Archive for September 2024

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[Commlist] cfp: Online workshop - Discourses of Capital, Technology, and Artificial Intelligence

Thu Sep 26 13:20:25 GMT 2024




D31: Online workshop - Discourses of Capital, Technology, and Artificial Intelligence

Dates: November 4 - 9 (with November 4 for videos going live and sessions online throughout the week) 2024

Call for papers ending on: Sunday, 6 October 2024

Website: discourseanalysis.net/DN31 <http://discourseanalysis.net/DN31>

Contact: (east.west.dn.wg /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(east.west.dn.wg /at/ gmail.com)>

Location: online, parallel

Language policy: the working language for the workshop is English

Call for Papers
The “East-West dialogue” working group of DiscourseNet Association and the University of Valencia invite submissions for an upcoming online workshop on "Discourses of Capital, Technology, and Artificial Intelligence."

In an era marked by rapid technological advancements and the increasing influence of artificial intelligence (AI), the intersection of capital, technology, media, and AI in discourse has become a crucial area of study.  AI technologies have commanded billions of dollars in capital, and have been implicated in maintaining and contributing to inequalities in global employment markets (Perrigo, 2023).

In the last years AI has attracted high expectations around its capabilities and potential in both public and scientific discourses (De Togni et al. even refer to this interest as ‘hype’), different technologies that contain embedded AI are constantly in the focus of the researchers. Thus, in 2023 only Google Scholar indexes more than 35 000 articles upon request “AI” and 17800 papers upon request “Generative AI”. At the same time, we can state that the key term – AI – has not yet crystalized (Ekbia 2012, Elliott, 2021, Elliott 2022). It leads to interpretative flexibility (Bijker 2012) and makes the discourses around AI crucial as they partially impact further development of this technology.

Moreover, AI becoming a strategic priority for global players such as the USA, the EU, Russia, China, India and others fighting for the leadership in this technological area, politicizes the technology and makes the development of AI deeply incorporated in political and geopolitical context, tightly connected to capital and different strategies of technological development in different states. So it is important to analyze how AI is discursively constructed and publicly discussed on a global level, which involves the dialogue between different global regions.

This workshop aims to explore the discursive practices that shape our understanding of the structures of these domains, and explore the relationship between capital, technologies, and the social conditions through which they emerge.

We welcome contributions that examine themes such as:

- The rhetoric surrounding AI and its impact on society, economy, and culture

- Discourses of technological innovation and their relationship to capital

- The language of automation and its effects on labour discourses

- Narratives of progress and disruption in tech-driven economies

- Ethical considerations in AI development and implementation

- The role of discourse in shaping public opinion on emerging technologies

- Critical analyses of techno-capitalist discourses

DN31 invites scholars from all subfields of the transdisciplinary field of (critical) discourse studies to submit papers and to explore what is going on in this dynamic field of strategic struggles. We accept the results of finalized research projects but also work-in-progress and embryonic ideas.

We also explicitly welcome scholars from other disciplines and perspectives in the humanities and social sciences: Media studies, Communication sciences, Political sciences,  International relations, History, Ideology studies, Linguistics, Cultural studies, Audience and reception studies, Governmentality studies, Strategic narrative studies, Journalism studies, (Social) media studies, Development studies, Post- and De colonial studies, etc.

We equally welcome people with technological backgrounds as well as representatives of the tech industry.

Open lecture on November 4, 18-00 CET
Keynote lecture by Lisa Parks (https://www.lisaparks.net/ <https://www.lisaparks.net/>), Ph.D., Distinguished Professor at the University of California at Santa Barbara, Director of the Global Media Technologies and Cultures Lab, editor of the book 'Media Backends: Digital Infrastructures and Sociotechnical Relations' (https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/jj.10405519 <https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/jj.10405519>).
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