SIGCIS 2022: UNDER CONSTRUCTION
Γιάννης Κουκουλάς2022-06-07T12:47:02+03:00The Special Interest Group for Computing, Information, and Society welcomes submissions to their annual conference
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Lilly Irani
Associate Professor of Communication & Science Studies, University of California, San Diego
View CFP as a Google doc
Abstracts due June 1, 2022
THEME
Yet the patched and partial nature of computing isn’t new. Computing is infrastructure, requiring its own forms of construction and maintenance throughout its history, whether tearing up roads, detangling spaghetti code, or hastily soldering circuits. These are metaphors for history too: what better encapsulates the sentiment of doing history, than the feeling that it will never be done? For historians of information and computing itself, such anxieties are particularly acute due to the objects under examination: constant upgrades, absent documentation, planned obsolescence, the failure of historic hardware. For every line of code we save, hundreds, thousands, disappear. As we work to make sense of our contemporary conditions, how does the undone quality of history affect our ability to tell it?
The 2022 SIGCIS Conference, convening in-person in New Orleans on November 13 following the SHOT Annual Meeting, invites scholars, museum and archive professionals, journalists, IT practitioners, artists, and independent researchers across the disciplinary spectrum to submit abstracts related to the historical conditions of computing. We are especially interested in (but not limited to) work that relates to the theme of construction, maintenance, and labor, broadly and imaginatively construed. Areas of engagement may include:
- Maintenance and infrastructure in the history of computing and information tech
- Historically-oriented approaches to the platform and gig economies
- Computing as a site of labor struggle
- Networks, borders, boundaries
- Computational models of resistance: obfuscation, open-source, hacking, going “off grid”
- Government’s historic role in the construction of computing industries and infrastructure
- Communitarian and utopian applications of computing
- Updates, upgrades, failures, and bug
- Modding, re-using, recycling, afterlives
- Archival and curatorial practices and methods
- Oral history, memory, forgetting
- The limits of historical representation
SIGCIS is especially welcoming of new directions in scholarship. We maintain an inclusive atmosphere for scholarly inquiry, supporting disciplinary interventions from beyond the traditional history of technology and promoting diversity in STEM. We welcome submissions from: the histories of technology, computing, information, and science; science and technology studies; oral history and archival studies; critical studies of big data and machine learning; studies of women, gender, and sexuality; studies of race, ethnicity, and postcoloniality; film, media, and game studies; software and code studies; network and internet histories; music, sound studies, and art history; and all other applicable domains.
The annual SIGCIS Conference begins immediately after the regular annual meeting of our parent organization, the Society for the History of Technology [SHOT]. Information about the annual SHOT conference can be found at: https://bit.ly/3Nswik2