On-campus Information Session, CMS Graduate Program

MIT Building E51, Room 095 70 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA

September 19, 2013. If you would like to attend an on-campus information session, please RSVP to cms-admissions@mit.edu.

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.

Online Information Session, CMS Graduate Program

http://irc.lc/freenode/cmsinfo

October 3, 2013. RSVP not required for online information sessions. To participate, simply come to this page during session hours.

Online Information Session

cms.mit.edu

Join us at 8am on October 3, 2013, here at cms.mit.edu!

Born Digital

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

On Oct. 10, John Palfrey and Ethan Zuckerman discuss whether those born digital likely to have different notions of privacy, community, identity itself.

On-campus Information Session, CMS Graduate Program

MIT Building E51, Room 095 70 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA

October 24, 2013. If you would like to attend an on-campus information session, please RSVP to cms-admissions@mit.edu.

Coco Fusco: “A Performance Approach to Primate Politics”

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

Coco Fusco New York-based interdisciplinary artist and writer Coco Fusco will consider the critical responses to the original Planet of the Apes films, focusing in particular on the interpretation of the films as critiques of American race relations during the 1960's and '70's. She will also discuss her interest in exploring the strategies used in […]

Online Information Session

cms.mit.edu

Join us at 2pm on October 31, 2013, here at cms.mit.edu!

Nelly Rosario: “Noble Strains: Thoughts on a Hybridized Identity”

Boston College, Devlin Hall, Room 101 Boston College Campus, Chestnut Hill, MA

Nelly Rosario’s hybrid talk presents a mash-up of genres to explore the benefits and pitfalls of hybridity as identity in these “post-racial” times.