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[ecrea] CfP Special Issue: The Platformization of Chinese Society
Fri May 19 11:37:11 GMT 2017
Special Issue of Chinese Journal of Communication: The Platformization
of Chinese Society
Extended Abstract Submission Deadline: July 1, 2017
Full Paper Submission deadline: February 28, 2018
Guest Editors: Jeroen de Kloet, Thomas Poell, Zeng Guohua
Full text:
http://jeroendekloet.nl/the-platformization-of-chinese-society/
<http://jeroendekloet.nl/the-platformization-of-chinese-society/>
We are currently witnessing a fast process of platformization of Chinese
society. Social media, as well as platforms for collaborative
consumption, are emerging as new power players that challenge older
institutions and disrupt economic sectors like news, hospitality, and
transport. Yet, in the light of omnipresent government regulation and
intervention, platformization presents us with a very different set of
problems and questions than in the West. In the same way, we need to
critically interrogate the seemingly ‘natural’ connection between online
platforms and ‘global capitalism’, which has been theorized through the
notion of ‘platform capitalism’ (Smicek, 2016). Again China presents an
odd case, as it is hard to read China as a capitalist society (Nonini,
2008). Against this background, the aim of this special issue is to
critically engage with the platformization of China, using China as a
method (cf. Chen, 2010) to interrogate, complicate, and complement
current research on the global rise of the platform society (van Dijck &
Poell 2015). We thus ask in this special issue: what does the platform
society mean for China, but also, what does China mean for our thinking
about the platform society?
This special issue aims to empirically scrutinize different platforms
that are currently popular in China. The Chinese process of
platformization appears to differ on at least three crucial dimensions
with developments in the US and Europe. First, there are vital
differences in the political economy of platforms: the ownership
structure and business models of Chinese platforms are different from
those in the US. This also has implications for the ownership of data,
raising issues of surveillance, control and marketing of data (Couldry &
Hepp, 2017; Dyer-Witheford, 2014). Second, vital differences need to be
taken into account in terms of the architectures and affordances of
platforms: user and programming interfaces (and its semiotics),
algorithms (what is made visible and invisible), and infrastructures
(how are third parties plugged into the platform ecosystem) (Hookway,
2014; McVeigh-Schultz & Baym, 2015; Plantin et al., 2016). Finally,
Chinese online platforms appear to be characterized by particular types
of user practices and cultures, which differ from those in other parts
of the worlds (Poell, de Kloet & Zeng 2014; Qiu, 2016). Given that the
societal impact of new technologies is for an important part shaped by
how these technologies are integrated in social practice, these
differences greatly matter.
The contributions we solicit for this special issue will each focus on
one specific type of platform, following a typology based on a
preliminary inventory (see below). We envision contributions that
analyze a particular platform and its role in societal relations through
the three dimensions sketched above. These contributions are expected to
build on the fields of media and cultural studies, software studies
and/or platform studies, in their investigation of one of the following
types of platforms:
1. Public social media (e.g. weibo and douban)
2. Private social media (e.g. weixin).
3. News and search platforms (e.g. baidu)
4. E-commerce services (e.g. taobao)
5. Media sharing platforms (e.g. youku and tudou)
6. Transport platforms (e.g. taxi didi and mobike)
7. Food services (e.g. meituan and eleme)
8. Dating platforms (e.g. tamtam and blue’d)
Evidently, we will welcome strong paper proposals, focused other types
of platforms as well.
Timeline
1200-word extended abstracts should be submitted by mail to Jeroen de
Kloet ((b.j.dekloet /at/ uva.nl) <mailto:(b.j.dekloet /at/ uva.nl)>) and Thomas Poell
((Poell /at/ uva.nl) <mailto:(Poell /at/ uva.nl)>) by July 1, 2017. The abstract
should articulate: 1) the issue or research question to be discussed, 2)
the methodological or critical framework used, and 3) indicate the
expected findings or conclusions. Decisions will be communicated to the
authors by July 15, 2017.
Full papers of the selected abstracts should be submitted by February
28, 2018. All submitted manuscripts will be subject to a rigorous blind
peer-review process. All accepted manuscripts will be published online
first. The planned printed publication date is an issue of CJC in 2019.
Submissions should conform to the editorial guidelines of the Chinese
Journal of Communication found at http://www.informaworld.com/cjoc
<http://www.informaworld.com/cjoc> under “Instructions for Authors.”
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