Typecraft v2.5
Jump to: navigation, search

Futurescapes

Revision as of 14:14, 20 August 2015 by Dorothee Beermann (Talk | contribs) (Dorothee Beermann moved page Internal:Futurescapes to Futurescapes)


This event is supported by TypeCraft


Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination


Symposium in New Media,Technologies and the Humanities

The Faculty of the Humanities at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) is pleased to announce a two-day symposium on New Media,Technology, and the Humanities, organized in connection with the TrondheimTechnology Biennale which is devoted to the technology of the outer space and interstellar travel.

Futurescapes shares the Biennale’s interest in interplanetary, space and time, and the cosmic beyond, and in humans who dream, invent, construct and destroy their way into the future. As we enter our future, scientists in the Digital Humanities start to break down the boundaries that have separated communication technologies and the classical humanities. Knowledge about ourselves, our history and our future, our culture and our languages finds in the Digital Humanities new forms of expression. Digital communication brings us in constant connection to others and exposes us to a encompassing stream of sounds, pictures and words which fill us with new ideas and visions. We would like the Futurescapes symposium to be the space for scholars across diverse fields to showcase their work. The Symposium aims not only to offer an opportunity for interdisciplinary practitioners to share their projects, but also to interrogate critically how and with what tools humanists and technologists make things and think big ideas. We also would like to address ethical, legal, and political implications of such work, how does it bear on the futures of our fields and beyond.

Key speakers

Confirmed key speaker

Kari Kraus is an associate professor in the College of Information Studies and the Department of English at the University of Maryland. Her research and teaching interests focus on new media and the digital humanities, digital preservation, game studies and transmedia storytelling, and speculative design. She was a local Co-PI on two grants for preserving virtual worlds; the PI on an IMLS Digital Humanities Internship grant; and, with Derek Hansen, the Co-Principal Investigator of an NSF grant to study Alternate Reality Games (ARGs) and transmedia storytelling in the service of education and design. Her latest transmedia work is likewise funded by the NSF. With Min Wu and Doug Oard, she Co-PIed “Exploring Invisible Traces in Historic Recordings,” which used audio forensics techniques to help recover provenance information about undated recordings.

Kraus has written for the New York Times and the Huffington Post, and her work has been mentioned in the Atlantic, Baltimore Public Radio, The Salt Lake Tribune, Huffington Post, Gamasutra, Wired, and the Long Now Foundation. In 2015 she entered into a Space Act Agreement with NASA (really!). She is currently writing a book about how artists, designers, and humanities researchers think about, model, and design possible future.

Call for Papers

Futurescape Revised by madheinrichs2

Futurescapes will showcase interdisciplinary and/or digital humanities projects which deal with any of the issues listed below and scholars, practitioners and students from the fields of technology, the arts, and the humanities are encouraged to submit their work. We are especially interested in papers addressing the following issues

Digital humanities, interdisciplinary methodologies and new research questions How have humanistic thoughts and creative practices associated with fine arts, music and culture transformed neuroscience, information technology, communication and computational sciences? Conversely, how has the digital turn transformed the supposedly “analogue” disciplines of literary studies, linguistics, and philosophy? What do text mining, data visualization, sonification, topic modeling, textual annotation, digital curation offer the humanities? What are the new research questions they enable us to ask? What are the benefits and limitations (economic, methodological, political, legal, ethical, etc.) of this digital and big data turn and cross-disciplinary methodologies?

Speculative practices in the humanities and technological fields How do different disciplines narrate and landscape the future? How do they harvest the “past” for this purpose?

Disciplinary keywords in translation What are the humanities and technical sciences’ key terms (memory, space, future, data, narrative, network, design, for instance), and how do they travel/translate across disciplines?

Critical pedagogy How can we use technology in the service of critical pedagogical practices? How can technology help build collaborative and critical intellectual communities? Activate new student networks? Transform teaching, assessment, and reflection into dialogical practices? How can we turn students and educators into active global digital citizens?

Sustainability and the humanities How do interdisciplinary humanities engage with sustainability in environmental and temporal senses? How can those of us working in digital humanities create projects that last, instead of dying of “digital rot”? Can the humanities help us better understand sustainability? Can technology make the humanities more sustainable?

Legal regimes and access to technology and the humanities How do intellectual property laws shape knowledge production and sharing in the humanities, technical and science fields?

Power, technology, and the humanities How are existing power frameworks (also within the humanities itself) consolidated, transformed, challenged by new technologies? Who has the privilege, the right to create and narrate the future? What is the gender of the future? How are our futures classed and raced?

Abstracts

We solicited abstracts, proposals for mini workshops, and Lightning Shorts.

Submission

  • Abstracts of up to 500 words (excluding references and Figures or Tables) should be sent by 31st November 2015 to the following e-mail address: tba
  • Proposals for a mini workshop of up to 200 words should be sent by 31st October 2015 to the following e-mail address: tba
  • Lightning Shorts of up to 200 words should be sent by 31st November 2015 to the following e-mail address: tba (PhD and MA students are particularly welcome to showcase their work)

Conference Logistics

more soon

Organizers

[Hanna Musiol], Associate professor, NTNU, Department for Language and Literature

[Dorothee Beermann], Professor, NTNU, Department for Language and Literature