[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP: Geospatial Memory and the City
Mon Mar 27 21:27:17 GMT 2017
===
MEDIA THEORY (mediatheoryjournal.org <http://mediatheoryjournal.org>)
CALL FOR PAPERS: SPECIAL ISSUE ON GEOSPATIAL MEMORY AND THE CITY
DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS: JUNE 1, 2017
Geospatial media has saturated cityscapes and inspired new perspectives
on the social world. Beyond its undisputed global reach through popular
applications like Google Earth, the geospatial web carries a cluster of
implications for local commerce, governance, civic participation and
activism that are still largely unspoken for. From dramatically
re-evaluating the navigability of city streets to that of determining
the shape of hidden infrastructures, the geospatial web galvanizes
practitioners and researchers in the fields of architecture,
cartography, geographic information systems design, social media and
urban computing as well as theory. In fact, urban design’s absorption of
geospatial media only solidifies its importance as a factor in both the
quality and articulation of city life.
Despite the rapid immersion of geospatial media into the everyday, there
exist relatively few attempts within critical media studies to
investigate and evaluate its unique affordances, or even to express the
broader aesthetic, political, historical and epistemic questions that it
raises. There are even fewer attempts to connect critical perspectives
on geospatial media with memory studies practices. However, memory
studies research may prove to be useful here because of its explicit
commitment to revealing how collective identity is formed and contested
within technologized environments (whether through writing, cinema or
digital media), and to considerations about the transfer of information
across individuals and generations, including the latter’s impact on the
social. Moreover, because geospatial media infrastructures deliver
specific challenges to our collective orientation of place, the
interdisciplinary work of memory studies acquires further significance
as a particularly rich avenue for reframing our place-bound expectations
within new media environments.
This special issue is devoted to considering the potential for
collective memory practices to gain insight into the dimensions of
geospatial media from north to south. We invite contributors to
interrogate the existing paradigms of spatial media analysis, as well as
both the practical and theoretical implications of developing
methodologies that are germane to the mediated experience of cities.
Above all, this issue is devoted to furthering the concept of geospatial
memory within critical media studies broadly defined. By working though
existing frameworks to re-examine the role of spatial environments for
the imagination, we aim to develop tools that are commensurate with
critical perspectives on geolocation and meaning-making in the digital
episteme.
SUGGESTED TOPICS
Cityness, architecture and digital sustainability
Geolocation, cultural meaning and urban planning
Online spatial environments, interfaces and the (post-)human condition
Navigability, spatial orientation and urban computing
Psychogeography, /flânerie/ and everyday life
Spatial archives, digital preservation and critical heritage practices
Symbolic urban and media infrastructures
Transmedia narrative
SUBMISSION DETAILS
Deadline for proposals is June 1st, 2017. Proposals (300 words) may be
for full-length articles or shorter pieces. Include a short (50-70 word)
bio with your proposal.
Final submissions for peer review will be due September 1st, 2017.
Full instructions for authors, including citation guidelines, will be
available soon at (www.mediatheoryjournal.org
<http://complit.ca/?email_id=155&user_id=74&urlpassed=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5tZWRpYXRoZW9yeWpvdXJuYWwub3JnLw%3D%3D&controller=stats&action=analyse&wysija-page=1&wysijap=subscriptions>)
Submission, correspondence and questions about this call for papers can
be directed to: Joshua Synenko ((joshuasynenko /at/ trentu.ca)
<mailto:(joshuasynenko /at/ trentu.ca)>)
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please
use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]