[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] Call for Papers: Digital Culture and Education, special edition - Truth or Dare: Truth, knowledge and power in the digital age
Thu Oct 18 22:05:32 GMT 2018
Truth or Dare: Truth, knowledge and power in the digital age
The ‘truth’ has been much contested lately. While much has been made of
‘fake news’ and its impacts and implications, little has to date been
made of the theoretical, ontological, and epistemological implications
that arise. Digital platforms are creating communities that are using
online affordances to challenge claims to truth, knowledge, and power by
various establishments. This has manifested itself not only in the rise
and re-emergence of rather extreme fringe communities such as the
alt-right (Daniels, 2018) and ‘Flat Earthers’ (Dyer, 2018), but also in
also in the use of social media by traditionally maligned communities
such as LGBTQ youth (Gray, 2009, Jackson et al., 2017), asexual
communities (Carrigan, 2011), or PoC communities (Florini, 2014). This
complicated landscape prompts a number of broad question about the
ontological and epistemological potential of the internet in a
‘post-truth’ era, such as who gets to have truth? Whose truths are
reflected online and offline? What truths are preferred? To which truths
should education align itself and why?
It is increasingly clear that there is a need for research that
addresses and unpacks the potential of the internet to provide a space
in which to challenge established norms in an engaged way. As Emejulu &
McGregor (2016, 12) points out in their call for radical digital
literacies in education that there is a need for educational practices
and research which explore “the process by which individuals and groups
work together to build and maintain alternative communication
infrastructure to enable marginalised groups to convey their own
messages, bypassing the filters of commercial and state gatekeepers”.
With this in mind, this special edition wishes to explore fractures in
the relationships between truth, power, and knowledge as they play out
in relation to digital cultures and education. Papers may approach the
topic from theoretical, conceptual, and/or empirical positions. Topics
of interest include (but are not limited to) how digital spaces are
challenging the ‘truths’ that underpin education:
Truths around the body and development
Truths around youth
Truths around knowledges
Truths around sexualities
Truths around gender
Truths around time
Truths around culture
Truths around discrimination
Truths around disability
Truths around agency
Truths around the individual
Truths around the value of education
This list is merely suggestive of the range of topics of interest to the
editors and is not in any way restrictive of possible interpretations of
the theme. We encourage contributors to be imaginative in formulating
ideas and paper proposals.
SUBMISSION DETAILS:
Abstracts of no more than 300 words – or inquiries – should be submitted
via email to one of the editors by 05 November 2018. Editor contacts:
(Harry.T.Dyer /at/ uea.ac.uk)
(E.Priya /at/ uea.ac.uk)
(alexander.schmoelz /at/ univie.ac.at)
(V.Carrington /at/ uea.ac.uk)
Full Papers will be due by 30 June 2019. The word limit for articles is
6,000 words (maximum) including Reference List. Papers that are not
included in this special edition may nonetheless be considered for
publication in future editions of Digital Culture and Education. Please
visit http://www.digitalcultureandeducation.com/submissions/ for the
Style Guide for Authors.
References
Carrigan, M., (2011). There’s more to life than sex? Difference and
commonality within the asexual community. Sexualities, 14(4), pp.462-478.
Daniels, J., (2018). The Algorithmic Rise of the “Alt-Right”. Contexts,
17(1), pp.60-65.
Doherty, C., Kiley, J. and Johnson, B., (2016). In presidential contest,
voters say “basic facts,” not just policies, are in dispute. Pew
Research Center, October, 2016
Dyer, H., (2018) I watched an entire Flat Earth Convention for my
research – here’s what I learnt. The Conversation.
https://theconversation.com/i-watched-an-entire-flat-earth-convention-for-my-research-heres-what-i-learnt-95887
Emejulu, A. and McGregor, C., 2016. Towards a radical digital
citizenship in digital education. Critical Studies in Education, pp.1-17.
Florini, S., (2014). Tweets, Tweeps, and Signifyin’ Communication and
Cultural Performance on “Black Twitter”. Television & New Media, 15(3),
pp.223-237.
Gray, M.L., (2009). Negotiating identities/queering desires: Coming out
online and the
remediation of the coming‐out story. Journal of Computer‐Mediated
Communication, 14(4), pp.1162-1189.
Jackson, S.J., Bailey, M. and Foucault Welles, B., 2017. # GirlsLikeUs:
Trans advocacy and community building online. New Media & Society
---------------
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]