<nettime-ann> CFP Reminder: Canadian Journal of Media Studies Call for P
Bob Hanke on Sun, 3 Jan 2010 08:00:45 +0100 (CET)
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<nettime-ann> CFP Reminder: Canadian Journal of Media Studies Call for Papers: Media, Knowledge and the Network University
- To: nettime@kein.org
- Subject: <nettime-ann> CFP Reminder: Canadian Journal of Media Studies Call for Papers: Media, Knowledge and the Network University
- From: Bob Hanke <bhanke@yorku.ca>
- Date: 2009年12月28日 13:16:17 -0500
.
Hello Felix and Ted,
Please kindly circulate this CFP reminder on Nettime with attached PDF.
The deadline for papers is February 28, 2010.
with best wishes for the new year,
Bob Hanke
http://bhanke.apps01.yorku.ca/
Department of Humanities
Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies
York University
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF MEDIA STUDIES
CALL FOR PAPERS
2009 marks the
30th
anniversary of the
publication of Jean-François Lyotard?s The Postmodern
Condition: A Report on Knowledge.?[I}t is common
knowledge,? he wrote, ?that the miniaturization and commercialization of
machines is already changing the way learning is acquired, classified,
made available, and exploited? (1984, org. 1979: 4). In 2010, ?Connected
Understanding? will be the theme of the Congress of Social Sciences and
Humanities in Montreal (http://www.congress2010.ca/). The Canadian
Journal of Media Studies announces a special issue on Media,
Knowledge and the Network University edited by Bob Hanke, York
University, and David Spencer, University of Western Ontario.
The massification and informationalization of the university has
transformed not only the content of teaching and research but also
disciplinary processes of knowledge production and the technological form
of academic life and culture. The integration and normalization of ICT's
raises many questions about the university, academic labour, scholarly
communication and collaboration, and academic technoculture. In 1957,
Marshall McLuhan invited us to reconsider the education process by
announcing that, with the advent of television, the ?classroom without
walls? had arrived. A half a century later, we are working in the
university without walls and the ICT ?revolution? is over. In
?Universities, wet, hard, and harder,? German media theorist Friedrich
Kittler reviewed 800 years of university-based media history to observe
that ?universities have finally succeeded in forming once again a
complete media system.? Yet media scholars have rarely chosen to study
their own universities as media systems. This special issue of the CJMS
is an invitation to reflexive, critical media studies. Established and
emerging scholars are invited to address continuities and transformations
in new media and the network university and to set the agenda for future
study and debate.
Possible questions and areas of research and critical inquiry
include:
What is unthought, unrepresented and unquestioned in discussions of the
public university and the ?neoliberal turn,? technologically-mediated
post-secondary education, and institutional initiatives in the
virtualization of the educational process?
What is the impact of the cybernation of the university? What is
happening in information technology (IT) infrastructure, planning and
governance? What IT strategies are pursued by specific institutions in
different jurisdictions? What is the role of IT professionals as
intermediaries between IT industries, intermediating organizations,
private-sector partners
and the university? What is the faculty experience of ICTs, and IT
?solutions,? services, and support?
What are the networks of possibility and affordances of technology, and
what are the obstacles and limits? the unintended, unanticipated
consequences?
What hybrid methodologies, research techniques and software enhance our
capacity to map the wireless campus and network condition of the
university?
What philosophers of technology and politics are relevant to sharpening
our thinking on the question of technology? What scholarly perspectives
on invention, innovation and the process of emergence enable us to break
the habit of instrumentalist thinking and discard the ?tool? metaphor?
How can we take technical artifacts, from small, portable technology to
entire campus networks, out of their ?black boxes? in order to study
them? How does the technical substrate matter to our thinking? Our
reading and writing of ?texts?? Our notions of ?research??
How is the university embedded in the network society and cognitive
capitalism? What are the drivers of IT change in universities? What are
the consequences of the disjuncture between the digital culture and
practices outside the university and IT (planning,
procurement/evaluation/implementation, support and services) inside
universities?
How can we move beyond user-centric approaches to Web 2.0 based software
applications and learning management systems, peer-to-peer networks, and
small tech in academic settings? In the new network culture, how can we
grasp the relations between what is ?given? and what is unlikely,
surprising, unexpected and unrealized?
How can we move beyond debates over ?student centered? learning and
faculty deskilling to new models of reskilling and organized research
networks, technological literacy and technologies of the common? How can
we articulate scholarly ?collaboration? and student ?engagement? with a
politics of knowledge (commodified knowledge, open scholarship and
knowledge within the social sciences and humanities, popular knowledge,
indigenous knowledge, etc.) that will strengthen the public mission of
the university after the recession? How can we turn away from the
?knowledge economy? and towards knowledge cultures? What does the
prototype of the Canadian Institute for Health Research?s Knowledge
Broker Model portend for the social sciences and humanities?
We also invite investigations of:
- ?
computerization, campus networking strategies, and ICT-related
organizational change since the advent of distributed computing, the
Internet and the WWW
- ?
space, time, speed and rhythm in the network university
- ?
the production and operativity of networks and archives,
scholarly journals and portals, web-based learning environments and
objects, research cyberinfrastructure, critical cyberpedagogy,
technological literacy, copyright/left, intellectual property rights
- ?
open access movement, open access research, open educational
resources, open courseware, institutional repositories, ?Do it Yourself?
education or edupunk
- ?
tropes of factory, ecology, network, mobility, common
- ?
articulations and destabilizations of oral/written,
actual/virtual, bureaucratic records/institutional memory, off-line/on
line, knowledge creation/information sharing, formal learning on
campus/informal learning off campus, amateur/professional,
artist/researcher
- ?ideology of
convenience, ethos of performativity, the promotional condition,
immaterial academic labour, general intellect, circuits of knowledge and
struggle
- ?
technological ?progress,??knowledge economy,? knowledge
?transfer? or ?mobilization,? creativity, innovation, academic freedom,
academic capitalism
- ?
the coming network university, knowledge futures, ecoethical
perspectives on the university?s inputs and outputs and the discourse of
?sustainability?
Since intellectual innovation may be engendered at the intersections
of disciplines, contributions are welcome from outside of Communication
and traditions and trajectories of media studies outside of Canada. Solo
or collaborative work that provides a comparative, international
perspective on the network university in different countries is
especially welcome.
Submission Guidelines
Authors should submit papers of about 25 pages (or 8000 words) in MLA
style with abstract and keywords electronically to David Spencer, Editor,
dspencer@uwo.ca. With the exception of the title page, please remove all
indications of authorship.
The deadline for papers is February 28, 2010. Peer review and
notification of acceptance will be completed by March 31, 2010. Final
manuscripts accepted for publication will be due April 30, 2010.
Comments and queries can be sent to Bob Hanke, Guest Co-Editor,
bhanke@yorku.ca.
For more information about the Canadian Journal of Media Studies,
visit
http://cjms.fims.uwo.ca/default.htm
Attachment:
CJMS.cfp.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document
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