[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] cfp: Arts & Humanities in digital transition conference
Wed Dec 21 12:22:34 GMT 2022
Arts & Humanities in digital transition
Conference | 6-7 July | Nova University of Lisbon
Venue: Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities | Nova Institute of
Communication (ICNOVA)
Transformations stemming from digital technologies are growing with
every passing decade, even if the newness of new media is gradually
fading. In the idea of digital transition, a feeling of disruption is
intertwined with that of inevitability and becoming, mixing voluntarism
and the design of the artificial with new evolutionary narratives.
Between a persistent post-historical atmosphere and the spectre of an
era of extinctions, the certainty of a generalised digital transition
stands out as an inescapable path towards the future. A path where not
only capitalism but also the insufficiently acknowledged co-evolution of
nature and technique would definitely take the place of history itself.
The question concerning the digital (Krämer, 2018; Hui, 2019; Galloway,
2021), which has just only started, is crucial for understanding the
deep anthropological, ecological and cosmological crisis (Latour, 2021)
of the present and resisting a one-way universalization sense of
technology. This crisis makes it urgent that we prefigure and care about
possible futures but also that we concern ourselves with the digital
(Stiegler 2010, 2019) and critically explore its relationship with
different temporalities and transits, as well as its transformative,
transgressive and translation possibilities.
The generalisation of computation and algorithms and the planetarisation
of information networks and infrastructures reveal the breadth and
capillarity of the digital transition involving the domains of
physicality, life, and the human, and their various interactions. The
crossovers between cybernetics and environmental sciences, molecular
biology and informatics, neurology and robotics expand our knowledge of
the human and lead, at the same time, to the questioning of the
centrality of the Anthropos in all of his/her dimensions – agency,
production, perception and cognition.
In the humanities, the digital has mostly been seen as the post-media or
metamedia stage of media history (Kittler 1997, Bolter&Groosin 2000,
Manovich 2005), and often as a culmination point of the long history of
the symbolic and the alphabets (Kittler, 2009; Krämer, 2018), allowing
us to expect changes as fundamental as those related to the beginning of
language in human history. Most importantly, media theory, digital
studies and the philosophy of technology have long been the source of a
crucial anthropological questioning (Stiegler, 1984; Kittler, 1997;
Hayles, 1999) that has shown the co-constitution of the human and its
technological milieu. This kind of questioning is also central to
ecological thought, in which the human is equally defined by its
interactions with the environment and with the non-human. That is why
media theory and ecological thought coincide today in the claim of a
post-humanist turn of the humanities. Accordingly, one of the main
challenges of the post-humanities (Braidotti, 2019) will be that of
helping to form a critical cosmology that will be able to include a
techno-ecology of the digital, which is also a cognitive ecology or an
“ecology of spirit” (Stiegler), in the general ecology (Stiegler 2010;
Hörl, 2013; Hayles 2017).
The initiative of this conference is indebted to the paths opened up by
the digital humanities and digital arts in recent decades, but also to a
reflection that increasingly exceeds the specificity of each of these
fields. The increasing interest and discussion about the cognitive and
epistemological implications of the widespread use of AI and
computational methodologies have cast new themes around DH themselves
(Burdwick et al. l, 2016, Berry and Fagerjord, 2017; Dobson, 2019).
Likewise, reflection on creativity and the digital has long gone beyond
the genealogy of media and procedural art to think how the digital is
penetrating aesthetic, affective and political experience, as well as
creative and collaborative practices in ways more fundamental or also
indirect (Zielinski, 2006; Bishop, 2012; Weibel, 2019). Thus, the scope
proposed by this conference is that of a broad epistemic, cultural,
political, and artistic reflection on the transformation of knowledge,
creativity, praxis, literacies, cultural techniques and institutions in
an era increasingly characterized by the distribution of capabilities
and agencies between humans and technology.
Adding to a new stage of the industrialisation of culture and the arts,
we are now witnessing the emergence of an industry of knowledge built on
the accumulation of data, AI and machine learning, automatic analysis
and information visualisation (Negri & Vercellone, 2008; Boutang, 2012;
Zuboff, 2019; Manovich, 2021). The new cognitive industries threaten to
trigger a general dispossession of cognitive practices, learning and
“savoir vivre” (Stiegler, 2019), and the replacement of the civic
mission of institutions and practices related to knowledge transmission
by infrastructures, platforms and algorithms (Bratton, 2016; Srnicek,
2016). However, the digital condition and the new cognitive ecology
allows, in turn, for a deepening and dissemination of knowledge on a
scale that is unprecedented in human history, the strengthening of
diverse forms of connectivity and collaboration (Castells, 2012;
Gerbaudo, 2017) and, for the first time, the sharing of a common
language between sciences, humanities and arts.
Establishing a political cosmology and ecology for the digital
transition emerges as a new task of critical thought, a fundamental
epistemic, cultural and creative task of the humanities and the arts in
the XXI century. This call invites participation in this task by
tackling topics such as, and not restricted to, the ones below. In
addition, in homage to the intellectual legacy of Bernard Stiegler, one
of the most influential thinkers of the digital condition and the
relationship between culture and technique, a specific exploration of
themes from his extensive work will also be welcome.
* Digitality, post-digital and digital transition
* Tecno-ecology, digital ecology and cognitive ecology
* Post-human and post-humanities
* Digital Humanities, theory, methodologies and practices
* Digital arts, post-media aesthetics and artivism
* Cognitive and creative economy and industries
* AI, Machine Learning and automation
* Digital literacies
* The university and the digital
* Bernard Siegler’s thought for the digital age (mnemotechnics,
general organology and digital technologies; pharmacology and
care; disruption and bifurcation; etc.)
Please submit abstracts for individual papers (max. 300 words) with
presentation title, up to 5 keywords, your name, affiliation, email
address and a short biographical note (max. 100 words; the biographical
note should be submitted annexed as a pdf or a word file). Proposals
should be written in English.
Please submit your proposal on
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ahdt2023
<https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ahdt2023>
Deadline for submissions: 6th March, 2023
Notification of acceptance: 30th March, 2023
Early Bid inscription: 15th April
Deadline for Inscription: 30th April
Publication: Full papers are invited to be submitted to a special
edition of a Scopus Indexed Journal.
For further information, please send us an email:
(digitaltransition /at/ fcsh.unl.pt) <mailto:(digitaltransition /at/ fcsh.unl.pt)>
Conference website: ah-digitaltransition.fcsh.unl.pt
<http://ah-digitaltransition.fcsh.unl.pt>
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]