https://dvss.bgsu.edu/player.php?movie_id=1510062
]]>9:30 – 10:50 am – Constructions of Race and Gender in the Networks ( BTSU 208)
Moderator – Yeon Ju Oh
11:00 am – 12:20 pm – BGSU Faculty and Graduate Students (BGSU 315)
Moderator – Franklin Yartey
2:15 – 3:35 pm – Questions of Labor and Nationality at the Interface (BGSU 208)
Moderator – Makhtar Sall
7:00 – 8:30 pm – Keynote Address by Anna Everett
Moderator – Radhika Gajjala
9:00 – 10:30 am – Affective Bodies
Moderator – Katherine Barak
11:00 am – 12:30 pm – Diva Roundtable
Moderator – Radhika Gajjala
]]>Radhika Gajjala: @cyberdivalive
Franklin Yartey: @FrankieNubalo
Sean Watkins: @glantern43
Melinda Lewis: @mindamaureen
Makhtar Sall: @makhtars
Yeonju Oh: @hysterogenie
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Dr. Anna Everett’s Bio Statement:
Dr. Anna Everett is Professor of Film, Television and New Media Studies, and former Chair of the Department of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). From 2002-05 she was Director of the UCSB Center for Black Studies. She has held distinguished visiting professor positions in Holland, Tunisia, and Canada. She has worked as an expert with the MacArthur Foundation, the American Film Institute, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the National Science Foundation. She has many publications consisting of single author manuscripts, anthologies, scholarly articles, and popular writings including Returning the Gaze: A Genealogy of Black Film Criticism, 1909-1949; New Media: Theories and Practices of Digitextuality (with John T. Caldwell), AfroGEEKS: Beyond the Digital Divide (with Amber T. Wallace), Learning Race and Ethnicity: Youth and Digital Media (for the MacArthur Foundation’s new series on Digital Media, Youth, and Learning). And her most recently published monograph Digital Diaspora: A Race for Cyberspace won a 2009 Choice Award for Outstanding Academic Book. Among her articles are “The Other Pleasures: The Narrative Function of Race in the Cinema,” “The Black Press in the Age of Digital Reproduction: Two Exemplars,” “P.C. Youth Violence: ‘What’s the Internet or Video Gaming Got to Do With It?'” “Trading Private and Public Spaces @ HGTV and TLS: On New Genre Formations in Transformation TV,” and “Serious Play: Playing with Race in Computer Games.” She was the lead organizer of the 2004 AfroGEEKS: From Technophobia to Technophilia and the 2005 AfroGEEKS: Global Blackness and the Digital Public Sphere Conferences. In 2008 she co-organized the Console-ing Passions Conference at UCSB.
Dr. Everett is a two-time recipient of the Fulbright Senior Scholar Award (2005, 2007) in residence at the University of the Center Faculty of Letters and Humanities (Kairouan, Manouba campuses) in Tunisia, the 2001 Belle van Zuylen Chair and Visiting Professor in the Department of Women’s Studies and New Media Studies at the University of Utrecht, Netherlands. She has received other fellowships, honors and grants, including a 2006 MacArthur Foundation Digital Media and Learning Grant, 2005 Ford Foundation Grant for the AfroGEEKS conference, the UCSB Harold J. Plous Award for Outstanding Assistant Professor in 2001, and the University of California Presidents’ Fellowship Award. Dr. Everett has presented her research and scholarship at numerous national and international conferences including those held in Australia, Canada, Tunisia, South Africa, Bristol, England, Utrecht, Netherlands, Odense, Denmark, Glasgow, Scotland, and throughout the United States. She is a member and serves on several boards of international scholarly associations including the Society for Cinema and Media Studies (SCMS), Console-ing Passions (CPTV), the Modern Language Association (MLA), among others. She is founding editor of the journal Screening Noir: A Journal of Film, Video and New Media Culture.
]]>142 Campbell Hill Road, Bowling Green Ohio
Tel: 419-353-3464
http://www.hamptoninn.com/en/hp/hotels/index.jhtml?ctyhocn=BGNOHHX
Days Inn
1740 East Wooster St. Bowling Green Ohio
Tel: 419-352-1520
http://www.daysinn.com/DaysInn/control/home
Holiday Inn
2150 Wooster St. Bowling Green Ohio
419-353-5500
http://www.hiexpress.com/hotels/us/en/bowling-green/bwroh/hoteldetail
Visitors Parking
Visitors can purchase permits at Parking Services or the Visitor’s Center.
Daily permit – $5 | Weekly permit – $15
This link gives you directions to the visitors center – http://www.bgsu.edu/map/page23944.html
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*Location: Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, USA*
*Dates of the meetings: April 14,15 2011*
We invite you to a two-day conference on Digital/Media, Race, Affect and Labor, to be hosted by the American Culture Studies Program at Bowling Green State University.
The conference look at mediated environments (broadly defined) in a contemporary or historical context. The papers in the conference engage with specific conceptual relationships that connect with the theme of this conference and explore them in any available online or offline setting.
The presenters of digital media and affect related research explore such questions as: How does desire for the Other play out in global/local and online/offline intersections? How does affect work in on-line networks and digital assemblages? What are the affective regimes of on-line sociality? What kind of perceptions, sensations, affective movements and public feelings emerge in our highly mediated and digitized environments?
The presenters also examine representations of raced bodies, shifting conceptualizations of race across space, place and time, race in cyberspace, racialized labor and so on. Historical mappings of race, caste, class and gender as well as historical contextualization of media forms reveal complex and nuanced understandings of how digital economies are shaped in relation to globalization are encouraged.
Further, the presenters will discuss affect and labor in relation to globalization and digitally mediated worlds, answering such questions as: What sorts of socio-economic formations emerge online and offline? How do we make sense of so-called voluntary networks of non-profit activities and social entrepreneurship online? How do notions of neoliberal governmentality shape emerging labor forces? What are the global and local implications of how we labor and work and play in digitally mediated environments?
Please email inquiries to *Radhika@cyberdiva.org*<Radhika@cyberdiva.org>and include conference in your subject line.
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