Date/Time
Saturday, February 24, 2018
10:00 am PST – 1:00 pm PST
Location
UCLA William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
2520 Cimarron Street
Core Program 2017–18
Becoming Media
Conference 2: Practices
—a conference organized by Sarah Tindal Kareem, University of California, Los Angeles, and Davide Panagia, University of California, Los Angeles
Despite the absence of a clearly articulated concept of medium, new ways of transmitting thought proliferated in the early modern period, as did reflection on the meaning of these new forms. This series of conferences investigates the objects, practices, and modes of attention associated with these new modes of communication and expression in the early modern and modern periods.
The second conference focuses on practices from collage to “commonplacing” associated with particular media. It is especially concerned with exploring the relationship between current practices in the digital humanities and older models of data collection and analysis. The participants’ presentations will illuminate the bi-directional flow between old and new media: the way that delving into early modern media practices from theatrical illusion to dictionary-making can reframe the way we understand our own relationship to our current media landscape, as well as vice versa.
Image
Parmigianino, 1503–1540
Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror
Oil on convex panel, ca. 1524
Kunsthistorisches Museum
Speakers
J. K. Barret, University of Texas at Austin
Frances Ferguson, University of Chicago
Bernard Dionysius Geoghegan, King’s College London
Brad Pasanek, University of Virginia
Jessica Roberson, Ahmanson-Getty Fellow
Sean Silver, University of Michigan
Dennis Yi Tenen, Columbia University
Neal Thomas, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Moira Weigel, Harvard University
Saturday, February 24, 2018 (Day 2)
9:30 a.m. Morning Coffee and Registration
10:00 a.m.
Session 3
Moderator: Ellen Truxaw, University of California, Los Angeles
Jessica Roberson, Ahmanson-Getty Fellow
“Excavating Romantic Media Archeologies”
10:45 a.m.
Bernard Dionysius Geoghegan, Coventry University
“The Differential Analyzer and its Affinities”
11:30 a.m. Coffee Break
11:45 a.m.
Moira Weigel, Harvard University
“The Gendering of the Media Concept”
12:30 p.m. Concluding discussion
1:00 p.m. Program ends
Booking Form
Bookings are currently closed for this event.