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[ecrea] EASA MAN Media Futures CfP
Fri Jan 17 01:45:14 GMT 2014
EASA2014: Collaboration, Intimacy & Revolution
Tallinn University, Estonia
31st July - 3rd August, 2014
Media futures: media anthropology of, for and through the notion of 'future'
(EASA MAN -Media Anthropology Network-)
Convenors
Elisenda Ardèvol (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya)
Débora Lanzeni (IN3/ UOC)
Philipp Budka (University of Vienna)
Short Abstract
This panel examines the implications of a 'futures turn' and how might
an anthropology of media (including design, content, materialities,
spaces and practices) enable us to understand how futures are imagined,
made, hoped for, contested and lived cross-culturally and in the present
and recent past.
Long Abstract
A new wave of critical future-focused scholarship has recently emerged
across the social sciences and humanities. This field of research, which
encompasses anthropology (Collins 2007), has developed in design
anthropology (Gunn and Donovan 2012), in the sociology of expectations
(Brown and Michael 2003) and through anticipatory practices in geography
(Anderson 2010). Media anthropology has intensively explored social
change and cultural transformations (Postill, Ardevol and Tenhunen
forthcoming), but little attention has been paid to how media are
implicated in the ways futures are imagined, projected, predicted or
contested.
Media, especially in its relationship with digital technologies, are
nowadays at the core of most meaningful social transformations, creative
and innovation processes. Digital media encompasses new models of social
intervention, citizenship, public engagement and knowledge production
based on collaboration and sharing, as well as new models of social
control and surveillance (Coleman 2010). Which media futures are in
dispute? Which futures are embedded in digital media content, design and
practices? How are images of the future interwoven with media regarding
space, materiality, the sensory, sociality and intimacy? How do media
futures change over time and cross-culturally?
This panel proposes to examine the implications of a 'futures turn' in
media anthropology. How might anthropology of media help us understand
how futures are imagined, made, hoped for, and lived in present and
recent past.
This Media Anthropology Network panel works in collaboration with the
Anthropology at the edge of the future EASA Lab, proposed by Sarah Pink,
Juan Salazar, Andrew Irving and Johannes Sjoberg.
Discussant: Juan Salazar (UWS)
The call for papers is now open, closing on 27th Feburary
Send papers proposal via:
http://www.nomadit.co.uk/easa/easa2014/panels.php5?PanelID=3070
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Elisenda Ardevol
Estudis d'Arts i Humanitats
Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
http://mediacciones.es
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