2014 Media Spectacle
MIT Building 32 (Stata Center), Room 155 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MAShowcasing video projects created by MIT students, staff, faculty and affiliates. Entry deadline: April 21.
Showcasing video projects created by MIT students, staff, faculty and affiliates. Entry deadline: April 21.
In this talk Tarleton Gillespie will highlight one particular dimension of these algorithms, their production of calculated publics: algorithmically produced snapshots of the “public” around us and what most concerns it.
The new documentary "The Internet's Own Boy" follows the story of programming prodigy and information activist Aaron Swartz.
Gaming in Color is a full length documentary of the story of the queer gaming community, gaymer culture and events, and the rise of LGBTQ themes in video games.
Hear what happened when six Comparative Media Studies graduate students went to Lima in April to work with some of Peru's most promising entrepreneurs in the creative industries.
Please join Alex Gonçalves as he presents his thesis " The Brazilian Networked Public Sphere: the Online Debate on the Civil Rights Framework for the Internet" to the public.
MIT Sloan's Sinan Aral will argue that a new science of online identity could help guide our business, platform design, and social policy decisions in light of the rising importance of online reputation and social influence.
This presentation by Rutgers' Philip Napoli will focus on ongoing research that seeks to define and assess the field of media impact assessment.
Georgetown's Caetlin Benson-Allott on how the technical and design evolution of remote controls reveal how the seemingly most inconsequential of media devices have shaped the way users cohabit with mass media, consumer electronics, and each other.
Helen Nissenbaum: "Obfuscation is a compelling 'weapon-of-the-weak,' which deserves to be developed and strengthened, its moral challenges countered and mitigated."
Raney Aronson of FRONTLINE, documentary director Katerina Cizek, Jason Spingarn-Koff of the New York Times' Op-Docs, and the Guardian's multimedia editor Francesca Panetta.
Doris Sommer's new book "The Work of Art in the World: Civic Agency and Public Humanities" revives the collaboration between aesthetic philosophy and democratic development.
If you would like to attend this on-campus information session, please register at Eventbrite (http://mitsha.re/1pU0142).
Three Comparative Media Studies alums -- Sam Ford, Rekha Murthy, and Parmesh Shahani -- return to discuss their post-graduate lives.
Join us at 9am on October 24th, here at cmsw.mit.edu! RSVP not required, but sign up for a reminder.