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[Commlist] CfP • Music and online cultures in a changing platform ecosystem
Tue Jul 30 16:46:32 GMT 2024
CALL FOR PAPERS
International conference 'Music and online cultures in a changing
platform ecosystem'
June 19-21, 2025 • Lisbon, Portugal
Deadline: September 30
For around half of the world’s population, it is hard to imagine a day
without being online in some way or another. The widespread adoption of
internet technologies has ostensibly been in service of improving human
connectivity, expression, and health. Yet technology companies face
unprecedented criticism for the range of changes that internet platforms
have wrought on everyday work and leisure practices. In few domains is
this clearer than music.
As digital landscapes have shifted and evolved, music has often been the
test subject for industrial change, and music cultures have accordingly
negotiated the structures of online platforms. A lively body of
scholarly and popular commentary has examined the power inequities,
constraints, and affordances of online music platforms. In the
mid-2020s, however, the formerly stable ecosystem of social media and
streaming platforms is changing according to processes of platform decay.
For social media, Twitter has become radicalised into Elon Musk’s X;
Reddit faces blackout revolts over API changes; and Instagram cedes
ground to TikTok while Meta and YouTube struggle to catch up and
re-capture the attention of young audiences drawn to short-form vertical
video. Spotify continues to lead an on-demand streaming oligopoly shared
with Apple Music, Tencent, and Amazon Music, while global competitors
contest some regions, and promising alternatives such as SoundCloud and
Bandcamp are being remade in line with the major distributors. Reports
indicate that artists and independent labels are, by and large,
dissatisfied with contemporary routes to music distribution and promotion.
For musicians, fans, and other stakeholders, things may get worse before
they get better. Considerable hype around generative artificial
intelligence technologies has already seen a range of creative
applications adapting to rely on imperfect, ethically questionable, and
environmentally costly machine learning logics.
Given these changing online contexts, there is reinvigorated demand for
directing scholarly attention at music as a social, cultural, and
artistic practice. This conference aims to bring together emerging and
leading thinkers on music and online cultures, cultivating a rich
diversity of music and multimedia scholarship to address the changing
platform ecosystem.
Topics may include, but are not limited to:
- Music and platform power: marginalisation, resistance, and/or equity
in Big Tech’s musical interventions
- Music and digital labour: relational and aspirational labour, creative
work, and entrepreneurship in late capitalist contexts
- Methods for studying music and online cultures
- Online music fandoms and communities
- Music and digital media: online interactions between music, video,
sound, games, dance, and more
- Music listening in the platform ecosystem: (live)streaming, genre,
discovery, filesharing, and curation
- Music’s online-offline tensions: logging off, digital detoxing, and
touching grass
- Music and internet culture: virality, memes, and context collapse
- Histories, archives, and ageing of/with music and the internet
This is a limited hybrid conference. We are asking presenters to join us
in-person in Lisbon and will livestream all presentations. The online
audience will be able to ask questions to engage virtually. The
conference will be held at the Colégio Almada Negreiros, Campolide,
which is an accessible venue.
The conference language is English. Proposals should offer original
contributions based on current research or work in progress. All papers
will be 15 minutes followed by 5 minutes’ discussion time. You will be
asked to provide contact details, paper title, an abstract of max. 250
words, up to 5 keywords, and a biography of max. 100 words.
Researchers at all career levels are welcome to submit proposals.
Individuals from groups that are under-represented in academia (e.g.
first-generation scholars) are especially encouraged to apply. To help
cultivate an inclusive and welcoming environment, please familiarise
yourself with our code of anti-discriminatory practice aka exceptional
vibes only (https://www.mocren.org/code/).
Abstract submission and additional information can be verified on the
official conference page on the Music and Online Cultures Research
Network (MOCReN) website here: https://www.mocren.org/lisbon2025/. The
deadline for submissions is 30th September 2024 23.59 GMT.
Coordination: MOCReN
With the support of CysMus (Research Cluster in Sound and Music in
Digital and Audiovisual Media), GTCC (Grupo de Teoria Crítica e
Comunicação), CESEM (Centro de Estudos de Sociologia e Estética
Musical), IN2PAST (Associate Laboratory for Research and Innovation in
Heritage, Arts, Sustainability and Territory), NOVA FSCH (NOVA
University of Lisbon – School of Social Sciences and Humanities) and FCT
(Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia)
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