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[Commlist] CFP: Optimization: Towards a Critical Concept
Mon Nov 04 19:03:47 GMT 2019
Call for Papers: Optimization: Towards a Critical Concept for Special
Themed Issue of the /Review of Communications/
Optimization has emerged as a quiet “buzzword.” It is seemingly
everywhere and yet elusive. Our bodies, tools, and institutions are now
understood as resilient and perpetually updatable. New diets and fitness
apps promise to optimize our caloric intake just as an optimal
information diet promises to make many informed citizens. So informed
that what to watch next or who to vote for becomes one of many
effortless choices made possible by the recommendations of algorithms,
smartphones, and other optimizing systems. But what does optimization
mean anyway? Or more crucially, what does it do? Who or what is
optimized? What relationships or platforms are generated? And who or
what or where falls away—is dis-optimized?
Optimization intervenes in the growing formulation of algorithmic
governance, regulation or algocracy, drawing on theories of
communication and control. Optimization refers to specific technical
architectures (e.g., centralized, decentralized or distributed) as well
as applications of mathematical theory to social life—including Pareto
optimalities, linear programming and stochastic theory. Taken together,
optimization provides a way to understand the iterative projects of
algorithmic governance as iterations of operations research,
systems-cybernetic theory, or computational management.
But optimization is also deeply cultural and situated—even if its claims
are often general or biopolitical. As such, its technical logics and
architectures should be considered alongside real social practices,
geopolitical networks, and the forms of organization (and violence)
shored up by the desire for optimum performance.
This themed issue calls for the interdisciplinary scrutiny of
optimization as a critical concept and a form of management crucial to
the rhythm of networks. We invite historical and theoretical
interventions around optimization and seek a wide range of approaches
and analyses of the sociotechnical assemblages made possible by
autonomous software and ubiquitous hardware. The goal is to provide a
clear, multi-faceted introduction; help situate contemporary concerns
around platforms and social engineering within the development of
management, cybernetics, social and political theory; and turn attention
to global specificities beyond North Atlantic examples, as well as the
many forms of difference elided by optimization itself.
How do these systems intervene in economic, social, and political life?
And how do they transform or diminish the political imagination—now tied
to industrial research and development and the calculations of a control
society?
Some topics this issue hopes to consider include, but are not limited to:
* Considerations of how optimization systems intervene in economic,
social, and political life. How do they transform or diminish the
political imagination—now tied to industrial research and
development and the calculations of a control society?
* Case studies of optimization of the human/body (e.g., health,
self-harm, mindfulness, biohacking) or systemic optimization (e.g.,
smart cities, ecosystems, platforms, networks)
* Genealogies of optimization techniques with particular attention to
operations research, Pareto optimalities, linear programming, game
theory, chaos theory, and multi-agent emergent systems
* Metaphors and practices of optimization in popular or political
cultures (e.g., self-tracking, speculative fiction, acceleration,
activism)
* Optimization from or in relation to the margins (e.g., questions of
scale, geopolitics, and frameworks beyond the biopolitical or
cybernetic) or attention to problems of difference (e.g., race,
ethnicity, indigeneity, religion, disability, sexuality, gender)
* Regulatory consequences of myths or discourses of optimization in
social, media, or technology policy
* Speculations around the possibility of dark optimizations or radical
futures through optimization (e.g., fully automated luxury
communism, post scarcity, posthuman, post-Earth, dis-optimization)
*Submission Deadline and Guidelines*
*December 1, 2019* Submit a 500-word abstract for Guest Editors’ review
*Spring 2020* Submit full manuscript for Guest Editors’ review
*July 1, 2020* Submit full manuscript for peer review
Manuscripts must be submitted electronically through the ScholarOne
Manuscripts site for /Review of Communication/:
https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/rroc
Manuscripts should be prepared in Microsoft Word using a 12-point common
font, double-spaced, and between 6,000 to 8,000 words (including endnotes).
Please refer to and follow the journal’s manuscript preparations
instruction for authors
<https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=instructions&journalCode=rroc20>.
Authors should identify which themed call their paper is responding to
by selecting the relevant drop-down option in ScholarOne.
*Review Process*
In keeping with the journal’s current practice, submissions will undergo
rigorous peer review, including screening by the guest editors and
review by at least two anonymous referees.
Please direct inquiries about the Optimization: Towards a Critical
Concept themed issue to:
*Fenwick McKelvey, PhD*
Associate Professor
Department of Communication Studies
Concordia University
fenwick.mckelvey[at]concordia.ca <http://concordia.ca>
*Joshua Neves, PhD*
Associate Professor
Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema
Concordia University
joshua.neves[at]concordia.ca <http://concordia.ca>
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