Andrew Murphie on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 14:44:48 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime-ann> The Fibreculture Journal—Call for Abstracts/Papers—“Trans”—Transversals, Transduction, Transmateriality |
. Call for Abstracts/Papers—the Fibreculture Journal —“Trans” —Transversals, Transduction, Transmateriality http://journal.fibreculture.org/ Issue Editors: Adrian Mackenzie, Andrew Murphie and Mitchell Whitelaw (andrew.murphie@gmail.com: for editorial inquiries) Please note that for this issue, initial submissions should be abstracts only Abstracts due: March 31 Full Submissions Due: May 31 Publication: Aimed for late November 2010 Articles must be submitted in full Fibreculture Journal house style. You must first read the Guidelines for Submission at http://journal.fibreculture.org/polstyle.html#submit. You can access information about house style at http://journal.fibreculture.org/polstyle.html#style. [Please note, submissions not in house style will automatically be returned to authors for formatting. That is, you will not be able to have your paper considered for publication unless you have formatted it correctly. The journal is peer reviewed and authors are expected to take readers reports into consideration when finalising their articles for publication. Negotiation with the editors over potential changes is usual practice.] ---- Digital, networked and informational media are extremely dynamic, and constantly diversifying in form and function at a dizzying rate. They fuse with social (and “natural”) worlds in a manner with which established powers find it difficult to come to grips. For many, from seriously challenged newspaper proprietors to established media disciplines, it might be time to pause for breath, if only for a moment—to regroup and adapt established practices and ideas, to count the survivors from among the old media worlds of just a few years ago. While occasionally sympathetic, this issue of the Fibreculture Journal rejects this approach. If we pause for breath, it is to take in the new air. This issue embraces the accelerated evolutions of media forms and processes, and the microrevolutions in the social (and even the natural sciences) that dynamic media foster. This issue forges ahead, embracing and thinking through what must be embraced and thought through, establishing new forms of critique, or new forms of design, in order to fully engage with the emergent conditions of our new engagements with the world via contemporary media. It rethinks the complex forces and ephemeral forms of digital and networked media via a “radical empiricism”. Relations and dynamic ecologies come first, before fixed forms and established disciplines or business models. In short, we seek articles that give voice to the transformative nature and powers of contemporary media’s new worlds and engagements. This issue of the Fibreculture Journal will critically explore the specific dynamics of digital, networked and informational media in the light of the constant transformations, micro and macro, that are these media’s very power. We are interested in articles addressing these media’s own ecologies of ongoing transformation, and/or their co-evolution with other worlds (social and political worlds, natural worlds, the worlds of science, or art, of pleasure, of philosophy and theory). To give this precision, we seek articles, theoretical or analytic, critical and/or propositional, that engage with contemporary media worlds within the parameters (or "conceptual parametrics") of three concepts: transduction, transmateriality, transversality. We begin from the assumption that transductions (the relay of forces, for example in a corkscrew or in the modulation of a video signal by audio data) and transmaterialities (the transformation of material flows, whether voltage in a computer. globalized distribution, or the movement of affect within social networks) are the lifeblood of digital, networked and informational media. These constantly generate transversals—lateral connections that transform all the fields they cross. These are often at once material, technical and social. The issue does not require submissions to engage with the thinkers behind these ideas (although of course we will be delighted if some do). Rather, transduction, transmateriality and transversality are meant as catalysts for experiments in radical empiricism, for immersions in the dynamic relations that distribute themselves within new media worlds. A brief summary of these terms can be found at the end of this call for papers. We would, for example, be interested in “trans” effects in the following areas: * cross-signal processing, relay and modulation, in VJing, dance and technology, and elsewhere. * networks—wired and wireless—as ongoing transducers/tranduced, individuators/individuations, micro and macro and all this at the same time. * the way in which metadata and feeds—and the generation of taxonomies or semantic webs—are indeed generative and transformative, but perhaps of taxonomies that are as destabilised by their own relays as they are stabilising .. the transformation of economies of knowledge that results. * the implications of “trans” media events for cultural, social and political theory and practices. The new ecologies of practice (Isabelle Stengers) that result; new concepts of community, or of the commons (Michel Bauwens, Elinor Ostrom), or activism or democracy, that are adaptive, or fed by, “trans” media events and technics. * art or design that brings together “strange constellations” of transduction, transmateriality, transversality. * the challenges to, and/or transformations of, disciplines or established ecologies of ideas and/or practices in philosophy, cultural theory, economics or science as a result of “trans” media events and