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[Commlist] CFP: Continuum ‘The Dark Social: Online Practices of Resistance, Motility and Power’
Mon Mar 30 11:05:39 GMT 2020
This is a call for papers for a special edition of/Continuum/‘*The Dark
Social: **Online Practices of Resistance, Motility and Power’*
The intention of this special edition is to provoke critical examination
of dark social spaces that are characterised by privacy enhancing
technologies that might give rise to acts of resistance, division and
evasion. Frequently, the actors using these technological affordances
are commonly identified as subcultural groups, activists, marginalised
cultures and communities, trolls and socially divisive actors who seek
to evade, refuse or disrupt institutional power. We want to suggest,
however, that this interpretation creates an artificial binary
positioning a fringe of radical actors against institutions of
governance, regulation and control. Similarly, approaches that
distinguish between social agency and technological affordances
protecting privacy, on the one hand, and institutional regulation and
centralised surveillance on the other, do not acknowledge how powerful
institutional actors use these decentralised technologies to reinforce
their authority and control.
This special edition seeks to draw on, but push past these binaries to
create new approaches to darknet and dark social studies. What is dark
online often connotes moral registers toward what society hides or
fears. Yet social spaces that are ‘dark’ offer autonomy and relief from
the ever-lasting digital light in current iterations of capitalisms,
authoritarianisms and surveillance cultures. A technical rather than
moral definition of darkness (Gehl 2018) critiques moral determinism and
opens for exploration those dark social spaces that seek legitimacy by
offering linked anonymities for reader and publisher, against structural
surveillance.
Such understandings of ‘dark social’ are in tension with social and
political theories which argue that for politics and ‘acts’ to matter
they must appear in the public light. They are also in tension with
popular narratives of the ‘dark recesses of the web’ which are leveraged
by structural powers to keep their subjects knowable, in and of the
clear web. We argue that the binary of dark versus light is challenged
by the swirling, /brackish /existence of identity, politics, and
everyday communication practices that modulate between online and
offline, and being open and obfuscating.
This special edition will focus on the tensions present in what is dark
and social online, while also considering how practices do not neatly
fit in a dark/light binary.
We seek papers that offer nuanced theoretical, empirical, creative,
methodological, and ethical approaches to ‘dark social’ digital
place[s], power, and practices whether technical, moral, or otherwise.
The framing we suggest surpasses previous literature to consider the
practices that exist outside the clear web in ways other than those
conceived as ‘moral darkness’. Humans and their communications—digital
or otherwise—do not exist in solely transparent space and practice.
Recognition of these complexities of being ‘online’ is a crucial step to
explore and critique an age concerned with post-privacy, ubiquitous
surveillance and authenticity of the message and messenger.
In the context of the above, we seek papers of no more than 6,000 words
each that might address Issues for darknet and dark social studies
through a critical lens of:
* The affordances/implications of online privacy enhancing technologies;
* Chinese and/or non-western social media platforms;
* Global Online Surveillance and other State-regulated social media
platforms;
* Communication and authenticity online;
* Socio-cultural/technical acts of online resistance, division and
evasion.
*Key Dates*:
* Please send 450-500 word ABSTRACTS by *25th May 2020*to
<(darksocial2020 /at/ gmail.com)>
o Include the name(s) of the author(s);
o The affiliation(s) and address(es) of the author(s);
o The e-mail address, and telephone number(s) of the corresponding
author:
* FIRST DRAFT SUBMISSION:*26th November 2020*
* REVISION DEADLINE:*April 2021*
* PUBLICATION: *June 2021*
/Guest editors: Toija Cinque (Deakin University), Robert W. Gehl
(Louisiana Tech University) and Alexia Maddox (Deakin University)/
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