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[Commlist] CFP: Digital Ecologies 3: Machine / Material / Land
Thu Nov 07 08:37:23 GMT 2024
*CFP: Digital Ecologies 3: Machine / Material / Land*
*Date: July 24-25 2025*
*Location: Bath, UK*
*Venue: Bath Spa University, Locksbrook Campus*
The *Digital Ecologies 3 Symposium* examines the complex material
relationship between technology, society, food and energy production and
the land. It is informed by Yuk Hui’s notion that the essence of
contemporary technology is to ‘consider everything as a standing
reserve, as a resource to be ordered and exploited’ (Hui, 2021). Along
these lines Hito Steyerl identifies AI generative media as ‘Mean Images’
and looks at their reliance on ‘vast infrastructures of polluting
hardware and menial and disenfranchised labour’ (Steyerl, 2023).
Today, we find ourselves in a new kind of alchemical process. The
digital age has become our modern-day philosopher’s stone; with its
infrastructure exploiting both base and precious materials. Technology
tools and infrastructure hold the potential to transform our world in
ways we are only beginning to understand. However, like the alchemists
of old, we must approach this potential with wisdom, respect, and a deep
understanding of the material and spiritual consequences for the human
and non-human world.
We must scrutinise the material and ecological cost of production,
extraction, AI and technological acts, and seek to reimagine our
relationship with technology, not as a tool for exploitation, but as a
means of seeing things differently and fostering care and attention
towards all entities.
Our symposium is organised around three main themes:
*Digital Ecologies: Machine Futures*
In this strand we explore how we can challenge Hui’s notion of
contemporary technology as a tool for extraction and exploitation of
resources. We ask how technology and our relationship with machines of
all sorts can be re-imagined in creative, critical and sustainable
ways. Here we would like to expand on Hui ‘s other ideas which consider
how philosophy and art can transform the concept of technology,
including the imagination, invention and use of technology’ away from
the conditions of exploitation. In addition, we are connecting with
Artist and writer James Bridle’s suggestion that technology can be
reimagined as a way of ‘seeing things differently rather than just doing
things’ (Bridle, 2022).
We are interested in a range of responses that explore themes including:
*
Speculative machine futures and imaginaries – re-imagined ethical
and sustainable machines
*
Machines that help us to communicate with, & understand non-human
intelligences
*
Non-western and postcolonial machine futurisms
*
Organic and biological machines
*
Caring machines
*Soil as place, internet as place-less-ness*
This strand thinks about digital technologies and their entanglements
with soil and food systems. Vandana Shiva argues that the techno
optimism advanced by Big Tech and Big Ag, will only exacerbate the
climate emergency. How might thinking-with soil, an undertheorized body,
offer fresh perspectives?
Soil, when understood as biologically intact, interconnected and
ongoing, is contingent on place. Conversely, cloud technologies and
internet infrastructure have a place-less-ness - our everyday actions
online, both trivial and essential, feel immaterial and weightless
thanks to metaphors and abstractions like the cloud. These tools are
constructed and operational through complex relationships with soil and
land.
What sense does soil make of our digital actions, what seeps in and out
of soily bodies – materially, conceptually, philosophically?
How might we create new metaphors for the digital that materialise and
bring to mind these hidden realities, manifesting with mass, visibility,
and place in a more authentic digital ecology?
We are interested in a range of responses that explore themes including:
*
Soil-human relations
*
Soil-food-data synergies
*
Food culture
*
Extraction
*
Data and transfer
*
New metaphors and stories for digital infrastructure and digital
actions
*
(Digital) compost and a (digital) lifecycle
*
Temporality
*
Acoustic soilscapes
*
Belowground digital ecologies
*
Photosynthesis and carbon
*
Phenology
*
Soil care practices and rituals
*Landscape, Ritual & Technology *
This strand seeks to understand how technology has altered human
interaction with the landscape and our ritualistic practices. We welcome
papers that explore how we are adapting to change and uncertainty
through ritualistic and folk behaviours in the face of the current
climate crisis.
The question arises: How has technology altered our interaction with the
landscape and our ritualistic practices? Furthermore, in what novel or
traditional manners are we exploring, celebrating, and adapting to
change and uncertainty?
We are interested in a range of responses from artists, academics,
historians and technologists who are investigating the intersections of
landscape and technology through ritual, folklore or performance to
submit papers and present work that explore the following themes:
*
Ritual & Rites
*
Embodied practices
*
Energy Production: Solar, Wind, Hydro
*
Alchemy
*
Technology as revered object
*
Festival/Carnival/Rave/Music/Dance/Theatre
*
Folk Practices and Costumes
*
Uncertainty
*
Celebration / Feasting
*
Human / more-than-human
*
Calendrical: Seasons / Harvest / Spring / May Day
*Submission Process*
We welcome submissions from academics, artists, researchers, and
practitioners who are exploring these themes. We also welcome proposals
for non-traditional approaches to papers including proposals for
exhibits and moving image screenings, sound works & performances.
Abstracts must be submitted in English by February 20th 2025 to
(_artandtechnologyresearch /at/ bathspa.ac.uk)
<mailto:(artandtechnologyresearch /at/ bathspa.ac.uk)>_with the subject
“Abstract DE3 2025” and should not exceed 300 words. Abstracts must
include the presentation title & the author's name. For practice based
work please provide the title and a summary/description of the work.
Shortly after the conference, participants will be invited to submit
their work for an online publication.
Applicants will be notified of the outcome of their submission by April
28th 2025. Subsequent information regarding the registration process and
process for submitting work will be made available closer to the
symposium date.
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