Erich W. Schienke on Thu, 18 Oct 2001 22:03:02 +0200 (CEST)
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[Nettime-bold] MIT Comparative Media Studies : CALL FOR PAPERS : Media inTransition
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Title: MIT Comparative Media Studies : CALL FOR PAPERS :
Medi
Passing this along to nettime.
Check out the call for papers at:
http://media-in-transition.mit.edu/conferences/m-i-t/callpapers.htm
MIT Comparative Media
Studies
CALL FOR
PAPERS
Media in Transition:
globalization and convergence, an international
conference
conference date: 10-12
May 2002
abstract deadline: 1 January 2002
Terms such as
"globalization" and "convergence" increasingly
dominate discussions of our media environment, yet their meanings
remain vague and context specific. Many factors make it difficult to
make broad statements about these trends: The uneven flow of cultural
products across national borders, the still nascent nature of the new
media environment, unpredictable patterns of use and meaning among
media consumers, diverse national histories of cultural exchange or
isolation, an unstable business climate which alternately encourages
and discourages innovation and entrepreneurship.
Many core issues remain to
be explored: Will globalization reduce or expand the world's cultural
diversity? Will new technologies empower international media makers to
enter the American marketplace or leave them more exposed than ever
before to U.S. cultural exports? How do we reconcile the competing
forces of media convergence and media fragmentation that are shaping
the current communications infrastructure? What patterns can we
discern among convergent content and audiences across media forms and
international borders? What are the implications of media convergence
not only at the corporate level, but also at the grassroots level
where users are in control of content, context, and flow?
Two years ago, MIT hosted
the first Media in Transition conference, bringing together an
international array of scholars from many different disciplines to
examine the process and consequences of media change. This year, we
invite you back to MIT for the second Media in Transition conference.
As in the first conference, we encourage reflection across
disciplinary boundaries, and among theorists and practitioners -- a
citizenly discourse makes core ideas accessible to a broad
public.
Focusing especially on North
American, European and Asian experiences, the conference will provide
a platform for a historically and culturally comparative analysis of
our media past, present and future. As in the first Media in
Transition conference, presentations and multi-media demonstrations
will be framed by plenary "conversations" in which
distinguished panelists will speak briefly and then participate in
extended dialogue with the audience.
We solicit papers on all
aspects of media in transition, including:
changing peripheries and
centers
world music-- world media
news and information in the digital age
the internet, policy and popular culture
transnational political activism
cultural disorder: regional censorship and trans-national media
unofficial cultures, cultures of resistance
cultural authority/autonomy/markets
historical precedents/precursors
global media flows, local media meanings
intellectual property: constructions, enforcements, implications
cyber citizenry and the global public sphere
digital culture: language and infrastructure
convergence and fragmentation
public service vs the marketplace: traditions, histories and
futures
building a global base for local media production
global fusion and hybridity
"The Third Culture" -- identity in an age of dislocation
the globalization of the media audience
re-examining "the global village"
the transformation of television
narrative forms and cultural change
Abstracts and short bios
should be sent by Jan. 1, 2002 to R. J. Bain at:
rjbain@mit.edu
Comparative Media Studies
14N-207
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA 02139
USA
The conference will be held
at MIT from 10-12 May 2002.
Please visit the web site
from the previous Media in Transition conference:
http://web.mit.edu/m-i-t/conferences/m-i-t/
--
:-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-:
Erich W. Schienke
Doctoral Student in Science
and Technology Studies
Fellow- Center for Ethics
in Complex Systems
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
110 8th St.
Troy, NY 12180
office: Sage Labs - 5502
email: schiee@rpi.edu
net: http://www.rpi.edu/~schiee
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