on visuality, sex and political participation. The
overarching questions she tends to ask are about identity, community,
norms and power. She is currently wrapping up a research project on the
platformization of sexuality (Rethinking Sexuality) and the role of the
internet in young people’s political participation (DigiGen) and has
just started a project on visual digital trust (TRAVIS).
Call for Papers
The conference will include different formats for presentation on topics
related to contested visibilities, everyday politics and online
imaginaries of the body. We welcome individual submissions for oral
presentations, which will be arranged in thematic sessions by the
organising team. We also welcome submissions in alternative and creative
formats, proposals may include video, audio, images, text, hyperlinks
and multimedia that illustrate your reflections in the proposal.
We are interested in abstracts that address the complexity of online
representations of bodies and/or related visual practices (e.g.,
producing, perceiving, curating, circulating) through case studies,
theoretical, empirical or methodological approaches. We strongly
encourage submissions that take an intersectional approach and address
embodiment in relation to social factors such as gender, sexuality, age,
class, race/ethnicity, disability, and nationality.
We are open to contributions from scholars at all career stages
(early-career scholars are especially invited to participate), artists,
activists, and media producers.
We look forward to submissions on (but not limited to) the following topics:
* The use of digital media for feminist, queer, anti-racist,
anti-ageist, anti-ableist, anti-classist, neurodiversity, or
illness-related activism and the returning critique of the normative body;
* Reactionary visualities to the above activism and hate
speech/imaginaries "against the woke";
* The intertwinement of socio-cultural imaginaries with platform cultures;
* Chances and limits of hybridisation of commercial culture, strategies
of self-branding and body activism;
* Practical experiments with methods attuned to the
'online-groundedness' of social body images (e.g., body-image dominated
platforms such as TikTok or Instagram);
* Impact of online representation of bodies in various fields such as
sports, memory cultures, advertising, fan/pop cultures, etc;
* Augmented technologies of filtering, avatars and their significance
for identity and meaning-making;
* Images shared without consent, images that reproduce stereotypes and
resistance by minority communities;
* Images produced by media and news organisations as part of their work,
which are ultimately criticised for 'othering'/stereotyping communities,
and the activism involved;
* Online communities as sites of political pedagogy and critique of
mainstream/traditional media's stereotyping of the body;
* Dialectical dialogues about the body in the online sphere:
metadiscourses, beefs, videos about videos, Tiktok reframings;
* Gendered and sexua(lised) digital/online representations of embodied
diversity, difference and intersectionality;
* Critical analysis of the relationships between digital spheres and
gendered and sexual(ised) performativity, resistance and defiance;
* Representations of bodies in relation to technology and artificial
intelligence;
Abstracts
Please submit your proposal (300-500 words) until 15 May, 23:59 (CET)
using the form at <https://bit.ly/ContestedVisibilities
<https://bit.ly/ContestedVisibilities>> and highlight how your work
relates to the conference topic, methods used, and perspectives you
would like to bring to the discussion. In addition to the thematic
sessions, the conference will also facilitate practical tutorials
dedicated to creative/situated/ethical approaches to digital platforms
and visual data.
Workshop
In addition, our YECREA team offers an online pre-conference workshop
for early-career scholars focusing on research challenges (ethics, data
access, collection, analysis etc.) via Zoom on Monday, 4 September 2023.
This event will offer ECRs the opportunity to present their work in
progress. If you wish to participate in the ECR pre-conference event,
please submit an abstract of 200-300 words at
<https://bit.ly/workshopContestedVisibilities
<https://bit.ly/workshopContestedVisibilities>>, briefly describing your
current project and research challenges, e.g. in regard to research
ethics, data collection, access, or analysis. The accepted participants
will engage in facilitated peer discussions based on their submissions.
Participation in the pre-conference YECREA workshop can be independent
of participation in the conference. Please indicate how you would like
to participate by 15 May, 23:59 (CET). Participation in the online
workshop is free of charge.
Fees
The fee includes buffet lunches and tea/coffee breaks during the
three-day conference.
non-members
100€
ECREA members and Lusófona students
80€
Early career Researchers
60€
Registration opens in early July and will be processed via the
Eventbrite platform.
Organisation
This ECREA conference is co-organised by the Digital Culture and
Communication, Gender, Sexuality and Communication and Visual Cultures
sections and their YECREA representatives.
Hosted and sponsored by Lusófona University.
The conference is partially supported by funding from the European
Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under the Marie
Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement Nº 101059460.
For questions, please send an email to
<ContestedVisibilities2023[at]gmail[dot]com>
More info at <https://dccecrea.wordpress.com
<https://dccecrea.wordpress.com>> and
<https://www.ecrea.eu/event-5192002?CalendarViewType=1&SelectedDate=9/13/2023
<https://www.ecrea.eu/event-5192002?CalendarViewType=1&SelectedDate=9/13/2023>>
Important dates
* The deadline for submissions for abstracts is Monday 15 May 2023,
23:59 (CET).
* We will notify all contributors if their proposal has been accepted or
not by the end of June.
* Registration for the conference will be open in early July.
* The event will take place on 6-8 September 2023, at Lusófona
University Lisbon.
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