THE OBERMANN CENTER PRESENTS A MINI-SEMINAR, NOVEMBER 1-2, 2004.
LANGUAGE, ART, PROGRAMMING AND NETWORKS: THE RELATIONSHIP OF NEW MEDIA LITERATURE TO "LITERATURE"

 

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mark hansen


Mark Hansen is Associate Professor of English at Princeton University where he teaches courses in media studies and cultural theory. He is author of Embodying Technesis: Technology Beyond Writing (Michigan 2000), New Philosophy for New Media (MIT 2004), and Bodies in Code (Routledge, forthcoming), as well as numerous essays on cultural theory, contemporary literature, and media. His most recent publication is "The Time of Affect, or Bearing Witness to Life," which appeared in Critical Inquiry 30 (Spring 2004). He is co-editor (with Taylor Carman) of The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty and (with W.J. T. Mitchell) of Critical Terms for Media Studies (Chicago, forthcoming). He is currently at work on Becoming-Human, an ethics of the posthuman, and Fiction After Television, a study of the novel in the age of digital convergence.

 

participants:
kate armstrong
mark hansen
n. katherine hayles
dee morris
brian kim stefans
thomas swiss
joseph tabbi

the rest of us:
merrie snell
kelly mclaughlin
laren leland
ben basan


Sponsored by The Obermann Center for Advanced Studies
& the Project On the Rhetoric Of Inquiry
Contact: poroi@uiowa.edu
Last update: 9.22.04

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