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[ecrea] Call for Papers for ICA Preconference on Sharing
Thu Oct 17 00:43:34 GMT 2013
Call for Papers
ICA Pre-Conference: Sharing
Thursday, May 22, 2014
University of Washington, Seattle
Sharing is a rich and emotive concept that refers to a range of distinct
yet associated practices, all of which are powerfully salient in
contemporary society. At the very least, sharing is the constitutive
activity of Web 2.0, an alternative mode of production, distribution and
consumption, and a type of speech. This pre-conference invites scholars
from a range of fields to contribute to the research and theorization of
sharing.
Thematic background
The notion of sharing is widely deployed nowadays, and in a number of
different ways. First, sharing is a keyword for the digital age: In Web
2.0 we share statuses, tweets, files, photos, videos, book reviews and
more. Second, sharing is the proposed bedrock of alternative forms of
production and consumption. Some of these forms are known collectively
as the Sharing Economy, an emergent movement that identifies with and
rests upon the technologies of social networks; others might fall under
headings such as FLOSS, peer production, or the P2P economy. Third,
sharing is a category of speech, or a type of communication, that is
fundamental to our therapeutic culture, referring mainly—but certainly
not only—to the conveyance of intimate information about the self to a
significant other. These are just some of the ways in which sharing, in
its different senses, is constitutive of important aspects of our
social, economic and intimate lives.
A feature of sharing that is common to these different practices is that
they all touch on the nebulous and porous boundary between the ‘public’
and the ‘private’: for instance, SNS users are criticized for polluting
the public sphere, or ‘oversharing’; a popular model in the Sharing
Economy involves offering private spaces (spare bedrooms, space in one’s
car) for public consumption; and the rise of the therapeutic discourse
has entailed increased levels of self-exposure between intimates,
friends, and even colleagues.
Relatedly, each of the types of sharing draws on a similar pool of
values, which includes honesty, openness, trust, and commonality. To the
extent that these are desirable values, sharing would thus seem to be
integral to any vision of the good life. Indeed, sharing is almost by
definition good. But this is precisely the point at which a critique of
sharing is required. For instance, we might wish to note that by sharing
on social network sites we are contributing to privately-owned (and
government-accessed) assemblages of surveillance; we might want to ask
in what sense renting out a spare room is sharing it, and we might want
to explore the role of venture capital and big business in the Sharing
Economy; and we might wonder what structures of power are enacted and
reproduced by privileging certain types of culturally-situated speech.
More generally, if inclusion in a social framework is predicated on the
ability to share, where does this leave people who have nothing?
Topics
Empirical and theoretical papers are invited on any topic for which
sharing is a central concept. Possible topics include, but are not
limited to, the following:
? Sharing online: What is the political economy of online sharing? How
does the metaphor of sharing as the constitutive activity of Web 2.0
operate?
? Technologies of sharing: Reports have claimed that online sharing
(e.g. of statuses) increases people’s propensity to share stuff offline
(e.g. power drills). How is sharing today technologically mediated,
encouraged, or forced? And: how do different technologies encourage
sharing or punish non-sharing? Skype users, for instance, must share
bandwidth to use the service; peer-to-peer file sharers share what they
are uploading for as long as they are downloading.
? The word, ‘sharing’: Etymologies; ‘sharing’ in different languages;
evolving meanings. And: what is stake by calling a practice one of
sharing? What is gained?
? The Sharing Economy: The Sharing Economy and collaborative consumption
as a critique of capitalism; the differences between sharing and gifting
– for instance, does sharing create the same obligations described by
Mauss and Derrida in relation to gifts?
? Sharing as a category of speech: What characterizes it? What rules of
reciprocity and mutuality govern it? How do the values of sharing as a
category of speech inform sharing in other social fields?
? Sharing and gender: Is sharing gendered? What would it mean to say
that it is?
? Sharing, giving, exchanging: conceptual boundaries
? What’s new? Sharing is a practice as old as human society, so what is
new about sharing in the 21st century, if anything?
? Sharing as a norm: How is sharing normatively promoted? What are the
sanctions for non-sharing in the different spheres of sharing?
? Sharing as a form of subjectivation and desubjectivation
? Sharing between having and being: towards existentialist
understandings of sharing
? Sharing and the concept of intimacy
? The anthropological narrative of sharing
We are particularly interested in submissions that actively interrogate
the concept of sharing. If sharing is an important notion in your
research, we therefore invite you to think about the work done by the
word in your field and how it might relate to other senses or uses.
Submissions
Submissions are welcomed from scholars at all stages of their careers,
and across multiple disciplines engaged in research that relates to
sharing. Submissions should be extended abstracts of around 750 words
and be in Word doc/docx or PDF format. Please submit your abstract as an
email attachment to (sharingpreconference /at/ gmail.com). The deadline for
submissions is November 30, 2013. Papers will be judged on criteria of
relevance and originality of topic, clarity of presentation, as well as
proximity to—and contribution to—the preconference theme. Notifications
on acceptance will be emailed in mid-January.
In an effort to facilitate informed discussion of papers, the organizers
hope to have the papers for this pre-conference posted online. For this
reason, we will ask for full papers to be submitted no later than April
15, 2014.
Venue
The sharing pre-conference will be held at the University of Washington.
Transportation to the venue from the conference hotel will be provided
at the beginning and end of each day's events.
The preconference is sponsored by the divisions of Popular Communication
and Philosophy, Theory and Critique, as well as by the Department of
Communication, University of Washington. It is being organized by
Nicholas John (Department of Communication, The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem) and Wolfgang Sützl (School of Media Arts & Studies, Ohio
University).
Queries may be directed to (n.john /at/ huji.ac.il).
This call for papers may be downloaded in PDF format here.
____________
Nicholas John
Department of Communication,
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Tel: +972-54-7906073
@nicholasajohn
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