FW: Cyborgology Call for Regular Contributors

NC
Nancy C McLaughlin
Mon, Jul 18, 2016 6:04 PM

To whom it may concern, can you do me a huge favor and take me off the list or send me link where I can do so? Thanks! Nancy
Nancy McLaughlin
Senior Financial Administrator
Materials Research Center
Northwestern University
n-mclaughlin@northwestern.edu
847.491.4098

From: CITAMS citams-bounces@list.citams.org on behalf of "Davis, Jennifer Lauren - davis5jl" davis5jl@jmu.edu
Date: Monday, July 18, 2016 at 10:05 AM
To: "citams@list.citams.org" citams@list.citams.org
Subject: [CITAMS] Cyborgology Call for Regular Contributors

Hi All,

We are looking to bring on some new regular contributors at Cyborgology. Please think about applying and spread the word.

Here's the call (details are also below):https://thesocietypages.org/cyborgology/2016/07/18/cyborgology-is-looking-for-new-regular-contributors/https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__thesocietypages.org_cyborgology_2016_07_18_cyborgology-2Dis-2Dlooking-2Dfor-2Dnew-2Dregular-2Dcontributors_&d=CwMF-g&c=yHlS04HhBraes5BQ9ueu5zKhE7rtNXt_d012z2PA6ws&r=B0bE6kiu586e4T2D2ypk3_3N_-tYuvZnRHorJ45Sse8&m=rFvAG97MaB_zGCH0KRGWnE-M8Ku4iZEvbWlXbJP2EaI&s=aaWVNmTyaeoXnfZOKtsH81wK7KDYzLu9jbiNOdO9bXU&e=

I am happy to answer any questions about the process or about writing for the blog

Best,
Jenny

Call For Contributors:
For nearly six years Cyborgology has been dedicated to producing thoughtful
essays and commentary about society’s relationship to technology. Writers
enjoy significant freedom to write essays and stories of varying length,
style, and topic. We are now looking for several new contributors to join
Cyborgology.

What we are looking for: People willing to write about society, culture,
and technology in an accessible but smart way. Contributions can take many
forms and we are flexible about writing frequency. Scrolling through the
last few months of Cyborgology is the best way to get an idea of the style
and frequency of pieces we want to see. We are especially interested in
writers from under-represented or marginalized subject positions. You do
not need to be affiliated with any institution of higher learning but you
do have to be comfortable writing about and through theoretical concepts.
Of course writing schedules are very flexible and we are open to whatever
work arrangement you can put together. The best way to know what kind of
work we want is to read the site and check out our submission guidelines
for guest posts.

The benefits of writing for Cyborgology: For better or worse, Cyborgology
is a volunteer effort. None of us get paid and we do not anticipate that
changing anytime soon. Writing for Cyborgology has, however, been known to
open up new opportunities of a monetary nature. We are also proud to have a
dedicated, smart audience that likes to share and discuss our ideas. Work
on Cyborgology has also been linked to and shared by large media
organizations including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Buzzfeed,
Huffington Post, Pacific Standard, and many more. All writing on
Cyborgology is covered under a Creative Commons attribution license and
authors retain full control over their work. We are also a member of an
awesome community of blogs and publications under The Society Pages
umbrella.

How to apply: As our past and present contributors can attest– writing
for Cyborgology is a strange animal. Therefore, we’ve done our best to
simulate writing for Cyborgology in the application process. We want three
polished writing samples between 500-1000 words, at least two of which need
to grapple with a current event between now (July 18, 2016) and the due
date which is September 1, 2016. It is totally fine to send us something
you’ve published elsewhere or turned in for an assignment.  We may also ask
if we can run some of your submissions as guest posts before we make any
final decisions. Writing samples should be saved as either .doc or .docx
and sent as an attachment to david.adam.banks [at] gmail.com. In the email
please indicate the best email address to reach you, a short three sentence
bio, and any other accomplishments you think we should know about. A full
cover letter is not necessary.

