[Air-l] Fwd: Cultural Attitudes towards Technology and Communication Conference
Steve Jones
sjones at uic.edu
Mon Jan 28 13:57:30 PST 2002
>CALL FOR PAPERS
>
>International Conference on
>CULTURAL ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY AND COMMUNICATION
>(CATaC'02)
>12-15 July 2002
>University of MontrÈal, Quebec, Canada
>http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac02/
>
>Conference theme:
>The Net(s) of Power: Language, Culture and Technology
>
>The powers of the Nets can be construed in many ways - political,
>economic, and social. Power can also be construed in terms of
>Foucault's "positive power" and Bourdieu's notion of "cultural
>capital" - decentered forms of power that encourage "voluntary"
>submission, such as English as a _lingua franca_ on the Net.
>Similarly, Hofstede's category of "power distance" points to the
>role of status in encouraging technology diffusion, as low-status
>persons seek to emulate high-status persons. Through these diverse
>forms of power, the language(s) and media of the Net may reshape the
>cultural assumptions of its globally-distributed users - thus
>raising the dangers of "computer-mediated colonisation"
>("Disneyfication" - a la Cees Hamelink).
>
>This biennial conference series aims to provide an international
>forum for the presentation and discussion of cutting-edge research
>on how diverse cultural attitudes shape the implementation and use
>of information and communication technologies (ICT). "Cultural
>attitudes" here includes cultural values and communicative
>preferences that may be embedded in both the content and form of ICT
>- thus threatening to make ICT less the agent of a promised
>democratic global village and more an agent of cultural
>homogenisation and imperialism. The conference series brings
>together scholars from around the globe who provide diverse
>perspectives, both in terms of the specific culture(s) they
>highlight in their presentations and discussions, and in terms of
>the discipline(s) through which they approach the conference theme.
>
>The first conference in the series was held in London in 1998
>(http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac98/). For an overview
>of the themes and presentations of CATaC'98, see
>http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac98/01_ess.html. The
>second conference in the series was held in Perth in 2000
>(http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/catac00/).
>
>Original full papers (especially those which connect theoretical
>frameworks with specific examples of cultural values, practices,
>etc.) and short papers (e.g. describing current research projects
>and preliminary results) are invited. Papers should articulate the
>connections between specific cultural values as well as current
>and/or possible future communicative practices involving information
>and communication technologies. We seek papers which, taken
>together, will help readers, researchers, and practitioners of
>computer-mediated communication - especially in the service of
>"electronic democracy" - better understand the role of diverse
>cultural attitudes as hindering and/or furthering the implementation
>of global computer communications systems.
>
>Topics of particular interested include but are not limited to:
>
>- Impact of information and communication technologies on local and
>indigenous languages and cultures.
>- Politics of the electronic global village in democratising or
>preserving hierarchy.
>- Communicative attitudes and practices in industrialised and
>industrialising countries.
>- Role of gender in cultural expectations regarding appropriate
>communicative behaviours.
>- Ethical issues related to information and communication
>technologies, and the impact on culture and communication behaviours.
>- Issues of social justice raised by the dual problems of "the
>digital divide" and "computer-mediated colonisation," including
>theoretical and practical ways of overcoming these problems.
>
>SUBMISSIONS
>
>All submissions will be peer reviewed by an international panel of
>scholars and researchers. There will be the opportunity for selected
>papers to appear in special issues of journals and a book. Papers in
>previous conferences have appeared in special issues of a number of
>journals (Electronic Journal of Communication/La Revue Electronique
>de Communication, AI and Society Journal, Javnost- The Public,
>Journal of Computer Mediated Communication, and New Media and
>Society) and a book, "Culture, Technology, Communication: towards an
>Intercultural Global Village", edited by Charles Ess with Fay
>Sudweeks, SUNY Press, New York, 2001.
>
>Initial submissions are to be emailed to catac at it.murdoch.edu.au as
>an attachment (Word, HTML, PDF). Guidelines for submission,
>including templates, are on the web site. Submission of a paper
>implies that it has not been submitted or published elsewhere. At
>least one author of each accepted paper is expected to present the
>paper at the conference.
>
>Important Dates
>
>Full papers: 15 March 2002
>Short papers: 29 March 2002
>Notification of acceptance: 5 April 2002
>Final formatted papers: 26 April 2002
>
>KEYNOTE SPEAKER
>
>Susan Herring (Associate Professor of Information Science, Adjunct
>Associate Professor of Linguistics, Indiana University): "The
>language of the Internet: English dominance or heteroglossia"
>
>COMMITTEE
>CONFERENCE CO-CHAIRS
> Charles Ess, Drury University, USA, ejcrec at lib.drury.edu
> Fay Sudweeks, Murdoch University, Australia, catac at it.murdoch.edu.au
>CONFERENCE VICE-CHAIR
> Lorna Heaton, University of Montreal, Canada, lheaton at videotron.ca
>PROGRAM COMMITTEE
> Jose Abdelnour-Nocera, Open University, UK
> Tom Addison, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
> Phil Agre, University of California San Diego, USA
> Poline Bala, University Malaysia Sarawak, Malaysia
> Steve Benson, Edith Cowan University, Australia
> Gunilla Bradley, Mid Sweden University/Ume University, Sweden
> Hans-J¸rgen Bucher, Universitt Trier, Germany
> Michael Dahan, Israel
> Dineh Davis, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA
> Gretchen Ferris Schl, College of William and Mary, USA
> John Gammack, Murdoch University, Australia
> Satinder Gill, Centre for Knowledge and Innovation Research, Finland
> and Stanford University, USA
> Sara Gwynn, University of the West of England, UK
> Soraj Hongladarom, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
> Herbert Hrachovec, University of Vienna, Austria
> Jeremy Hunsinger, Virginia Tech, USA
> Lawrie Hunter, Kochi University of Technology, Japan
> Steve Jones, University of Illinois Chicago, USA
> Helen Nissenbaum, Princeton University, USA
> Leslie Regan Shade, University of Ottawa, Canada
> Gill Sellar, Edith Cowan University, Australia
> David Silver, University of Washington, USA
> Malin Sveningsson, Linkping University, Sweden
> Peter Sy, University of the Philippines, Philippines
> Wal Taylor, University of Central Queensland, Australia
> Richard Thomas, University of Western Australia, Australia
> Leslie Tkach, University of Tsukuba, Japan
> Arun-Kumar Tripathi, Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany
> Alexander Voiskounsky, Moscow University, Russia
> Andrew Turk, Murdoch University, Australia
> Yvonne Waern, Linkping University, Sweden
> Ann Willis, Edith Cowan University, Australia
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