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[ecrea] Call for Papers: At Home with Digital Media
Thu Jun 01 17:46:25 GMT 2017
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https://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/2017/05/31/cfp-at-home-with-digital-media/
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navigatiCall for Papers: At Home At Home with Digital Media
<https://research.qut.edu.au/>
At Home with Digital Media
A symposium hosted by QUT Digital Media Research Centre (@qutdmrc
<http://twitter.com/qutdmrc>)
2-3 November 2017
Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
http://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/
Background
In /Television: Technology and Cultural Form/ (1974), Raymond Williams
coined the term ‘mobile privatisation’ to describe the experience of the
private home as an increasingly technologised space. Since the 1920s, he
argued, new technological ‘gadgets’ that improved domestic efficiency,
new options in private transport to take people to and from their homes,
and new media, such as the radio, which brought news and entertainment
into the home have fostered an ‘at-once mobile and home-centred way of
living’. Throughout the late twentieth century, family television
consumption practices and the domestication of new media technologies
were regular topics for media, communication and cultural studies. In
the early 21st century, the rise of smartphones and the turn to mobile
media led to a focus on the convergence of intimate forms of
communication with the presence of digital media in more public spaces,
such as the city and the street.
There is a resurgence of interest in the home in digital media research,
and for good reason: the digitally mediated home is the site of
household politics including intergenerational conflict and anxiety; it
is a key factor in the economics of digital inclusion; and it is at the
centre of a significant intensification of digital media technologies in
everyday life. Taking the concept of ‘home’ less literally,
domestication–the process of bringing new technologies home, making
sense of them, and finding new uses for them–is a key part of the
innovation and embedding process; it is also how new the cultural logics
of new technologies become normalised and entangled with our work, our
leisure, our intimate relationships, and our daily routines.
Mobile technologies create complex flows of social relationships,
personal and public communication, across the boundaries of work and
home, private and public space. At the same time, the particularities of
material spaces within homes offer diverse geographies of media
production, consumption, and entrepreneurship: teenage bedrooms,
kitchens and garages are the sites of cultural innovation, from new
forms of storytelling to games and software development. And intertwined
with the metaphors of comfort and enclosure, are less pleasant realities
– homes are not always safe; and digital media can be implicated in
household conflict and domestic violence.
This symposium will feature a range of national and international
scholarship on the changing relationships between digital media
technologies and the home – as space, as place, and as a troubled
metaphor for belonging.
Possible Themes
* Smart homes and digital living: assistive technologies; the internet
of things (aka the internet of shit
<https://twitter.com/internetofshit?lang=en>); AIs and automation;
pet wearables; contemporary and retro-futuristic representations of
the digitally enabled home; new frontiers for direct marketing (e.g.
Unruly and News Corp’s The Home
<http://www.campaignlive.co.uk/article/campaign-tv-unruly-launches-2000-sq-ft-connected-home/1433520>)
* Digital inclusion: digital technologies in the household economy;
digital ability, agency and control in the household; digital media
use in rural and remote homes.
* Place, space and mobilities: the domestic and mobile geographies of
media use and production; the mediatization of family spaces;
digital media as a tool for regulating and governing household space
and time
* Media consumption, production and audience practices: kids and the
‘screen time’ debate; connected and multi-screen family viewing;
work-life balance; the internet of toys; ‘let’s play’ and unboxing
videos; vernacular creativity and mundane media.
* Learning at home through digital media: early literacies and digital
media; learning technologies; the home as a node in connected
learning ecologies; social media entertainment, digital games and
learning; maker culture
Submission process and key dates
Please submit paper proposals to Michael Dezuanni <(m.dezuanni /at/ qut.edu.au)
<mailto:(m.dezuanni /at/ qut.edu.au)>> by 30 June 2017.
Proposals should include an abstract of 250–400 words along with a brief
bio of no more than 100 words.
Presenters will be notified of acceptance by 10 July 2017.
Draft papers (3000–4000 words) of accepted presentations are to be
submitted by 13 October 2017 for sharing and discussion among symposium
participants.
Please note that there will be no registration fees for this event, and
daytime catering will be provided; however participants will be
responsible for funding and arranging travel and accommodation if required.
Organisers
Michael Dezuanni <https://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/people/michael-dezuanni/>
Jean Burgess <https://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/people/jean-burgess/>
Peta Mitchell <https://research.qut.edu.au/dmrc/people/peta-mitchell/>
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