REIMAGINING CINEMA: FILM AT EXPO 67

Media History Research Centre presents Reimagining Cinema: Film at Expo 67 

A roundtable discussion in response to the publication of “Reimagining Cinema: Film at Expo 67,” edited by Monika Kin Gagnon and Janine Marchessault.

Scott MacKenzie from Queen’s University and Inderbir Singh Riar from Carleton University will join Concordia University’s Monika Kin Gagnon, Haidee Wasson, as well as moderator, Jeremy Stolow.

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Join us!
Wednesday, October 28
4:30 to 6:00 PM
RF 110,
Jesuit Conference Centre,
Loyola Campus,
Concordia University,
7141 rue Sherbrooke O.

Can’t make it? Follow us at @mhrcconcordia as we live tweet the event.

DIGITAL HUMANITIES: FROM SPECULATIVE TO SKEPTICAL

MEDIA HISTORY RESEARCH CENTRE PRESENTS THE PROJECT ARCLIGHT TALK, DIGITAL HUMANITIES: FROM SPECULATIVE TO SKEPTICAL.

On Friday, October 9, Concordia University will welcome Johanna Drucker to lead a “skeptical” talk on the foundation, development and future of the Digital Humanities field.

After two decades of growing investment in tools, platforms, projects, pedagogy, and promotional campaigns, the challenge to Digital Humanities as a field is whether or not any of this activity has had an intellectual impact on any specific field or discipline.

Johanna Drucker will take us through the methodological foundations of Digital Humanities, its development, and accomplishments, but will also pose a series of questions about what the future should or might look like, and whether there is an intellectual future for this field.

Johanna Drucker is the Breslauer Professor of Bibliographical Studies in the Department of Information Studies at UCLA. She was the co-founder of the Speculative Computing Lab, with Jerome McGann, at the University of Virginia, and has published widely on topics related to digitalscholarship, pedagogy, and criticism, including SpecLab (Chicago, 2008) the jointly authored Digital_Humanities, with Anne Burdick. Peter Lunenfeld, Todd Presner, and Jeffrey Schnapp, (MIT, 2013). Her introductory coursebook, DH_101 Introduction to Digital Humanities, is freely available online.

Event Details:

Friday, October 9 | 3:30 PM
CJ 1.114 Communication and Journalism Building
Loyola Campus, Concordia University
7141 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal

All the Poets in Town: A Montreal Poetry Recording Party

SpokenWeb, alongside the Media History Research Centre, AMPLab, the Department of English, and the Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling, is pleased to invite you to the final event of the SpokenWeb project, “All the Poets in Town: A Montreal Poetry Recording Party.”

Saturday, June 6th, 2015 – 8 PM
De Sève Cinema, Concordia University
McConnell Library Building
1400 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West

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