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[Commlist] CFP - Disrupting Surveillance: Media Arts Practice for a reimagined future
Wed Jan 26 08:40:57 GMT 2022
Call For Papers
Special issue of Media Practice and Education Journal (March 2023)
Disrupting Surveillance: Media Arts Practice for a reimagined future
Guest editors: Patrícia Nogueira, Ana Carvalho and Joana Pestana
((disrupting.surveillance /at/ ismai.pt))
We invite submissions for a special issue of The Journal of Media
Practice and Education on the topic of Disrupting Surveillance
Deadline for 500-word Abstract Submissions: 15 March 2022
Deadline for Full Papers: 31 July 2022
Expected date of publication: March 2023
Surveillance in the 21st Century is characterized by ubiquitous data
collection, storing and analysis, both visual and algorithmical, leading
to a world of networked media and to diagnoses of surveillance and
platform capitalism (Zuboff, 2019; Srnicek, 2017). In contemporary
screen culture, namely with the omnipresence of surveillance devices,
society has become a space of control (Pisters, 2012). Besides the
ubiquitous surveillance, materialized by the proliferation of CCTV
cameras scattered everywhere - in indoor and outdoor, public and private
spaces - each one of us carries a personal camera, daily capturing
everything around us, including ourselves and others, sharing our
interests, the places where we go, the daily activities we do, the
products we consume… actively contributing to a self-monitored society,
or more precisely, to “societies of control” (Deleuze, 1992).
Therefore, surveillance is not just an external act, it is a voluntary,
embodied everyday practice, which increasingly becomes an integral part
of everyday life. It presents new sorting and controlling practices that
promote new forms of visibility and control, new modes of power, as well
as unintended consequences and disadvantages. Whereas such a scenario
seems unavoidable, scholars and artists have been raising numerous
questions to critique and reimagine the social and political landscape
of contemporary surveillance society, refusing to indulge “technological
determinism” (Jordan, 2008; Smith & Marx, 1994). While some artists and
practitioners appropriate and repurpose surveillance images and
technologies to interrogate the realm, others question the surveillance
status quo by proposing strategies of disruption and escape.
The special issue therefore aims to provide a space for discussing
strategies of subversion and alternatives concerning various forms of
surveillance through technological means, relating to the crossover
between artistic practices and technologies. The themed issue encourages
bringing together a range of artistic, critical and scientific
perspectives, affording visibility to recent artistic practices and
research works, and exploring, broadly, the interdisciplinary frameworks
for understanding contemporary surveillance and, particularly, how
surveillance practices intersect with visual technologies, visual
culture, and moving image studies.
The issue aims to interrogate a manifold of perspectives, from the
aestheticization of surveillance to networked images, by exploring their
intersections and derivations. We propose to discuss the way in which
contemporary visual arts are contributing to the creation of new
approaches and perspectives to interrogate the societies of
surveillance, re-imagining and proposing alternative futures.
As so, we are seeking contributions of full papers that explore the
intersection of Surveillance, Arts, and Technology from various
perspectives. We are particularly interested in papers focusing on the
practice-based media-arts research and analysis, its communication and
circulation that respond to one or more of the special issue strands:
1.
Film and Moving Images: the use, re-use, manipulation, and
re-contextualization of surveillance, sousveillance, and
self-surveillance moving and still images in contemporary film,
video art and art installations, namely:
- The art of CCTV cameras / Cultural plays with CCTV;
- Drone images and aerial perspectives of control;
- Anthropocene and non-human gaze / imagery;
- Panopticism and cinematic surveillance: theories, practices, and
representations;
- The relationship between voyeurism and surveillance;
- New visibilities of surveillance / Changing temporalities and spaces
of surveillance;
- Surveillance art and the aesthetics of surveillance;
- Surveillance in post-colonial and decolonial film and art.
2.
Digital Art: How the arts, and in particular the digital arts, the
philosophy and theory of art and the reflection upon the arts from
other areas of knowledge, has been critically reflecting the
contemporary networked landscape of surveillance:
- Photography, film and personal strategies of production and
distribution through social media;
- Performance and the technologies for online communication;
- The relationship of bodies to surveillance technologies;
- Interactions, creativity and aesthetics of and with A.I.;
- Individualization and the collective intelligence in times of digital
surveillance;
- Artificial environments, personal devices, big data and networks of
control;
- Sound ecologies of surveillance and the use of surveillance
technologies for digital creation and production.
3.
Critical Design and Visual Culture: interfaces, structures and
technologies revealed or concealed in critical design works, and
visual artworks that aim to disrupt surveillance and knowledge
monopolies, delving into design fiction and speculative design and
approaching broadly the following topics:
*
Disrupting surveillance;
*
Performative design and surveillance;
*
Aesthetics and ethics of surveillance;
*
Interfaces of and against surveillance;
*
Wearable technology and interactive clothing;
*
Structures and systems of resistance in design history;
*
Alternative and speculative worlds.
To submit: Please send a 500-word abstract, and a 100-word bio per
author to the guest editors at (disrupting.surveillance /at/ ismai.pt) by 15
March 2022. Authors of accepted abstracts will be contacted in mid-April
and invited to submit full contributions by 31 July 2022
Style guide for authors:
https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=instructions&journalCode=rjmp21
<https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=instructions&journalCode=rjmp21>
Issue Schedule:
*
15 March 2022: 500-word proposals to be submitted
((disrupting.surveillance /at/ ismai.pt)).
*
15 April 2022: Response from editors and, if successful, invitation
to submit contribution.
*
31 July: Full Papers submission (5000 to 7000 words, incl. references).
*
August to November: Peer review period.
*
31 December: Submission of reviewed final papers.
*
March 2023: expected date of publication.
About the journal: Media Practice and Education is an international,
peer-reviewed journal publishing high-quality, original research. Please
see the journal's Aims & Scope for information about its focus and
peer-review policy.
Please note that this journal only publishes manuscripts in English.
Taylor & Francis is committed to peer-review integrity and upholding the
highest standards of review.
There are no submission fees, publication fees or page charges for this
journal.
References:
Crawford, Kate (2021). Atlas of AI. Yale University Press.
Deleuze, Gilles (1992). “Postscript on the Societies of Control”, The
MIT Press, vol.59. pp.3-7.
Jordan, Tim (2008). Hacking: Digital Media and Technological
Determinism. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Foucault, Michel (1991). Discipline and Punish - The Birth of the
Prison. London: Penguin.
Pisters, Patricia (2012). The Neuro-Image: A Deleuzian Film-Philosophy
of Digital Screen. Stanford University Press.
Smith, Merritt Roe & Marx, Leo (1994). Does Technology Drive History?
The Dilemma of Technological Determinism. Cambridge: MIT Press.
Srnicek, Nick (2017). Platform Capitalism. Cambridge, Malden: Polity.
Zuboff, Shoshana (2019). The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight
for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power. New York: Public Affairs
*
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