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[ecrea] 4th Annual Intersections and Intersections Conference (UWS)
Thu Jun 14 19:36:48 GMT 2012
4th Annual Intersections and Intersections Conference
School of Humanities and Communication Arts
University of Western Sydney
19-20 June, 2012
Venue: Building BB, Werrington South (Penrith Campus)
Full program details: http://www.uws.edu.au/postgradconf
(Attendance is free but please register by 14 June)
The School of Humanities and Communication Arts (UWS) presents
'Interventions and Intersections', a two-day interdisciplinary
postgraduate conference for School-based Honours and Higher Degree
Research (HDR) candidates.
Designed to bring research students together from across the various
disciplines of the School, the conference will offer an opportunity
to present research in a friendly and supportive environment while
giving students the chance to gain valuable feedback from academic staff
and peers. Recognising that scholarship is largely a 'conversation of
ideas', the event seeks to foster a collegial environment of
scholarly exchange in order to enhance students' research experiences.
Participation in the conference is open to all and is an important
feature of research training offered by the School of Humanities
and Communication Arts.
Keynote Speakers
19 June
Assistant Professor Ulises A. Mejías
'Liberation Technology and the Arab Spring'
While the tendency in the West to refer to the Arab Spring movements as 'Twitter Revolutions' has passed, a liberal discourse of 'liberation technology' (information and communication technologies that empower social movements) continues to influence our
ideas about networked participation. Unfortunately, this utopian discourse tends to circumvent any discussion
of the capitalist market structure in which these tools operate. Dr
Mejías
suggests that liberation technologies may in fact increase opportunities for political engagement, but that they simultaneously create certain kinds of
inequalities. To counter these inequalities, he proposes a theoretical framework for locating alternative practices of identity formation and participation.
Ulises A.
Mejías is director of the Integrated Media graduate program and Assistant Professor in the Communication Studies
Department at the State University of New York, College at Oswego. His book on Digital Networks is scheduled for publication in Fall of 2012 by the University of Minnesota Press.
Lisa Matthews, Director, Australia on Trial (2012)
'The Challenges, Constraints and Unexpected Joys in Making History
Entertaining for Television'
In using examples of my work, I will discuss the intellectual and
practical concerns in realising history to the screen from the research
through scripting, production and post production. In adapting material
there are many creative dilemmas - what to include/exclude, who's point
of view to tell the story and most importantly the delicate dance
between the entertainment value of the story and the allegiance to its
factual basis. I will screen excerpts from OUTRAGE AT MOUNT RENNIE from
the recently broadcast Australia on Trial series on ABC Television in
April, Darwin's Brave New World, Rogue Nation (Episode Two) and Rosie's
Secret.
Lisa Matthews has worked in the film and television industry in
Australia and Britain for twenty five years. Her passion is unearthing
untold stories from Australia's past. She has produced, written and
directed several award winning short films, dramas and documentaries
including Rosie's Secret, The Shadow of Mary Poppins, In Search of
Bony, Art House, Ten Pound Poms, Rogue Nation, Darwin's Brave New
World and most recently the Australia on Trial series. Her films have
screened in local and international festivals and broadcasters include
ABC and SBS Television, Channel Nine and THE COMEDY Channel in
Australia; RTE Ireland, BBC and BBC2 London, ARTSWORLD UK, CBC Canada
and AVRO The Netherlands.
Lisa is currently writing two feature film scripts and
commences production at the end of the year for a television
series Daughters of the Dragon to be filmed in China.
20 June
Dr Ros Bandt
'Acoustic Spaces: Site Specific Approaches in Recent Sounding
Artworks, Medusa Dreaming, Blue Gold, Tracings'
Every Place is an acoustic space. How do we design work which brings the
auditory sense to a new experience? What are the intersections and
interactions between people, spaces and ideas? Ros will answer these
questions with reference to three large recent works she has
been creating, touring and recording in Australia, Greece, Turkey,
Germany and Japan at a point where they are all being published on CD.
How much can we really capture?
Ros Bandt is Honorary Senior Research Fellow, School of Historical and
Philosophical Studies (SHAPS), University of Melbourne. Since 1977 she
has pioneered 'sounding' unusual acoustic sites, audience interactive
installations, spatial music, sound sculptures, sound playgrounds, free
music systems and curated large scale dynamic collaborative events. Her
numerous books and writings on sound are well known. She founded the
award winning web-based online gallery and data base the Australian
Sound Design Project. www.sounddesign.unimelb.edu.au
Associate Professor Colin Harvey
'Transmedia Memory Flows'
Though exact definitions of the term remain contentious, 'transmedia
storytelling' is generally agreed to refer to processes of connected
narrative-making across multiple media forms. Such forms might include
novels, films, video games, comic books, websites, and varieties of
User-Driven Content. Central to transmedia storytelling is the role
of memory, the processes by which other elements of the storyworld are
either recalled with fidelity, forgotten or deliberately misremembered.
In this paper I will utilise Manuel de Landa's philosophy alongside
insights from the field of memory studies to identify transmedia memory
flows in relation to my own professional work as a video
game story designer and licensed fiction writer.
Dr Colin B Harvey is a British writer and academic specialising in
memory, fantasy and transmedia storytelling. He has worked as
a freelance video game story designer for Sony and written licensed
tie-in fiction for the Doctor Who and Highlander ranges. He is currently
an Adjunct Associate Professor in the School of Humanities and
Communication Arts, University of Western Sydney.
Please contact Sally Macarthur <(s.macarthur /at/ uws.edu.au)
<mailto:(s.macarthur /at/ uws.edu.au)>> (Communication Arts) or David Walton
<(d.walton /at/ uws.edu.au) <mailto:(d.walton /at/ uws.edu.au)>> (Humanities) for
more information.
--
Ned Rossiter
Professor of Communication
School of Humanities and Communication Arts
University of Western Sydney
Sth Werrington Campus
Locked Bag 1797
Penrith NSW 2751
Australia
+ 61 2 9852 5196 (tel)
+ 61 2 9852 5424 (fax)
(n.rossiter /at/ uws.edu.au) <mailto:(n.rossiter /at/ uws.edu.au)>
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