The Centre for Internet and Society
http://editors.cis-india.org
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Research Programmes
http://editors.cis-india.org/research/research-programmes
<b>The Research Portfolio at the Centre for Internet and Society seeks to develop new pedagogic practices, plural and unique knowledges, multidisciplinary perspectives, and reflexive interventions in the field of Internet and Society. </b>
<h3><strong>Context</strong></h3>
<p align="left">We
work on the premise that very little work has gone into understanding
or exploring the internets in their plurality, leading to
simultaneous mythification and demonisation of the internet. However, instead
of trying to define what the internet means or enumerating its many
manifestations, the Centre for Internet and Society
is invested in producing new pedagogical devices and frameworks to
analyse the various layers of the internet as it interacts with
socio-cultural and geo-political contexts.</p>
<div align="left"> </div>
<p align="left">Most
frameworks that address questions of Internet and Society work with
borrowed terminologies (of older technologies and technological
forms) and institutional perspectives (arising out of traditional
disciplines and interventions of earlier paradigms) that are no
longer adequate for serious engagement with the complex relationship
between internet and society. We
recognise three dominant strains that are influential in most of the
research and intervention in the field of Internet and Society.</p>
<p align="left">The
first is a focus on the science and technologies of the internet -- looking at innovation, experimentation and development of the
technologies to build a faster, more effective and more robust web of
applications and protocols. The second is a sustained philosophical
engagement that explores the aesthetic and ethical implications of
the digital worlds, networks, communities and identities that cyberspaces evolve. The third is an instrumental approach to
technology that focuses on the effects of the internet and its growth as well as
the potential it has for further development and impact.</p>
<div align="left"> </div>
<p align="left">These
approaches create a schism between internet technologies and social structures, obscuring the inextricable nature of their
intertwining. The focus is either on the purely technological, where
the social fades into the background, or on the severely
socio-cultural, where internet technologies are looked upon
merely as instrumental in nature. The
Centre for Internet and Society, instead of making this either-or
choice, seeks to invest its energies in emphasising and excavating
the processes, transactions, negotiations and mechanics by which internet technologies engage with society.</p>
<div align="left"> </div>
<h3 align="left" style="text-align: justify;"><strong>CIS
Research Programmes</strong></h3>
<p align="justify">The
Research Portfolio currently houses three different research
programmes, each aimed at different audiences and researchers:</p>
<ol><li><strong><a href="http://editors.cis-india.org/research/cis-raw" class="internal-link" title="CIS-RAW">The
CIS-RAW</a>:</strong> The Centre for Internet and Society’s Researchers At
Work programme encourages innovative ideas and perspectives that
emerge from dialogue and exchange, structured around a theme that
changes every two years. The CIS-RAW is targeted at <strong><em>established
scholars</em></strong> willing to engage with the specific themes that CIS is
immediately interested in. It offers full financial support towards
quantified academic productions. To know more about the CIS-RAW
programme, please <a href="http://editors.cis-india.org/research/cis-raw" class="internal-link" title="CIS-RAW">click here</a>.</li><li><strong><a href="http://editors.cis-india.org/research/ict4arts" class="internal-link" title="ICT4Arts">The ICT4A Fellowships</a>:</strong> The Centre for Internet and Society
recognises that some of the most innovative ideas and experiments
with philosophical concepts and practice based projects are in the
intersections between Information and Communication Technologies and
the Creative Arts. Artists experimenting with form, shape,
installations, processes and pedagogy create significant projects
with high intervention and public value while forcing us to revisit
the relationship between the internet and society. The ICT4A (Internet
and Creative Technologies of Art) Fellowships are for <strong><em>artists</em></strong>
who are interested in examining the
aesthetics, politics and pragmatics of internet technologies and
their relationships with different socio-cultural and geo-political
phenomena. To know more about the ICT4A Fellowships, please <a href="http://editors.cis-india.org/research/ict4arts" class="internal-link" title="ICT4Arts">click
here</a>.</li><li><strong><a href="http://editors.cis-india.org/research/projects-inception-grant" class="internal-link" title="Collaborative Projects Programme">Collaborative Projects Programme:</a></strong> CIS sees its role as that of an enabler and think
