News Archive
Soils, care and community: re-imagining ecological belonging
Maria Puig de la Bellacasa will be speaking at Nottingham Contemporary in the framework of the exhibition Still I Rise. Feminisms, Gender, Resistance
The talk will be on Soils, care and community: re-imagining ecological belonging
Abstract
This talk weaves together moments in scientific practice, community activism and creative art to tell stories in which soils are coming alive, revealing life within them, even a spirit. Re-animated human-soil relations are altering the perception of earth matter as inert resource passive to human use. Instead, they call for a sense of caring interdependency where the carers are not only human. As soils become enlivened a sense of human-soil interdependency is intensified, appealing to renewed ecological affinities, re-animating not only soils but also the humans who care for them. A more than human sense of community and belonging emerges, that depends on embracing the breakdown and recirculation of matter as a mundane eco-ethical obligation that disrupts the fascination with life as magnificent productivity and endurance.
Opening of the WISC Seminar Series with Professor Alexander Singleton
We are delighted to announce that Professor Alexander Singleton from the Geographic Data Science Lab of the University of Liverpool will open this term's WISC Seminar Series next week:
Professor , University of Liverpool:
How Data Philanthropy Can Help Us Understand Contemporary Urban Environments
Thursday, 17 January 2019, 16:00, Ramphal Building, R0.03
Abstract: Cities are awash with data that provide partial and fleeting glimpses into human activities and their contexts. Unlike many of those traditional sources of data that have been used to provide insight about population attributes and human behaviour, data are often located within the commercial sector and have limited degrees of access. Data Philanthropy provides a model for the more egalitarian access to such data. This talk focuses on the operationalisation of this concept within a UK context through case studies developed at the Geographic Data Science Lab.
Snacks and refreshments will be served! Please sign-up before attending, to assist us in managing numbers and to avoid food waste:
/research/priorities/sustainablecities/newsandevents/calendar/wisc2019/register
Please find an overview of all upcoming Seminars published online: /wisc2019. For further information, please contact Dr Ren茅 Westerholt (Rene.Westerholt@warwick.ac.uk) or Dr Jo茫o Porto de Albuquerque (J.Porto@warwick.ac.uk).
New Paper: A Music Worthy of The Name by Naomi Waltham-Smith
Naomi Waltham-Smith (Associate Professor, CIM) has published an article entitled 鈥楢 Music Worthy of the Name; Or, Agamben鈥檚 Museicology鈥 in a special issue on music and theory, edited by Chris Swithinbank and Irving Goh, of CR: The New Centennial Review.
The article develops a critical reading from a Derridean perspective of the appendix to Agamben鈥檚What is Philosophy?, interrogating music and sound鈥檚 (quasi)-transcendental status. It can be found here
鈥淎 Music Worthy of the Name; Or, Agamben鈥檚 Museicology,鈥 special issue on Music & Theory, CR: The New Centennial Review 18, no. 2 (2018): 179–202.
Moments of Identity Talk 23/01/19
We look forward to welcoming David Stark and Giovanni Formilan to present a talk on Moments of identity: Artists and their aliases in electronic music on 23rd January at 15.30-17.30 in R0.03.
In many creative fields, distinctive identities are shaped around named personas – pen names in literature, stage names in the performing arts, aliases in music. More than just responding to the need for artistic recognition, these personas also serve as test devices to navigate the complexity and unpredictability of one鈥檚 presence in the creative journey. Drawing evidence from the underground electronic music scene, a field where both genres and aliases proliferate, we outline dynamics of anonymity, visibility, and engagement that surround the use of aliases. We identify nine ideal moments in which the relation among person, persona, and audience gives temporary shape to the creative identity of the artist. Representing a part of the artist, the alias is projected apart from the artist and, through this curious distance that anticipates expectations and demands feedback, creative identity develops as a process of ongoing curation.
Dr Lizzie Richardson, Department of Geography, Durham University, visiting CIM during the Spring term
Lizzie Richardson is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the Department of Geography at Durham University, UK. Her research focuses on the performance and qualification of work as an economic activity. She is particularly interested in the technologies and devices through which work is made (in)visible and accounted for.
