Events
Past Events › Colloquium
April 2024
Luca Caminati, “RR Does Dams” & Masha Salazkina, “Romancing Yesenia: The Global-Popular in the Soviet Union”
Luca Caminati, “RR Does Dams” N. S. Thapa’s Films Division of India (FDI) documentary Bhakra Nangal (1958) celebrates the building of the eponymous dam on the Sutlej River. Towards the end of this 20-minute film, a group of workers is allowed to introduce themselves in their native tongues, and in a gesture of unity for a common cause, the diversity in physical features, dress, and languages is channeled towards the common cause of Indian modernity. As the late Fifties saw…
Find out more »May 2024
Ecogames: Playful Perspectives on the Climate Crisis – Joost Raessens, Media and Culture Studies, Utrecht University
With the climate crisis and its repercussions becoming more and more tangible, the media are increasingly participating in the production, circulation, and interrogation of environmental assumptions, using both explicit and implicit ways of framing the crisis. In this lecture, I will present an overview of my research on green media/ecogames/VR. I will first present our ‘Green Media Studies initiative,’ the four thematic sections of our book Ecogames: Playful Perspectives on the Climate Crisis, and our Horizon Europe project STRATEGIES: Sustainable…
Find out more »Infrastructural Encounters: Ethnographic perspectives on telecommunication in the Arctic – Mette Simonsen Abildgaard, Department of Culture and Learning, Aalborg University Copenhagen
How do digital infrastructures shape the experiences of those positioned as living ‘on the margins’? This has been the central question guiding my research over the past five years, which has focused on sea-cables, wi-fi networks, mobile plans, satellites, and other infrastructures of telecommunication in Greenland. Another big question has been: How can we study these systems, which are both pervasive and deeply personal, using ethnographic methods? In this talk, I will present some of my methodological and theoretical approaches…
Find out more »The Political Aesthetics of Light – Brian Larkin, Barnard College, Columbia University
In this talk I use light as a way of opening up questions about the relation of aesthetics to racial capitalism. Drawing from research in Nigeria, but thinking more generally, I move between structures of political economy and the everyday techniques and experience of living with and in light. Brian Larkin is co-director of the Society of Fellows/Heyman Center for the Humanities and Professor of Anthropology at Barnard College, Columbia University. His research, broadly conceived, examines the operations of media…
Find out more »From Fake to Deepfake: The Metrics of the Face – Kriss Ravetto-Biagioli, Cinema and Media Studies, UCLA School of Theater, Film & Television
The face has had a privileged status in visual media, enrapturing cinematic audiences with its beauty and intensity of emotion. Yet, the study of the face and its social relevance is also the subject of pseudo-sciences like physiognomy and eugenics. This talk examines how the media help to capture the intimate details inscribed within the face, in what I will argue is, an artificial discourse of authenticity, identity, and intimacy by looking at how have media affected the way we…
Find out more »November 2024
Lisa Yin Han – Deepwater Alchemy – Extractive Mediation and the Taming of the Seafloor
Set against the backdrop of climate change, energy transition, and the expansion of industrial offshore extractions, Deepwater Alchemy: Extractive Mediation and the Taming of the Seafloor makes the case the historical developement of deep sea media technologies has been complicit in perpetuating logics of extraction, exploitation, and militarism in our global oceans. From towed hydrophones to networked seafloor observation, the hunt for resources had driven the imaging of the ocean floor and vice versa, imperiling fragile deep ocean ecosystems in…
Find out more »December 2024
Circuit Training: Infrastructural Approaches to (Dark) Fiber, Data Centers, and Cell Towers
This panel explores material relations and methodological approaches core to critical understandings of (dark) fiber, data centers, and cell towers. Through a focus on methodological approaches—from spatial mapping and environmental analysis to ethnographic insights and industry analysis—panelists detail the layered, often contested relationships that bind these infrastructures to the environments and people they serve. This conversation encourages thinking about digital connectivity as contingent on tangible, place-based circuits, urging us to see these systems as both powerful actors in social life…
Find out more »February 2025
Outside the Box: Cardboard in Contemporary Children’s Culture – Meredith A. Bak (Rutgers University-Camden)
The cardboard box has long been regarded as the imaginative plaything par excellence. In 2005, the box was inducted into the Toy Association’s Toy Industry Hall of Fame at the Strong National Museum of play in Rochester, NY—institutionalizing a decades-old association between cardboard and children’s creative play. On the page and onscreen, in museum galleries, schools, toy aisles, and at home, today cardboard occupies a privileged position within children’s material culture where the promises of environmental and STEAM education coalesce.…
Find out more »May 2025
Environmental Violence and the Limits of Inculpatory Media – Sasha Crawford-Holland Media Studies, Vanderbilt University
Sasha Crawford-Holland Media Studies, Vanderbilt University In 2008, the Inupiaq community of Kivalina filed a lawsuit against the largest greenhouse gas emitters in the United States, seeking damages for the rising temperatures destroying their island home. After years of litigation, courts dismissed Kivalina’s claims on evidentiary grounds: their injuries were not “traceable” to the defendants’ actions. Although irrefutable scientific research links emissions to heat to harm, plaintiffs could not conclusively attribute specific impacts to discrete perpetrators. Heat’s nebulous, atmospheric mediation…
Find out more »June 2025
SCMS Award Winners – Graduate Student Colloquium
Pujita Guha, PhD First Place, Graduate Student Writing Award, Media, Science, and Technology SIG Counting Carbon in the Forest In the late 2000s, AIPP (Asia’s Indigenous People’s Pact), an Indigenous NGO body operating across south and southeast Asia, produced a series of training manuals, excel sheets and workshop materials, to train Indigenous activists and organizers on carbon trading and climate change. I call this body of carbon-related media AIPP’s carbon toolkit. AIPP’s carbon toolkit, while being cautious and wary of…
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