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[Commlist] CFP – Diagramming digital image ecologies

Wed Mar 12 11:47:32 GMT 2025




CFP – Diagramming digital image ecologies @LCCT 2025. Deadline: Friday 4th April 2025
The Call for Presentations is now open for the 12th annual London Conference in Critical Thought (LCCT), which will be hosted and supported by Birkbeck, University of London on 20th-21st June, 2025.

Proposals are invited for the stream: *“Diagramming digital image ecologies: material articulations of invisual relations”*

**About the Stream:**

The technologies that produce and disseminate images structure visual culture, both as social practice and at the level of individual perception. Digital images, which predominate in contemporary platform environments, have a complex ontology: as digital objects, they are composed of nonsensuous data and metadata, regulated by structures or schemas that formally define them in a computational sense (Hui, 2016); as visual objects, they are instantiated materially in a heterogenous perceptual form (Drucker, 2001). Trevor Paglen (2016) draws attention to the increasing agency of unseen algorithmic processes in visual culture, suggesting that ‘what’s truly revolutionary about the advent of digital images is the fact that they are fundamentally machine-readable: they can only be seen by humans in special circumstances and for short periods of time.’ He argues that machine-vision and AI image generation systems enact formal abstractions that are alien to human perception, raising both epistemological and ethical questions. Thus, innovative methodological approaches are needed to theorise digital images – if the computational infrastructures that shape networked digital culture resist visibility, then new forms of cognitive mapping are needed to ‘augment… our phenomenological experience in such a way as to make clear the structural elements determining it, thereby making them visible and open to transformation’ (Srnicek, 2015: 310).

This stream proposes that diagramming can be used as a method to navigate the complexities of this terrain – revealing hidden relational structures (technical, political-economic, social, cultural, etc.) and potentially articulating resistance to them. It departs from Adrain Mackenzie and Anna Munster’s (2019) exploration of ‘platform seeing’ – a mode of algorithmic perception that extracts sense from images by aggregating them into ensembles. This ‘invisual’ perception renders visuality operative in a computational form that ‘operates diagrammatically, re-flowing relations in … image ensembles, generating materialities and experiences in their wake’ (Ibid.: 13). Diagrams are understood, after Deleuze, not as representational figures but as mechanisms that actualise new assemblages (Deleuze 1999, 2005; Zdebik 2012). As Rocco Gangle notes, diagrams are ‘essentially iconic’, implying a partial blurring between object and sign – they ‘represent systems of relations and at the same time instantiate … those relations directly’ (2020: 6). They thus engender a performative immanence. Not located in a common-sense ‘visual space’ (Vellodi, 2018), diagrams constitute an abstract topology that enables us to articulate the transformations that occur as corporeal and incorporeal elements interact. As such, they are useful for mapping the material effects of algorithmic processes.

Proposals are invited that use diagrammatic approaches to explore any aspect of digital image culture. Contributions may include:

-       Theoretical applications of diagrammatology (e.g. Peirce, Deleuze, Châtelet, etc.) to digital image ecologies -       Practice-based mappings or counter-mappings of relational assemblages in platform environments -       Critical visualisations of algorithmic bias, data colonialism, or other ethical problematics in contemporary visual culture -       Artistic research revealing processes or latent spaces of machine-vision or AI image-generation systems
-       Methodological experiments in spatialised thinking
-       Participatory diagramming workshops
-       Performative iterations of diagrammatic transformation/plasticity.

Contributors to this stream will have the opportunity to submit papers for publication in a special issue of the *Leonardo Electronic Almanac* (MIT Press), following the conference < https://www.leoalmanac.org/ <https://www.leoalmanac.org/>>.

If you have any questions about the conference stream or publication, or would like an informal discussion prior to submitting a proposal, please get in touch with me at (Hannah.Lammin /at/ gre.ac.uk) <mailto:(Hannah.Lammin /at/ gre.ac.uk)>.


**About LCCT:**

The LCCT is an annual interdisciplinary conference that provides a forum for emergent critical scholarship, broadly construed. The event is always free for all to attend and follows a non-hierarchical model that seeks to foster opportunities for intellectual critical exchanges where all are treated equally regardless of affiliation or seniority. There are no plenaries, and the conference is envisaged as a space for those who share intellectual approaches and interests but who may find themselves at the margins of their academic department or discipline.

**Please note that LCCT is an in-person conference.**

You can find details about the conference, and other streams, here: <https://www.londoncritical.co.uk <https://www.londoncritical.co.uk>>

If you would like to participate, please send an abstract for a proposed presentation with “Diagramming Digital Image Ecologies” indicated in the subject line to (hello /at/ londoncritical.co.uk) <mailto:(hello /at/ londoncritical.co.uk)>. [Please note the change of email address and URL from previous conferences, which are both no longer monitored.]

Abstracts should be submitted as Word documents of no more than 250 words and must be received by Friday 4th April 2025.


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