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[Commlist] Call for Papers - "Habitual New Media" - Journal of Communications and Languages
Tue Mar 30 08:51:41 GMT 2021
“HABITUAL NEW MEDIA”
Journal of Communications and Languages, nº 55, 2021.
https://www.icnova.fcsh.unl.pt/en/2021/03/08/call-for-papers-rcl-no-55-habitual-new-media-may-15-2021/
<https://www.icnova.fcsh.unl.pt/en/2021/03/08/call-for-papers-rcl-no-55-habitual-new-media-may-15-2021/>
https://www.fcsh.unl.pt/rcl/index.php/rcl/index
<https://www.fcsh.unl.pt/rcl/index.php/rcl/index>
*
*
*“What it means when the media moves from the new to the habitual—when
our bodies become archives of supposedly obsolescent media, streaming,
updating, sharing, saving.”*
Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, in ``Updating/to Remain the Same /(MIT Press,
2016), argues that our media “become more important when they appear to
be of no importance - when they move from the 'new' to the ‘habitual’”.
Technologies such as smartphones are no longer surprising to us, they
have been absorbed into our lives in such a way that “we become our
machines: we transmit “live”, update, capture, share, connect, save,
delete and track”(from the introduction).
Chun interprets theincorporation of social networks in our habits as a
defining concept of the present. “Networks have been central to the rise
of neoliberalism, replacing 'society' with groups of individuals
(...)Habit is central to the inversion of privacy and advertising that
drives neoliberalism and networks”. It is in this field, for example,
that Natalie Bookchin's artistic work expands individual expressions
that embody this paradoxical intimate exposure in the visual digital flow.
The issue of "habitus", as a concept like in Pierre Bourdieu, places it
in a more general social context, foreshadowing and consolidating the
influence and complexity of the media in our lives, making them as
omnipresent as almost involuntary. Roland Barthes, in the face of
photography, in his idea of the invisibility of the signifier, also
reveals a notion of“habit”. Pedro Miguel Frade in “As Figuras do
Espanto” (ASA, 1992) reminds us of a moment when photography was still a
technology that caused strangeness, where thinking “the modernity of the
gaze” was also a “continuous and cumulative effect” (p.7) of what tends
to remain obscure. Cultural technologies can be paradoxically surprising
when viewed from the perspective of novelty or persistence.
The collective awareness of the political uses of new “habitual”
technologies precipitated the first digital social movements of the 21st
century ten years ago, such as the “Arab Springs”, “M12M” in Portugal,
“Movimiento 15M” in Spain, or “Occupy WS Movement '' from New York, USA
(Castells, 2013). Smartphones, “internet cafes'' connected with digital
social networks spread tweets, images and videos on YouTube, based on
participatory structures, making them political and destabilizing a
global order with their protests. These movements surprised and
liberated digital practices, as the reactivation of Ivan Illich's
concept of “vernacular” (Illich, 1980), by Peter Snowdon in “The people
is not an image - Vernacular Video after the Arab Springs” (Verso Books,
2020) that punctuateda moment in recent digitally mediated History.
Since then, paradoxical digital lives have evolved and “habitual new
media'' complexified.
However, with the pandemic moment, contemporary modes of existence have
raised such mediations as globally evident. The weaknesses exposed in
real and organic life now appear to be mediated in the coexistence, but
also in communication and even in the hypothesis of contact, through
digital existence and technological mediation of the “habitual new
media”. In the context of the pandemic, “life on screen” becomes the
canon of contemporary existence.
*This number seeks to collect contributions on:*
* “habitual new media” cultural mediations, focusing on the individual
or the small collective, which relate to this perspective of digital
intimacy in the contemporary;
* macro perspectives within the scope of Media Theories, on the
relationship between progress and obsolescence of cultural
technologies, or reflections on digital networks and their impact on
the reproduction of control systems or the creation of resistance
and solidarity movements;
* critical perspectives on the impact of the current pandemic context
on cultural media and mediations, within the scope of Cultural
Analytics. (Manovich, 2020).
* analysis of these themes in different segments and communities,
particularly in minorities or vulnerable groups, and digital
projects to overcome this context;
* historical perspectives on cultural media and their relationship
with the concept of “habit” and progress, such as photography,
cinema, sound technologies or others, and moments of tension
“between medias”;
* artistic and creative practices that address these contexts, in
visual arts, cinema but also sonic, multimedia or web art expressions;
* digital ethnographies under these themes, focusing online experiences.
* recent perspectives of the different digital social movements of
2011, their mediations and their impacts, but also of recent digital
social movements, anchored online, such as #metoo or #BLM, or #XR
(Extinction Rebellion) and their digital practices or artivist
expressions.
Articles can be written in English, French, Spanish or Portuguese and
will be subjected to blind peer review. Visual essays will also be
accepted. Formatting must be done in accordance with the journal’s
submission guidelines and the submission via the OJS platform by *May
15, 2021*.*No payment from the authors will be required.*
For inquiries, please contact editor Madalena Miranda:
((miranda.madalena /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(miranda.madalena /at/ gmail.com)>)
Guidelines for submission and instruction for authors:
http://www.fcsh.unl.pt/rcl/index.php/rcl/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions
<http://www.fcsh.unl.pt/rcl/index.php/rcl/about/submissions%23onlineSubmissions>
*Visual essays format:*
Up to 12 pages. The essay can be entirely visual or combine image and
text. The visual element of the essay must be an integral part of the
argument or the ideas expressed and not serve as an example or
illustration of them. It must also include an introductory text (150-300
words) integrated with the essay and its relevance in the context of
this issue. Particular attention should be given to the layout of
images/texts: the essay should include a PDF file with suggested layout
for 17 × 24.5cm and image resolution of at least 300ppi.
(Useful information:
https://catoolkit.herts.ac.uk/toolkit/the-visual-essay/
<https://catoolkit.herts.ac.uk/toolkit/the-visual-essay/>)
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