The Culture of Ubiquitous Information Nordic Research Network

CFP – Interweaving Technologies

Interweaving Technologies: The Aesthetics of Digital Urban Living

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

First network seminar at Aarhus University, Denmark. 21-23 April 2010
We aim to being at 11.00 on the 21st and end at 15.00 on the 23rd.

The urban environment is increasingly formed by the development of digital and mobile media. In this development there is no lack of investment in how these new technologies can be directed at making our lives both easier and more fun. But one could argue that we still need to find a proper ground for discussing these innovations in light of art, aesthetics and socio-cultural aspects.

Although these new technologies are generic in structure, they shape the environment differently, based on the context and site in which they are interwoven. There is a need for critical attention – be that from the viewpoint of an auditory or software culture, critical design, mobile or locative media art, or through a focus on the various strategies that come into play in the appropriation of the digital urban space (bricolage, interventions, hacktivism or the exploration of playful and performative strategies).

A lot of research in Nordic countries is focused upon how digital technologies shape daily urban life. However, most of the examples drawn upon in this research take place in large metropoli in the US and Asia, which raises the question of how we reflect on pervasive, locative or ubiquitous technologies in light of the smaller metropoli (as found in the Nordic region), the provincial or even the rural.

Relevant discussions are the interweavings of:

  • the innovative and the aesthetic;
  • the optimistic and the critical views on technology;
  • the provincial everyday and the spectacular metropolis;
  • the central square and the suburbs; the individual and the collective; and
  • the mesh that folds and unfolds between situations and technologies.

This conference is aimed at gathering researchers interested in the aesthetics and socio-cultural aspects of situated and ubiquitous technologies. In addition, we hope that this conference will provide a fertile ground for discussing how we can use the specific Nordic way of constructing a society (in political constitutions, sets of values, existing practices, and the commonsensical traits of our everyday cultures and forms of life) as a backdrop for discussions of digital urban living.

The conference format will comprise invited speakers and reviewed individual presentations of papers. A number of workshops aimed to facilitate further discussions of the conference topics through experimental group work will also be held. All workshops will have to produce an outcome that can be exhibited and presented at the closing reception (as posters or in a medium related to the workshop topic).
Please note that the seminar is a work-in-progress seminar, which is why the length of the final papers is relatively short (see below). You could regard your contribution as a way to discuss ongoing (and not necessarily finished) research. One way of framing your paper could be in the spirit of a position paper, where you present a hypothesis, a project or a specific position on a topic related to the seminar theme with the purpose of contributing to and maybe initiating a broader discussion amongst peers when we meet in Aarhus.

The seminar is aimed at the members of the network, but contributions from researchers from outside of the network are greatly welcomed. So please feel free redistribute this call.

Relevant topics for the individual presentations include (but are not limited to):
The research areas of:

  • auditory culture
  • software culture
  • urban cultural geography
  • critical design
  • mobile and locative media art

The research agendas of:

  • critical approaches to digital public space
  • appropriation, bricolage, interventions and hacktivism
  • playful and performative strategies

Submission format and deadlines (please refer to the Ubiquity website (http://ubiquity.nu/) or to the website of Digital Aesthetics Research Center (http://darc.imv.au.dk) for further guidelines):

  • 18 February 2010 (extended from 10 Feb): deadline for submission of abstracts of max 600 words. Abstracts will be reviewed. Accepted language is English only.
  • 4 March 2010 (extended from 20 Feb): authors receive comments on submitted abstracts.
  • 21 March 2010: deadline for submission of final position papers of maximum 2500 words. Papers will be subjected to final evaluation as to whether they meet the conference topic. Accepted language is English only.
  • 21-23 April 2010 (incl): conference

There is no specific paper template for the abstract submission. Authors with accepted abstracts will receive further information on templates to be used for the final position papers along with the acceptance email.
Submissions and questions regarding the conference can be directed at interweaving@imv.au.dk (preferred contact address), Lone Koefoed Hansen (koefoed AT hum.au.dk) or Lars Bo Løfgreen (lbl AT hum.au.dk).

The conference is part of a number of events arranged by the research network “The Culture of Ubiquitous Information”; a Nordic interdisciplinary research network addressing an unresolved problem: the articulation of a conceptual apparatus in cultural theory and technology studies which affords an analysis and evaluation of ubiquitous computing as a contemporary development increasingly making itself felt socio-culturally.

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