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[Commlist] CfP - Opting Out of Pandemic Digitalities: Digital Disengagement and Covid-19
Wed May 05 12:02:28 GMT 2021
The deadline for abstract submission is in 5 days (10th May).
***Opting Out of Pandemic Digitalities: Digital Disengagement and
Covid-19*** Edited by Adi Kuntsman, Sam Martin and Esperanza Miyake
Under consideration by Bristol University Press
Call for Contributions
Emerging from the concept of “digital disengagement” – a framework
developed by the editors to examine digital media from the point of
disconnection, refusal, and opting out – this book brings into
interdisciplinary dialogue two critical key areas of concern in the
context of COVID-19. The first one is what we call “pandemic
digitalities” – the rapid and extensive increase, reliance and shifts in
meaning of digital technologies in the age of COVID-19 and post-COVID
futurities across various spheres in science, technology and society:
from public health, to education, to politics, to everyday life. The
second concerns the politics of refusal, the right and even the
viability to opt out of digital technologies, networks, tracing
surveillance, and databases.
At this unique moment in time, both have global spread and significance:
the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted every society globally; so do digital
technologies and networked communication. Crucially, “global” should not
be mistaken for “universal” – while both the virus and digital
technologies are spread around the world, their adoption, use and impact
are profoundly different both across, and within different countries,
societies and communities. Within the growing field of Disconnection
Studies, research on opting out and digital refusal has focused almost
exclusively on “the West”/“global North”. To this date, no literature
addresses in great depth the implications, consequences and
(im)possibilities of opt out in the quickly changing digital landscape
and lived realities of the COVID-19 pandemic which has forced a rapid
and sudden digitisation in times of crisis.
Taking a critical global perspective, this timely edited collection thus
has two key aims: firstly, to explore digital disengagement and opt out
through the lens of the global pandemic; and secondly, to explore
pandemic digitalities through the critical perspective of digital
disengagement. As we are arguing elsewhere, digital disengagement is a
continuum, rather than a dichotomy, containing a range of individual and
institutional practices, legal frameworks, and technologies, as well as
degrees of disengagement that shrink and expand elastically across time
and space. And digital disengagement is also a matter of justice,
operating within and vis-à-vis political forces and forms of structural
injustice. How do these times and spaces of digital disengagement open
and close in the era of COVID-19 and post-COVID futurities? What does
digital justice look like at the time of the pandemic?
Looking at digital disengagement through the lens of COVID-19 and at the
pandemic through the lens of the pandemic, we invite contributions that
would take a variety of perspectives: legal, social, cultural,
political, and economic. We seek contributions that address, but are not
limited to, the following in the context of digital disengagement and
the pandemic:
• Inequalities (e.g. race, gender, sexuality, class, ability) •
Individual versus collective concerns (e.g. individual data rights
versus collective data justice, individual freedoms versus social
responsibility, collective good or herd needs) • Health and wellbeing
(e.g. Zoom fatigue, Long Covid, lockdown) • Digital economies • Key
workers, home-schooling and digital labour • Spaces, times (e.g.
lockdown, social-distancing) • Increased surveillance (e.g.
track-and-trace, digital health apps, WFH/remote working) • New spaces
of digital disengagement • Environment (e.g. extractive economies,
regeneration and sustainability) • Social Media (e.g. misinformation and
fake news, media saturation)
Format: contributions of up to 5,000 words length, in a variety of
formats (creative and academic, autoethnographic, reports, critical
commentary and more).
***SUBMISSION INFO***
Please send a 500 words abstract to
(digitaldisengagementproject /at/ gmail.com) by May 10th 2021. Authors will be
notified by May 31st, with full submissions due by end of December 2021.
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