Concourse: Digital humanities

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Showing posts with label Digital humanities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Digital humanities. Show all posts

Saturday, October 28, 2023

CFP: International Conference on "(Art)ificial Intelligence and the Problems of Language, Thinking, and Writing: Interrogations to #Jacques Derrida"






The first English translation of Jacques Derrida’s La Voix et le Phénomène (1967) translated as  Speech and Phenomena: And Other Essays on Husserl's Theory of Signs is completing its 50th anniversary in 2023. This is “an event, perhaps” (Salmon, 2020). This book was translated again in 2011, this time with the title Voice and Phenomenon: Introduction to the Problem of the Sign in Husserl’s Phenomenology. Derrida’s views on translation “as transaction and as transfer” (2001) is too well known not to think of this series of translation events as, at least, “dubious”. We are using “dubious” of course to underline the fact that this International Conference which is being organized to commemorate Speech and Phenomena may not be celebrating the “original” book let alone celebrating Voice and Phenomena. Therefore, the question of authenticity and originality is, not putting too fine a point on it, an aporia. We use this aporia of original, translation, and multiple productivity of texts to investigate and contribute to the contemporary debates on artificial intelligence, machine learning, writing, ChatGPT, and several other concerns emerging from the current time of the “algorithmic self” (Pasquale, 2015). This investigation is through interrogations of Jacques Derrida and the series of “events” that his three books of 1967 helped initiate: De la grammatologie translated into English as Of Grammatology (1976); L'écriture et la difference translated into English as Writing and Difference (1978) apart from Speech and Phenomena this conference is celebrating.

We are using “interrogation”, fittingly to the aims of the conference, in the way Oxford’s A Dictionary of Computing (2008) defines the term. Interrogation in this sense is “the sending of a signal that will initiate a response. A system may interrogate a peripheral to see if it requires a data transfer. The response is normally a status byte. When a number of devices are interrogated in a sequence the process is called polling.” This International Conference, therefore, is in a way sending “signals” to Derrida and the texts associated to that proper name, especially Speech and Phenomena. We want to investigate if these texts signal back and to what extent on the questions of language, thinking, and writing that first animated Derrida and which now need a serious revisit, reformulation, and reconsiderations.

With the advances being made in AI and computing, we need a better understanding of how these technologies are changing (or not changing) how we understand language, thinking, and writing. This seems to be one of the urgent tasks of philosophy and theory. The optimism of Hilary Putnam (1995) that “AI has so far spun off a good deal that is of real interest to computer science in general, but nothing that sheds any real light on the mind” (392) to the Chinese Room Argument by John Searle (1980) where he claims that “no program is sufficient for intentionality” (424) have tried to wrest some ground of thinking from computation and algorithm but the field remains highly contested and contentious. Works such as Alien Phenomenology (2012) among many others have shown interesting ways in which interactions and thinking may happen within and between objects. Similarly, with natural language processing (NLP) which enables a predictive model of writing generating signifiers based on big data and algorithm the very notion of “writing” is perhaps undergoing a radical change. If we take Derrida’s claim that “writing thus comprehends language” (1976, 7) it is now an urgent task to see if probabilistic writing is or is not transforming the concept of writing all over again. Derrida’s task of revealing the ethnocentrism that controlled the concept of writing which was seen as “phoneticization of writing” (3) needs to be taken up in the light of the promises and ambitions of “predictive writing.” If Derrida indeed deconstructed the logocentric nature of ethnocentric writing, does predictive writing “liberate” us finally from the stranglehold of the logos? Is algorithmic also logocentric or is it not? There are suggestions that it may just be the case and that what Derrida and others were theorizing about language and writing may have ultimately been triumphant (Underwood, 2023). This conference will think about these questions deeply and hopefully will result in certain insights which give us newer ways of conceptualizing thinking, language, and writing.

