Announcements
Skip Intro: Upstreams & Downstreams (Piracy, Data Retention, Surveillance)
We would like to cordially invite you to the first meeting of Skip Intro.
Skip Intro is a series of primarily ad hoc-organized meetings in which academics, artists, politicians and working professionals give brief lectures and presentations about current-day issues in which new media play a significant role.
Our first meeting will take place on Wednesday January 20 from 19.30-21.30 in Studio T (Kromme Nieuwegracht 20, 3512 HH Utrecht).
We’ll kick off the series with Upstreams & Downstreams (Piracy, Data Retention & Surveillance) and with the following speakers:
- Jaromil (dyne.org, http://www.rastasoft.org)
- Ilpo Koskinen (University of Arts & Design Helsinki, http://www2.uiah.fi/~ikoskine)
- Joris van Hoboken (Bits of Freedom, https://www.bof.nl)
Central topics of this evening are free & open software, the integration
of mobile media in socio-cultural interaction, and 21-century citizenship. There will be lots of room for discussion, so anyone who is interested in participating in the debate on new media is welcome!
Symposium: Media van Morgen
Donderdag 21 januari 2010
Studio T (Kromme Nieuwegracht 20), Utrecht
Keywords: future media toekomst e-learning netwerken politiek wetenschap muziek alumni nmdc utrecht ted
Op donderdag 21 januari 2010 vindt het symposium Media van Morgen plaats. Wij nodigen (aankomende) studenten Nieuwe Media en Digitale Cultuur, mediawetenschappers en alumni uit aanwezig te zijn bij wat belooft een avond te worden vol inspirerende vooruitzichten op de media van morgen.
Naast een inleidende keynote, een koffiepauze, een afsluitende endnote en een borrel, biedt de avond plaats aan zes sprekers. Zij hebben de opdracht binnen 15 minuten hun visie op de toekomst van media te presenteren, waarbij ieder over een ander medium of thema spreekt.
De zes sprekers zijn alumni van de master Nieuwe Media en Digitale Cultuur en hebben hun sporen in het werkende veld inmiddels verdiend. Het zijn ervaren sprekers die het symposium als generale repetitie zullen gebruiken voor een eventuele toekomstige TED-talk: het format dat als voorbeeld dient voor het symposium.
Schrijf je in door een mail te sturen naar mvm[at]dutchearth.nl
Kick-Off Centre for TV in Transition
The Centre for TV in Transition brings together the work of the television and scholars at the Department of Media and Culture Studies of Utrecht University who study the cultural transition of television from its early beginnings on. Our research focuses on the historical, recent and current transitions of television’s screens, histories, discourses, and practices. We suppose that television is a medium that never just is, but constantly is in the state of transition. Currently, we do not witness ‘ The end of TV’ as many commentators claim, but the re-invention of television in the digital environment.
Visit our website: http://tvintransition.wordpress.com/
“OH MY GOD, is this LIVE?!”
UTRECHT MEDIA & PERFORMANCE RESEARCH SEMINAR ‘09-’10
The Utrecht Media & Performance Research Seminar invites participation of both junior and senior researchers from various research areas in a new series of discussions about the concept of liveness, presence and mediatization in debates about new and transforming media and performance technologies and practices.
In seven sessions we will discuss key publications on notions of liveness, presence, mediatization, aura, dis/appearance, and the relationship between public and private spaces, including work by authors like Philip Auslander, Herbert Blau, Walter Benjamin, Jay David Bolter, Steve Dixon, Adrian Heartfield, and Amelia Jones.
Literature will be selected and distributed by the organizers.
Dates: October 30, December 4, January 29, February 26, March 26, May 7, June 4. Time: 2.30 - 17.00. Location: Janskerkhof 13, 0.06 (OGC), except for the first session in October: Kromme Nieuwegracht 80, 1.06 (Stijlkamer van Ravenstyn)
If you would like to participate, send a message to N.Verhoeff[at]uu.nl no later than October 15th 2009.
We look forward to your participation,
Frank Kessler, Maaike Bleeker, Nanna Verhoeff
Seminar series on CONTEMPORARY CULTURAL THEORY
Theme five: Signs & numbers; culture & nature
(first session September 8, 2009)
Organised by: Dr. Rick Dolphijn (Media and Culture Studies), Dr. Iris van der Tuin (Gender Studies)
“Signs & numbers; culture & nature” deals with the ways in which the new materialism engages itself with mathematics, models, numbers, always in their entanglement with the human sciences, culture, signs. This theme will make clear the importance of science in new materialist theory. Yet it is not by taking the sciences as exemplary for good academic research that the humanities are critiqued. On the contrary, it is in re-reading the sciences and the humanities as they write a similar morphogenesis that builds up new materialist thinking. Neglected by the philosophy of science, this theme unveils a history of thought that is affirmative of both the sciences and the humanities, and shows their entanglement throughout the history of Western thinking.
Showing Making: An International Conference on the Representation of Image Making and Creative Practices in Ritual, Art, Media, and Science
June 18 & 19 2009, Filmmuseum, Amsterdam
If making is thinking, as Richard Sennett has recently argued in his book The Craftsman, studying making can enable us to understand visual artefacts. Paintings, films, computer animation, or scientific images are the results of skilled procedures and complex interaction between makers, materials, tools and technologies, which generate and shape meaning. Mainly based on tacit knowledge though, these procedures and interactions tend to evade textual description and are, although enclosed in the finished product, usually not recorded. How do we get our hands and minds at these material procedures if we want to study the meaning of making?
00110001 00110000 something Anniversary: New Media Studies Utrecht
Dear students, colleagues, alumni, and friends,
You are cordially invited to the celebration of the 10th anniversary of the Department of New Media and Digital Culture of Utrecht University on Friday the 15th of May in Studio T. On this day we want to reflect on what we have achieved in the last ten years and how we have developed into a full-fledged and indispensable field of study.
Studium Generale - Geloof je ogen niet
Bestaat er zoiets als visuele geletterdheid?
Wat maakt Vermeers schilderijen mooi? Dat is een klassieke vraag uit de kunstgeschiedenis. Maar is een hersenscan mooi? En kan een arts er dan nog objectief naar kijken? Wetenschappers produceren steeds meer beeldmateriaal. Krachtige microscopen en computers genereren prachtige plaatjes in kleur en 3D. Maar eigenlijk leren we nooit hoe we moeten kijken naar beeld. We hebben geen woorden geleerd om elkaar uit te leggen waar we op moeten letten. Toch kunnen beelden ons veel makkelijker verleiden (of misleiden) dan teksten. Kunnen we ons daartegen wapenen?
BLIK 2.0, now available!
All the contributions in the latest edition of BLIK (the academic student magazine on audiovisual culture from the department of Media and Culture Studies) balance between media theory and practice. In the editorial it is discussed how scientific theories can serve as a searchlight in the quest for greater insight and for posing new questions. That light seems to literally shine through our feature image on the cover, which is intentionally out of focus. This because posing new question requires more than an absent-minded gaze, but the attentive vision of the critical observer.
Interviews with Dieter Mersch and Michal Kobialka, essays by Asher Boersma, Shirley Niemans, Mirko Tobias Schaefer, and Nora Wellhausen.
On the website you can read the full content overview. You can order your own copy of BLIK 2.1 by sending an email to blik.tijdschrift[at]gmail.com