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This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary
project aims to explore what it is to be human and the nature of human
community in cyberculture, cyberspace and science fiction. In particular,
the project will explore the possibilities offered by these contexts
for creative thinking about persons and the challenges posed to the nature
and future of national, international, and global communities.
Papers, short papers, and workshops are invited on issues
related to any of the following themes;
- the relationship between cyberculture, cyberspace and science
fiction
- science fiction and cyberpunk as a medium for exploring the nature
of persons
- humans and cyborgs; the synergy of humans and technology; changing
views of the body
- human and post-human politics; cyborg citizenship and rights; influence
of political technologies
- bodies in cyberculture; from apes to androids - electronic evolution;
biotechnical advances and the impact of life, death, and social existence;
the impact on individuality
- gender and cyberspace: new feminisms, new masculinities
- electronic persons, community and identity; cyberspace, cybercommunities,
virtual worlds, and home worlds
- nature, enhancing nature, and artificial intelligence; artificial
life, life and information systems, networked living
- Cyberpolitics, cyberdemocracy, cyberterror; old conflicts, new
spaces: elections, protest and war in cyberspace; nationality and
nationalism in cyberculture; the state and cyberspace: repression
vs. resistance
- cybercultures: the transnational and the local
- boundaries, frontiers and taboos in cyberculture
- cyberculture and orientalism
- religion and spirituality in cyberculture, science fiction and
cyberpunk
- old messages, new medium: cyberspace and mass communication
- cyberculture, cyberpunk and the near future: utopias vs. dystopias
- technology vs. the natural? cyberculture and the green movement
Papers will be considered on any related theme. 300
word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 7th May 2004. If your
paper is accepted for presentation at the conference, an 8 page draft
paper should be submitted by Monday 19th July 2004.
All papers accepted for and presented at the conference
will be published as an ISBN eBook. Selected papers accepted for and
presented at this conference will be published in a hard copy themed
volume. One themed volume from the previous is in press.
300 word abstracts should be submitted to both the
Organising Joint Chairs; abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, PDF
or RTF formats.
Joint Organising Chairs
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Christopher
Macallister
Department of Politics and IR, University of Kent at Canterbury
Canterbury
United Kingdom
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Dr
Rob Fisher
Inter-Disciplinary.Net
Priory House
149B Wroslyn Road
Freeland, Oxfordshire OX29 8HR |
The conference aims to bring together people from
different areas, disciplines, professions and interests to share ideas
and explore various discussions which are innovative and exciting.
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