This International Conference invites paper submissions from scientists, media scholars, philosophers, literary scholars, Science and Technology Studies (STS) scholars, historians, anthropologists, practitioners, professionals, and others. The papers can have varied perspectives and aims. They can be exploratory and speculative and could also be based on empirical studies or lab results. The only requirement is that the papers should be in conversation (or as we mentioned above, in the nature of “interrogation”) with the range of concepts used by Jacques Derrida that pertains to language, thinking, and writing. The topics include but are not limited to:

  • Deconstruction and AI
  • Derrida and Ethics of Language and AI
  • Derrida and Digital Humanities
  • Derrida, Politics, and Social Media
  • Derrida and AI generated Digital Selfs and Cultures
  • Conversational AI and the Presence of Speech
  • Trace in the Digital

Please send an abstract (500-750 words) with 3-5 keywords to mithilesh.kumar@christuniversity.in 

Conveners:

Avirup Ghosh, Panihati Mahavidyalaya, Kolkata, India.

Mithilesh Kumar, CHRIST (Deemed to be University), Bengaluru, India.

Namitha Shivani Iyer, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.

Abstracts will be selected through a double-blind review process. Papers presented at the conference will be published as a special issue in Tattva Journal of Philosophy (UGC-CARE Listed Journal. Group I, Arts and Humanities)

Important Dates and Fees:

  1. Deadline for submission of abstracts: September 30, 2023.
  2. Notification of selected abstracts: October 10, 2023
  3. Registration link: October 15, 2023.
  4. Deadline for registration: December 01, 2023.

Registration fee: Paper presenters (India)- INR 5,000

Paper Presenters (International)- US $75

Participation- INR 1,000 (India)/US $15 (International)

 

References:

Bogost, Ian. Alien Phenomenology, or, What It’s like to Be a Thing. University of Minnesota Press, 2012.

Daintith, John, et al., editors. A Dictionary of Computing. 6th ed, Oxford University Press, 2008.

Derrida, Jacques.  Of Grammatology. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976.

---. Speech and Phenomena, and Other Essays on Husserl’s Theory of Signs. Northwestern University Press, 1973.

---. Writing and Difference. University of Chicago Press, 1978.

---. Voice and Phenomenon: Introduction to the Problem of the Sign in Husserl’s Phenomenology. Northwestern University Press, 2011.

---. “What Is a ‘Relevant’ Translation?” Critical Inquiry, vol. 27, no. 2, Jan. 2001, pp. 174–200. DOI.org (Crossref), https://doi.org/10.1086/449005.

Pasquale, Frank. “The Algorithmic Self.” The Hedgehog Review, https://hedgehogreview.com/issues/too-much-information/articles/the-algorithmic-self. Accessed 7 Aug. 2023.

Putnam, Hilary, and James Conant. Words and Life. Harvard University Press, 1994.

Salmon, Peter. An Event, Perhaps: A Biography of Jacques Derrida. Verso, 2020.

Searle, John R. “Minds, Brains, and Programs.” Behavioral and Brain Sciences, vol. 3, no. 3, Sept. 1980, pp. 417–24. DOI.org (Crossref), https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X00005756.

 

 

 

Contact Information

Mithilesh Kumar- mithilesh.kumar@christuniversity.in

Contact Email
mithilesh.kumar@christuniversity.in

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Call For Publications: "Online Hate Speech: Impacts, Prevention, and Intervention" -Rotura - Journal of Communication, Culture & Arts

 In the last decade, the increase in visibility and exposure of online hate speech has raised cultural, social, and academic concerns. This issue encompasses topics such as social, political, and religious polarization, the dissemination of hate ideologies, the promotion of violence through online propaganda and recruitment, and the impact on the well-being of individuals involved, with implications for the construction of a pluralistic discourse in peaceful, just, and inclusive societies.

