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[Commlist] CFP: Global Media and China Special Issue: Surveillance Capitalism
Thu Mar 05 16:56:20 GMT 2020
Call for Papers - *Abstracts due 31st May 2020*
*Surveillance Capitalism* - Special Issue of /Global Media and China/
Guest Editor: Professor John Ellis, Royal Holloway University of London
Recent issues of /Global Media and China/ have explored the specifically
Chinese characteristics of internet services, involving a particular
constellation of companies and services that is distinct from those
developed in the USA. How do the particular affordances of the dominant
Chinese internet services differ from those of Google, Amazon, Facebook
and PayPal? The combination of financial information of personal data
that WeChat now has is very different from that held by any Western
corporation, where payment systems are separated from social networking
systems. Indeed, Facebook’s recent attempt to launch a payment system
similar to that of WeChat seems to have failed for a variety of reasons,
including its potential to destabilise the Western banking system. It is
now time for comparative studies and the development of an overview of
the different constellations that have developed.
Debates in the West are developing around the nature of the
privatisation of online services in the age of big data and the intent
of things. Two events have accelerated this debate. The first is the
growing concern around the misuse of data about individuals and its
potential for influencing behaviour, evidenced by the rise of ‘fake
news’ in social media and the scandal round Facebook and Cambridge
Analytica. Data on specific individuals who might be susceptible to
influence was, in this case, used to target them with specific Facebook
advertising messages in an attempt to influence their voting behaviour
in both the Brexit referendum and the election of President Trump.
The second event is the publication of Shoshana Zuboff’s /The Age of
Surveillance/ /Capitalism./ Zuboff provides a powerful, Marxist
influenced, critique of the behaviour of internet giants of the USA, and
their repurposing of the web from its initial idealistic public service
direction. Zuboff’s critique is directed towards the huge scale of the
internet corporations and their denial of any public responsibility for
their actions. She discusses the rights and responsibilities of these
giant private corporations in dealing with user data. They sell this
predictive data to companies who “want to know the maximum they can
extract from us in an exchange. They want to know how we behave in order
to know how best to intervene in our behaviour”.
Zuboff’s critique is a powerful one, but she scarcely mentions China at
all. Given that China’s internet giants are also private corporations
devoted to the pursuit of profit, can it be said that China is
developing a different model to the Surveillance Capitalism identified
by Zuboff, or is it broadly similar? Indeed, is Zuboff’s model
applicable to the Chinese situation at all?
This call for papers for a special issue of Global Media and China
invites both specific case studies and more general overview articles in
order to open a debate about the specifics of the different ways in
which Western and Chinese enterprises have implemented the affordances
of the internet and digital information management.
Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words in length, plus a short
author bio-notes to Professor John Ellis Royal Holloway University of
London at (john.ellis /at/ rhul.ac.uk) <mailto:(john.ellis /at/ rhul.ac.uk)> by 31st
May 2020. Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by 15th June 2020.
Important dates:
_31st May 2020_ - abstracts and authors’ bio-notes
_15th June 2020_ - notifications of abstract acceptance
_15th November 2020_ - full paper submission
_31st December 2020 _- notifications of peer-review results
_31 March 2021_ - submission of final revised paper
*June 2021 special issue published*
Please note than acceptance of an abstract does not guarantee
publication. All submissions will undergo double blind peer review once
completed articles are submitted.
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