The Aesthetics of Drone Warfare
An International, Interdisciplinary Conference
Humanities Research Institute, University of Sheffield
7-8 February 2020
Keynote speakers:
Drones have now become commercial and readily available, with innovators
promising unprecedented solutions to sectors as wide ranging as agriculture,
energy, public safety, and construction. But this multi-billion-dollar industry
is founded upon the technology’s origins in a military context, and drone
warfare is rapidly redefining the meaning of war, peace, and their temporal and
geographical boundaries.
Combining surveillance with targeting, satellite
imaging with ground-level intelligence, human observation with algorithmic
apparatuses, drones have catalysed new ways of making and experiencing war.
This international two-day conference explores the issues surrounding drone
warfare through the prism of aesthetics: aesthetics understood as art, and as
the relationship between the body, the self, and the material environment. How
does drone warfare extend and augment the human sensorium? How have writers and
artists engaged in new forms or genres to address drone warfare? What is the
role of the human in future war? What opportunities and challenges does
information-based warfare pose for human rights and peace work? Approaches from
all fields are welcome, including literature, history, geography, philosophy,
political science, and visual art.
We invite proposals for 20-minute presentations or for three-paper
panels. Topics could include but are not restricted to the following:
- Literature and the arts which thematise or feature drone technology and drone warfare
- The history and pre-histories of drone warfare, such as aerial bombardment
- The relationship between war, technological innovation, and the entertainment industries
- Narratives of robotics, artificial intelligence, and information-based warfare
- The relationship between peace, surveillance, pre-emption, and human rights
- Drones, drone warfare, and social media
- Posthuman warfare
Please send 250-word individual paper proposals, or 350-word proposals
for fully formed panels, along with short biographies, to Beryl Pong at
artofdronewarfare@gmail.com
* There will be a workshop, for postgraduates and early-career
researchers, led by Drone Wars UK: an NGO that conducts research, and maintains
an up-to-date public dataset, on the U.K. use of armed drones. If you are
interested in participating in the workshop, please indicate this in your
application.
Bursaries for postgraduates and early-career researchers will be shared
after the CFP deadline.
Deadline: 20 October 2019
Sponsored by a British Academy Rising Star Engagement Award
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