BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18749838
SEQUENCE:18859398
CREATED:20140127T163600Z
DESCRIPTION:This symposium at UCSC will explore the interdisciplinary possibilities for 
 poetic and multimedia production in a digital era, as well as the shifting 
 political and aesthetic implications for research and creative work in the 
 humanities. The all-day symposium will feature discussions by UCSC graduate 
 students and faculty from multiple disciplines, as well as a keynote from 
 Professor of Bibliographical Studies at UCLA and renowned book artist 
 Johanna Drucker.\n\nFor more information, including a full schedule, 
 details about the symposium panels, and the abstract for Johanna 
 Drucker’s keynote, please visit the Poetry & Politics website: 
 http://www.ucscpoetrypolitics.com/politics-of-the-digital-poetry-technology-and-the-university-a-symposium.html\n\nWe 
 hope to see you there! We hope you'll also join us at the poetry reading on 
 January 31 at the Felix Kulpa Gallery in downtown Santa Cruz.\n\nThis event 
 is organized by the Poetry & Politics Research Collective with the 
 sponsorship of the Puknat Literary Studies 
 Endowment.\n\nSchedule\n\nFriday, January 31, 2014: Poetry reading at 6 
 p.m. at the Felix Kulpa Gallery\nFeaturing Johanna Drucker with Eireene 
 Nealand, Margaret Rhee, and Tsering Wangmo.\n\nSaturday, February 1, 2014: 
 Interdisciplinary symposium at Humanities 1, room 210\n\n8:45 - 9:15 
 a.m.\nContinental breakfast (room 202)\n\n9:15 - 9:30 a.m.\nOpening 
 remarks\n\n9:30 - 11:00 a.m.\nPanel One: Textual and Visual 
 Technologies—Pre-Histories of a Digital Era \nAs an introduction to key 
 questions of the symposium, this panel will help to broaden the historical 
 scope of problematics that will later be posed in relation to our current, 
 digital context. With the development of different technologies, what are 
 the changing conditions by which material histories of texts and images 
 become constructed in modernity? How do we understand the present in 
 relation to this history? Exploring formal and visual aspects of textual 
 production and the creation / negotiation of meaning, papers on this panel 
 will take a variety of approaches by which to historicize the dynamics of 
 technology and knowledge production. \n\nRespondent: Professor Tyrus 
 Miller, Literature, UCSC\nPanelists: Christopher Chitty (PhD Candidate, 
 History of Consciousness, UCSC), Heidi Morse (PhD Candidate, Literature, 
 UCSC), Eireene Nealand (PhD Candidate, Literature, UCSC)\n\n11:15 a.m. - 
 12:45 p.m.\nPanel Two: Digital Practice and Database Aesthetics\nAt the 
 intersection of aesthetics and politics, this panel will consider different 
 problematics of digital media, artistic and literary production, and 
 interdisciplinarity. What is at stake in the digitization of scholarly 
 research, and of different artistic and literary forms? What are the 
 possibilities for creative and political interventions to digital practices 
 in the university? How have the evaluative standards of computer science 
 and engineering come to bear on literary and artistic practices? In a 
 visual culture that is increasingly predominated by graphic design, what 
 dynamics of content and form have emerged between text and printed 
 media?\n\nRespondent: Professor Sharon Daniel, Film and Digital Media, 
 UCSC\nPanelists: Jessica Beard (PhD Candidate, Literature, UCSC), Kyle 
 Lane-McKinley (Instructor, UCSC), Aaron Reed (Digital Arts and New Media 
 MFA, Computer Science PhD Candidate, UCSC)\n\n12:45 - 2 p.m.\nLunch (room 
 202)\n\n2:00 - 3:30 p.m.\nPanel Three: Neoliberalism and the Digital Future 
 \nWhat are the politics of the "Digital Humanities" as an emergence of the 
 neoliberal university? How do we understand the coincidence of university 
 privatization, the rise of immaterial labor in postmodern capitalism, and 
 the digitization of education? Continuing the dialogue about digitization 
 initiated by the previous panel, this discussion will be more specifically 
 engaged with the various political outcomes of the Digital Humanities, 
 within the contexts of university privatization and contemporary poetry. 
 With the rise of immaterial labor in postmodern capitalism, what is at 
 stake in the Digital Humanities as an emergence of the neoliberal 
 university?  What are the different forms of embodiment and knowledge 
 production that have come with new media? \n\nRespondent: Professor 
 Christine Hong, Literature, UCSC\nPanelists: David Lau (UCSC Instructor), 
 Jeb Purucker (PhD Candidate, Literature, UCSC), Margaret Rhee (PhD 
 Candidate, Ethnic Studies, UC Berkeley)\n\n3:30 - 4:00 p.m.\nCoffee and tea 
 service\n\n4:00 - 5:00 p.m.\nKeynote from Johanna Drucker \n\nTowards a New 
 Humanism \nThe activities associated with the term "digital humanities" 
 have gained much attention recently in academic and mainstream venues. But 
 have core values of humanism been discounted as a result? Do the techniques 
 of analytic processing or other engagements with large data displace or 
 devalue those of more traditional method and even, perhaps, traffic in the 
 worst kind of concessions to administered culture? Might these digital 
 approaches be at odds with the tenets of humanistic inquiry? What are the 
 ways out of a binaristic opposition between a retro-oriented, possibly 
 conservative, defense of “the humanities” and a techno-digital approach 
 that seems to some to dehumanize cultural materials by treating them as 
 “data”? The answer might be in recovering the methods of humanism, 
 rather than just its objects. Engagement with the materiality of texts and 
 artifacts crosses many disciplinary lines—from traditional critical 
 studies, bibliography, and law to current studies of media archaeology, new 
 materialism, and digital interpretation. This talk addresses ways in which 
 the cultural authority of the humanities might be formulated as a new 
 humanism whose methods and values extend traditional interpretative work 
 while taking up some of the potential offered by data-driven and 
 algorithm-based approaches to the study of human culture. \n\n\n\n5:00 - 
 7:00 p.m.\nReception at the Kresge Provost House\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/01/27/18749838.php
SUMMARY:Politics of the Digital: Poetry, Technology, and the University
LOCATION:Humanities 1, room 210\nUniversity of California, Santa Cruz\n1156 High St, 
 Santa Cruz
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/01/27/18749838.php
DTSTART:20140201T164500Z
DTEND:20140202T024500Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
