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ECIC #21 – Gothenburg

Between Angels and Trolls – a web of emotions


31 May – 3 June 2016

Marketing clips, viral videos, cat-content, Youtube and Instagram celebrities, racist comments – the web is full of emotions. Strong emotions strengthen an experience and connect us to others as well as our on-line and the off-line realities. It’s important to find ways to express quiet and more hidden emotions so that complexity of human life can be present in every social sphere of communication. Without emotions there is no real digital experience.

Does the web provide new possibilities for change, democracy, transparency and relationship?  Is the web also creating a culture of voyeurism and angry reactionaries? How can we create emotional content? How can we challenge the dark side of anonymity, and as Christians stand up against it? What consequences will this have and how can the Church benefit from communicating emotionally? How can we face these challenges creatively?

Questions such as these will be discussed during ECIC 21. Come, be part of the conversation!

Details are subject to change.

 Tuesday, 31  May
 15:00 Registration, coffee and networking at the venue
 16:00 Opening Prayer
 16:45 Welcome and introductions
 17:30 Opening Keynote: Peter Ljungstrand, Magnus Eriksson
  
 19:00 Dinner
  

 

 Wednesday, 1 June (open to local 1-day participants)
 8:00 Breakfast
 9:00 Morning prayer (Chapel)
  
 9:30 Keynote Gustav Martner: Emotions and Marketing
 10:30 coffee break
 11:00Keynote Gustav Martner: Emotions and Marketing
 12:00 Tell your story 1/2/3
 12:30 Lunch
 14:00 Tell your story 4/5/6
 14:30 Tell your story  7/8/9
 Coffee break
 16:00 Workshop Gustav Martner
 17:30 Reflection
 19:00 Dinner

Tell your storyTell your storyTell your story

 

 Thursday, 2 June (excursion)
 8:00 Breakfast
 9:00 Morning Prayer
 9:30Keynote Charlotte Frycklund
 10:15 Coffee break
 10:30 Tell your story 10/11/12
 11:00 Annual meeting
 12:00 Lunch
 13:00Bus to Gothenburg
 14:00Visit at Interactive Institute, Sightseeing tour in town / free time
 20:00Dinner
 23:00Bus to Ljungskile folkhögskola

Tell your story

 

 Friday, 3 June
 8:00Breakfast
 9:00Morning prayer
 9:30Keynote: Timothy Hutchings
 10:30Workshop
 11:30Feedback
 12:00Journey blessing
 12:30 Lunch

Tell-your-story sessions

These sessions comprise a series of presentations from ECIC members detailing innovations, developments and web strategies. This year there will be 30 minutes for each presentation including discussion.

Timetable:

Wednesday 12:00  

  1. Klara Roxberg, Bo Erlandsson: Online councelling for young people where they are, A long time project
    room: Ulvön
  2. Simon Lampenius: Luthercraft – a place in Minecraft on the Fisucraft-server
    room: Hasselön
  3. Annegret Kapp: How do we make our constituency feel part of our story?
    room: Fräknefjorden

Wednesday 14:00

  1. Anna Yngvesson: Relaunch www.svenskakyrkan.se 
    room: Ulvön
  2. Christian Grund Sørensen: Persuasion & Worldview – Ph.d.dissertation on indirect evangelism
    room: Hasselön
  3. Miklós Geyer: Presentation and development of the App “Play bible” for children
    room: Fräknefjorden

Wednesday 14:30

  1. Wolfgang Loest: snap.church: insights into a youth-driven Advent calendar on Snapchat
    room: Ulvön
  2. Christian Steffenson: ChurchDesk
    room: Hasselön
  3. Peter Reimann: 1. Open Data, Open Content, Open Source Softwae and the theology of St. Augustine 2. Racism in social media and possible christian responses 
    room: Fräknefjorden

Thursday 10:30

Samuli Suonpää: racism and hate-speech in social media
room: Hasselön
Julia Abebe, Lari Lohikoski: Findings of the new web-system (CMS) in Finland 
room: Ulvön

Evenings

The evenings will allow opportunities to continue networking – Swedish style!

