Artist-Audience Relations in the Age of Social Media

MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

Nancy Baym asks, "How does direct access to fans change what it means to be an artist? What rewards are there that weren't before?"

Jim Bizzocchi, “Close-Reading Media Poetics”

MIT Media Lab, Room 633 75 Amherst St., Cambridge, MA

Close reading requires that the scholar immerse herself in the experience of the text on its own terms, and at the same time maintain a critical distance.

Gediminas Urbonas

MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

Gediminas Urbonas is artist and educator, and co-founder of Urbonas Studio, an interdisciplinary research program that advocates for the reclamation of public culture.

Minding the News

MIT Media Lab, Room 633 75 Amherst St., Cambridge, MA

Mark Turner's research on the cognitive underpinnings of network news, with an emphasis on blended joint attention, story-telling, counterfactuality, and hypotheticals.

New Forms, New Markets for Independent Film

MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

Independent film-maker Andrew Silver will discuss emerging forms of hybrid media, some promising new pathways for distributing films and his career as a director and producer.

The Cultural Feedback of Noise

MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

David Novak on the "cultural feedback" of noise music through its recorded forms, technologies of live performance, and creative practices of musicians and listeners.

Size Is Only Half the Story:
Valuing the Dimensionality of BIG DATA

MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

Mary L. Gray Recent provocations (boyd and Crawford, 2011) about the role of "big data" in human communication research and technology studies deserve an outline of the value of anthropology, […]

Film Preservation in the Age of Digitality

MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

Much of the general public in fact believes that every film and television program ever made has already been digitized and is now available in Netflix’s catalog. That is hardly the case.

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MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

Co-authors will discuss the nature of their collaboration facilitated by structured conversations and writing done online and in person.

Ethan Zuckerman: “Digital Cosmopolitanism and Cognitive Diversity”

MIT Building 4, Room 231 Cambridge, MA

By examining perspectives we are exposed to and insulated from, we may be able to design tools and approaches that help readers increase their cognitive diversity and prepare themselves to tackle transnational challenges.