tank for new ideas, methods and frameworks within the field of Internet and Society. Given
the scope of internet technologies and the persuasive way in which
they embrace various facets of contemporary life, we envision various
disciplines engaging with the concerns of Internet and Society in the
future. The Collaborative Project Programme is structured to provide
initial head-space, ideation resources, and intellectual
infrastructure to <strong><em>senior researchers and/or practitioners</em></strong> to work
towards a larger project that intersects with our vision. The Collaborative Projects Programme offers CIS an opportunity to enter into a financial, intellectual and administrative collaboration for up to six months with individuals or organisations who are
looking at funding for the inception work towards a project
(research, intervention, or otherwise) in the field of Internet and
Society. To learn more about the modalities, CIS’ involvement and
the nature of support for the Collaborative Projects, please <a href="http://editors.cis-india.org/research/projects-inception-grant" class="internal-link" title="Projects Inception Grant">click
here</a>.</li></ol>
<p> </p>
<p>
For more details visit <a href='http://editors.cis-india.org/research/research-programmes'>http://editors.cis-india.org/research/research-programmes</a>
</p>
No publishernishantresearchcyborgscyberculturesdigital pluralismdigital subjectivitiescyberspacespedagogye-governance2009-01-15T12:02:51ZPagePleasure and Pornography: Initial Encounters with the Unknown
http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/law-video-technology/xxx-files-initial-encounters-with-the-unknown
<b>This blog entry is the first in a series by Namita Malhotra on her CIS-RAW project that is about pornography, Internet, sexuality, law, new media and technology. She aims for this to be a multi media and research project/journey which is able to cite and draw on various sources including legal studies, film studies and philosophy, academic and historical work on sexuality, art, film and pornography itself. </b>
<p>There are few dilemmas that one is faced with when working on the vague and over extended category of pornography. The first is the very familiar feminist dilemma over pornography, and the position of radical feminists such as Andrea Dworkin and Catherine McKinnon--pornography is violence or sexually explicit subordination of women. This is more popularly encapsulated in Robin Morgan’s words--pornography is the theory and rape is the practice. Even if this can be collapsed into the positions of pro-sex and anti-sex feminists, it does initially haunt any research agenda on pornography, especially for a guilty quasi-feminist like myself.</p>
<p>However, some of my previous writings have attempted to deal with the position of the women’s movement, specifically in India, on pornography (the details are given below) and here I hope to move beyond either the moral or feminist positions on pornography, to examine what the pervasive phenomenon does. One of the strands that I hope to continue to explore is the relation of body to film. Though film studies is mostly focused on the visual sense, few scholars have looked on film as a bodily experience and attempted to understand the mimetic relation between the body of the 'viewer' and the body of the film. A more tactile understanding of the experience of film and media would be a useful place to start exploring pornography.<br /><br />The second has arisen from many conversations that I have had – when I say I’m working on pornography, the response is either a withdrawal or over-enthusiasm bordering on insistence to share personal collections of erotica and pornography. Though these conversations are often insightful, I have now realized that it is hard for me to actually examine pornography in all its totality – from spliced moments in mainstream films in shady theatres to specificities of hentaii and tentacle porn. Personal tastes, preferences, and access make it hard to be able to be interested in everything. Which is precisely my fascination with pornography – that it is in fact an intensely personal relation or rather a space in which different people have kept very varied and specific material, words, and media--that it also is not entirely about the media/words themselves, but also about how and in what setting they are consumed, how they are bought, downloaded or searched for. <br /><br />The third is the legal conundrum posed by pornography – that it is not recognized in Indian law as a specific category but that there exist, nonetheless, stringent conditions for obscenity. Obscenity is determined on the basis of the Hicklin test, which originated in England in 1868 and has continued as an integral part of Indian law though it has been discredited in English common law and American law. Here, the legal scholarship of Nussbaum is an interesting starting point as it sets up a useful framework