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[Commlist] Digital Intimacies 9: "life among the ruins"
Fri Aug 25 21:08:37 GMT 2023
We are so pleased to see the Digital Intimacies symposium continue on,
now in its 9th year. Following the fabulous Swinburne/ADM+S Sexy Messy
symposium earlier this year, the Digital Intimacies 9 symposium is to be
held at QUT December 14 + 15. Co-hosted by the QUT Digital Media
Research Centre and the Digital Cultures & Societies group at UQ. The
full CFP is copied below: abstracts now extended until Sept 1!
More information is available on the website here:
https://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/digital-intimacies-9/
+++
The Digital Intimacies 9 call for papers is now live! This year the
theme is "life among the ruins":
"Without stories of progress, the world has become a
terrifying place. The ruin glares at us with the horror of its
abandonment. It’s not easy to know how to make a life, much less
avert planetary destruction. Luckily there is still company,
human and not human. We can still explore the overgrown verges
of our blasted landscapes…" (Tsing, 2015, pp. 282).
Digital intimate publics express that the “vibe is off”, a sense
that things aren’t quite right as we doom scroll on and on and on. A
state of precarity and instability has left ruin and decay in its
wake. From failed political systems, burnt-out utopias and bombed
out landscapes, to the eerie and empty urban spaces of the mass
industrial era, the persistent rubble left from (neo)colonisation
and cultures threatened by climate crises, to recently obsolescent
technologies, hyperlinks rotting away, and glitchy automated systems.
Despite the rubble seeming dead and inert, Anna Tsing (2015) reminds
us that ruins are lively places where new multi-species and
multi-cultures thrive. From a flattened out, ruined landscape, new
possibilities grow. Ruins can be enclaves of hope as much as
mourning, loss, and longing: they not only invoke nostalgic
reflections, but open up space to dream and imagine the future.
Digital intimate publics share the affective experience of life amid
the ruin. They are formed in circumstances of something being ‘off’,
of being squeezed, constituted from positions of non-dominance.
Digital intimacies come to be not in the gleaming corporate towers
and cathedrals, but in the messy in-between spaces where resilient,
creative practices of ‘making do’ emerge.
For Digital Intimacies 9 we ask in what ways are digital intimacies
reckoning with the ruined structures they find themselves in? We
invite submissions across disciplines to critically engage with,
interpret, locate, theorise, or dissect the notion of life amid the
ruins in abstract and creative ways. Additionally we encourage
applicants to think broadly about the intersections between digital
intimate publics and ruins to look with a hopeful eye for what may
grow on the edges of our worlds.
We welcome papers and presentations in various formats exploring
topics including but not restricted to:
·Everyday responses to ruin.
·Tactics and strategies of ‘making do’.
·Obsolescent technologies and outdated digital media.
·The politics of nostalgia and the future.
·Stories, voices and practices from the margins.
·Resistance, opposition and subversion in digital spaces.
·Community, kinship and care during and after crises.
·As well as papers covering broader questions and topics relating to
digital intimacies.
References:
Tsing, A. L. (2015). The mushroom at the end of the world: On the
possibility of life in capitalist ruins. Princeton University Press.
To submit please email (digitalcultures /at/ hass.uq.edu.au)
<mailto:(digitalcultures /at/ hass.uq.edu.au)> with a 200-300 word abstract
and a 1-2 sentence bio by August 25th.
The symposium will be a hybrid event held from the 14^th to the
15^th of December at QUT Gardens Point campus (lift access
available) and online.
Digital intimacies 9 is jointly hosted by the Digital Media Research
Centre at Queensland University of Technology and Digital Cultures &
Society at University of Queensland.
For more information check out our website:
https://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/digital-intimacies-9/
<https://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/digital-intimacies-9/>. If you
have any further questions please feel free to email Digital
Cultures and Societies UQ at (digitalcultures /at/ hass.uq.edu.au)
<mailto:(digitalcultures /at/ hass.uq.edu.au)>.
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