Program: Media and Literature
- VENUE New York University
- LOCATION New York, NY
- DATES Fall 2012-Spring 2014
- URL programseries.com
- PRESS https://cecimoss.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Jacqueline Kiyomi Gordon_Press_YBCA.pdf
Lecture series at New York University from 2012-2014, co-organized with Brian Droitcour (Comparative Literature), Brady Fletcher (Media, Culture and Communication), Jacob Gaboury (Media, Culture and Communication), Matthew Hockenberry (Media, Culture and Communication), Ella Klik (Media, Culture and Communication), Xiaochang Li (Media, Culture and Communication), Ben Mendelsohn (Media, Culture and Communication), Carlin Wing (Media, Culture and Communication)
Description PROGRAM is a collaborative, interdisciplinary event series organized by graduate students within New York University’s departments of Media, Culture, and Communication, English, Cinema Studies, and Comparative Literature. The series presents talks that explore the cultural, historical, aesthetic, and political impact of software and programming logic.
The goal of the series is to create an interactive space for the exploration of emerging practices across media and literature, both online and off. To this end we have organized a series of events, in which a pair of prominent scholars will explore one particular methodological approach to the study of software’s impact on culture and literature.
The series is open to the public, and is intended to facilitate a dialogue on the intersections of these fields.
Speakers: Matthew Fuller (Goldsmiths, University of London), Lev Manovich (The Graduate Center, CUNY), Noah Wardrip-Fruin (University of California, Santa Cruz), Lori Emerson (University of Colorado, Boulder), Ben Fino-Radin (Museum of Modern Art), Deborah Stratman (Filmmaker), Keller Easterling (Yale University), Erica Robles-Anderson (New York University), Matthew Kirschenbaum (University of Maryland), Wendy Hui-Kyong Chun (Brown University), Geoffrey Bowker (UC Irvine), Sara Hendren (Harvard University), Bernard Stiegler (Institut de Recherche et d’Innovation at the Pompidou Center in Paris), Ben Kafka (New York University)