Speakers

Gustav Martner

Gustav is a digital re-inventor, media agnostic creative and skinny Swede with a beard worthy a viking, who co-founded the digital agency Daddy at the turn of the millennium. In the decade to follow, Daddy expanded whilst maintaining its presence in Sweden’s top echelon of digital agencies – bringing home numerous international awards for clients like ABSOLUT VODKA, Carlsberg, Scandinavian Airlines and TeliaSonera among others. In 2009, the US based creative powerhouse CP+B acquired Daddy, turning them into the foundation for their European operations. The years to follow, Gustav was an Executive Creative Director for CP+B, expanding with new European offices and winning a lot of metal in award shows such as Cannes Lions, the Golden Egg and Eurobest, for clients such as Sony Mobile, Ubisoft and Swedish Radio.

In 2009 Gustav co-founded the big data company Burt Corp, who organize and visualize data for publisher’s digital properties. Burt has 20 employees and operate in Scandinavia and North America.

For four years Gustav was also the chairman of the Swedish Association of Communication Agencies (Komm), which is Sweden’s main professional organization for communication agencies, and has around 300 companies as their members. 

In 2015, Gustav left CP+B and Komm to co-found DigitalReliance.org, a non-profit organization that works with projects to strengthen human rights and sustainability in a digital context. Ongoing projects include #refugeephones, which is the biggest non-profit initiative in Scandinavia when it comes to give refugees smartphones and access to mobile networks for free.

2012 Gustav was featured as number 6 on “Sweden’s top 100 super talents” list in the financial magazine “Veckans Affärer”. 

Tim Hutchings

Tim Hutchings is a sociologist and ethnographer of digital religion, with a particular interest in digital Christianity. His research explores new digital forms of authority, community and ritual, the relationship between online and offline activity, and the role of media technologies in social change. His projects have included studies of online churches, online evangelism, Bible apps and Bible games, and digital pilgrimage. He is currently a researcher in Stockholm University’s “Existential Terrains” team, where he studies death, grief and the afterlife in digital cultures.

Profile page: http://www.ims.su.se/forskning/forskningsområden/journalistik-medier-och-kommunikation/tim-hutchings-1.257722

Project page: http://et.ims.su.se 

Publications: https://su-se.academia.edu/TimHutchings

Magnus Eriksson and Peter Ljungstand

This presentation from Peter and Magnus of The Interactive Institute will deal with utopias,dystopias, hopes and fears that has permeated visions of the internet. From the early community norms and hacker ethics that made the computer culture declare an “independence of cyberspace” in the 90’s to the internet of today, filled with seductive manipulation of information for profit or political interests. They will also showcase their own designs for how digital technology can be used to bring about strong social ties and foster a positive participatory culture.

Interactive Institute is an experimental IT & design research institute creating groundbreaking user experiences and do research in the field of interaction design, visualization, user behavior, sound design, games and entertainment.

Peter Ljungstand

Peter Ljungstand has a background in computer science, electrical engineering, systems science and interaction design, as well as in the hacker communities of the pre-web era. His prime research interests relate to the intersection of humans and technologies from a design and innovation point of view.

Magnus Eriksson

Magnus Eriksson is a sociologist studying legal, political and social consequences of digitalization and how various communities make use of digital tools. He has a background as an activist for free communications and an open internet as well as within new media art.

Charlotte Fryckelund

 Charlotte Frycklund has been a minister of the Church of Sweden for 20 years, and is now the national coordinator of the Chat for Clergy on Call, as well as for the E-letter-service of Clergy on Call. Clergy on Call is a service of the Church of Sweden which allows people in need of ministry and counselling to talk, via telephone or screen, with a Minister of the Church of Sweden. Clergy on Call handles about 90 000 contacts per year. The Chat function started in 2014, after Clergy on Call discovered that young people did not use the phone number and generally preferred to talk about life questions via chat. Charlotte Frycklund is also the first minister of Church of Sweden to be employed as a minister on social media, and she spends a good deal of her working hours being a minister on Facebook, Twitter and other social media.