With the aim of deepening knowledge on the subject and addressing effective ways to prevent and intervene in online hate speech, we invite the scientific community to submit studies and theoretical and empirical approaches that contribute to understanding the following topics:

Topics of Interest:


  • Impact of online hate speech on society.

  • Influence of the digital environment on the behavior and development of children, youth, and adolescents.

  • Interactions of online gamers and digital gaming communities as conducive spaces for the spread of hate speech.

  • Analysis of effective strategies and initiatives for preventing and intervening in online hate speech.

  • The role of social media in promoting a culture of peace, justice, and strong institutions.

  • Impact of the pandemic and distance learning on children's exposure to online hate speech and risky behaviors.

  • Public policies and regulatory frameworks to address online hate speech and violence.

  • Other studies related to hate speech.

Rotura is indexed on RCAAP, DOAJ, Scielo, Google Scholar, Latindex, ERIHPLUS, SUDOC, ROAD, Jisc and INDEXAR.

Contact Information

Editors:

Anthony Brooks (Aalborg University)
Ana Filipa Martins (CIAC, Universidade do Algarve)
Janice Richardson (Digital Citizenship Expert, Council of Europe)
Susana Costa (CIAC, Universidade do Algarve, Universidade Aberta)

Contact Email
rotura@publicacoes.ciac.pt

Sunday, April 30, 2023

CFP: Translation in European Periodical Cultures, 1945-65 -Germersheim, Germany- March 2024



CfP SpaTrEM Final Conference

Translation in European Periodical Cultures, 1945-65
Venue: JGU, Germersheim, Germany
Date: 19th to 21st March 2024



To conclude the Spaces of Translation: European Magazine Culture, 1945-65 project (SpaTrEM) we will hold an international conference in March 2024 at the Germersheim campus of Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz.

The project has studied a small constellation of important literary and cultural magazines from three countries (Britain, France, Germany), between c. 1945-65, in order to consider how, through translation, they explore and construct notions of European identity in the period following from the end of World War Two to the mid-1960s. Using the notion of periodicals as 'European spaces' (Brolsma and Wijnterp, 2018) the project has explored how periodical culture uses translation to reconfigure a vision for Europe after the catastrophe of World War Two.






For more information on the work of SpaTrEM see https://spacesoftranslation.org/about/

For our final conference, we hope to bring together scholars, whether established, early career, or postgraduate, in order to present work on themes relevant to the project. These may explore translation and transnational exchanges in British, French, or German magazines, but we also very much welcome papers on magazines from other European countries or involving a wider range of languages (including non-European languages) in the relevant time period. A selection of papers from the conference will be published as a book.






Possible topics might include the following:

  • Translators and translating cultures (studies of translation in individual magazines; comparative studies of translating cultures; studies of individual translators in magazines; the ‘invisible’ translator in magazines; translators and exile; …)




  • Politics and transnationalism (Europe and decolonisation; Cold War translation; the Congress for Cultural Freedom and Cold War periodicals; politics and translation in magazines; Europe and America; transnational periodical cultures; translations and transnationalism; …)



  • European identity (how discussion about the nature of post-war Europe was formulated in magazines; the materialisation of new European identities in cultural, philosophical, and political debates; the role of magazine editors in developing ideas about European identities; the role of translation in exploring European identity; …)



  • Materiality, visual cultures and genres in post-war periodicals (the materiality of post-war periodical culture in Britain, Germany, France; visual culture and translation in magazines; the significance of diverse genres of material in magazines e.g. travel writing, photo-journalism, advertising; the relation of post-war magazines to ideas of modernism and modernity …)





  • Digital humanities approaches to translation and periodicals (mapping translations; creating and working with databases; data visualization; network analysis; mixed methods research; …)









Please submit an abstract of c. 250 words, along with a short bio (c. 100 words), to Dana Steglich (dsteglic@uni-mainz.de) by 30st June 2023. If you have any questions about the conference please do get in touch.
Contact Email: dsteglic@uni-mainz.de