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[Commlist] Workshop Sisterhood on Twitter
Tue Jan 08 17:41:43 GMT 2019
we are looking forward to receiving your abstracts for our workshop
“Sisterhood on Twitter? ICT-based Collective Action and Narratives of
Solidarity and Justice” on February 18, 2019, at the University of
Tübingen, Germany. The deadline is January 20, 2019.
Registration for the workshop is possible until February 10, 2019.
All information is available below:
*Call for Abstracts: Graduate Workshop “Sisterhood on Twitter”, February
18, 2019, at the University of Tübingen*
Today, it seems that a hashtag is the means of choice to show solidarity
with women/LGBTI* or advocate for gender justice. Social media and in
particular Twitter are used by government bodies, civil society,
activists, but also companies to promote gender equality. Examples of
collective action that focus on the advancement of women’s and gender
issuesinclude the incredibly popular #MeToo initiative against sexual
harassment in the United States, the relatable #YoTeCreo campaign in
Spain, but also the #CzarnyProtest mobilization to push back against a
proposed ban on abortion in Poland. Examples of top-down initiatives in
support of gender justice include the UN campaign for IDEVAW
#OrangetheWorld and the European Commission’s initiative #SayNoStopVAW.
All of the above cases represents instances in which people claimed
visibility by aggregating their voices and speaking up on a given issue.
While in some cases more than in others, the overall impression emerging
from these initiatives is that of a powerful show of horizontal
democracy. However, the picture is probably not as clear-cut as it might
look at first sight. Deeply rooted mechanisms of exclusion de facto
prevent a large portion of the public from participating in these forms
of collective action. Similarly, inequalities in the distribution of
social media visibility seriously question the widespread assumption
that anyone’s voice can actually be heard, as long as they tweet loud
enough.
At the Centre for Ethics in Tübingen, we will discuss the following and
related questions: What are mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion in
ICT-based collective actions? What is the actual visibility that these
kind of actions can hope to achieve? Who are the most visible actors
within their narrow context? What narratives do these actors voice? How
do the actors’ narratives of solidarity and justice clash with feminist
ideas about gender equality and justice? We encourage Master’s students
and Ph.D. candidates to join our workshop. The goal of the workshop is
to develop new thoughts about the topic at hand, gather inspiration for
your own work, and connect with academics working on similar issues.
If you would like to contribute a 10-minute presentation, please send
your abstract of max. 500 words to the organizers of the workshop by
January 20, 2019. If you would like to attend the workshop merely as a
participant, please register with the organizers by February 10, 2019.
Organization:
Ms. Laura Schelenz, University of Tübingen,
(laura.schelenz /at/ uni-tuebingen.de) <mailto:(laura.schelenz /at/ uni-tuebingen.de)>
Mr. Tommaso Trillò, University of Lodz, (tommaso.trillo /at/ uni.lodz.pl)
<mailto:(tommaso.trillo /at/ uni.lodz.pl)>
Date and Place:
February 18, 2019
Room 1.13 in Wilhelmstraße 19, 72074 Tübingen
Preliminary Program:
10:00 Welcome and warm up
11:00 Lecture by Tommaso Trillò: “Can the Subaltern Tweet?
Unfulfilled Promises of Participation and Strategies of Resistance”
12:00 Lunch break
13:00 Short presentations/working groups
15:00 Short break
15:30 Short presentations/working groups
17:00 Final discussion and wrap-up
18:00 Keynote Lecture by Prof. Dr. Tobias Matzner: “Algorithmic
Subjectivities and Digital Publics”
**
*Laura Schelenz*is a Research Associate in the project “Ethical
Implications of ICT export to sub-Saharan Africa” at the International
Center for Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities, University of
Tübingen. She is exploring ethical concerns about digitalization
processes in Africa and is particularly interested in understanding the
gender digital divide and mechanisms of exclusion. Schelenz holds an MA
in Peace and Conflict Studies from Goethe University Frankfurt am Main
and a BA in American Studies from Heidelberg University. She has spent
time abroad in the USA and Hungary, and has previously worked in
conflict research and human rights advocacy.
*Tommaso Trillò *is a Marie Skłodowska Curie Early Stage Researcher and
PhD candidate at the University of Lodz, Poland, in the context of GRACE
– Gender and Cultures of Equality in Europe (MSCA grant agreement No
675378). His main research focus is on the production of cultures of
gender equality on social media platforms. His doctoral research project
aims at exploring how key institutions at the EU supranational level and
at the Italian national level contribute to the construction of ‘gender
equality’ as a core European value through a comparative analysis of the
narratives they advance on Twitter. Trillò holds an MSc in Migration
Studies from the University of Oxford and a BA in Political Sciences
from John Cabot University, Rome, Italy.
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