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[Commlist] CfP: IACSS (Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Society) 2021, From platforms in cities to the platforming of cities
Mon Jan 11 17:30:48 GMT 2021
Call for papers
IACSS (Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Society) MAIN CONFERENCE 2021
From platforms in cities to the platforming of cities**
June Wang, City University of Hong Kong
Lik Hang Tsui, City University of Hong Kong
(With support from Digital Society research cluster
<https://research.class.cityu.edu.hk/digital-society/>, College of
Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, City University of Hong Kong)
This panel attempts to integrate ideas on the platform in media studies
and urban geography, and build a constructive flow between them. Initial
studies on the platforms have inspired critical reflections on different
subjects, from platform capitalism, platform society, to platform
urbanism. For Barns (2019), an epistemological development of platform
pivot is to be traced back to the architecture of platform
infrastructure design for the encounter of multiple markets,
decentralisation and re-centralisation of data (Helmond, 2015), and
premised upon it, the commodification of data (Srnicek, 2017). Platforms
thus intermediate producers, consumers, and frequently prosumers,
exploiting their labour and network sociality for an ever-expanding
participatory community, or the crowd-based economy (Sundararajan,
2016). Moving far beyond media studies, the value of platform studies
is about how a new norm has been distilled from digital platforms and
institutionalised as a new rule that governs our consensus on "what is
economy, what is society, and what is a city" — in sum, the
platformization of everything (Barns, 2020; Rancière, 2013).
This panel thus attempts to solicit efforts that explore the
platformization of cities. Borrowing the concept of /platform
pivo//t///and/infrastructuration /(Plantin et al., 20/18; /Barn, 2019),
we ask how media studies and urban studies might shed light on each
other by exploring the conditions of visibility and the role/power of
co-ordinating in platform studies (Richardson, 2020). Topics could
include, but are not limited to, the following:
How are cities and societies framed and sensed on platforms? How are the
socio-spatial experiences of cities deployed to articulate discourses
about cities, through different "ways of seeing" algorithms (Kitchin,
2017; Willson, 2017), namely, design tactics of classifying, ranking,
and predicting?
How do digital platforms convert the entire society to
networkedprosumption sites? How does algorithms-conditioned visibility
regulate the labouring and prosumption process? Furthermore, how is the
distributed agency of prosumption co-ordinated to accommodate
participatory culture, entrepreneurialism, and governance?
How do platforms de-territorialise cities' existing physical fabrics,
from functional infrastructures to symbolic spaces, and then rearrange
them according to their redefined visibility (Plantin et al., 2018)? How
is the idea of platformization and infrastructuration of utility in
revisiting spatial parameters such as scale, networks, territory and place?
Please send your abstract to June Wang((June.wang /at/ cityu.edu.hk)
<mailto:(June.wang /at/ cityu.edu.hk)>) before Jan 23 2021.
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