Janneke Adema on Tue, 29 Mar 2016 20:18:50 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime-ann> Symposium - New Media Gatekeepers: Ecosystems of Access and Denial - Coventry University 22-04 |
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New Media Gatekeepers: Ecosystems of Access and Denial
Coventry University
School of Media and Performing Arts
Ellen Terry Building - ETG101
April 22nd - 12:30-16:00
17:00: Book Launch and Wine Reception
Organised by the Centre for Disruptive Media:
Free Symposium. Please Register at:
Speakers:
Margie Borschke (Macquarie University) – Music (via Skype)
James Newman (Bath Spa University) – Computer Games
Federica Frabetti (Oxford Brookes University) - Software
Janneke Adema (Coventry University) – Academic Publishing
Jennifer Holt (UC, Santa Barbara) – Television (via Skype)
Anthony Luvera (Coventry University) – Photography
Alejandro Ball (University of Dundee) – New Media Art
Virginia Crisp (Coventry University) – Film and Moving Image
New Media Gatekeepers: Ecosystems of Access and Denial
The shift from ‘expert’ to ‘amateur’ gatekeepers of cultural content in a web 2.0 context has been lamented by many an Internet skeptic as an ‘undermining of our culture’ (Keen 2007). However, gatekeeper studies have demonstrated
that the process of ‘expert’ selection (or not) of media for publication or dissemination is subject to vagaries of personal subjectivity (David Manning White, 1950) or to bureaucratic routine (Walter Gieber, 1964). Negus points out that despite its ‘liberal’
image, the distribution of power within the cultural industries is quite regressive and that decision-making power is often situated within small enclaves of privilege—where the music industry actually represents ‘in condensed form, the preferences and judgements
of a small, relatively elite educated, middle-class, white male faction’ (Negus, 2002: 512).
Such examinations of gatekeeping practices have made an important contribution to understandings of power and influence within the cultural industries. However, they have yet to fully examine the manner in which certain
technological and social developments have increased the role of non-professional gatekeepers (e.g. fan fiction communities, YouTube vloggers, bloggers or piracy forum moderators (Crisp, 2015; Bodó, B. and Lakatos, 2012)) as well as the intermediation provided
by non-human filtering devices such as recommendation algorithms and search. Even we as media users play an important role here, actively feeding the filtering devices and computational processes set up by major technology platforms to facilitate media dissemination
and consumption (Striphas 2015, Gillespie 2014).
Indeed, in opposition to the claims that web 2.0 has been accompanied by a process of disintermediation (whereby intermediaries no longer play a role in mediating between audiences and producers), this symposium will examine
the role of the complex and diverse ecosystem of formal and informal, visible and invisible, human and computational media gatekeepers, that is currently rising to the fore.
Keeping in mind the diversity and specificity of various media forms, this symposium seeks to examine how the varying networks of media dissemination come together on various platforms and as part of networks of interactions
and relations. It is our contention that the practices of media gatekeeping must be examined in a way that acknowledges the current level of interrelation between media forms and their associated process of production, distribution and consumption. How does
the distribution and dissemination ecology of one medium, e.g. film, intersect with the associated ecologies of production, distribution and consumption surrounding games, TV programmes, software, books, newspapers, new media art, music, and other media content?
This symposium will consider interlocking ecosystem(s) of media distribution and publishing both holistically and culturally to develop a more nuanced understanding of the factors that influence the transnational flows of
media texts, objects and events, and our own becoming as users and producers of technology in intra-action with these processes of mediation (Kember and Zylinska 2012). In doing so, this symposium aims to provide a detailed examination of the macro/micro,
social, cultural and formal/informal contexts within which media acquisition, as well as publishing and dissemination decisions, are made, and how such decisions ultimately dictate the content made available to audiences worldwide, as well as our relationship
to it. This symposium therefore considers how gatekeeping practices overlap across industries, platforms, texts and actors, and how we might potentially intervene. It will consider the following questions:
• What is the potential of various media forms and ecologies to intervene into these transnational socio-computational flows of media texts?
• According to which criteria are decisions about what will be published made, and can we foreground alternative criteria?
Bibliography
Bodó, B. and Lakatos, Z. (2012) Theatrical Distribution and P2P Movie Piracy: A Survey of P2P Networks in Hungary Using Transactional Data, International Journal of Communication 6, 413–445
Crisp, Virginia (2015) Film Distribution in the Digital Age London: Palgrave Curran, James. “Literary Editors, Social Networks and Cultural Tradition.” in Media Organisations in Society, edited by James Curran, 215 – 239. London: Hodder Arnold, 1999. Gieber, Walter. “News is what Newspapermen Make it.” in People, Society and Mass Communication, edited by David Manning White and L. A. Dexter, 173 – 192. New York: Free Press, 1964. Gillespie, T. (2014) ‘The Relevance of Algorithms’. in Media Technologies: Essays on Communication, Materiality, and Society. ed. by Boczkowski, P.J., Foot, K.A., and Gillespie, T. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. Keen, A. (2007) The Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s Internet Is Killing Our Culture and Assaulting Our Economy. Nicholas Brealey Publishing Kember, S. and Zylinska, J. (2012) Life After New Media: Mediation as a Vital Process. MIT Press. Manning White, David. “The ‘Gatekeeper’: A Case Study in the Selection of News.” In News: A Reader, edited by Howard Tumber, 66 – 73. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2000. Negus, Keith. “The Work of Cultural Intermediaries and the Enduring Distance Between Production and Consumption.” Cultural Studies 16, no. 4 (2002): 501 – 515. Striphas, T. (2015) ‘Algorithmic Culture’. European Journal of Cultural Studies 18 (4- 5), 395–412
Dr. Janneke Adema | Research Fellow Digital Media | Centre for Disruptive Media | School of Media and Performing Arts | Faculty of Arts and Humanities | Coventry University | ++447808738388 | ademaj@uni.coventry.ac.uk | www.openreflections.wordpress.com | http://twitter.com/Openreflections
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