writing studies emergent practices, currently circulating ...
writing studiesemergent practices, currently circulating ...
timelinestudent-generated history with key conceptual nodes
affective intensitiesaffective intensities“the primacy of the affective in image reception.”
-- Brian Massumi
image pleasureimage pleasurethe visual turn
conceptualizing, creativity, (re)focusing ...
see http://binarythis.com/2013/05/21/foucault-explained-with-hipsters/ re: foucault
bloggingbloggingaudience, community, kairos, performance
http://designingcwII.blogspot.comhttp://kairotica2.blogsot.com
kk
data visualizationdata visualizationLev Manovich
Madeline SorapureInfosthetics
digital humanitiesdigital humanities““the maker movement” the maker movement”
““The Maker Lab’s approach to the humanities is influenced by popular makerspaces and maker faires as well as fields like experimental art, interaction design, and media archaeology.”
See more at: http://maker.uvic.ca/about/#sthash.BJncqmrB.dpuf
object-oriented object-oriented ontologyontology
anticorrelationist (anthropocentric) orientations, networks, humans & things in webs of discourse,
meaning, & being. lots of digital rhetoric work here, to expose networks and webs of relations (labor,
players).
MakerSpaces (why?)David Sheridan (glasses)
Jentery Sayers (UVic)kits for culture
early wearables kit (skull pin)
rhetoricityfrom Diane Davis’ Inessential Solidarity, Eric Detweiler summarizes a definition for his podcast, “What is Rhetoricity?”:
So while rhetoric often focuses on persuasive encounters, situations, or strategies, rhetoricity emphasizes the conditions that make persuasion possible—not the rhetorical power or agency of a masterful communicator, but the vulnerability, the openness and feeling of exposure that have to be in place for any attempt at persuasion to unfold. Rhetoricity emphasizes not the individual speaker or writer, but the web of relations that has to be in place before that individual ever has something to say or someone to talk to (1).
film-compositionbonnie lenore kyburz “fantasy ethnography”