Radical media, politics and culture.

Fibreculture, "Multitudes, Creative Organisation, and the Precarious Condition ofNew Media Labour"

"Multitudes, Creative Organisation, and the Precarious Condition of
New Media Labour"

Fibreculture Journal

Call for Papers


Post-Fordist techniques of flexible accumulation coupled with the
widespread use of new communications media have had a profound impact
on the organisation of social relations. In recent years the
"Creative Industries" have emerged across the UK and Ireland, United
States and Canada, Australia and New Zealand, Europe and Asia as the
new idiom
by which governments, the culture industries and the higher education
sector engage in the management of populations. The primary mission
of the Creative Industries is to extract an economic value from a
heterogeneous array of cultural practices.


Accompanying the self-valorising rhetoric of the Creative Industries
is an intensification of the precarious situation of cognitive
labourers — a mode of engagement that is common to those working in
both symbolic production and the more menial tasks associated with
the service industries. While the specific forms of exploitation of
labour-power vary across industries and along the lines of class,
gender, ethnicity, age and geography, all precarious labour practices
generate new forms of subjectivity and connection, organised about
networks of communication, cognition, and affect.


These new forms of co-operation and collaboration amongst creative
labourers contribute to the formation of a new socio-technical and
politico-ethical multitude. The contemporary multitude is radically
dissimilar from the unity of "the people" and the coincidence of the
citizen and the state. What kinds of creative organisation are
specific to precarious labour in the era of informatisation? How do
they connect (or disconnect) to existing forms of institutional life?
And how can escape from the subjectification of precarious labour be
enacted without nostalgia for the social state or utopian faith in
the spontaneity of auto-organisation?


This issue of the Fibreculture Journal is interested in receiving
individually and multi-authored contributions that may adopt the
following expressive forms:

* theoretical interventions

* reflexive empirical studies of precarious labourers

* personal accounts by those working in new media and related
industriesThis issue
will be guest edited by Brett Neilson, Ned Rossiter and Geert Lovink.


There are guidelines for the format and submission of contributions
at http://journal.fibreculture.org


These guidelines need to be followed in all cases. Contributions
should be sent electronically, as word attachments, to:


Geert Lovink geert@xs4all.nl

Brett Neilson b.neilson@uws.edu.au

Ned Rossiter n.rossiter@ulster.ac.uk

The editors will not be privileging one genre over the other, and all
will be subject to peer review. Contributions may range from short
meditations to longer studies. See the journal's submission
guidelines for more details.

The
Fibreculture Journal has established itself as Australasia's leading
forum for discussion of internet theory, culture, and research. It is a peer-reviewed journal that explores the
issues and ideas of concern and interest to both the Fibreculture
network and wider social formations.


The deadline for submissions is August 30, 2004. Peer review & author
revisions will be completed by October, with a launch date of
November 2004.