technics. * new “transmaterialisms” and their implications for older materialisms. * open access: design, publishing (whether of books, 3D objects, or perhaps genetic, genomic or neuroscientific data), education, data, ontology, etc and the new kinds of social, material and technical transactions allowed by “trans” media events. * new concepts of invention. * “trans” media events at the junction of virtual and actual. * images, sounds and sensations as transducers/transduced/transversals, via “trans” media events, across bodies and social fields. * the transformation of Capital by “trans” media events. * biomedia—mutual inscription and incorporation (Hayles), between computing and social and natural ecologies. * “counter-transversality” … rethinking computing and sustainability, “trans” media events and environmental crisis or social crisis. * “trans” media events and the production of subjectivity. * reactionary and radical transductions or transmaterialities. * contributions to the theory of transduction, transmateriality and transversality at the junction of media and other ecologies. * contemporary media and transience. * generative ecologies and “trans” media events. ---- Transduction, Transmateriality, Transversality: o transduction: the active transformation of forces that allows an ongoing individuation—or coming together of relations into novel assemblages—to occur. This might be in the assemblage of a corkscrew and wine bottle, or in the relays which are also modulations between video and audio signal in VJing. (see Adrian Mackenzie’s Transductions: bodies and machines at speed [London: Continuum, 2002] or Steven Shaviro’s blog entry, “Simondon on Individuation”, http://www.shaviro.com/Blog/?p=471). o transmateriality: is a term recently developed by Mitchell Whitelaw. If computing allows for an “incredibly dynamic, pliable set of techniques for manipulating the material environment” (Whitelaw, http://teemingvoid.blogspot.com/2009/01/transduction-transmateriality-and.html), then transmateriality suggests “the extension of transduction to an understanding of the material relations and transformations involved in a computing immersed in the material world”. In this, computers are taken to be “material machines dedicated to propagating a behavioral illusion, or call it a working model, of immateriality” (Matthew Kirschenbaum—http://www.otal.umd.edu/%7Emgk/blog/LeavesATrace.pdf; http://mkirschenbaum.wordpress.com/). “Concepts like ‘data’ are functional abstractions for describing the propagation of material patterns through material substrates. But that at the same time these material patterns - and here I mean everything from optical pulses to hard disk substrates, luminous screens and speakers pushing air - these material patterns, and the sensations and aesthetics that result are profoundly shaped by data acting as if it were symbolic and immaterial. Transmateriality is an attempt to ‘ground’ the digital without losing sight of its (let's say) generative capacities” (Whitelaw). If ‘Transduction suggests a way to link practices like physical computing, fabrication, networked environments, and many more... We could add tangible interfaces, augmented reality, and locative systems. ... perhaps we can call this expanded computing: digital media and computation as material flows, turned outwards, transducing anything to anything else” (Mitchell Whitelaw,) o transversality: a transformative mobility though different systems (that can be at once technical, but also social, political, natural). It tends to be lateral, rather than hierarchical. A transversal connection does not just connect fields or sets of pre-existing relations. It transforms the things/events that are brought into connected networks. Any ‘individual’/individuation/social or natural ecology is to some extent a network, and any network involves an ecologies of transversals. Crucially, the micro-reconstitution of relations is as important as, if not more so than, the macro- reconstitution of fields. (see Glen Fullers’ blog entry, “Transversality”, at http://eventmechanics.net.au/?p=675; Andrew Murphie’s account of Guattari’s use of the term, “editorial”, FCJ 9, http://journal.fibreculture.org/issue9/issue9_editorial_print.html; or Gerald Raunig’s “Transverality: In Search of a Non-Instrumental Relationship Between Art and Politics”, http://www.acfny.org/transforum/transforum-2/transversality/) ---- The Fibreculture Journal (http://fibreculturejournal.org/) is a peer reviewed international journal, associate with Open Humanities Press (http://openhumanitiespress.org/) that explores critical and speculative interventions in the debate and discussions concerning information and communication technologies and their policy frameworks, network cultures and their informational logic, new media forms and their deployment, and the possibilities of socio-technical invention and sustainability. -- "Take me to the operator, I want to ask some questions" - Barbara Morgenstern "A traveller, who has lost his way, should not ask, Where am I? What he really wants to know is, Where are the other places" - Alfred North Whitehead "I thought I had reached port; but I seemed to be cast back again into the open sea" (Deleuze and Guattari, after Leibniz) Andrew Murphie - Associate Professor School of English, Media and Performing Arts, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, 2052 Editor - The Fibreculture Journal http://journal.fibreculture.org/> web: http://www.andrewmurphie.org/ http://www.andrewmurphie.org/blog/ http://www.last.fm/user/andersand/ http://researchhub.cofa.unsw.edu.au/ccap/ fax:612 93856812 tlf:612 93855548 email: a.murphie@unsw.edu.au room 311H, Webster Building _______________________________________________ nettime-ann mailing list nettime-ann@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ann