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[ecrea] APPS AND AFFECT Conference
Mon Sep 10 18:25:03 GMT 2012
APPS AND AFFECT: October 18-20, 2013
University of Western Ontario (Faculty of Information and Media Studies
and Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism)
London, Ontario, Canada
Keynote speakers:
Jodi Dean (Hobart and William Smith Colleges)
Mark Andrejevic (Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies)
Patricia Ticineto Clough (Queens College and The Graduate School, CUNY)
Ed Keller (Parsons The New School for Design)
Alexander Galloway (New York University)
Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky
Website: http://appsandaffect</x>.blogspot.ca/
There has been a palpable shift in the digital world, primarily
motivated by the growing popularity of the iPhone model of mobile
computing and the raise of an app as a new signifier, media object, and
technique of ubiquitous computing. Although the term has been in use
colloquially since 2009 (following Apple’s iPhone ad campaign built upon
the slogan “There’s an app for that”), the rapid adoption of the term
and the tool was unforeseen by media theorists. Nonetheless, many
social, cultural and media theorists predict the death of the Web, the
reinforcement of control and censorship of the online content, and the
end of a general purpose computer (Zittrain). Whereas the logic and
environment of the Web is one of open, free, and constantly changing or
updating (i.e. mutating) networks, it is argued that mobile computing
operates upon semi-closed platforms that are driven by specialty
software with single-purpose designs (Anderson and Wolff).
How do apps as ‘cultural technique’ (Siegert) and ‘technics’ (Stiegler)
channel our ways of maintaining relations with/in media environment? Do
the specific and circumscribed operations of individual applications
foster or foreclose what media theorists call the transformative and
transductive potential of collective technological individuation
(Simondon)? Do apps represent “a new reticular condition of
transindividuation grammatising new forms of social relations”
(Stiegler)? Or do they signal instead the triumph of “regulatory”
networks over “generative” ones (Zittrain)? This conference sets out to
examine the relations between mobile apps and their networked/internet
context.
Possible paper topics / fields of inquiry include (but not limited to):
Apps and affect: connecting technical objects and the constitution of
subjectivity, information and feeling, data and desire, as well as
organic and inorganic machines. How is the mutual circulation of apps
and affects constitutive of new biopolitical assemblages in zones of
work and consumption, surveillance and escape, trauma and therapy,
laboratory and studio? App ‘addiction’, and habit-formation (e.i.
mnemotechnics and technical prostheses, attentional forms and the
psychical effects of application software).
Apps and the networking drive: facilitating the enactment of the loss of
symbolic efficiency; assisting the force shared within the network that
circulates in order to produce satisfaction despite missing the aim of
grasping the desired, yet unreachable object – the setting for our
activity as communicating subjects of the network.
Apps and political economy: micro-object of digital labour, virtual
consumption and networked value extraction; tether to branded mobile
platforms, trading- off openness, to attract developers and consumers,
against profit-harvesting, from sales and surveillance; site of new
pirate, hacking and jail-breaking practices; a new front line between
cognitive capital and communal digitization.
Apps and trans-individuation or disassociation: the fostering and/or
foreclosing of technical trans-individuation and new forms of social
relations by apps; apps and the implications of ubiquitous computing and
digital mediation, especially ambi-informatic ‘everyware’ (Greenfield).
How might we think about the social, political and technical
implications of such this movement away from
open-ended/trans-individuating networks like the internet towards
specific, focused, and individualized modes of computing?
Send abstracts of 250 words to the conference committee
(atapps.and.affect /at/ gmail.com) by October 1st, 2012.
For inquiries, please contact:
Svitlana Matviyenko at (svitlana.matviyenko /at/ gmail.com)
Susan M. Knabe at (sknabe /at/ uwo.ca)
Venue: Museum London (London, Ontario, Canada) http://www.museumlondon.ca/
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