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[Commlist] Call for Papers: “Beyond Californian Ideology? Tech Communities and Alternative Imaginaries of Deep Mediatization”
Mon May 31 10:26:00 GMT 2021
“Beyond Californian Ideology? Tech Communities and Alternative
Imaginaries of Deep Mediatization”
Call for Papers for a Thematic Issue in the International Journal of
Communication
Guest-edited by:
· Prof Dr Andreas Hepp, University of Bremen, ZeMKI
((ahepp /at/ uni-bremen.de))
· Prof Nathan Schneider, University of Colorado Boulder
((nathan.schneider /at/ colorado.edu))
· MA Anne Schmitz, University of Bremen, ZeMKI
((a.schmitz /at/ uni-bremen.de))
++Overview++
In their 1996 publication of the same name, Richard Barbrook and Andy
Cameron characterized what they called the “Californian ideology” as a
combination of “the free-wheeling spirit of the hippies and the
entrepreneurial zeal of the yuppies” (Barbrook & Cameron 1996: 44). At
its core, this Californian ideology is defined by the notion of a
society characterized simultaneously by libertarian markets, alternative
ideas of community and individual freedom—shaped by technology more than
other social forces. Such notions were driven by networks such as those
that emerged around the Whole Earth Catalog, and later, Wired magazine
(Turner 2006), which communicated these ideas far beyond the American
West Coast. Many of today’s platforms and digital infrastructures, which
drive the current “deep mediatization” (Hepp 2020) of society, were
created in the spirit of such an ideology, supported by ideas of “global
scalability” of once found "technical solutions”.
At the same time, there were groups early on that seem to be opposed to
such ideas. Examples of this are the Hacker, Open Source, or Civic
Hacking movements, which are interested in critically questioning
tendencies of commercialization. Such groups exert their influence by
developing alternative “sociotechnical imaginaries” (Jasanoff &
Sang-Hyun 2015) about possible futures – thus creating a space of
possibility. However, if one also looks at emerging communities today
such as the Maker, Quantified Self, or Biohacking movements, it becomes
evident that many “alternative” imaginaries are closely interwoven with
the Californian ideology. On closer inspection, the boundaries do not
appear to be so easily drawn; there are manifold connections, fractures,
affinities, and differences in the various communities.
Against this background, the aim of this special issue is to look at
different technology-oriented communities and to ask what “alternative
imaginaries” of a deeply mediatized society they develop as well as what
their possible impact on future developments might be.
Submissions should address questions like these:
- What imaginaries of possible futures are tech communities
developing?
- In which areas are they experimenting and which future
developments are they opening up?
- Where is a Californian ideology reproduced in the practices and
discourses of these communities?
- How does the departure to other models and concepts of
technological development succeed?
++Formatting and Requirements++
To be considered for this collection, a paper should range between 6,000
and 8,900 words (all-inclusive, which includes the abstract, keywords,
images with captions, footnotes, references, and appendices, if any)
must be submitted by October 31, 2021 to the editors and adhere to the
following formal requirements:
- Formatting according to the most recent version of the APA
style-guide (including in-text citations and references).
- Any endnotes should be converted to footnotes.
- Papers must include the author(s) name(s), title, affiliation
and email-address. (Your paper will subsequently be anonymized for
double-blind peer review.)
- All articles should include an abstract of 150 words.
- All spelling must be rendered in American English. To change
British or Commonwealth spellings to their American equivalents, please
see the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary.
- See “Author Guidelines/Submission Preparation Checklist” at
https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/about/submissions#authorGuidelines
Any papers that do not follow these guidelines will not be submitted for
peer review.
The International Journal of Communication is an open access journal
(ijoc.org). All articles will be available online at the point of
publication. The anticipated publication timeframe for this Special
Issue is October 2022.
++Contact Information++
All submissions should be uploaded to
https://cloud.medlab.host/s/pt43t39ZrHtXcnD by October 31, 2021. Late
submissions will not be included for consideration.
No payment from the authors will be required.
Download the Call for Papers here:
https://www.uni-bremen.de/fileadmin/user_upload/fachbereiche/fb9/zemki/media/photos/publikationen/special-issues/Call-Californian-Ideology_final.pdf
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