Call for Papers: Visuality, Truth & Politics https://platformjmc.com/2020/12/01/call-for-papers-visuality-truth-and-polit... *Volume editors: Sophie Freeman, Geoff Hondroudakis, Maria Kamal, and Brian McKitrick.* Platform Journal of Media & Communication is pleased to announce our latest CFP, inviting submissions from graduate researchers and ECRs. Do consider submitting an abstract and please feel free to spread the word to those who may be interested. Deadline for abstract submissions: 1st February 2021 From photographs to viral videos and memes, images pervade digital communication. In one sense, the global health crisis compresses a media landscape already dominated by branded content, extremism, tokenism, fakes and misinformation hosted on platforms underpinned by logics of surveillance capitalism. The long-discussed spectacle of the image appears, in this sense, to degrade the epistemic function of visuality, breaking the bonds between the visible and the true. Yet, within this milieu, a cell phone video documenting police brutality enabled social media audiences to witness the events that led to George Floyd’s death and galvanised global protests in support of the Black Lives Matter movement, demonstrating the power of visuals shared in the digital media sphere. Activism and political dissent take on new forms (or recycle old forms with new technologies) to hold power to account through visual forms of communication and witnessing. Such mass movements reveal that the suturing of the visible, the true, and the politically effective remains possible, though it requires enormous collective work. Beyond and beneath these most overt sites of struggle, visuality as a conflux of sensing and representing renews fundamental problems of knowing and being. Scholars such as Wendy Chun have pointed to the technoscientific collapse of the image with its process of becoming. Planetary computation prompts us to rethink how technics make visible the invisible, converting the Earth into a vast sensing apparatus from which data become visual object. Such frames contrast with notions of the photograph as part of social rituals and a means of participating in the “mortality, vulnerability and mutability” of others (Zelizer, 2010, p. 25). Visuality thus also activates ontological questions of the determinations and disjuncts between the frame of the human and that of technical system. This issue of Platform seeks papers which engage with the question: What is the relationship between the visual, the true, and the political today? What does visual signify today in the digital realm in regards to activism and discourse? How do visual technologies bolster reactionary powers through new forms of surveillance and policing? What does the visual signify in terms of representation as such, of the relationship between the sign, its apparatus, and its meaning? Platform invites papers on all aspects related to visual politics and digital media, including but not limited to: * Online and physical activism * Circulation dynamics of visual media * Witnessing and accountability * Collective memory, visibility and accessibility * Images as transient: attention and content overload * Manipulation, interference and disinformation * Online and offline moderation * Ideologies of visibility and concealment * Apparatuses and applications of data visualisation * Sensing and Visual Augmentation * Memes and formats of online cultural artifacts * Image appropriation and remix culture * Images, memorialisation and mourning rituals Please submit abstracts via the form available at our ‘Make a Submission’ page.<https://platformjmc.com/make-a-submission/> Abstracts should not exceed 350 words. Abstract submission deadline: 1 February 2021. Authors notified of decisions: 22 February 2021 Full papers due: 2 April 2021 Please send all further questions to the editorial team via platformjmc@gmail.com. Sophie Freeman | Ph.D. Candidate | Media and Communications Tutor | Graduate Editor Platform JMC School of Computing & Information Systems | School of Culture & Communication The University of Melbourne E: sophie.freeman@unimelb.edu.au I acknowledge the Traditional Owners of the land where I live and work, the Wurundjeri and Boon Wurrung people of the Kulin Nations, and pay my respects to the Elders, past, present and emerging.