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[ecrea] Call for Participation: Fear and Loathing of the Online Self (Rome, May 22-23, 2017)
Tue Feb 21 21:43:27 GMT 2017
*Fear and Loathing of the Online Self--A Savage Journey into the
Heart of Digital Cultures*
/
/
/Call for Participation/
/Conference, Rome, May 22-23, 2017/
We would like to invite artists and researchers to submit proposals
to join this event hosted by John Cabot University and Università
degli Studi RomaTre in Rome, and organized in collaboration with the
Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam.
The conference aims at exploring the state of the online self by
raising questions about its status as a focal point of contemporary
power/networks. Is the online self merely a product of software
predictability and viral marketing? Is there any space left for
self-determination? Or should we search elsewhere for new forms
resistance by changing our political categories and perspectives?
Which contradictions are at play? How and where can we locate the
spaces of performativity of the online self?
Critical political-economic readings of platform capitalism do not
explain nor grasp new forms of (visual) online subjectivity. There
is a growing gap between the obsessive quest for measurability, big
data and algorithmic regimes (such as AI/bots),and critical
investigations of an emerging variety of compulsive forms taken by
the online self. We need to fill this gap and bring them back
together. If a humanities approach of Internet studies nurtured by
artistic and activist practices aims to survive the ‘big data’
onslaught from the social sciences, then it is vital to ask what the
citizen-as-user wants. To portray the population as (innocent or
guilty) victims of the data monopolies is, politically speaking, a
dead-end street.
The cynical condition rules: we know we’re under surveillance, yet
we continue to click, like, love and share ourselves online as
usual. We are told by concerned experts and libertarians that our
privacy "matters" and we want to believe it; yet it silently confers
a guilty stigma upon another vital need, to engage socially and
culturally with others. While some preach the offline escape as a
way out, most of us are so deeply invested in the everyday social
media life that it is inconceivable for most of us to leave
Facebook and the like. And this not only out of desire but
necessity: networking and self-sharing has become imperative for
succesfully managing the double binds of the immaterial labour
economy. Instead, we'd rather deal with peculiar pathologies, such
as addiction, depression and solitude generated by hyper-connection
and lack of connections.
Abstracts and proposals are welcome to contribute to the following sections:
1. ONLINE SUBJECTIVITY THEORY
How much free room do we have to design new identities? What aesthetic
and philosophic paths and patterns does meme distribution hint at? What
is the role of theory and criticism, if any, in the ever changing yet
endless production of the latest user affordances, from dating sites,
Tinder swipes and Snapchat lenses, to Pokemon-Go? Can we still attempt
to design new modes of subjectivity, or has our role withdrawn to a mere
Cassandra-like gloom and doom prediction of digital catastrophes, while
start-ups (read: future monopolies) have all taken over the cool
business of designing and shaping the online self?
2. BEHIND AND BEYOND SELFIES
It is easy to diagnose the selfie as a symptom of a growing narcissism
of our daily digital obsessions. But how do we get beyond the
predictable split between the politically correct assessment of
empowerment (of young girls) against the nihilist reading of
self-promotion and despair? Does criticism of today’s photography of the
everyday life always have to end up giving medical prescriptions and
recipes of wellbeing? What could a materialist reading of large
databases and facial recognition techniques (including protection) that
goes beyond media archaeology (the historical approach) and the
ever-changing pop gestures involve and say? Can we still talk about the
liberation of the self in the age of digital self-generation of the images?
3. ARTISTIC PRACTICES OF THE ONLINE SELF
Artists play an important role in the anticipation, and critique, of new
modes of the self. What role does the artistic imagination play beyond
the creative industries paradigm? How can artistic and creative avant
garde practices help disrupt the trite quantitative approach and the
dogma of the algorithm in defining modes and moods of the onlife self?
What separates a (properly) artistic imagination and the aesthetic
imagination of the online curators of selfie-constructed personas and
are contemporary critical paradigms merely reproducing an understanding
of online practices that are aligned with the requirements of corporation?
4. POLITICS AND AESTHETICS OF MASK DESIGN
Masks and selfies should not be seen as opposites as they both represent
different modes (and moods) of being of the self. Masks create spaces of
performance; they are playful and seductive (or scary) forms of
self-representation that ultimately do not protect us against the
computational repression of the security apparatus. What are the lessons
learned from the Anonymous movement? We should come to a new social
contract between the individuals, groups and the cybernetic machine. In
the meanwhile, how can we make sure to protect /us/, and what premises
are hidden in the numerous crypto-design projects that circulate?
Confirmed speakers: Wendy Chun, Ana Peraica, Jodi Dean, Marco
Deseriis, Gabriella Coleman, Daniel de Zeeuw, Rebecca Stein, Vito
Campanelli, Franco Berardi, Olga Goriunova.
Editorial Team: Donatella Della Ratta (John Cabot University), Geert
Lovink (Institute of Network Cultures/HvA), Teresa Numerico
(Università degli Studi RomaTre), Peter Sarram (John Cabot
University).
/Please send your proposal (max 500 words in word/pdf format), a
short bio and any other material that could support your idea
visually (artwork, film links, etc) to
/(selfieconference /at/ johncabot.edu)
<mailto:(selfieconference /at/ johncabot.edu)> / Deadline: March 1, 2017./
Conference website http://networkcultures.org/online-self/
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