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[ecrea] cfp - MiT10: A reprise - democracy and digital media
Sun Nov 04 22:23:32 GMT 2018
MiT10: A REPRISE - DEMOCRACY AND DIGITAL MEDIA
MAY 17-18, 2019
MIT IN CAMBRIDGE, MA
Paper proposals due February 1, 2019. Registration will open soon after.
In 1998, MIT’s Comparative Media Studies program held the first Media
in Transition (MiT) conference and inaugurated a related book series.
Research from that first MiT conference appeared in Democracy and New
Media, Jenkins & Thorburn, eds., (MIT Press, 2003). Now, twenty years
later, we are organizing the 10th iteration of the event. Much has
changed over these two decades, but the theme “democracy and digital
media” is as urgent as ever. Twenty years ago there was no Facebook,
Twitter, or Netflix. iPhones and Samsung Galaxies had not yet hit the
shelves. And Siri and Alexa were still in development. Since 1998, media
have undergone major transition. We have witnessed a shift from Napster
to Spotify, from Web 1.0 to 2.0, from CU-SeeMe to Twitch TV, and beyond.
We have experienced the rise of social media, civic media, algorithmic
cultures, and have seen ever greater concentration of media ownership.
The events of 9/11 catalyzed intensified state surveillance and
privatized security using various media technologies. Undergirding these
shifts have been major transformations in global media infrastructure,
the platformization of the Internet, and the ubiquity of the mobile phone.
In the US, we also have seen changes in the news ecosystem with the
likes of ProPublica and community engagement journalism. At the same
time, public trust in media has dropped from 55% in 1998 to 32% in 2016,
according to a Pew report. For better and worse, a growth of interest in
media ritual and a decline in the more familiar transmission paradigm is
underway. Given such changes, concepts of participation, trust, and
democracy are increasingly fraught and have been powerfully
repositioned. How will our news media look and sound in the next decade?
What can we learn from news media of the past? What can international
perspectives reveal about the variability and plasticity of media
landscapes? How are non-traditional sources of learning, knowledge
production, and participation reshaping civic spheres?
We are interested in how these issues play out across media, whether as
represented in television series and films, or enacted in rule set and
player interactions in games, or enabled in community media, music,
social media, and talk radio. We welcome research that considers these
issues in public media and commercial media, with individual users and
collective stakeholders, across media infrastructures and media texts,
and embedded in various historical eras or cultural settings.
Paper proposals might address the following topics/issues:
• politics of truth/lies, alternative facts
• future of civic media & Indymedia
• media, authoritarianism, and polarization
• virtual reality, extended reality, and the return of media effects
• diversity in gaming / livestreaming / esports
• new lords of the global village (Spotify, Netflix, Amazon, Alibaba)
• making or breaking publics with algorithmic cultures/machine learning/AI
• environmental media (from medium theory to climate change) and activism
• media infrastructures as public utilities or utility publics?
• datafication, privacy, and the future of public service media
• machine vision and biometrics: surveillance without seeing or knowing
• social media, creating consensus, and bursting filter bubbles
• designing media technologies for inclusion
• listening publics: sound, podcasts, radio, music
• audiences / fandoms and the civic imagination
• rhetoric and poetics of democracy and civility
• diversifying creative labor in Hollywood and beyond
• the #metoo movement and its impact
• new texts/contexts (Black Panther, Handmaid’s Tale, Blackish, Black
Mirror, Insecure)
• lessons from the 19th century partisan press
• the ritual of right wing radio
• social media platforms (FaceBook, Twitter, Instagram, etc), politics,
and civic responsibility
• Twitter, viral videos, and the new realities of political advertising
Submission Details
Please submit individual paper proposals, which should include a title,
author(s) name, affiliation, 250-word abstract, and 75-word biographical
statement to this email address: (media-in-transition /at/ mit.edu) -- by
February 1, 2019. Early submissions are encouraged and we will review
them on a rolling basis. Full panel proposals of 3 to 4 speakers can
also be submitted, and should include a panel title and the details
listed above for each paper, as well as a panel moderator. We notify you
of the status of your proposals by February 15, 2019 at the latest.
Registration
Registration will open in February 2019. Participants will be
responsible for covering their own travel and accommodation expenses,
and there will be a registration fee of $100 for faculty members and $50
for graduate students. MIT participants are exempt from this fee. Coffee
and snacks will be provided each morning and there will be a hosted
conference reception on the evening of May 18. Further information will
be posted on the conference website.
The conference is organized by faculty in the Comparative Media
Studies/Writing department and supported by the MIT School of
Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences along with its programs in
Anthropology, Global Studies & Languages, History, Literature, Political
Science, and Science, Technology, & Society.
Venue
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Tang Center, 70 Memorial Drive,
Cambridge, MA, USA
www.mit.edu
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