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[ecrea] Call for papers: 'Platform Politics', a special issue of 'Culture Machine'
Sun May 06 16:32:43 GMT 2012
*CALL FOR PAPERS *
*Platform Politics*
*Special issue of Culture Machine, vol. 14; http://www.culturemachine.net *
edited by Joss Hands (Anglia Ruskin University) Greg Elmer (Ryerson
University) Ganaele Langlois (University of Ontario Institute of Technology)
This special issue of the peer-reviewed, open access journal Culture
Machine on the concept of ‘Platform Politics’ will explore how digital
platforms can be understood, leveraged and contested in an age when the
‘platform’ is coming to supplant the open Web as the default digital
environment.
Platforms can be characterized as resting on already existing networked
communication systems, but also as developing discreet spaces and
affordances, often using ‘apps’ to circumvent any need to access them
via the Internet or Web. For this issue of Culture Machine we are
seeking papers that explore the nature and distinctive aspects of the
‘platform’: as something that can be positioned as more than just a
neutral space of communication; and as a complex technology with
distinct affordances that have powerful political, economic and social
interests at stake. In this respect the platform constitutes a zone of
contestation between, for example, different formations and
configurations of capital; social movements; new kinds of activist
networks; open source and proprietary software design. Platforms also
constitute spaces of struggle between mass movements and governments,
users and the extractors of value, visibility and invisibility: witness
the various debates over the role of ‘social media’ in the Arab Spring,
anti-austerity, student and occupy movements. Such struggles entail a
compelling intersection between technology and design, capital,
multitude, the democratization of technology and ‘subversive
rationalization’.
The platform represents not just a question of software and control,
then; it also connects to wider social struggles in the sense that
‘platform’ can refer to a ‘political platform’, and can thus take on
the agenda setting or framing role of political discourse more
generally. Accordingly, this special issue will look to understand
‘platform politics’ as a broad social assemblage, complex or form of
life. Linking particular platforms across the molecular and molar, it
will think about platform politics as a distinct new context of power
operating at the intersection of technological development, software
design, cognitive/communicative capitalism, new forms of social movement
and resistance, and the attempts to contain them by the exiting
democracies. As such, platform politics requires a distinct mode of
engagement, which this special issue of Culture Machine will endeavour
to encourage and provide.
We invite contributions on topics such as:
• Protocols as machinery of the platform – its common
language, including ideas of control and/or the possibilities and
limitations of open, non-proprietorial platforms.
• The specific relationship between networks and platforms
(including the discussion of whether the former are being subsumed by
the latter), and distribution vs centralization/aggregation -- not least
in terms of user created content and content management systems (code
politics of algorithms, and the use of APIs).
• The question as to whether a process of enclosure is
taking place via the struggle over the creation and expropriation of
'network value', or whether it entails a more parasitical engagement
with, and enhancement of, the existing network architectures.
• Visibility/invisibility: platforms as political spaces to
be seen/heard, or indeed tactically escaped and eluded.
• Resistance: how the above described issues relate to the
potential for cultural, political, social and economic praxis, which in
turns opens up a space from which to address recent global events. (See,
for example, RIMs (Blackberry Messaging’s) enclosure, which ironically
creates spaces of resistance as well as disturbance and securitization.)
• New software possibilities: for example, Drupal’s opening
up and democratization of content management, which perhaps creates a
kind of ‘platform commons’? The potential of ‘Diaspora’, the open source
social network, to offer a viable alternative to proprietary social media.
• The role of intrinsic network tendencies, as opposed to
political and economic decision-making, taking in explorations of the
relevance of graph theory, the role of power laws and the
network-specific characteristics of ‘communication power’.
Deadline for submissions of complete articles: 1st November 2012
Please submit your contributions including contact details by email to
Joss Hands:
< (joss.hands /at/ networkpolitics.org)>
Culture Machine’s Guidelines for Authors:
http://www.culturemachine.net/index.php/cm/about/submissions#authorGuidelines
All contributions will be peer-reviewed.
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Established in 1999, CULTURE MACHINE http://www.culturemachine.net is a
fully refereed, open-access journal of cultural studies and cultural
theory. It has published work by established figures such as Mark
Amerika, Alain Badiou, Simon Critchley, Jacques Derrida, Henry Giroux,
Mark Hansen, N. Katherine Hayles, Ernesto Laclau, J. Hillis Miller,
Bernard Stiegler, Cathryn Vasseleu and Samuel Weber, but it is also open
to publications by up-and-coming writers, from a variety of geopolitical
locations.
!!! New 2012 issue on attention economy coming out soon!!!
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