CFP: The Contours of Algorithmic Life
A conference sponsored by The Mellon Research Initiative in Digital Cultures
May 15-16, 2014 at the University of California, Davis
Submission Deadline: March 1, 2014
Send submissions to 
algorithmiclife@gmail.comAs
 algorithms permeate our lived experience, the boundaries and 
borderlands of what can and cannot be adapted, translated, or 
incorporated into algorithmic thinking become a space of contention. The
 principle of the algorithm, or the specification of the potential space
 of action, creates the notion of a universal mode of specification of 
all life, leading to discourses on empowerment, efficiency, openness, 
and inclusivity. But algorithms are ultimately only able to make 
intelligible and valuable that which can be discretized, quantified, 
operationalized, proceduralized, and gamified, and this limited domain 
makes algorithms necessarily exclusive.
Algorithms increasingly shape our world, our thought, our economy, 
our political life, and our bodies. The algorithmic response of NSA 
networks to threatening network activity increasingly brings privacy and
 political surveillance under algorithmic control. At least 30% of stock
 trading is now algorithmic and automatic, having already lead to 
several otherwise inexplicable collapses and booms. Devices such as the 
Fitbit and the NikeFuel suggest that the body is incomplete without a 
technological supplement, treating âhealthâ as a quantifiable output 
dependent on quantifiable inputs. The logic of gamification, which finds
 increasing traction in educational and pedagogical contexts, asserts 
that the world is not only renderable as winnable or losable, but is in 
fact betterâi.e. more effectiveâthis way. The increased proliferation of
 how-to guides, from HGTV and DIY television to the LifeHack website, 
demonstrate a growing demand for approaching tasks with discrete 
algorithmic instructions.
This conference seeks to explore both the specific uses of 
algorithms and algorithmic culture more broadly, including topics such 
as: gamification, the computational self, data mining and visualization,
 the politics of algorithms, surveillance, mobile and locative 
technology, and games for health. While virtually any discipline could 
have something productive to say about the matter, we are especially 
seeking contributions from software studies, critical code studies, 
performance studies, cultural and media studies, anthropology, the 
humanities, and social sciences, as well as visual art, music, sound 
studies and performance. Proposals for experimental/hybrid 
performance-papers and multimedia artworks are especially welcome.
Areas open for exploration include but are not limited to: daily 
life in algorithmic culture; gamification of education, health, 
politics, arts, and other social arenas; the life and death of big data 
and data visualization; identity politics and the quantification of 
selves, bodies, and populations; algorithm and affect; visual culture of
 algorithms; algorithmic materiality; governance, regulation, and ethics
 of algorithms, procedures, and protocols; algorithmic imaginaries in 
fiction, film, video games, and other media; algorithmic culture and 
(dis)ability; habit and addiction as biological algorithms; the 
unrule-able/unruly in the (post)digital age; limits and possibilities of
 emergence; algorithmic and proto-algorithmic compositional methods 
(e.g., serialism, Baroque fugue); algorithms and (il)legibility; and the
 unalgorithmic.
For more information, especially on updates regarding featured 
keynote speakers and performers, check out the conference website at: 
algorithmiclife.ucdavis.edu
Please send proposals to 
algorithmiclife@gmail.com by March 1, 2014.
Decisions will be made by March 8, 2014.