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CFP: Convergence Special Issue: “The Digital Face and Deep Fakes on Screen” Deadline for Abstract Submissions: June 30, 2020
Deadline for Full Papers: January 5, 2021
“The Digital Face and Deepfakes on Screen”
Special Issue of Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies
Guest editors: Lisa Bode (University of Queensland), Dominic Lees (University of the West of
England), Dan Golding (Swinburne University of Technology)
Expected date of publication: August 2021
The past few decades in high-budget screen production has seen the emergence of digital human faces on screen. The iconic youthful likenesses of dead and aging stars have been painstakingly recreated for advertising and film franchise prequels and sequels. Actors’ faces have been pasted over those of stunt and performer doubles for sequences of breath-taking agility, or integrated with animated animalistic or mechanistic bodies for the purposes of fantasy and science fiction. Such sequences are notable for the time, labour, and technology required to make them, but in late 2017 things escalated: an open access machine learning application was released online, and the means to quickly and easily replace or alter faces in moving images became readily available. Since then, so- called ‘deepfakes’ have proliferated on video sharing sites and social media, causing widespread concern about consequences for persona rights, revenge porn, our perception of social and political reality, and the potential to further undermine the democratic process in an era of ‘fake news’. Both deepfakes and the digital human face more generally, raise multiple pressing concerns, which this special issue seeks to explore.
This special issue examines how the technological processes of creating and altering the digital face impact on screen cultures, on the reception of the moving image, and on social interactions through the mobile screen. We seek papers that look at the ethical, philosophical and legal issues around the use of deepfakes in public life, and those that may explore positive cultural and creative possibilities for deepfakes and/or digital faces more generally.
The editors welcome contributions from a range of disciplinary perspectives that explore questions such as:
• What are the implications of digital faces and/or deepfakes for screen labour markets,screen production, visual effects workers, performers, or celebrity culture?
•To what extent are established legal or ethical frameworks challenged by or vital to approaching the creation and circulation of deepfakes?
•What older ways of thinking about persona, likeness, the actor/character relation, or illusionism might be useful for understanding digital faces and/or deepfakes?
• How do viewers respond to digital faces and/or deepfakes in different contexts? What factors might shape persuasiveness, uncertainty, or suspicion in viewer responses?
•What are the gendered, racial, or other social identity issues around digital faces and deepfakes?
•Are there distinct geographic, temporal, and cultural differences in the dominant uses and/or discourse surrounding and/or reception of digital faces on screen?
Deadline for abstracts: June 30, 2020
Please send a 500-word abstract and a 100-word bio to the guest editors: [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask]
Authors of accepted abstracts will be invited to submit full contributions by January 5, 2021
Dr Lisa Bode
Senior Lecturer in Film and Television Studies
School of Communication and Arts
The University of Queensland
Brisbane Qld 4072 Australia
T +61 7 3365 1443
E [log in to unmask] W <http://www.uq.edu.au> https://communication-arts.uq.edu.au/profile/365/lisa-bode
CRICOS code: 00025B
The University of Queensland (UQ) acknowledges the Traditional Owners and their custodianship of the lands on which UQ operates. We pay our respects to their Ancestors and their descendants, who continue cultural and spiritual connections to Country. We recognise their valuable contributions to Australian and global society.
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