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[ecrea] cfp: Imaging and Space in the Post-Digitality - Between Visibility and Nonvisibility
Wed Oct 31 09:22:02 GMT 2018
Arts & Cultural Studies Review, peer-reviewed, open access,
interdisciplinary journal dedicated to cultural studies research in all
its diversity, is seeking papers on:
Imaging and Space in the Post-Digitality – Between Visibility and
Nonvisibility
The advent of ubiquitous computing with its architecture based on
fluid configuration of mobile media, internet of things and sensor-based
networks coincided with the major technological, social and cultural
changes. The discourse of “smart technologies” invaded the public
debate, with the figure of “smart city” (and, more general, “smart
environments” and “smart objects”) becoming one of the most powerful
cultural phantasies of the first decade of XXI century. “Becoming
environmental of computation”[1]
<https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/current-call-for-papers/#_ftn1>, to
borrow the insightful phrase coined by Jennifer Gabrys, contributed to
the undergoing . The excitement for the newness of all-things digital
started evaporating and fading out, which inspired both the fresh wave
of the popcultural nostalgia and the renewed penchant for the older
platforms, software and devices. On the other hand, the plethora of the
sensor-based technologies often employed in the environmental research
(especially in monitoring the scale and pace of the climate change),
have been symptomatic of yet another transformation: the ubiquity of
computing has reached beyond the urban setting, integrating with
agriculture, wilderness and nature protection. It has also increased the
awareness of dataveillance inherent in the multifarious processes of
fusing the digital data with physical space as well as with human,
animal and vegetal bodies. Such processes provide the robust ground for
yet another reading of the media becoming “atmospheric, collective and
micro-temporal”[2]
<https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/current-call-for-papers/#_ftn2>.
Is the centrality of image production maintained under the
circumstances of the nascent post-digital condition? What is the role of
the digital image in spatial media environments and ambient informatics?
To what extent the known and familiar conceptualization of the visuality
and visibility have been affected by the shift towards the image as “the
continuous actualization of networked data” or “networked terminal”[3]
<https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/current-call-for-papers/#_ftn3>, now
occurring also in the physical space and/or mediated with human bodies
and living organisms? Is the dichotomy of visible/non-visible, well
researched and oft-referred to in the field of visual studies being
maintained, reconfigured or delegitimized? How are the relationships
between embodiment and image being shaped under circumstances of booming
biometric technologies? How the relationship between media, imagery and
urban space – symptomatic for Western modernity – is being reconfigured?
The editors of the Arts & Cultural Studies Review’s special issue
entitled “Space and Image – Visible/Non-Visbile” are inviting the
contributions exploring the following areas:
– the role of digital imagery production in the discourse of the
“smart city” and “smart technologies”;
– imagining and the dataveillance;
– the post-digital condition and production of space;
– the digital imagery and new materialism;
– biometrics, embodiment and the digital imagery
– human and non-human agencies in the atmospheric media
– networked digital imagery in the data-based and automated farming
practices, nature protection and wilderness;
– spatial data visualization as a media genre;
– digital imagery, space and data mining;
Articles should be in range of 4000 – 6000 words (including
references). See author guidelines:
Please send the 500-word abstracts (including basic references) to
the editors: (przeglad.kulturoznawczy /at/ uj.edu.pl)
<mailto:(przeglad.kulturoznawczy /at/ uj.edu.pl)> by 4th November 2018.
Notes of acceptance will be sent by 8th November 2018.
Articles due: 10th December 2018.
More information on the journal: https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/about/
Author guidelines: https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/information-for-authors/
[1]
<https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/current-call-for-papers/#_ftnref1> Jennifer
Gabrys, /Program Earth: Environmental Sensing Technologies and the
Making of a Computational Planet/, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota
Press, loc. 324 (wersja Kindle)
[2]
<https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/current-call-for-papers/#_ftnref2> Mark
B. N. Hansen, /Ubiquitous Sensation: Toward an Atmospheric, Collective,
and Microtemporal Model of Media/ in: /Throughout. Art and Culture
Emerging with Ubiquitous Computing/, ed. U. Ekman, Cambridge and London,
MIT Press, 2013
[3]
<https://culturalstudiesreview.eu/current-call-for-papers/#_ftnref3> Remy
Marie, Ingrid Hoelzl, /Softimage. Towards a New Theory of the Digital
Image, Bristol – Chicago, Intellect 2015, loc. 146 (wersja Kindle)/
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