call for papers for workshop (Internet Histories 2) &
edited collection (Internet Histories)
deadline for abstracts: 1 February 2008

'Internet Histories 2: Australia and the Asia-Pacific'
Saturday 14 June 2008
Perth, State Library of Western Australia
an ARC Cultural Research Network workshop
convened by Gerard Goggin and Mark McLelland

co-sponsored by
Centre for Asia-Pacific Social Transformations Studies, U. of  
Wollongong (CAPSTRANS) & Centre for Social Research in Journalism and  
Communications, UNSW

'Internet Histories 2: Australia and the Asia-Pacific' is the second  
of two workshops exploring the emerging field of Internet Histories.
Following on from the Vancouver Oct 07 pre-conference workshop of the  
Association of Internet Researchers, this event will further  
investigate conceptualisation of the problematics of Internet  
histories, what the state of the field is, and what specific  
challenges exist for cultural research, and media histories.

In particular Internet Histories 2 will focus upon:

· Australian Internet histories;
· Internet histories in the region, notably from leading Asia-Pacific  
countries (such as China, Korea, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia,  
Indonesia, and the Philippines);
· what comparative Internet histories tell us about the development  
of the Australian Internet - and the possibilities for the paths the  
technology might take in the future;
· what are the implication of specific Internet histories for  
revising taken-for-granted, general ideas about the Internet?
* what are the challenges of doing Internet histories, and what are  
the particular issues for concepts, methods, tools, documentation,  
archives, interpretative strategies, and presentation of research  
findings?

Accordingly we call for papers that discuss concepts, methods,  
themes, and theories associated with Internet histories in Australia  
and the Asia-Pacific - as well as issues of archives, records,  
historical documentation and interpretation.

'Internet Histories' collection

As well as the call for Internet Histories 2, we also issue a call  
for papers for a collection on Internet histories.

Drawing on papers from both Internet histories workshop, but also  
from other submissions, we wish to compile a collection that  
comprehensively investigates the state of Internet histories.  
Accordingly, for this Internet Histories collection, we welcome  
submissions that offer perspectives on questions such as (but  
certainly not limited to):

· what sorts of Internet histories are currently available, or in  
progress - whether national, country-specific, local, subcultural,  
community, or transnational and translocal?
· what are the histories and trajectories currently missing and why  
do these particular lacunae exist? What histories of the Internet are  
being foreclosed, overlooked, or not yet imagined, and what are the  
implications of this?
· who is currently writing, reading, collecting, valorising, or even  
enshrining Internet histories?
· what are the dominant accounts of Internet history, or dominant  
assumptions regarding these?
· what histories do we have of Latin American, African, Oceanic, or  
Asian Internet, for instance, compared to European or North American  
Internet?
· what challenges does doing Internet history pose? what is specific  
about Internet history compared to histories of media,  
communications, or other technologies, or broad social or cultural  
histories?
· how do our understandings of Internet and mobile technologies and  
cultures vary depending on the kinds of quite specific histories that  
condition these?
· how do a researcher's own culture and patterns of use determine the  
kinds of questions s/he may raise concerning the history of 'the  
Internet'?

For either the Internet Histories 2 workshop or the Internet  
Histories collection, please send 150 word abstracts to both  
convenors by 1 February 2008: Gerard Goggin ([EMAIL PROTECTED])  
and Mark McLelland ([EMAIL PROTECTED]). Please indicate whether you  
wish your submission considered for the workshop, or collection, or  
both. Further details can be found on the project website: http:// 
www.capstrans.edu.au/about/projects/internet-histories.html

About the convenors/editors:

Gerard Goggin is Professor of Digital Communications and deputy  
director of the new Centre for Social Research in Journalism and  
Communications at the University of New South Wales, Sydney,  
Australia ([EMAIL PROTECTED]). He is author and editor of a number  
of books on mobiles and Internet, including ‘Mobile Technologies:  
 From Telecommunications to Media’ (2008), ‘Cell Phone  
Culture’ (2006), ‘Virtual Nation: The Internet in Australia’ (2004),  
and ‘Digital Disability’ (2003).

Mark McLelland lectures in the Sociology Program in the School of  
Social Sciences, Media and Communication at the University of  
Wollongong, Australia. He is the author or editor of six books  
relating to Japanese cultural history, minority social groups and new  
media. These include ‘Japanese Cybercultures’ (2003) and ‘Queer Japan  
from the Pacific War to the Internet Age’ (2005).
Gerard and Mark are the editors of the forthcoming collection,  
‘Internationalizing Internet Studies’(Routledge, 2008).

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
Gerard Goggin
Professor of Digital Communication
& Deputy Director
Centre for Social Research in Journalism and Communication
University of New South Wales
Sydney 2052 NSW Australia
e: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
w: +61 2 9385 8532
m: +61 428 66 88 24









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