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[Commlist] Approaches to SLEEP - a colloquium
Wed Jan 26 08:35:21 GMT 2022
*Somnambulations: New Directions in Interdisciplinary Approaches to Sleep*
Graduate Colloquium 2021–2022
Friday, January 28, 2022, 9:30am–5pm EST
Register on Eventbrite for the Zoom link: eventbrite.com/e/237871268367
<http://eventbrite.com/e/237871268367>
Communication and Media Studies scholars and all others are welcome!
Somnambulations: New Directions in Interdisciplinary Approaches to Sleep
is a full-day colloquium featuring graduate students and emerging
scholars addressing sleep from a variety of disciplinary contexts.
Researchers working in media and communication studies are particularly
welcome, and should find resonance in talks on sleep and sound, music,
performance, encoding, measurement, and more. Through these themes the
event seeks to reflect the critical and creative sociocultural approach
to sleep and sleep science that is fundamental to The Sociability of
Sleep project.
https://sociabilityofsleep.ca/activities/graduate-colloquium-somnambulations
<https://sociabilityofsleep.ca/activities/graduate-colloquium-somnambulations>
~~~~~~PROGRAMME~~~~~~
Panel 1 – SLEEPING SOUNDLY
9:30am–10:20am EST
Devon Bate (Media Studies, Concordia University)
“Spectacular Rest: How to Sleep in the Attention Economy”
Josh Dittrich (Communication, Culture & Technology, University of Toronto)
“Counting Sheep Beats: Toward a Sonic Materialism of Sleep”
~~~~~~
Panel 2 – SLEEP'S CREATIVE THRESHOLDS
10:30am–11:20am EST
Cédric Kayser (French Language and Literature, Université de Montréal)
“Bodily Atmospheres: The Impact of Ambient Music on the First Stage of
Sleep (N1)”
Sandra Huber (Interdisciplinary Humanities, Concordia University)
“SleepWriter: Composing the Electricity of Sleep”
~~~~~~
Panel 3 – CRITIQUING NORMS IN SLEEP AND SLEEP RESEARCH
11:30am–1:00pm EST
Ryan Staples (Humanities, York University)
“To Whom Does the Dream Belong? Negotiating Expertise in the Early
History of the International Association for the Study of Dreams (IASD)”
Josianne Barrette-Moran (Bioethics, McGill University)
“Let the Night Owls In: A Patient-as-Partner Approach to Actualizing
Sleep Assessment Tools”
Kristie Serota (Public Health, University of Toronto)
“Unstitching the Sleep Industrial Complex: Reflections on the
Medicalization and Commodification of Sleep”
~~~~~~
Break – 1:00pm–2:15pm EST
~~~~~~
Panel 4 – ARTS OF REST AND RESISTANCE
2:15pm–3:45pm EST
Josie Roland Hodson (African American Studies and History of Art, Yale
University)
“Rest Notes: On Sleep and Black Contemporary Art”
Stacey Cann (Art Education, Concordia University)
“Rest, Slowness, and the Morality of Labour”
Victoria Stanton (Art Education, Concordia University)
“Modeling Rest, Cuing Recovery: On Activating (Doing) Nothing in the
Revitalized Third Place”
~~~~~~
PERFORMANCE – 4pm–5pm EST
Bureau of Noncompetitive Research – "Steeped In"
~~~~~~
The Sociability of Sleep projet is supported by the Government of
Canada’s New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF).
https://sociabilityofsleep.ca <https://sociabilityofsleep.ca>
(info /at/ sociabilityofsleep.ca) <mailto:(info /at/ sociabilityofsleep.ca)>
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