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[Commlist] CFP EASA: Doing and Undoing the Anthropology of Place in an Increasingly Digitalized World [Media Anthropology Network]
Thu Jan 18 11:41:09 GMT 2024
We warmly invite you to submit a paper to the EASA Panel “Doing and
Undoing the Anthropology of Place in an Increasingly Digitalized World”
[Media Anthropology Network] at the EASA conference in Barcelona (July
23-26, 2024). Please submit your proposal here (deadline January 22!):
https://easaonline.org/conferences/easa2024/programme#14648
Convenors
Monika Palmberger, University of Vienna, Austria
Katrien Pype, KU Leuven University, Belgium
Doing and Undoing the Anthropology of Place in an Increasingly
Digitalized World [Media Anthropology Network]
Short abstract
Researching the digitalization of everyday life brings us back to the
query of how to define the ethnographic field and how to conceptualise
place and its relation to culture. This panel invites empirical and
theoretical contributions that (re-)address concepts of place, culture
and the digital.
Long abstract
Since the late 1980s, anthropologists have questioned the concepts of
“culture” and “the ethnographic field” as bounded entities and gradually
have shifted their focus from entities to relations. Research into the
digitalization of everyday life brings us back to the query of how to
define the “ethnographic place” (Pink et al. 2016), and how to
conceptualise place and placemaking and its relation to culture more
broadly. Due to the ubiquitous proliferation of digital technologies,
including artificial intelligence, predictive analytics, machine
learning and new communication media, anthropologists encounter place
and placemaking increasingly as a relational practice in virtual and
physical proximity (Kaufmann and Palmberger 2022). Concepts such as
“virtual culture”, “online culture” or “cyberculture” are too narrow.
While people build social relations, negotiate identities and claim
space beyond territorially defined places, physical place remains
important for the experience of being in the world, including the
experience of inequalities (Udupa and Dattatreyan 2023). Concepts such
as “ethnographic co-presence” (Chua 2015), “field events” (Ahlin and Li
2019), and smartphones as “domestic spaces” (Miller et al. 2021) have
been proposed to address the complex entanglements of place in
ethnographies of the digital, however there is little engagement with
the notion of culture in the digital environment and digitalized
society. Yet, culture can be conceptualized and theorized in different
ways, especially when attending to its relationship to place.
This panel seeks to re-evaluate place, culture and their
interconnections and invites contributions that (re-)address conceptual
questions of place, culture and the digital, empirically and theoretically.
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