[spectre] 2.nd call for papers amberconference 2010 DATACITY
Zeynep Gunduz
zgunduz at yahoo.com
Sun Sep 19 23:29:04 CEST 2010
amberConference invites papers around the theme “DATACITY”
deadline extended to: 29th of September 2010:
http://www.amberconference.org
This is an international call for amberConference which will be take place in
the frame of amber'10 Art and Technology Festival. The selected papers will be
presented at amberConference in 6th-7th of November 2010 in İstanbul and will
be published in the Conference Book.
important dates:
· Up to 500 word abstract to be submitted by 29th of September 2010 ((( for
submission: http://submissions.amberplatform.org )))
· Notification of acceptance 1st of October 2010
· Registration deadline 10th of October 2010
· Conference 6th and 7th of November 2010
· Deadline for final revised paper submission 30th of December 2010
· Proceeding book will be published in 2011
the theme:
"Datacity"
For the first time in history the World’s urban population has outnumbered its
rural counterpart. Cities have become the predominant habitat of humanity. The
requirements of rapidly growing cities, coupled with the contemporary
technological possibilities bring about new urban reality that is data.
amber’10 takes up the relationship between city and data as its festival theme.
It is no accident that the rise of statistics as a science coincided with the
rise of the modern city as a social form during the industrial revolution. When
statistical methods of data production and measurement coupled with
reproductive techniques such as photography and printing, the modern city
entered into imaginary circulation simultaneously with its double, its image.
From its beginnings, the modern city emerged both as a reality and a
representation that were interrelated in such a manner that it became hard to
tell one from the other.
In this historical process, contemporaneous with the Enlightenment and
Industrial capitalism, the ability to understand the city became conditional on
processing and thinking through the data it produced. Data has become a crucial
factor in urban social relations and politics.
The capacity to produce and process all kinds of data has increased
tremendously with the rise of new technologies in the last three decades.
Capitalist parliamentary democracy, as it exists today, demands transparency,
efficiency and absolute security as the conditions of its mechanism and has at
its service the wide possibilities offered by new technologies to meet these
demands. This coupling brought about the strategic importance of data in
today’s World. We know and define the city through the images made up of its
data. The collection, storage and processing of the vast amount of data has
become an everyday practice that is both visible and invisible, threatening to
some and absolutely beneficial to others in a field ranging from law to ethics,
human rights to health.
With the theme title Datacity, amber’10 proposes to define the modern city as a
data cluster in addition to however else the city form may be defined today. We
call on artists to interpret the life forms, production and consumption
patterns and politics of the Datacity from the vantage point of arts and
technology.
New technologies play an ever-increasing role in the social life and
administration of cities in various forms and functions. Branded as "smart
cities", modern urban spaces are now equipped with cctv cameras, GPS and
mapping systems, computerized infrastructure management systems along with the
ever-multiplying number of personal electronics and gadgets all operating on
global digital communication networks.
With objectives ranging entertainment and administrative strategy to pure
profit and public security, this network of networks tracks and traces anything
that is processed digitally and continually creates a massive circulation of
digital data that emanates from the operation of very many animate and
inanimate things in the city. The city and its data are now heavily implicated
in each other from aesthetic, technological, political, economic and
sociological angles.
In light of this new state of things, amberConference proposes to begin by the
beginning and ask the question: What is the new urban reality under the reign
of data? and what is data in the context of the city? For a through rethinking
of the pair datacity from the above angles, we invite researchers, thinkers and
artists from relevant disciplines to submit presentations of no more than 4000
words by considering the following subject headings.
· The politics of data and contemporary Urban governmentality.
· Politics of data circulation and use.
· Contemporary security and surveillance discourse.
· Legality and legitimacy of data collection and use.
· Political economy of data generation.
· Value of metadata in a data-driven society.
· The notion of Smart cities and urban management.
· Datazen: the consumer in a transurban dwelling pattern.
· Urban mundane and serendipity in the digital age.
· Urban artistic sensibilities in the digito-technological age.
· City as a "space of flows": Networked urban topology as an art material.
· Spatial experience and ambient information processes
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