Julian Bleecker on Thu, 3 Jan 2008 19:45:33 +0100 (CET)
|
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime-ann> Convergence: Call For Research Articles, Debates and Feature Reports
|
- To: nettime-l@kein.org
- Subject: <nettime-ann> Convergence: Call For Research Articles, Debates and Feature Reports
- From: Julian Bleecker <julian@techkwondo.com>
- Date: Wed, 2 Jan 2008 09:32:59 -0800
.
This call invites submissions for a special issue related to digital
cultures of California. Internationally, California is a phenomenon in
terms of its relationship to creating, consuming and reflecting upon
the era of digital technologies. From the legendary garage
entrepreneurs, to the multi-billion dollar culture of venture capital,
to stock back-dating scandals, to the epic exodus of California’s IT
teams during the Burning Man festival, this state plays an important
role in the cultures of digital technologies.
Submission Deadline: February 29th 2009.
All research articles are refereed and should be between 7000 — 10000
words in length.
We also welcome submission of debates (1500 - 3000 words) or Feature
Reports (3000 - 4000 words)
The Bay Area of California (often referred to somewhat incorrectly as
Northern California) is often perceived as a hot-bed of technology
activity. Silicon Valley serves as a marker for the massive funding of
enterprises that shape many aspects of digital culture. The new
interaction rituals that have come to define what social life has
become in many parts of the world can often be traced back to this
part of the state. New forms of presence awareness and digital
communication such as Twitter and Flickr have found a comfortable home
in the Bay Area. Complimenting the Bay Area’s activities in “social
software” is Southern California — Los Angeles in particular — where
Hollywood sensibilities bring together entertainment with technology
through such things as video games and 3D cinema.
California is also the home of several colleges and universities where
digital technologies are developed in engineering departments and
reflected upon from social science and humanities departments. This
curious relationship between production and analysis creates the
promise of insightful interdisciplinary approaches to making culture.
Many institutions have made efforts to combine engineering and social
science practices to bolster technology design. Xerox PARC probably
stands as the canonical example of interdisciplinary approaches to
digital technology design. Similarly, combining arts practices with
technology as a kind of exploratory research and development has
important precedent at places like PARC and at the practice-based
events such as the San Jose California-based Zero One festival and
symposium.
In this special issue we welcome submissions which investigate,
provoke and explicate the California digital cultures from a variety
of perspectives. We are interested in papers that approach this
phenomenon in scholarly and practice-based ways.
* What are the ways that social networks have been shaped by digital
techniques?
* How has the phenomenon of the digital entrepreneur evolved in the
age of DIY sensibilities?
* What are the ways that “new ideas” succeed or fail based on their
dissemination amongst the elite, connected digerati, as opposed to
their dissemination amongst less more quotidian communities?
* What is the nature of the matrix of relationships between Hollywood
entertainment, the military and digital technology?
* Can the DIY culture explored in the pages of Make magazine produce
its own markets?
* How does the Apple Inc. culture of product design and development
shape and inform popular culture?
* How have the various interdisciplinary approaches undertaken at
corporate research centers connected to universities such as Intel
Berkeley Labs shaped digital cultures?
Contact for further information: Julian Bleecker (julian@nearfuturelaboratory.com
)
_______________________________________________
nettime-ann mailing list
nettime-ann@nettime.org
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ann