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[Commlist] The Postdigital City for Post-Pandemic Times - free online conference
Mon Jun 07 18:58:20 GMT 2021
Registration is now open for next week’s The Postdigital City for
Post-Pandemic Times conference.
Attendance is free and all are welcome, but please register here:
https://www.coventry.ac.uk/research/about-us/research-events/2021/the-postdigital-city/
Organised by The Centre for Postdigital Cultures, Coventry University, UK.
‘The Postdigital City for Post-Pandemic Times’ will take place online
over the course of two days:
Tuesday 15 June (12:30pm – 6:20pm)
Wednesday 16 June (10:30am – 2:50pm)
https://www.coventry.ac.uk/research/areas-of-research/postdigital-cultures/cpc-2021-conference/
Keynote speakers:
Binna Choi - director of Casco Art Institute: Working for the Commons
Leslie Kern - Mount Allison University, author of /The Feminist City/
(Verso, 2020)
‘The Postdigital City for Post-Pandemic Times’
All cities can now be said to be postdigital since digital information
processing has permeated nearly every aspect of their existence:
communication, entertainment, education, energy, banking, health,
transport, manufacturing, food, water supply. Yet cities today also face
numerous /predigital/ problems: poverty,populationdensity, unemployment,
racist state violence, segregation, social inequality, violence against
women, climate breakdown and threats to public health posed by novel
viruses. Given the funding cuts imposed by governments in the name of
‘austerity’, a lot of cash-strapped cities have been forced to reduce
their public infrastructure budgets. Britain has closed 800 of its
public librariessince 2010, for example – that’s almost one fifth of the
total. The coronavirus pandemic has only made the situation worse,and
not just in the UK. Asurvey of 760 museum directorsby the American
Alliance of Museums found that one third of their institutions may not
reopen after the outbreak. As a result, the path has been left clear for
private providers to enter spaces long considered the domain of the
public sector. That many cities are planning for their post-Covid future
by looking to for-profit businessesfor investment and infrastructure,
often partnering with multinational data surveillance companies such as
Amazon, Google and Uber, is all the more surprising given the virus has
clearly exposed the danger of relying on the private sector. Doing so
led to vaccines for diseases with pandemic potential not being developed
in advance as businesses perceived them as having insufficient potential
to generate profits for their owners, shareholders and investors. The
fight against a pandemic only works if /everyone/ /everywhere/ is
vaccinated, not just those who can afford to pay for the privilege. The
same can be said of other aspects of municipal health and welfare.
Cities are only really fit to live in if they provide /all/ of their
human and nonhuman inhabitants –– people, animals, plants – with a
decent quality of life. The climate and environmental crises have made
this clear.
How can we reimagine our cities for post-pandemic times? And what role
can postdigital media, from AI and FemTech to augmented reality and 360
video play in such public placemaking? This conference will examine how
artists, activists, designers, theorists, practitioners, publishers and
writers can work together (albeit not necessarily without disagreement
and dissensus) to intervene in and transform cities for the 21^st
century world after austerity, the Covid outbreak and the recent
Extinction Rebellion, Black Lives Matter and violence against women
protests. It will explore how postdigital cities, and the cultural
institutions within them, can be reshaped, including through the
provision of a diverse range of co-created and co-curated alternatives
to those currently being offered by the state and corporate realms. It
will show how urban citizens and communities can use the infrastructural
tools and resources generated by advocates of open access, free and
open-source software, p2p filesharing, copyfarleft, ‘piracy’ and the
anti-privatized knowledge commons; and how they can build their own
anticapitalist,antiracist orantiheteropatriarchal versions of galleries,
libraries, archives and museums. By cultivating conditions for a wide
range of situated ideas, initiatives and projects, the conference will
look to generate a nonharmonious pluriverse of more socially just and
environmentally sustainable ways of living and working in the
postdigital city.
The conference includes panels on:
Being Public: placemaking with the whistle-blower, the heckler, the
killjoy and the protestor / 'She Was Just Walking Home': on violence
against women / Publishing and Place: situated knowledges in art and
academia / The Immersive City: co-creating with 360 video, augmented and
virtual reality / AI and Algorithmic Cultures: from predictive policing
to intelligent assistants on phones and in homes.
Participants include:
Adrienne Evans, Debra Ferreday, Devi Kolli, Gary Hall, Ian Bruff, Ian
Forrester, Jacqueline Cawston, Janneke Adema, Kevin Walker, Lena
Wånggren, Lindsay Balfour, Maria Economou, Matt Davies, Mel Jordan,
Nathan O'Donnell, Priya Rajasekar, Ravin Raori, Sylvester Arnab, Vidushi
Marda//
Find out more and sign up here:
https://www.coventry.ac.uk/research/about-us/research-events/2021/the-postdigital-city/
The conference webpage is here:
https://www.coventry.ac.uk/research/areas-of-research/postdigital-cultures/cpc-2021-conference/
/
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/#PostdigitalCity /
/#CovResearch/
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