New Paper: The Subject of Circulation: On the Digital Subject's Technical Individuations
Scott Wark (Associate Researcher, CIM) recently wrote a paper published in Subjectivity. The abstract from the paper is:
'The concept of the digital subject proposes that online subjectivity is a mediated construct. This article extends this concept by arguing that online subjectivity is not a property of human users, but of digital subjects enacted in circulating data. It develops the digital subject by, first, using Phillip Agre鈥檚 concept of 鈥済rammars of action鈥 to argue that computational architectures exclude humans from the position of the user; and, second, using Gilbert Simondon鈥檚 and Yuk Hui鈥檚 philosophies of technology to posit the digital subject as a determinate technical entity that, as per Hui鈥檚 reworking of Simondon, inhabits a 鈥渄igital milieu鈥. Online, this digital subject inverts the human–technology relationship. It individuates by entering circulation, excluding us from individuating whilst individuating us in turn. This article expands upon this claim by analysing projects by Amalia Ulman and Zach Blas and their thematisation of visibility, identity and authenticity in online subjectivity.'
The article can be read online at . The link to the full article is .
Applications are invited for an Associate Professor in the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies (CIM).
Mapping the mappers 鈥 undoubtedly my best and most creative academic year
The final stage of a CIM postgraduate degree is the dissertation research project. This piece of independent research is an opportunity for students to bring together the skills, knowledge and methods they have developed in the first two terms of taught modules. CIM students can follow the theme of their postgraduate degree in their optional modules, or branch out, sculpting their own degree in relation to their interests and goals.
Maria Petrescu investigated collaborative mapping within Coventry鈥檚 OpenStreetMap community for her dissertation research. Maria studied the Big Data and Digital Futures MSc with the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies (CIM) and the 糖心TV Q-Step centre. In addition to her core modules, Maria chose optional modules such as IM919 Urban Data, Theory and Methodology and IM921 Visualisation which are taken by students in the MSc in Urban Analytics and Visualisation, as well as auditing IM923 User Interface Cultures, with the MA in Digital Media and Culture. Maria also took advantage of ongoing research projects in CIM, related to Humanitarian Mapping, and helped establish the 鈥淩esilience Mapping鈥 student society, in which students create digital maps of areas in need of humanitarian assistance.
We spoke to Maria about how her time at CIM allowed her to develop an innovative interdisciplinary research approach.
A Digital Test of the News: Checking the Web for Public Facts: Workshop report published
The Digital Test of the News workshop brought together digital sociologists, data visualisation and new media researchers for two days at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies at the University of 糖心TV in May 2018. The workshop is part of a broader research collaboration between the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies and the which investigates the changing nature of public knowledge formation in digital societies and develops inventive methods to capture and visualise knowledge dynamics online. This workshop report, written by Liliana Bounegru, Noortje Marres and Jonathan Gray, outlines the workshop鈥檚 aims and outcomes.
Launch of the 鈥淲aterproofing Data鈥 project
From 7 to 9 November 2018 the city of S茫o Paulo in Brazil has seen the launch of the project 鈥Waterproofing Data: Engaging Stakeholders in Sustainable Flood Risk Governance for Urban Resilience鈥.
Waterproofing Data is an interdisciplinary project with around 鈧1m funding provided by an international association of research councils: ESRC (Economic and Social Sciences Research Council), FAPESP (S茫o Paulo Research Foundation) and BMBF (German Federal Ministry of Education and Research) in collaboration with the Belmont Forum, Norface and the International Science Council within the programme. Professor Jo茫o Porto de Albuquerque from the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies is the Principal Investigator of an international consortium which includes Heidelberg University (Prof Alexander Zipf) and Fundacao Getulio Vargas (Prof Maria Alexandra Cunha), alongside cooperation partners in Brazil (National Disaster Monitoring and Early-Warning Centre/Cemaden, Sao Paulo City Hall, State Secretary for the Environment of Acre, Brazil Geological Survey), Germany (Rhein-Neckar Water Rights Office and Eberbach City Council) and the UK (British Geological Survey, Environment Agency).