[Air-L] Digital Culture Workshop
Andrea Forte
aforte at cc.gatech.edu
Thu Feb 26 13:11:20 PST 2009
Apologies for cross postings
Just a reminder that the closing date for submission of abstracts
for the 2nd Digital Cultures Workshop is the 28 February 2009. Full
details are below. Abstracts should be sent directly to Ben Light at
b.light at salford.ac.uk
Best wishes,
*****************
2nd Digital Cultures Workshop: Social Media Publics
4-5 June 2009, University of Salford, U.K.
Final Call for Contributions
Organizers
Ben Light and Marie Griffiths, University of Salford
Sian Lincoln, Liverpool John Moores University
Steve Sawyer, Syracuse University
Confirmed Speakers
Dr. Carsten Sørensen - Information Systems and Innovation Group,
Department of Management, London School of Economics
Dr. Theresa Senft - School of Social Sciences, Media and Cultural
Studies, University of East London
It is clear that the boundaries between the 'public' and the
'private' are becoming increasingly blurred within and amongst sites
of home and work. Indeed, in the wake of reality television shows,
national identity card schemes, increased social media usage and the
like, publicity appears to be the order of the day. For this
workshop we seek papers that discuss the issues raised for those
living in environments where there is seemingly little room for
privacy. As was the case last year, we intend for the workshop to
be multi-disciplinary in nature, broad in the approaches
participants take and issues they cover. If your work is about any
aspect of digital culture, this is the workshop for you! The
following are thus only indicative of potential topics that could be
raised:
- How do people domesticate social media in their attempts to
maintain a balance in publicity and privacy? Do they? Why do they,
or don't they?
- What matters are raised by increased access to data about
individuals and organizations?
- What does the blurring of boundaries between public and private
mean for our knowledge and experiences of gender, sexuality, race,
ethnicity and disability?
- How are ICT mediated spaces created and maintained at home, work
and those spaces in between? For example, how are 'geek gamers'
finding spaces to play now the only console in the house can be in
the living room?
- How are ICT policies shaping public and private spaces throughout
societies around the world?
- What privacy issues are presented by media convergence?
- What role are mobile and ubiquitous computing technologies playing
in public and private spaces?
- How is the increased commodification of social media affecting our
privacy?
Following from the first workshop we continue to see this workshop
having three purposes. First, we seek to give voice and structure to
existing new media, ICT and technology related research which may
not readily sit within conventionally accepted areas. Second, we
wish to draw in research on new forms of digital technology, ICT,
computing, organizing and social interactions. Third, we want to
continue discussions regarding potential futures for ICT related
research which combine research as related to the evolving forms and
functions of work organizations and the changing boundaries and
relations between these organizations and their social milieus.
We seek abstracts (of up to 600 words) that focus upon some aspect
of digital culture. We hope to have a special issue of a journal
associated with the workshop as was the case last year (a special
issue of the Journal of Information, Communication, Ethics and
Society was published early in 2009 - Vol 7, Issue 1). Abstracts
should be submitted to Ben Light at: b.light at salford.ac.uk
Important Dates
Abstract Submission Date: 28 February 2009
Notification of Acceptance: 31 March 2009
Workshop Dates: 4 and 5 June 2009
Workshop Arrangements
The fee for presentation/attendance at the workshop is £75 GBP. This
will cover refreshments and meals throughout the workshop and a
workshop dinner to be held on the evening of the 4th of June.
There is no fee for PhD students, however they still need to
register for the workshop. PhD student registration includes
refreshments during the workshop but excludes attendance at the
workshop dinner (This is subject to a £25 GBP fee, payable upon
registration).
You will be able to register for the workshop at:
https://shop.salford.ac.uk
<https://staffwebmail.salford.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=https://shop.salford.ac.uk>
<https://shop.salford.ac.uk/
<https://staffwebmail.salford.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=https://shop.salford.ac.uk/>
>
Further details regarding the location of the workshop will be
posted nearer the time at: http://www.iris.salford.ac.uk
<https://staffwebmail.salford.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.iris.salford.ac.uk>
<http://www.iris.salford.ac.uk%3E> <http://www.iris.salford.ac.uk/
<https://staffwebmail.salford.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.iris.salford.ac.uk/>
<http://www.iris.salford.ac.uk/%20%3Chttps://staffwebmail.salford.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.iris.salford.ac.uk/>
>
<http://www.smmp.salford.ac.uk/
<https://staffwebmail.salford.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.smmp.salford.ac.uk/>
<http://www.smmp.salford.ac.uk/%20%3Chttps://staffwebmail.salford.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.smmp.salford.ac.uk/>
>
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