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Workshop Format​

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The workshop will provide an open, collaborative space for sharing ideas and fostering dialogue between those working across consumer culture, marketing, cyber-security, media studies, cultural theory, and the digital humanities.
Sessions will combine oral presentations and roundtable discussions centred on conceptual, crticial, creative, and empirical approaches to the study of cybernetic culture and its discontents.

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This is an opportunity to exchange ideas, gain constructive feedback, and contribute to an expanding interdisciplinary conversation about the cultural, ethical, and critical dimensions of the digital world.

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Themes & Areas of Inquiry​

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We invite conceptual, critical, creative, and empirical contributions that venture into the obscured, illicit, and affective zones of cybernetic culture, asking what they reveal about visibility, power, and the recursive entanglements of human and machine.

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Core Themes​

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  1. Subcultural Deviance and Digital Publics
    Examines how online communities and subcultures form around resistance, identity, and shared moral codes — from countercultural networks and radical movements to viral trends that challenge or reshape public norms.
     

  2. Visibility, Exposure, and Control
    Explores how digital platforms shape what is seen or hidden online — through surveillance, privacy management, influencer culture, and the social consequences of visibility, cancellation, and exposure.

     

  3. AI Intimacy and Algorithmic Desire
    Investigates how humans interact emotionally and socially with artificial intelligence — from chatbots and virtual companions to personalised algorithms that simulate intimacy, creativity, and desire.

     

  4. Dark Economies and Data Shadows
    Unpacks the economic and infrastructural dimensions of digital life — including cryptomarkets, data exploitation, misinformation networks, and the blurred boundaries between legitimate and illicit online trade.

     

  5. Digital Emotion and Affective Systems
    Analyses the emotional architecture of digital culture — how platforms design for outrage, empathy, and play, turning feeling into a key driver of attention, participation, and value creation.

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Together, these sessions invite critical, creative, and empirical approaches to understanding how digital technologies organise power, shape affect, and transform what it means to connect, consume, and belong online as we move through the visible and invisible layers of the internet, from playful networks and niche cultures to its darker economies and emotional underworlds.


Suggested Areas of Inquiry (not exhaustive)​

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Subcultural Deviance and Digital Publics

  • Platform subcultures and digital deviance

  • Populism, misinformation, and online radicalisation

  • Hidden or alternative online communities

  • Dark tourism and the consumption of taboo or harmful digital content

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Visibility, Exposure, and Control

  • Surveillance capitalism, data economies, and platform governance

  • Privacy, visibility, and the politics of self-presentation

  • Cancel culture, public shaming, and online accountability

  • The aesthetics of exposure in influencer and visual culture

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AI Intimacy and Algorithmic Desire

  • Human relationships with chatbots, virtual companions, and AI influencers

  • Automated emotion, personalisation, and algorithmic matchmaking

  • The ethics and governance of emotional AI and simulated companionship

  • AI creativity, embodiment, and the aesthetics of digital desire

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Dark Economies and Illicit Online Markets

  • Cryptomarkets, digital fraud, and financial exploitation

  • Data harvesting, surveillance infrastructures, and platform monetisation

  • Misinformation economies and coordinated influence operations

  • The circulation of illicit, hidden, or unregulated digital trade

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Digital Emotion and Affective Systems

  • Emotional capitalism and the gamification of engagement

  • Outrage, empathy, and emotional manipulation across platforms

  • Play, pleasure, and entertainment in attention-driven economies

  • The design and governance of digital emotion in everyday life

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Submission Guidelines​

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We invite all interested participants to submit a circa 500-word abstract (excluding references) in a word document outlining their proposed presentation or project.

 

Abstracts should include:

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  • Title of the paper, author name(s), and affiliation(s)

  • Keywords (3–5)

  • Key objectives and/or research questions

  • Methodological or conceptual approach

  • Preliminary findings, expected contributions, or implications

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Please submit abstracts to the workshop co-chairs by email:

 

Sophie James: s.james7@lancaster.ac.uk

James Cronin: j.cronin@lancaster.ac.uk
 

We encourage submissions from all members of the department, including faculty, staff, and students, across all disciplines. Your contribution is invaluable to the success of our event and will help us to create a diverse and enriching programme.

Submission Deadline


Please submit your abstract by Friday, 23rd January 2026.

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Notifications of acceptance will be sent by Tuesday, 10th February 2026.

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Following the success of last year’s inaugural Cybernetic Culture Workshop event, we are delighted to announce the Cybernetic Culture Workshop 2026: Digital Underworlds — a one-day interdisciplinary gathering exploring the hidden, obscured, and transgressive spaces on the internet.

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We are delighted to welcome you to the Cybernetic Culture Workshop 2026 – Digital Underworlds: Hidden, Obscured, and Transgressive Spaces on the Internet. As co-chairs, we are thrilled to have you join us for what promises to be an engaging and thought-provoking gathering.

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This year’s workshop will bring together scholars, practitioners, conceptual, creative, and critical researchers from across disciplines to explore the shadowed terrains of our digital lives; from platform subcultures and misinformation circuits to haunted machines, algorithmic desires, and the affective infrastructures of the web. Together, we will interrogate how these digital underworlds reveal new relations between visibility, power, and emotion in networked culture.

 

The programme is designed to foster exchange and collaboration through a blend of presentations, roundtable discussions, and informal conversations, creating space for reflection, experimentation, and interdisciplinary dialogue. We encourage you to participate actively, share your ideas, and engage with the diverse perspectives represented throughout the day.

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Thank you for being part of this year’s event. We look forward to your contributions and to collectively charting the darker, more fascinating contours of cybernetic culture.

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Sophie James & James Cronin

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Lecturer in Security & Protection Science

Lancaster University

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Professor in Consumer Culture

Lancaster University

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© 2026 Cybernetic Culture Workshop. All rights reserved.

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