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[Commlist] CfA: Blackboxed Futures: Multiple Temporalities of Algorithmic Technologies
Fri Feb 18 11:50:30 GMT 2022
The deadline for the online symposium *Blackboxed Futures: Multiple
Temporalities of Algorithmic Technologies *has been extended until 25
February. We are inviting you to submit your abstracts on algorithms,
temporalities, and futures. See the CfP below.
*Call for Papers: Blackboxed Futures: Multiple Temporalities of
Algorithmic Technologies (Online Symposium, March 19)*
Algorithmic technologies are nowadays proliferating in various sectors
of the economy and, more generally, in society. Yet, while their
widespread development already occupies several areas of contemporary
life, their material configuration often remains opaque and difficult to
comprehend, especially when it comes to how algorithms shape the futures
of people and societies at large. Often, algorithms and AI technologies
are conceived by their users and creators as “magic” that is beyond
comprehension — an understanding that has a range of political and
cultural implications for society (Campolo & Crawford, 2020) and has
been consequently recognized in the theorizations of economy and
politics (Pignarre and Stengers, 2012). Questions of vital scholarly and
political importance emerge – what future(s) do algorithmic technologies
offer for society, who is included in them and left out, how they can be
scrutinized and resisted? Do we witness a “temporal stasis in an age of
automated media” (Andrejevic, Dencik & Trere, 2020) or a “speculative
time-complex” (Avanessian & Malik, 2016)?
In this symposium, we invite scholars from critical media, cultural,
science and technology studies, as well as adjacent fields, to further
reflect upon the imagined futures of algorithmic technologies and
multiple temporalities enrolled in their continuous enactment. We
suggest focusing on algorithmic temporalities by thinking of them both
in terms of related discursive practices and issues of algorithmic
design. Addressing both theoretical and empirical matters of algorithmic
temporalities, this symposium aims to shed light on how our thinking
about time vis-a-vis algorithmic technologies spreads — or meets
resistance — in different social and political contexts.
The symposium will take place online on *March 19*. We invite papers
that reflect (but are by no means limited) upon the following themes:
– discussions of multiple temporalities related to algorithmic
technologies and the governance regimes of which they are a part of
– grassroots and top-down imaginaries of futures as they pertain to the
(mis)use of algorithms
– historical accounts exploring interconnections between time and
algorithmic technologies
– political-economic accounts of temporal regimes associated with
algorithmic technologies
– decolonial computation and decolonization of algorithms
– creative and speculative approaches seeking to address the issues of
algorithmic futures
Please, send your abstracts (250-500 words) and a short bio to the
following email: (blackboxedfutures /at/ gmail.com) no later than February 25.
The results of the selection process will be published on March 1.
Postgraduate Symposium, Critical Media Studies, HSE, Moscow
Dmitry Muravyov, Artyom Kolganov, Aleksey Pereyaslov, Elizaveta Panina,
Yujie Chi
http://blackboxedfutures.odie.us <http://blackboxedfutures.odie.us>
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