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[Commlist] CFP: The Aesthetics of Bio-Machines and the Question of Life
Mon Nov 27 14:25:42 GMT 2023
*The Aesthetics of Bio-Machines and the Question of Life *
June 13-14, 2024
International conference organised by the University of Southern Denmark
and held at the *University of Copenhagen, Denmark*.
Deadline for Abstracts: February 1, 2024
This conference aims to bring together a wide range of scholars,
researchers and artists who explore life-simulating technologies from an
aesthetic perspective. Today we are immersed in life-simulating digital
technologies, such as virtual assistants (Siri, Alexa), generative
self-learning computer systems (chatbots), and adaptive robots that use
artificial intelligence to learn from their surroundings (robot vacuum
cleaners). In new and intriguing ways, these digital technologies raise
the question of who and what is alive, and how we as humans cohabit with
them. Indeed, physicists, engineers, and biologists are currently
speaking about a notion of “life 3.0,” which affords life status to
self-learning artificial intelligence. This humanities-based conference
will investigate these “life-forms” from an aesthetic perspective by
focusing on how we may understand the sensory capabilities of such
technologies and the way these are negotiated in literature, art and film.
We propose to conceptualize these diverse life-simulating technologies
as sensing bio-machines, since we argue that their life-like qualities
should be understood through the ways they perform a techno-mimesis (an
imitation) of the sensory capabilities of biological life. Our focus on
aesthetics allows us to home in on the intersection of humans and
machines and to interrogate the dependencies and symbioses we find in
the process of sensing, and how these processes negotiate new
perspectives on what constitutes life.
It is imperative that these intersections are not solely analyzed by
engineers and natural scientists but also by humanities scholars, who
can place current technological developments in historical trajectories
and theoretical debates that highlight the ethical, cultural, and
societal implications of such bio-machines for humanity. Given the
current planetary crisis (climate change, warfare, inequality), the
search for new, integrative, and diverse concepts of life that rethink
the status of machines is more than a philosophical task, it is an
ethical responsibility. We believe that our focus on aesthetics can
provide unique and creative insights to enhance and sustain life in
alliance between the human and more-than-human technical entities.
We invite scholars, artists, and practitioners to engage with how
aesthetics/artworks/sensoria as imaginaries can reflect the life of
bio-machines within the wider contemporary arenas of cultural, ethical,
environmental, and socio-political realms.
The *keynote speaker* will be Joanna Zylinska (Professor of Media
Philosophy and Critical Digital Practice at King’s College London)
Exploring these cultural-artistic negotiations of bio-machines, we are
interested in the following directions:
*Cultural Imaginaries and Histories of Bio-machines *
This direction invites contributions investigating the cultural
imaginaries of bio-machines throughout history. For centuries, humans
have created machines that simulate biological life, from
eighteenth-century automata (Vaucanson’s mechanical digesting duck),
wheel-based motion machines (locomotive and automobile), to
cinematography (moving images). We are interested in tracing back the
contemporary correlation between machinic sensing and life back to early
analogue concepts of life-simulating machines, as we believe that the
historicization of technological innovations provides a necessary
perspective for understanding their relevance today.
*Domestic Life-Worlds: Bio-Machines and Home Assistance *
This direction investigates cultural imaginaries of bio-machines
focusing on intimate life-worlds. An emerging genre of fiction and art
portrays humanoid robots as friends, partners, and lovers rather than
monsters and scary creatures. By means of their advanced technical
sensoria, these bio-machinic companions express empathy, compassion,
intimacy, and ethical values about human-machine relationships. This
direction investigates how artistic works negotiate such new companions
and evaluate how technologies claim agency for being seen as alive in
cultural imaginaries.
*Work Life-Worlds: Bio-Machines and Labor *
This direction explores how bio-machines and their sensoria change the
life-worlds of the workplace. Smart technologies include “bossware”
(software that tracks productivity), automated warehouse robots used at
Amazon, as well as care robots in hospitals. The papers should
investigate how these smart technologies become our living and sensing
co-workers and employers, as well as how bio-machines change work
conditions and power dynamics at the workplace. The main focus is on the
artistic interpretations (visual art) of these “working” bio-machines,
and how art can critically reflect the use of machinic surveillance at
the workplace.
*Ecological Life-Worlds: Bio-Machines and Hybrid Eco-Systems *
This direction examines ecological life-worlds in conjunction with
life-simulating technologies. In a time of ecological decay and climate
devastation, engineers and biologists work on the development of
“artificial life technology” to stabilize eco-systems. These are
bio-machines that could sustain eco-systems, such as artificial
honeybees and fish to stabilize biodiversity. Artists have taken up this
topic of bioengineering. This WP analyzes bio-machinic art (visual
art/literature) and discusses the implications of these eco-hybrid
systems in reference to how we understand life, reproduction and evolution.
Venue:
The conference will be held physically from June 13, 2024 (10:00-17:00)
and June 14, 2024 (10:00 - 14:00) at the University of Copenhagen. The
conference is organized in close collaboration with the University of
Southern Denmark and is based on the research cluster “Bio-machines and
the Question of Life” supported The Velux Foundations. The cluster is
led by Kathrin Maurer (Professor of Humanities and Technology and leader
of the Center for Culture and Technology at the University of Southern
Denmark www.sdu.dk/en/cult-tech) and Kristin Veel (Associate Professor
at Copenhagen University and leader of the research hub INTERSECT
https://intersect.ku.dk ).
Please send an abstract of up to 300 words and a short bio to this email
address: (kamau /at/ sdu.dk)
Deadline for Abstracts: February 1, 2024
Notification and Invitations: March 15, 2024.
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