<div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_default" style="font-family:arial,helvetica,sans-serif"><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"><b>4S 2019 Open Panel Call for Papers</b></span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px">September 4 -7, 2019</span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px">New Orleans</span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"><b></b></span><br></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"><b>Race and/as technology today</b></span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px">Thao Phan, University of Melbourne</span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px">Scott Wark, University of Warwick</span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"></span><br></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px">In her seminal essay, “Race and/as Technology”, Wendy H. K. Chun proposed that race could be understood as a technology—that is, as neither biological nor cultural, human nor machine, mediated nor environmental, visible nor invisible, but as a category that organises all of these dualisms and many more. Race, she argued, can be thought of as a “technique that one uses, even as one is used by it” (38). Using this essay and its concerns as a touchstone, this panel will ask how we might understand race and/as technology in the present. What is the relationship between visibility/invisibility and race and how is it mediated? How are emergent technologies of control, such as facial recognition, racialised? How might we think categories—like race, person, or population—after Artificial Intelligence, machine learning, and big data? How might these technologies be understood historically? What is the relationship to related categories, such as gender, class or ability, in the technologisation of race? How might analyses of culture help us to understand race and/as technology? If we adopt Chun’s idea that this approach “displaces ontological questions of race” (56), what different things might race be made to do, in the present? We want to bring together scholars working in any discipline touched by these questions to think through what it might mean to consider race and/as technology today.</span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"></span><br></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px">Please feel free to pass on to your colleagues.</p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><br></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"><b>Deadline: </b>Feb 1, 2019</span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"><b>Submissions: </b><a href="https://www.4s2019.org/accepted-open-panels/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow" style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px;text-decoration:none;color:rgb(102,17,204)"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px">https://www.4s2019.org/accepted-open-panels/</span></a><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"> </span></span></p><p style="margin:1em 0px;padding:0px;border:0px;line-height:normal;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px"><b>Conference details: </b><a href="https://www.4s2019.org/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow" style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px;text-decoration:none;color:rgb(102,17,204)"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;border:0px">https://www.4s2019.org/</span></a><span style="mar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