Digital
media, networked services, and aggregate data are beacons of the future. These
incessantly emerging tools and infrastructures project new ways of
communication bring unknown kinds of information and open up untrodden paths of
interaction. Yet digital technologies do not only forecast uncharted times or
predict what comes next. They are, it seems, both prognostic and progressive
media: they don’t await the times to come but realize the utopian as well as
dystopian visions which they have always already foreseen. At the same time,
all calculation of anticipations has to rely on past data that profoundly shape
our ability to manage expectations and minimize uncertainties.
In these
fast forward dynamics, the special issue of Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies examines the
futuremaking capacity of networked services and aggregate data.
We ask
contributions to consider: What role do digital technologies and data play in
the construction and circulation of future knowledge, e.g., through
forecasting, modelling, prediction, or prognosis? What expectations and
anticipatory visions such as promise or warning do accompany the creation and
diffusion of new media? Over the course of history, which imaginaries of social
and technological futures have been propelled by the media innovations at that
time? How do new media technologies and discourses contribute to the production
and reproduction of social time that is future oriented? How do they impact on
the ability to exert control over the future?
Papers in
this special issue of Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies will explore the future making dimension of new media and
may include the following topics:
- Role of media in reconfiguring the relations and distances among present, past, and future times
- Communicative construction of differently vast and (un)certain horizons of expectation
- Data-based modes of anticipation (e.g., prognosis, prediction, prevention, precaution, pre-emption); calculative practices and other kinds of speculative accounts of possible events
- Historical succession of past future visions around media innovations and mediated social life
- Imaginaries of futures related to digital media
- Interventions into the plans, efforts, and processes of constructing futures
- Backwards-orientation of forecasting and conservative aspects of future scenarios
- New media in the production of simultaneity, coincidence, or (non)contemporaneity
Submissions:
Proposals
should include the author's name and affiliation, title, an abstract of 500
words, and 3 to 5 keywords, and should be sent to the e-mail address no later
than 1 December 2018: mediatizedtime@uni-bremen.de
Invited
paper submissions will be due 1 June 2019 and will undergo peer review
following the usual procedures of the journal. The invitation to submit a full
article does not guarantee acceptance into the special issue.
The special
issue will be published in 2020. All inquiries should be sent to:
christian.pentzold@uni-bremen.de.
Download
the Call for Proposals.
Guest-editors:
Christian Pentzold (University of Bremen, Germany), Anne Kaun (Södertörn University, Sweden), and Christine Lohmeier (University of Bremen, Germany)
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