[Air-L] One-day symposium: 'Making Sense of the High-Speed Society, ' 14.01.22

Scott Wark nmz.smw at gmail.com
Wed Jan 12 04:13:42 PST 2022


On Friday January 14th, the Pause for Thought project will be hosting a one-day
symposium <https://pauseforthought.net/symposium/schedule/> on the theme
'Making Sense of the High Speed Society.'

The symposium will be held on Zoom and will include keynote preentations by
David Berry and Rebecca Coleman. The full day's schedule is pasted below -
if you are interested in attending, please register your interest with Tom
Sutherland (TSutherland at lincoln.ac.uk) and Scott Wark (S.Wark at warwick.ac.uk)
to receive a link and password.

//

The world seems to change so rapidly, it often feels hard to keep up.
Concerns regarding the hurried pace and constant upheaval of everyday life
are not at all new, but anxieties surrounding these issues seem to be
growing increasingly acute, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic
(witness, for instance, the focus on problems of ‘burnout’). Continual
upheaval, one of the characteristic features of modernity from the
Industrial Revolution onward, has intensified to the point where our
societies are unable to adjust. This inability to keep up manifests most
strikingly in the realm of technology: the platforms, devices, apps, and
other media forms that leave a mark on our everyday lives emerge and then
obsolesce with dizzying rapidity.



We have all likely devised and shared tactics for adapting to and managing
the pressures that the high-speed society places upon us – ways of dealing
with the fact that we cannot, and perhaps should not, keep up with the pace
of change. That is, ‘media literacy’ – the question of how we learn to
navigate the fluctuations of our hyper-mediated world and how we share that
skill and knowledge with others – is not an issue that can or should be
confined merely to the institutional setting of the university. It does not
occur solely within the classroom. In a world saturated by media
technologies, all of us must learn – have learned – to live with media’s
accelerating pace of change. Or: to ‘make sense’ of media technology even
as it threatens to leave us behind.

*9.00am Keynote one:*

David M. Berry (Professor of Digital Humanities – University of Sussex):
‘Personal Computation’

10.00–10.15am [morning break]

*10.15am Panel one *(chair: Scott Wark):

Tina Kendall (Anglia Ruskin University): ‘Staying Connected to Stay
Safe: Boredom and Social Media Literacy in a High-Speed Society’

Yanning Huang (Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University): ‘From “996”,
“Involution” to “The Philosophy of Lying Flat”: The Classed Practice of
Talking About (and Dealing With) Overwork in High-Speed China’

Henrik Bødker and Philip Pond (Aarhus University and University of
Melbourne): ‘Events, Acceleration and Attention Politics’

Ben Potter (University of Sussex): ‘Hegemony of the Fad: Ephemerality,
Reproduction and the Losing Time for Thought on TikTok’

11.45am–12.45pm [lunch break]

*12.45pm Panel two *(chair: Tom Sutherland):

Leah Junck (University of Cape Town): ‘The Times of Tinder: Perceptions of
Intimacy in a Fast-Paced Dating Environment’

Emir Kurmuş (Boğaziçi University): ‘Insights for the Complex Interaction
Between Acceleration and Deceleration Through the Analysis of White-Collar
Employees’ Sleep Patterns and Time Pressure in Istanbul’

Lorenzo Olivieri (University of Bologna): ‘Temporalities of Non-Knowledge
Production: Acceleration and Repetition in the Italian Asylum System’

Andreas Schellewald (Goldsmiths, University of London): ‘Understanding the
Practice of “Mindless” Scrolling on TikTok in the Context of Pandemic Life
and Social Acceleration’

2.15–2.30pm [afternoon break]

*2.30pm Panel three *(chair: Zara Dinnen):

Krista Lepik (University of Tartu): ‘Temporal Tension Fields in Museums and
Libraries’

Manuela Arruda Galindo and Paula Sibilia (Fluminense Federal University):
‘Running to Miss Nothing: Anxious Temporality and the Frustration of the
(Un)limited’

Sandy Di Yu (University of Sussex): ‘The Enclosure of Free Time in the
Digital Society: How the Advent of Platform Capitalism Parallels the
Process of Primitive Accumulation in the Transition to Post-Feudal
Capitalistic Europe’

Victoria Stanton and Stacey Cann (Concordia University): ‘Pedagogy and Time’

*3.45pm Keynote two: *

Rebecca Coleman (Reader – Goldsmiths, University of London):
‘Infrastructures of Feeling: The Digital Mediation of the Present’



More information about the Air-L mailing list