Message posted on 08/10/2021

CfP: Conference 2022 "Digital Futures in the Making: Imaginaries, Politics, and Materialities", 15-16 Sep 2022, University of Hamburg

                *Sorry for cross-posting*

Dear colleagues,


The call for papers for the 9th dgv Conference of the Section "Digitisation in
Everyday Life", taking place at the Institute of Anthropological Studies in
Culture and History at the University of Hamburg on 15-16 September 2022
(tbc), is now open. The conference theme is "Digital Futures in the Making:
Imaginaries, Politics, and Materialities".



We strongly encourage the participation of early-career researchers of all
levels (PhD & post-doc), young professionals and graduate research students
interested in future-making and digitisation.



Short abstract

Possible themes include but are not limited to:

  *   How should we live in the digital age: What are modes of living that
acknowledge the open-endedness and contingency of digital cultures? Which
imaginaries or even utopias are envisioned? How do they already shape ongoing
digital transformations?
  *   Mundanisation of digital technologies: How do people negotiate futures
and appropriate the digital within their everyday lives? Which resistances,
counterculture(s), and creative practices emerge in everyday life and social
movements?
  *   Digital infrastructuring and materialities: In this section, we are
concerned with not only the often-hidden infrastructures (including data,
code, algorithms, etc.), in which power and governmentality are embedded and
materialised, but also with the profound knowledge gap that exists between
platforms, institutions, and the vast majority of people that use and
co-produce digital media. Furthermore, we are interested in how digital
expressions, artefacts, and the stakeholders who develop them shape how
digital cultures are realised.
  *   Futures of digital anthropology and open science: Digital media have
also become instruments of analysis of researchers in cultural anthropology
and related disciplines of technoscience. Open science poses new challenges to
ethnographic research with regard to research data management, data
infrastructures and ethics. How do digital technologies create new
possibilities for ethnographic research and academic knowledge production
itself? What challenges and ethical questions may arise for qualitative and
empirical research in sensitive fields

We welcome individual papers and panels as well as experimental workshops and
transdisciplinary studios to discuss everything from ongoing research,
collaborations, methodological challenges, and empirical work to new ideas. We
are planning to publish the contributions in an international publication.


Please send a 300-word abstract (in English or German) and a short biography
(in English) to mail@digilab-culture.de by 5
December 2021.



Please find more information on the Call for Papers at:
https://digilab-culture.de/call/.



We are looking forward to your contributions!



Samantha Lutz, Anna Oechslen, Hannah Rotthaus, Quoc-Tan Tran



Samantha Lutz, M.A. | POEM Project Manager

University of Hamburg
Institute of Anthropological Studies in Culture and History
Grindelallee 46 | postbox: H8  | 20146 Hamburg | Germany

phone: +49 (0)40 42838-9940 | e-mail:
samantha.lutz@uni-hamburg.de
web: www.poem-horizon.eu | twitter: poem_h2020 |
Instagram: poem_h2020
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