CfP Digital Culture & Society Towards Popular Techno-Futures Due March 15
Call for Articles:
Special Issue of the journal Digital Culture & Society
Towards Popular Techno-Futures - a Global Cultural Perspective
Submission deadlines for abstracts (200-300 words): March 15
and full papers (6000-8000 words): August 15, 2025
Please submit all contributions to: techfutures@posteo.com
This special issue will bring together articles exploring Popular Techno-Futures from interdisciplinary and international perspectives, including Cultural and Media Studies, Science and Technology Studies and related disciplines.
The goal of this special issue is to decenter the discussion on socio-technical futures and the role of popular culture, aesthetics and media in their (re)production. In the Global North, official policies and cultural engagements with techno-futures are predominantly driven by a small group of libertarian techno-oligarchs who, in spite of reinforcing critical and dystopian counter-discourses, propound celebratory views of technological progress - of enhancing, or overcoming the human - motivated by their desire to attract venture capital. These futures emerge as increasingly hegemonic, as governments tend to share these celebratory views to further their own interests of economic and national competitiveness. Nationalist, elitist, and often ethnocentric imaginaries and narratives blur the line between political, economic, and pop-cultural realms and become obstacles to a nuanced and inclusive discourse on the risks and benefits of future technologies. What is worse, the political surrender to capitalist and competitive growth-lock-ins disregards or even erases a vast imaginary zone of alternative futures.
Focused on the interests of individual nations, these narratives tend to disregard the historical and current economic entanglements between technological developments in the North and the exploitation of the South. Political and cultural media discourses in the North tend to cast the Global South as war-torn, technologically underdeveloped, and in need of help. At the same time, official national strategies in the Global North as well as the Global South foreground the use of technology to further development and economic growth. These efforts tend to disregard the economic precarity of local populations and the necropolitical exploitation of the lands of the South. Rarely acknowledged in official media discourses and dominant cultural references, these connections nevertheless emerge in counter-cultural discourses and artistic productions predominantly from the Global South which imagine their own techno-futures. Preexisting research on techno-futures and their impact on the societal acceptance, design, and use of technologies has mostly focused on the ‘key players’ of the West (and its antagonism to China), while other parts of the world have been neglected.
Conceptually, Cultural Studies and STS scholarship have long stressed the interplay between the social imagination and the de facto production of scientific facts or socio-technical authority. Contributions will work from the general premise that technologies are shaped not only by the policies and views of political or economic elites and the allocation of resources but also by various narratives and discourses drawing on popular imaginaries and cultural frameworks of techno-futures. Technology, and therefore also technological futures, are always socially situated, relational, and enmeshed in (dominant) narratives of societal sense-making, constantly reworked and understood differently by users and contexts. Narratives, in particular, have not only been understood as reservoirs of sense-making, but also as performative trajectories, causing dominant perceptions, expectations and investments - powerfully transforming future ideas into material being.
While the intersecting fields of cultural studies and STS have begun to acknowledge voices from the Global South, there is still more work to be done to arrive at a more just and inclusive picture. Such a global take on tech-futures has taken on a renewed urgency in times of rising geopolitical block formations, growing tensions, and a worrying resparking of nationalist sentiments. In this special issue, we plan to focus on forms of tech-future societal discourses from a global and popular perspective to counter the dominant Western mode of inquiry and its (de-)construction of tech-futures. Eligible articles should thus tackle (one or more of) the following questions:
*
How do different forms of sense-making, like belief systems, media,
cultural memory, myths, political culture, and social ideals around
the globe reflect, shape, and produce their own tech-futures?
*
How are these futures co-produced through local and regional
experiences, histories and narratives, and how do such narratives
interweave traditional and futuristic discourses to create
culturally specific futurisms (Sinofuturism, Afrofuturism,
Indigenous Futurisms)?
*
What role do the denial or promotion of, opposition or attraction
to, and resistance against or adoption of Western modernist and
techno-progressive paradigms play?
*
How do tensions between spheres of global or local, official or
informal shape artistic and media explorations of techno-futures?
*
What kind of cultural productions and media embody and represent
tech-futures? What is the role of the arts, stories, markets,
ideals, figures, imagery, humor, narrativity etc. in transmitting
and producing different techno futures?
*
What kind of different hermeneutical approaches and tools exist in
contribution or opposition to creating typologies, comparisons,
discourses, symbols, analysis etc.?
*
Which transnational patterns and connections and block formations
can be identified in their development?
When submitting an abstract, authors should make explicit to which of the following categories they would like to submit their paper:
Field Research and Case Studies (full paper: 6000-8000 words)
We invite articles that discuss empirical findings from studies that approach the relationships between neurobiology, brain research, computational intelligence, biopolitics, psychological research and the new AI movement. These may include practices of circulating or collecting data as well processes of production and evaluation.
Methodological Reflection (full paper: 6000-8000 words)
We invite contributions that reflect on the methodologies employed when researching the practices of the new tendencies of AI (e.g. artificial neural networks, fuzzy systems, genetic algorithms, evolutionary computation, deep learning, prognostics and predictive modelling, computer vision). These may include, for example, the specificities of ethnographic fieldwork in online/offline environments; challenges and opportunities faced when qualitatively researching quantifiable data and vice versa; approaches using mixed methods; discussions of mobile and circulative methods; and reflections of experimental forms of research.
Conceptual/Theoretical Reflection (full paper: 6000-8000 words)
We encourage contributions that reflect on the conceptual and/or theoretical dimension of the new artificial intelligence paradigm, and discuss or question how digital intelligence can be defined, what it can describe, and how it can be differentiated.
Entering the Field (2000-3000 words; experimental formats welcome)
Publication schedule
March 15: Collection of abstracts
August 15: Collection of full papers
September onwards: Peer-review
Early 2026: Publication of the Special Issue
Please submit your abstract of 200-300 words until March 15, 2025 to the following email address:
techfutures@posteo.com
Publication fees
None. The issue will be made fully open access one year after initial publication.
We strongly encourage researchers and practitioners around the world (especially the ones outside, or countering, the scientific production of the global North) to submit an abstract.
Please circulate widely.
Guest editors:
Jascha Bareis
Scientific Staff at the Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (ITAS) & Associate researcher at the Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (HIIG)
Anya Heise-von der Lippe
Assistant Lecturer with the Chair of Anglophone Literatures at the English Department of the University of Tübingen
Felix Spremberg
Postdoctoral research fellow at the Department of Languages and Cultures, Ghent University
--
Jascha Bareis(Profile) (Scholar) (LinkedIn)
Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis(ITAS)
Karlsruher Institute of Technology(KIT)
Research Group Digital Technology and Societal Change(FG DigIT)
Recent Publications
Ask Me Anything ! 😈How ChatPGT Got Hyped Into Being.SOC ARXIV Preprint
The Trustification of AI. Disclosing the bridging pillars that tie Trust and AI together.Big Data & Society
Technology Hype: Dealing with bold expectations and overpromising, with M. Roßmann and F.Bordignon.Journal of Technology Assessment in Theory and Practice EASST's Eurograd mailing list -- eurograd-easst.net@lists.easst.net Archive: https://lists.easst.net/hyperkitty/list/eurograd-easst.net@lists.easst.net/ Edit your delivery settings there using Account dropdown, Mailman settings. Website: https://easst.net/easst_eurograd/ Meet us on Mastodon: https://assemblag.es/@easst Or X: https://twitter.com/STSeasst
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