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[Commlist] CFP Electricdreams IV - Visions of Control: Power and Technology in Speculative Fiction
Fri May 02 15:39:44 GMT 2025
CFP Electricdreams - Between fiction and society IV
"VISIONS OF CONTROL: POWER AND TECHNOLOGY IN SPECULATIVE FICTION"
Call for papers for an international in-person conference on speculative
fiction, organized and hosted by IULM University of Milan (Italy) in
collaboration with Complutense University of Madrid and the HISTOPIA
research group, taking place from October 15 to 17, 2025.
Areas of interest: literature, cinema, television, comics,
games/videogames, new media, performative arts, cultural studies.
The fourth edition of Sognielettrici – Between Fiction and Society
invites contributions on how speculative fiction – across media such as
literature, film, television, video games, comics, and performative arts
– critically addresses the entanglement of power and technology.
Technological development—material and conceptual, ethical and
political—plays a fundamental role in shaping societal structures and
cultural imaginaries. As Marshall McLuhan (1967) famously argued, “All
media work us over completely. They are so pervasive ... that they leave
no part of us untouched.” Technology conditions not only what we can do,
but also how we think and relate to others. Its influence is pervasive,
its neutrality questionable. Power, likewise, resists reduction to a
single definition. As Faridun Sattarov (2019) notes, it can be episodic
(interpersonal influence), dispositional (the capacity to affect
outcomes), systemic (structural constraints and affordances), or
constitutive (productive of identity and agency). These modalities of
power interact in diverse, often conflicting ways with the technologies
we use and imagine. David Kipnis (2012) writes that “technology
represents the means by which humans exercise control over their
physical and social worlds.” It is therefore clear that technology is
power, and that power—not only political but also economic—seeks
technology as a tool for control and the assertion of its authority.
Clearly, technology is not solely or simply an instrument for
manipulation and propaganda; it can also be a means of resistance and
sharing.
Speculative fiction offers a privileged space for exploring, contesting,
and reimagining the uses and abuses of power through technology. In the
decaying world of George Orwell’s 1984 (1949), for instance, technology
allegorically supports the divine eye of Big Brother, enabling
continuous government surveillance across Oceania and depriving citizens
of privacy and self-determination. In contrast, in Mattapoisett, in the
utopian future envisioned by Marge Piercy in Woman on the Edge of Time
(1976), technology serves the “good place,” helping to level social,
racial, and gender inequalities, and to harmonize architecture and
nature with a strong emphasis on ecological sustainability. There could
also be rebellious technologies, as in the Swedish TV series Äkta
människor (Real Humans, 2012), or uncontrollable and alien ones, such as
the shimmer and the genetic technologies in Annihilation (Jeff
VanderMeer, 2014) and the fungal technology in The Girl with All the
Gifts (M.R. Carey, 2014). The Deus Ex video game series (2000-2016)
explores transhumanist themes and the ways in which corporations and
governments use technology to control society. In the Japanese manga
Blame! (1997-2003), by Tsutomu Nihei, technology shapes vast
architectural environments and autonomous intelligent systems that have
spun out of human control. Conversely, in the narrative universe of Star
Trek (1966-present), technology is portrayed as a utopian force that
transforms society by overcoming inequality and misunderstanding, and by
fostering knowledge and exploration. Furthermore, performative arts such
as documentary theatre employ testimonies, documents, and archives to
question power and truth. Technology assumes a dual role as both a
narrative tool and a subject of critique, highlighting how media and
devices shape perceptions of power. The stage transforms into a site of
resistance, prompting the audience to consider authenticity and
narrative control. In this way, theatre and technology merge to reveal
systems of domination in modern society.
We invite proposals that explore speculative representations of power
and technology across all media, historical periods, and cultural
contexts. Topics may include, but are not limited to:
-- interpretations, representations, and reimaginings of
power-technology relations;
-- ecocritical approaches and environmental justice;
-- singularity, inevitability, accelerationism, techno-solutionism;
-- postcolonial reconfigurations of technological infrastructures;
-- post-/trans-human, animal, and environmental forms of otherness;
-- alien technologies and alternative realities;
-- dystopian regimes of control and surveillance;
-- technological imaginaries of resistance and collective agency (e.g.,
solarpunk, utopia, ecotopia);
-- intersections of power and technology with gender, race, religion,
minority identities.
The conference will be held in-person and its official language will be
English. We welcome abstracts for 20-minute presentations from scholars
at all career stages. Papers may be submitted individually or as part of
pre-constituted panels.
Submission details
Please send:
-- name, affiliation and contact information
-- an abstract (max 300 words)
-- a short bio (max 100 words)
to: (electricdreams.conference /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(electricdreams.conference /at/ gmail.com)>
by 30 June 2025
For panel proposals (3–4 participants), please include a brief panel
overview and individual abstracts and bios.
Important dates
-- Abstract deadline: 30 June 2025
-- Notification of acceptance: 15 July 2025
-- Confirmation of participation: 30 July 2025
The conference is part of the Sognielettrici / Electricdreams
International Film Festival (13–18 October 2025).
Registration
Conference fee: €40
Optional social dinner: €20
Note: payments are non-refundable.
Scientific Committee:
Simone Arcagni (IULM University)
Matteo Bittanti (IULM University)
Gianni Canova (IULM University)
Manuela Ceretta (University of Turin)
Luisa Damiano (IULM University)
Megen de Bruin-Molé (Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton)
Elisabetta Di Minico (HISTOPIA)
Ester Fuoco (IULM University)
Gaia Giuliani (CES - Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra)
Hagen Lehmann (IULM University)
Stefano Locati (IULM University)
Scott Jordan (Illinois State University)
Francisco José Martínez Mesa (Complutense University of Madrid, HISTOPIA)
Anna Pasolini (University of Milan)
Juan Pro Ruiz (CSIC - Spanish National Research Council, HISTOPIA)
Federico Selvini (IULM University)
Nicoletta Vallorani (University of Milan)
Contacts: Stefano Locati ((stefano.locati /at/ iulm.it)
<mailto:(stefano.locati /at/ iulm.it)>), Elisabetta Di Minico ((elidimin /at/ ucm.es)
<mailto:(elidimin /at/ ucm.es)>), Federico Selvini ((federico.selvini /at/ iulm.it)
<mailto:(federico.selvini /at/ iulm.it)>)
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