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[Commlist] What is Communication? (2021) Speaker Series
Wed Apr 07 20:46:45 GMT 2021
WHAT IS...?
COMMUNICATION
April 19 & 22 • May 6, 13 & 20, 2021
University of Oregon | Remote • Speaker Series
What is Communication? (2021) will investigate instantiations and
permutations of communication via models of exchange, modes of inquiry,
and meanings of community. While communication has been conceptualized
as models of transportation, transmission, and ritual, communication is
also characterized by modes of sharing, imparting, connecting, and
participating. These characteristics can contribute to democracy, as
well as facilitating the commons and community/fellowship.
Communication is sensorial, including the auditory, visual, kinesthetic,
tactile, olfactory, gustatory, and interoceptive, and can involve
humans, nonhumans, plants, and/or machines. Most importantly,
communication imbues meanings—experiences/cultures, languages/ideas,
feelings/emotions, interactions/transactions, politics/economics,
situations/contexts, and networks/environments.
This year’s event takes a problem-solving approach to communication by
examining systems of networks and flows, gender and ICT4D, surveillance
and algorithms, platforms and democracies, familial commonalities and
ecological interdependencies.
What is Communication? (2021) builds on the previous two years’
gatherings. What is Technology? (2019) examined practical arts and
tools, techniques and processes, moral knowledge and imagination, as
well as technology as intelligent inquiry and problem-solving. What is
Information? (2020) investigated tapestries, temperaments, and
topologies of the mathematical and semantic, physical and biological,
cultural and environmental, economic and political, as well as
information’s transformational æffects. This year marks the eleventh
annual What is...? and the sixth collaboration with scholars from the
natural sciences, social sciences and arts. The series continues to
enact a collaborative network of transdisciplinary research, cultivating
communication as the heart of nature and society.
Keynotes:
*
Monday, April 19, 2021 • 9:00-10:00am PT [NOTE: Different day of
week and time than others below.]
Elihu Katz, Sociology and Anthropology, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, and Yonatan Fialkoff, Smart Family Institute, Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, Israel
“How Did Mass Become Network?”
*
Thursday, April 22, 2021 • 12:00-1:00pm PT
H. Leslie Steeves, African Studies/Media Studies, University of
Oregon, and Janet D. Kwami, Communication/Film/Center for
Sustainability, Furman University
“Power, Voice & Influence Through ICTs: Reflections on Digital
Inequalities in the Global South”
*
Thursday, May 6, 2021 • 12:00-1:00pm PT
Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Information & Society/Communication, University
of Pennsylvania
“Algorithmic Manipulation: How Shall We Respond to the Threats and
Challenges Before Us?”
*
Thursday, May 13, 2021 • 12:00-1:00pm PT
Kathryn C. Montgomery, Communication, American University, and Jeff
Chester, Center for Digital Democracy
“Understanding and Regulating the Commercial Surveillance System”
*
Thursday, May 20, 2021 • 12:00-1:00pm PT
Suzanne Simard, Forest & Conservation Sciences, University of
British Columbia, Canada *
“Trees Communicate Through Networks in Complex Adaptive Systems”
* in cooperation with UO Women in Graduate Science
FREE REGISTRATION REQUIRED. Please see whatis.uoregon.edu
<http://whatis.uoregon.edu> for more details.
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