Yale has a network studies club for grad students but I think it's mostly about
robots. They don't approach it as an avenue for undergrad liberal arts, where
I think it belongs better. This is largely because undergrad curriculum is
controlled by faculty, who have a vested interest in
Basins of Unease
http://www.alansondheim.org/basins.jpg
https://youtu.be/UYokluOxUDk VIDEO
We're traveling across a diseased the land. We get the news from
typed print from radio from television from language insured. The
body is sealed by the noise of the news. The disease is everywhere
we
On 2020-03-09 3:38 p.m., Max Herman via NetBehaviour wrote:
>
> Conversation-worthy links as always!
Thank you!
> Regarding the story about Yale changing their intro to art history
> course, it makes sense to me.
Yes I think this is a good thing for much the same reasons you give.
Putting my
Conversation-worthy links as always!
Regarding the story about Yale changing their intro to art history course, it
makes sense to me. There's just no substance left for defending this
particular version of flat-earth cosmology, so why bother? Even on its own
terms it is dismantling itself
"Did Duchamp really steal Elsa’s urinal?" -
https://www.theartnewspaper.com/comment/letter-to-the-editor-or-did-duchamp-really-steal-elsa-s-urinal
"The missing third client: how artists are exploring radical economies" -
Bumper Edition of Citizen sci-fi at Furtherfield - events and exhibition, 2020
Coming up in the next couple of weeks we have a number of events and
an exhibition as part of Furtherfield’s three-year Citizen Sci-Fi
programme, crowdsourcing creative and technological visions of our
communities and
Hi all,
I'm going to re-post a couple of emails on the list due to others on
this list informing me that my proton mail email account tends to end
up in their spam folders, especially if they're using google email
accounts. Not all though...
Anyway, sorry for the re-posting & wishing you all