Knowledge’s Allure: Surveillance and Uncertainty

MIT Building 3, Room 133 33 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA

Sun-ha Hong on how "big" data and surveillance are not just about privacy and security but also redistribution of authority, credibility and responsibility.

Next Stage Planning for the Digital Humanities at MIT

MIT Building 3, Room 133 33 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA

Douglas O’Reagan will update the audience on his efforts and invite suggestions and ideas concerning the future of digital humanities at MIT.

How Did the Computer Learn to See?

MIT Building 3, Room 133 33 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA

Did computers learn to see by modernity's most highly evolved technologies of vision, or, as Alexander Galloway argues, from sculpture?

Black + Twitter: A Cultural Informatics Approach

MIT Building 3, Room 133 33 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA

André Brock, scholar of Black cyberculture, offers that Twitter's feature set and ubiquity map closely onto Black discursive identity.

Desktop Reveries: Hand, Software, and the Space of Japanese Artist Animation

MIT Building 56, Room 114 Access via 21 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Seeking to unravel the analytical split between the "drawn" and the "digital" in animation and media studies more broadly, Paul Roquet’s project moves back and forth between two desktops: the hard surface of the drawing table and the pixelated surface of the screen.

The Networked Sensory Landscape Meets the Future of Documentary

MIT Building 56, Room 114 Access via 21 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Glorianna Davenport presents DoppelMarsh, data from a dense network of diverse environmental sensors mapped to deliver “a sense of being there” in a re-synthesized, ever-changing landscape.

Barbie and Mortal Kombat 20 Years Later

MIT Building 56, Room 114 Access via 21 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Yasmin Kafai and Gabriela Richard expand the discussions on gender, race, and sexuality in gaming.

Michael Lee: “The Conservative Canon Before and After Trump”

MIT Building 56, Room 114 Access via 21 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA

Michael J. Lee charts the vital role of canonical post–World War II (1945–1964) books in generating, guiding, and sustaining conservatism as a political force in the United States.