Reading, Writing & Research Methodologies 2012/2013
This is a shared page for the R,W & R module.
Assignments
Trimester 3
June 5
Writing machines:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjT1O0oPtxE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWVABqw3Xd4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X0F0Tcqn7eE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Go-epSMZEUI
How does it make you feel?
What kind of atmosphere does it evoke?
What was the motivation behind making it?
What preceded it?
What will follow it?
What’s holding it together?
How long will it last?
Where are its edges?
Is it original?
What does it evoke?
To whom does it speak?
Can it touch you?
When was the work made?
Can it be destroyed?
When did it begin to exist?
What is its status?
What is its economy?
What is it influenced by
Under what conditions would it fail?
What is the measure of its success?
May 30
Reader and feedback
key questions:
is the method clear?
is motivation clear?- (maybe use the discussion to talk about motivation)
how can the writer come to a conclusion?
Reading Writing Research Methods
Assignment one: 22 April - 15 May:
Self-directed research essay = 1000-1500 words
The aim of this exercise is:
(1) to further articulate your practice and to discuss it within a broader cultural and historical context
(2) to identify and articulate a methodology
Some of you have already made progress in producing texts which fulfill the above ends.
In the second year, when you produce your Final Project Proposal, then it will be necessary to demonstrate the ability to do the above.
Guidelines:
The aim of this assignment is to use description of your work as a way of identifying and articulating your method. Describing first what and then how and why you make work often leads to discussions of the works context (what work is similar to the work you describe; what are the key ideas the work deals with) . The theoretical elements of the texts you write should therefore emerge from, and have a very clear connection with, the work you are making. For this experiment I am asking you to follow the method outlined above so that you can begin to reflect and write quite deeply about the work you are making.
A second method you will find useful is to draw on annotations of texts you have read which have a particular relation to the work you make.
link title
Timetable:
Outline: 23 April
First draft: 7th May (review in groups)
Final draft: 15th May (review in groups)
Tips on structure:
Aim: articulation of methodology
Structure:
Abstract = 50 words
Intro
Text:
Conclusion (recapping the main issues in the text)
Note on mode of address: imagine you are writing for a reader who is known to you (a peer or colleague).
What needs to be explained to them for them to understand what you do?
Upload Drafts Here
Mathijs
Marlon
Manno
ROEL
Niek
Viking
joak
Nicole
mmths
Michaela
Nan
Yoana
Lasse
PIRATEPAD: http://piratepad.net/kMpxZySx5m
Assignment two:
Writing Machines: 5, 12 and 19 June
Trimester 2
This trimester we will be looking at key terms in the media lexicon and study the ideas and work they inspire, beginning with:
Cultural Hegemony
9-1-13
links for 9-1-13 class
http://www.chadmccail.co.uk/billboard/billboards.html
http://www.chadmccail.co.uk/snake/snake.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNDz0EWJwII
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AnB8MuQ6DU
Texts under discussion this week:
The Ruling Class and the Ruling ideas, Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels
(i) History of the Subaltern Classes; (ii) The Concept of 'Ideology'; (iii) Cultural Themes: Ideological Material, Antonio Gramsci
Clip:
(the 'propaganda model', in) The Culture of Consent, Noam Chomsky
Week one: read Marx and Gramsci texts (if you haven’t got one Leslie has copies).
Assignment: gather together material comprising the following and bring that material to the seminar on Wednesday:
Make brief synopsis of each text:
Make notes on how Gramsci developed Marx’s idea
Posit your own definition for cultural hegemony
Speculate on how cultural hegemony might operate in the contemporary world... consider Chomsky’s use of the ‘propaganda model’. Can we consider the recent occupy movement and similar movements as countering cultural hegemony? If so, in what ways do they do this?
16-1-13
Cultural Hegemony Part two
1) You will work in groups on the texts you upload on to the wiki – at this point you should have material to work with and piece together, we can discuss what might be done with this material. [BUT DO NOT COME EMPTY HANDED]
2) Introduction into Adorno & Horkheimer and ‘the culture industry enlightenment as mass deception’
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00pr54s
23-1-13
Cultural Hegemony Part three
Counter-culture & the New left
The culture industry continued
Texts discussed:
Whole Earth Catalogue (issue #1, 1968)
Radical Software (issue # 1, 1970)
From Counterculture to Cyberculture, Fred Turner (2009)
Digital Culture, Charlie Gere (2008)
One Dimensional Man, Herbert Marcuse (1964)
All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace, Richard Brautigan (1967)
Clips:
Punishment Park, Peter Watkins (1970)
Abbie Hoffman and the yippies -- Bobby Seal and the Black Panthers-- Videofreeks (1968)
TV footage of 1968 Democratic Convention and 'police riot', Chicago (1968)
21-2-13
Welcome back to RWRM after Stock’s workshop. This session will be used to tie some loose ends together. The session will be in two parts
Agenda:
Item 1 (10:00 – 11:30):
EMO: encyclopedia of media objects has made a tentative start but we now need to build on it.
Action: during the session we will do the following:
a) Timetable for media object entry and cataloguing of lectures will be established
b) Each person will choose a media object and commit to it – so think carefully about your object before we meet – (please upload material for discussion before hand)
c) Make stub page on the wiki
d) Talk about how together we can make pages for the lectures (i.e.: revisit pirate pad and go through the audio of Femke's talk again to make more comprehensive notes to give us a starting point.)
Item 2 (11:45-13:00): Cultural Hegemony part four
Counterculture – cyberculture – the culture industry
Report on progress
Since the last session you have been reading the texts we discussed in the last seminar and also conducting your own research (at transmediale and elsewhere) that will result in your own self-directed research paper. Please upload what you have (draft, notes or finished paper) and we will discuss it in groups and plan for its completion.
Upload here
- Michaela Lakova
- Lasse van den Bosch Christensen
- Joseph Knierzinger
- Marlon Harder
- Menno Harder
- Mathijs van Oosterhoudt
- Roel Roscam Abbing
- Yoana Buzova
- Nicole Hametner
- Nan Wang
- Caetano Carvalho
- Niek Hilkmann
Trimester 1
November 2012
'YouTube mini- seminar: participatory surveillance post- TV.'
With YouTube and Facebook as the central media under investigation we will explore the role of 'consumer as producer' in the post (mass) media context, drawing on our understanding of Deleuze’s societies of control and Foucault’s notions of disciplinary societies and neoliberal governmentality
1 (31-10-12): a) screening of We Live in Public b) discussion of film c) identify areas of interest related to your work and allocation of texts
2: (6-11-12) Notes on The YouTube Reader and related texts
3: Seminar: presentations and screenings
See also:
In the Long Tail Part - Mark Leckey (7 parts)
Wednesday 17-10-2012
Assignment for the 17th: having listened to the advice of your peers, make changes to your texts and upload them on the wiki. Read and make notes of the text(s) you chose in the seminar. On the 17th we will discuss how the texts connect to each other and to your own work
Tuesday 09-10-2012
link to Holmes:
http://brianholmes.wordpress.com/2007/09/09/future-map/
Assignment for next week TUESDAY (9-10-2012)
Everyone reads Holmes text and makes notes (a line on every couple of paragraphs)
Those reading Deleuze: make synopsis = 250 words and also make synopsis of Holmes’ text = 250 words = 500 words
Those reading Oullette & Hay: Make synopsis of 250 words for each chapter = 500 words
Those reading Foucault: Make synopsis of 500 words = 500 words