that refuses to look at the law as a rational system of rules that is devoid of emotions. Nussbaum analyses the cognitive content of emotions that work within law – in the case of determining obscenity, she points to how emotions of disgust and revulsion play a significant role (the other emotions that she examines in detail are shame, fear and anger in the law). In Nussbaum’s analysis of the cognitive content of disgust, she remarks that in most cultures, disgust is about discomfort humans have with 'our own bodies and decaying selves', and concludes that disgust is an unreliable indicator for obscenity. She refers to McKinnon’s and Dworkin’s work to state that the indicator should be harm done by the material, rather than disgust. I would disagree with Nussbaum on whether harm can be a useful indicator to determine whether something is obscene, but before that it is necessary to examine whether Indian case law actually relies on the notion of disgust. Within Indian law, there seem to be other factors at work including notions of cultural purity vis-à-vis contamination from Western culture. An interesting and rather progressive judgment to look at is the recent High Court judgment on Hussain’s painting of nude Mother India that held that the painting is not obscene. <br /><br />These are a few of the scattered aspects of this project and some of the strands that it will explore. I would also like to share two comics on internet pornography. The first is from the famou <a class="external-link" href="http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/rule_34.png">xkcd comic</a> series and the second from the relatively new comic series <a class="external-link" href="http://deviswithbabies.blogspot.com/2008/10/brown-girls-equal-opportunity-porn.html">Brown Girls</a>. Both capture how lusty desires will find their objects anywhere – in the explosion of the polymorphous perverse on the internet or presidential debates on television. <br /><br /><br /></p>
<p><strong>Previous material </strong><br /><a class="external-link" href="http://www.apc.org/en/pubs/issue/gender/all/world-wide-web-desire-content-regulation-internet"><strong>The World Wide Web of Desire: Content Regulation on the Internet</strong></a><br />This article attempts to understand the dynamics of pushing the child pornography question to the forefront of any debate around censorship and pornography, especially in contexts of internet regulation, both nationally and in international forums such as the Internet Governance Forum. This is often done at the expense of a more nuanced understanding that would be possible if the focus were on issues related to gender, the prevalence of draconian censorship regimes in most countries in Asia and concerns related to free speech.</p>
<p><a class="external-link" href="http://www.genderit.org/en/index.shtml?apc=r90501-e95021-1"><strong>Do Not Look at Porn</strong></a><br />This is a short video titled "Do not look at porn" which is a remix video or a collage of different materials taken from television and other videos, famous art works, photographs and books. The video is almost boringly pedagogic in its attempt to illustrate the slippery-slope argument which is that obscenity laws generally lead to the ban of progressive material rather than only offensive material. The video features Sarah Jones' song 'Your revolution will not happen between these thighs', and the popular Warcraft character based machinema video 'The internet is for porn'.</p>
<p><a class="external-link" href="http://www.genderit.org/en/index.shtml?apc=r90480-e95146-1"><strong>Search History: Examining Pornography on the Internet</strong></a><br />This article explores some of the dilemmas of the women's movement in India when faced with the question of pornography. It also is a very basic historical look at the category of pornography itself, as it emerged to describe the array of objects and artefacts discovered in the ancient city of Pompeii. These finds were kept at the Secret Museum; only men of a certain upper class were allowed and ‘trusted’ to have access to these objects, and not the ‘easily corruptible rabble or women’. Such distinctions would often arise in the case of pornography and be the reasoning behind censorship and regulation of many media in the next few centuries. Whether it was the birth of photography, cinema, video, and in recent times the internet and new media (CD,VCD, DVD), each technology has been greeted with suspicion of its possible harm to society. <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
<p>
For more details visit <a href='http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/law-video-technology/xxx-files-initial-encounters-with-the-unknown'>http://editors.cis-india.org/raw/histories-of-the-internet/blogs/law-video-technology/xxx-files-initial-encounters-with-the-unknown</a>
</p>
No publishernamitahistories of internet in IndiaObscenityinternet and societywomen and internetresearchCyborgsdigital subjectivitiesHistory2011-08-02T08:37:27ZBlog Entry