[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP: Tech/Money Collected Volume
Thu Oct 16 16:47:02 GMT 2025
Call for Proposals: Tech/Money Collected Volume
Co-editors: M.R. Sauter, M.C. Forelle, Caroline Jack
*Deadline for proposals*: 6 January 2026
We are seeking chapter proposals for a proposed collected volume on the
theme of Tech/Money.
Our goal with this volume is to highlight a materialist, political
economy approach to science and technology studies with work that
emphasizes an understanding of the role played by money, financing, and
business structures in the study of technology and science. This work
moves beyond an economic analysis, highlighting the role of capital and
finance’s movements, norms, and infrastructures in animating science and
technology, inflecting and directing the performance of these spaces and
their own ideologies, imaginaries, and infrastructures. The papers we
seek to include in this volume examine the constitutive nature of money,
finance, funding, and business models in the development of technologies
and technosocial/technopolitical landscapes. Sub-themes include:
temporalities of money, finance, and speculation (including sales and
fundraising pitches); imaginaries of risk, particularly financialized
risk; the role of the frontier (geographic, political, intellectual) in
the technocapitalist imaginary and its influence on the practices of
firms; the connected lives of money, innovation, and science; and the
social meanings of money and markets in science. Dealing
unapologetically with ways in which the global logics of technocapital
are often chewed up, altered, and digested by the specificities of the
local context provides an opportunity to examine the tensions of
resistance, collaboration, collusion, adaptation, and imitations, and
enmeshment that often accompany these projects. We invite contributions
that ground theoretical insight in empirical or archival work and that
bridge STS, communication, and media studies to illuminate how capital,
finance, and technoscience mutually constitute one another.
This volume draws inspiration from two overlapping traditions that have
examined the entanglements of finance, technology, and knowledge
production. Within science and technology studies, scholars of the
so-called “financial turn”—notably Donald MacKenzie (2006) and Michel
Callon (2021)—adapted the analytical tools of STS to financial markets,
tracing how epistemic cultures, modeling practices, and publics were
constructed through technical systems of valuation and exchange.
Subsequent work expanded this analysis to a range of financial and
economic lifeworlds: the epistemology of the “national economy” and GDP
(Murphy, 2017); currency and techno-monetary systems (Swartz, 2017,
2020); the sociology and materiality of financial markets (Knorr-Cetina
and Preda, 2004; Pinch and Swedberg, 2008); and critiques of innovation
policy, austerity, and assetization (Wisnioski et al., 2019; Mirowski,
2013; Birch and Muniesa, 2020).
In parallel, scholars in communication, media, and information studies
have examined how capital and finance shape—and are shaped by—the
communicative infrastructures of technological life. Research on
platform economies, algorithmic labor, and digital intermediation
(Bishop, 2020, 2025; Gillespie, 2018) situates money as both discourse
and medium, while work on infrastructural politics and “radical
infrastructures” (Paris et al, 2023; Paris, forthcoming) highlights how
funding models, data extraction, adtech, and platform governance
reproduce the material and ideological conditions of technocapitalism.
The Tech/Money approach brings these strands together to re-center a
political-economy perspective within the study of science, technology,
and communication. We argue that contemporary technoscience cannot be
understood apart from its financial architectures—venture investment,
speculative valuation, policy regimes, and the imaginaries that sustain
them. Treating money and finance not as external contexts but as
constitutive, knowable infrastructures allows for a fuller account of
how knowledge, value, and technological futures are co-produced. We
invite contributions that extend this dialogue between STS and
communication/media research, combining materialist political-economy
approaches with nuanced theoretical and empirical analysis.
We are interested in pieces that address (but are not limited to) the
following questions:
How is risk conceptualized and instrumentalized in the modern technology
landscape?
How are bodies and data transformed into saleable commodities?
How do local or localized mutations of national or multinational
companies and economies function differently in local geographies or at
local scales?
How does examining the local reveal the multiplicity of capitalism (not
a single capitalism, but multiple, overlapping capitalisms)?
How are the logics of technologized finance extending into new sectors?
How does technology allow capital and/or finance to move at new speeds
and/or across new scales?
What technocapitalist imaginaries are centered in efforts to regulate
emerging financial technologies?
What social meanings do venture capital and financial markets bring to
or install in contemporary systems for the production of scientific and
technical knowledge?
How are emerging forms of techno-finance, tech markets, and/or
investment promoted as social good? How do these forms of hype build off
or respond to historical fads in technology or finance?
How do financial or technological actors shape culture to reflect market
logics or serve the purposes of the market?
What roles do hype, pitching, trend-spotting and “visionaries” play in
the funding strategies and legitimacy claims of technocapital?
*Proposals should include: a 250-500 word abstract, a short
bibliography, and author bio.*
*Please send these as one PDF to : (mrsauter /at/ umd.edu)
<mailto:(mrsauter /at/ umd.edu)>*
*DUE DATE: 6 January 2026*
*Authors will receive a response by the end of January, with full
chapters due by 1 May 2026*
*The volume will be published as open access with a major university
press. No financial contribution from the authors is expected or required.*
Questions regarding the collected volume or the theme may be directed to
any member of the editorial collective
Thank you and we look forward to reading your proposals-
M.R. Sauter, University of Maryland, College Park, (mrsauter /at/ umd.edu)
<mailto:(mrsauter /at/ umd.edu)>
M. C. Forelle, University of Virginia, (mcf7sc /at/ virginia.edu)
<mailto:(mcf7sc /at/ virginia.edu)>
Caroline Jack, University of California, San Diego, (cjack /at/ ucsd.edu)
<mailto:(cjack /at/ ucsd.edu)>
WORKS CITED
Birch, Kean and Fabian Muniesa, eds. Assetization. MIT Press. (2020)
Bishop, Sophie. “Algorithmic Experts: Selling Algorithmic Lore on
YouTube,” Social Media and Society. (2020); Influencer Creep, University
of California Press. (2025)
Callon, Michel. Markets in the Making. Princeton University Press. (2021)
Birch, Kean and Fabian Muniesa, eds. Assetization. MIT Press. (2020)
Knorr Cetina, Karin and Alex Preda, eds. The Sociology of Financial
Markets. Oxford University Press. (2004)
Gillespie, Tarleton. Custodians of the Internet. Yale University Press.
(2018)
MacKenzie, Donald. An Engine Not A Camera. MIT Press. (2006)
Mirowski, Phillip. Never Let A Serious Crisis Go to Waste. Verso. (2013)
Murphy, Michelle. The Economization of Life. Duke University Press. (2017)
Paris, B., Cath, C., & Myers-West, S. “Radical Infrastructure: Building
Beyond the Failures of Past Imaginaries for Networked Communication.”
New Media + Society. (2023)
Pinch, Trevor and Richard Swedberg, eds. Living in a Material World. MIT
Press. (2008)
Swartz, Lana. New Money: How Payment Became Social Media. Yale
University Press (2020); Paid: Tales of Dongles, Checks, and Other Money
Stuff. MIT Press. (2017)
Vinsel, Lee and Andrew R. Russell. The Innovation Delusion. Penguin
Random House. (2020)
Wisnioski, Matthew; Eric Hintz; Marie Stettler Kleine, eds. Does America
Need More Innovators. MIT Press. (2019)
---------------
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]