Michael Reinsborough on Mon, 16 May 2011 23:24:21 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> "Anarchism and Technology": |
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [NAASN] CFP: "Anarchism and Technology": A special issue of Anarchist Studies Date: Sun, 8 May 2011 12:49:30 -0600 From: Michael Truscello <truscello@gmail.com> Reply-To: naasn@googlegroups.com To: naasn@googlegroups.com Call for Papers "Anarchism and Technology" A special issue of Anarchist Studies Editors: Michael Truscello and Uri Gordon Deadline for abstracts: 1 August 2011 Deadline for papers: 1 February 2012 Throughout its history, the anarchist movement has had an ambivalent relationship with technology, with activists and writers approaching the issue on the full spectrum between celebration and abolitionism. This trend has continued with the revitalization of anarchist resistance and theory in the last decades, with phenomena as diverse and seemingly-contradictory as the wholesale adoption and development of information and communication technologies, the primitivist critique of civilization and rewilding practices, and the uptake of practical ecology applications and models by anarchsits around the world. Nevertheless, anarchist and anarchist-inspired writings on technological issues remain quite scant, especially in the scholarly rather than polemical register. The proposed special issue of Anarchist Studies seeks to address this gap, in bringing together a focused discussion of all aspects related to the anarchism/technology nexus. Naturally, this is not the first time activists and scholars have promoted the concept of technology in harmony with nature. Philosopher John Clark, for example, checklists a host of famous theories that demand consonance between human beings and nature: "what Illich calls 'convivial tools,' Schumacher labels 'intermediate technology,' and Bookchin (perhaps most adequately) describes as 'liberatory technology,' or 'ecotechnology'" (1985:196). Clark was writing about technology and anarchism 25 years ago. What do contemporary anarchists have to say about technology? Abstracts are invited for papers that would address any intersection of anarchism and technology. Topics might include: - Anarchist theories and critiques of technology, from any tendency within anarchist thought - Historical approaches to technology by anarchist movements or writers - Anarchist-inspired infrastructures and new forms of satisfying necessities, anarchist perspectives on the transition from oil-dependent capitalism to alternative energies and practices - Social media and revolution (the Iranian "Twitter Revolution," the Egyptian "Facebook Revolution," etc.) - Anarchist critiques of civilization and practices of rewilding - Totalitarian "technological drift" (Langdon Winner) and anarchist responses - Technological abilities/ableism - Anarchist dimensions of Free and Open Source Software - Technosocial assemblages and (the subversion of) regimes of domination - Anarchist readings of contemporary events/issues, such as Wikileaks and the Julian Assange saga Abstracts (up to 350 words) should be sent by 1 August 2011 to the editors by email (truscello@gmail.com <mailto:truscello@gmail.com>, uri@riseup.net <mailto:uri@riseup.net>) Once an abstract is accepted, the full paper will be expected by 1 February 2012. Papers will be subject to anonymous peer-review and the author may be asked to respond to comments or make additions and corrections. Michael Truscello, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Departments of English and General Education EA3118 Mount Royal University Calgary, AB, Canada T3E 6K6 403-440-8513 truscello@gmail.com <mailto:truscello@gmail.com> http://capitalismisthecrisis.net # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org