*About Cyborgology: *Individuals and social groups have always been cyborgs
because we have always existed in tandem with technology. Today, with the
vast proliferation and diffusion of new technologies throughout society,
techno-human syntheses occur in more aspects of our lives than ever before.
Advances in medicine augment our bodies with technology (e.g., pills,
pacemakers, IUDs, breast implants, Viagra, contact lenses).  Communication
is increasingly technologically mediated (e.g., radio, television, the
web).  We are experiencing a proliferation of personal devices like the
smart phone, which is, essentially, a computer we carry with us wherever we
go, often sleeping with them at our bedsides and using them check our
profiles and messages first thing in the morning. It is not difficult to
imagine a future where we begin to look like the cyborgs found in movies;
however, our definition goes far beyond the half-human, half-robots
propelled into the popular imaginary by science fiction and cyberpunk
because technology is about more than electronics. The layout of a prison
or a school is a technology of discipline; language is a technology of
thought and communication; cultural norms themselves are technologies of
social organization—in every instance, technology is the product of a
particular historical moment and it becomes integrated into the social life
of that period.

Our focus is as broad as these examples suggest, but we most often focus on
new technologies. Today, the reality is that both the digital and the
material constantly augment one another to create a social landscape ripe
for new ideas. As Cyborgologists, we consider both the promise and the
perils of living in constant contact with technology.

Jenny L. Davis

Assistant Professor of Sociology

James Madison University

Co-Editor: Cyborgology.org

Twitter: @Jenny_L_Davis

From: CITAMS [citams-bounces@list.citams.org] on behalf of Laura Robinson [laura@laurarobinson.org]

Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2016 5:28 PM

To: citams@list.citams.org

Subject: [CITAMS] ASA Rose Series in Sociology

Hi All,

See information on submitting to the ASA Rose Series below.

Best,

Laura

Call for Submissions - ASA Rose Series in Sociology, a book series published by the Russell Sage Foundation, is seeking book proposals.
The Rose Series publishes cutting-edge, highly visible, and accessible books that offer synthetic analyses of existing fields, challenge prevailing paradigms, and/or offer fresh views on enduring controversies. Books published in the Series reach a broad audience
of sociologists, other social scientists, and policymakers. Please submit a 1-page summary and CV to: Lee Clarke, rose.series@sociology.rutgers.edu.
For more information, visit http://www.asanet.org/research-publications/rose-series-sociology.

--

Laura Robinson

www.laurarobinson.org

laura@laurarobinson.org

Associate Professor, Santa Clara University

Affiliated Faculty, UC Berkeley ISSI

CITAMS Past Chair

Series Editor, Emerald Studies in Media and Communication

To whom it may concern, can you do me a huge favor and take me off the list or send me link where I can do so? Thanks! Nancy Nancy McLaughlin Senior Financial Administrator Materials Research Center Northwestern University n-mclaughlin@northwestern.edu 847.491.4098 From: CITAMS <citams-bounces@list.citams.org> on behalf of "Davis, Jennifer Lauren - davis5jl" <davis5jl@jmu.edu> Date: Monday, July 18, 2016 at 10:05 AM To: "citams@list.citams.org" <citams@list.citams.org> Subject: [CITAMS] Cyborgology Call for Regular Contributors Hi All, We are looking to bring on some new regular contributors at Cyborgology. Please think about applying and spread the word. Here's the call (details are also below):https://thesocietypages.org/cyborgology/2016/07/18/cyborgology-is-looking-for-new-regular-contributors/<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__thesocietypages.org_cyborgology_2016_07_18_cyborgology-2Dis-2Dlooking-2Dfor-2Dnew-2Dregular-2Dcontributors_&d=CwMF-g&c=yHlS04HhBraes5BQ9ueu5zKhE7rtNXt_d012z2PA6ws&r=B0bE6kiu586e4T2D2ypk3_3N_-tYuvZnRHorJ45Sse8&m=rFvAG97MaB_zGCH0KRGWnE-M8Ku4iZEvbWlXbJP2EaI&s=aaWVNmTyaeoXnfZOKtsH81wK7KDYzLu9jbiNOdO9bXU&e=> I am happy to answer any questions about the process or about writing for the blog Best, Jenny Call For Contributors: For nearly six years Cyborgology has been dedicated to producing thoughtful essays and commentary about society’s relationship to technology. Writers enjoy significant freedom to write essays and stories of varying length, style, and topic. We are now looking for several new contributors to join Cyborgology. *What we are looking for:* People willing to write about society, culture, and technology in an accessible but smart way. Contributions can take many forms and we are flexible about writing frequency. Scrolling through the last few months of Cyborgology is the best way to get an idea of the style and frequency of pieces we want to see. We are especially interested in writers from under-represented or marginalized subject positions. You do not need to be affiliated with any institution of higher learning but you do have to be comfortable writing about and through theoretical concepts. Of course writing schedules are very flexible and we are open to whatever work arrangement you can put together. The best way to know what kind of work we want is to read the site and check out our submission guidelines for guest posts. *The benefits of writing for Cyborgology:* For better or worse, Cyborgology is a volunteer effort. None of us get paid and we do not anticipate that changing anytime soon. Writing for Cyborgology has, however, been known to open up new opportunities of a monetary nature. We are also proud to have a dedicated, smart audience that likes to share and discuss our ideas. Work on Cyborgology has also been linked to and shared by large media organizations including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Buzzfeed, Huffington Post, Pacific Standard, and many more. All writing on Cyborgology is covered under a Creative Commons attribution license and authors retain full control over their work. We are also a member of an awesome community of blogs and publications under The Society Pages umbrella. *How to apply:* As our past and present contributors can attest– writing for Cyborgology is a strange animal. Therefore, we’ve done our best to simulate writing for Cyborgology in the application process. We want three polished writing samples between 500-1000 words, at least two of which need to grapple with a current event between now (July 18, 2016) and the due date which is September 1, 2016. It is totally fine to send us something you’ve published elsewhere or turned in for an assignment. We may also ask if we can run some of your submissions as guest posts before we make any final decisions. Writing samples should be saved as either .doc or .docx and sent as an attachment to david.adam.banks [at] gmail.com. In the email please indicate the best email address to reach you, a short three sentence bio, and any other accomplishments you think we should know about. A full cover letter is not necessary. *About Cyborgology: *Individuals and social groups have always been cyborgs because we have always existed in tandem with technology. Today, with the vast proliferation and diffusion of new technologies throughout society, techno-human syntheses occur in more aspects of our lives than ever before. Advances in medicine augment our bodies with technology (e.g., pills, pacemakers, IUDs, breast implants, Viagra, contact lenses). Communication is increasingly technologically mediated (e.g., radio, television, the web). We are experiencing a proliferation of personal devices like the smart phone, which is, essentially, a computer we carry with us wherever we go, often sleeping with them at our bedsides and using them check our profiles and messages first thing in the morning. It is not difficult to imagine a future where we begin to look like the cyborgs found in movies; however, our definition goes far beyond the half-human, half-robots propelled into the popular imaginary by science fiction and cyberpunk because technology is about more than electronics. The layout of a prison or a school is a technology of discipline; language is a technology of thought and communication; cultural norms themselves are technologies of social organization—in every instance, technology is the product of a particular historical moment and it becomes integrated into the social life of that period. Our focus is as broad as these examples suggest, but we most often focus on new technologies. Today, the reality is that both the digital and the material constantly augment one another to create a social landscape ripe for new ideas. As Cyborgologists, we consider both the promise and the perils of living in constant contact with technology. Jenny L. Davis Assistant Professor of Sociology James Madison University Co-Editor: Cyborgology.org Twitter: @Jenny_L_Davis From: CITAMS [citams-bounces@list.citams.org] on behalf of Laura Robinson [laura@laurarobinson.org] Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2016 5:28 PM To: citams@list.citams.org Subject: [CITAMS] ASA Rose Series in Sociology Hi All, See information on submitting to the ASA Rose Series below. Best, Laura Call for Submissions - ASA Rose Series in Sociology, a book series published by the Russell Sage Foundation, is seeking book proposals. The Rose Series publishes cutting-edge, highly visible, and accessible books that offer synthetic analyses of existing fields, challenge prevailing paradigms, and/or offer fresh views on enduring controversies. Books published in the Series reach a broad audience of sociologists, other social scientists, and policymakers. Please submit a 1-page summary and CV to: Lee Clarke, rose.series@sociology.rutgers.edu. For more information, visit http://www.asanet.org/research-publications/rose-series-sociology. -- Laura Robinson www.laurarobinson.org laura@laurarobinson.org Associate Professor, Santa Clara University Affiliated Faculty, UC Berkeley ISSI CITAMS Past Chair Series Editor, Emerald Studies in Media and Communication