Spring 2024 NMCC Shelfie: Annie Liu

Annie Liu (she/her) is a third-year Musicology, MM Bassoon Performance master’s student and an NMCC recipient. Liu is graduating from UO in June 2024 and starting a PhD in musicology at Princeton this fall. 


Profile

Liu’s current research focuses on voice, timbre, and politics in Chinese popular music from 1920–1980. She uses digital tools, like Sonic Visualizer, to create spectrograms or visual ways of representing the signal strength over time at various frequencies present in a particular waveform. 

Early in her program, she became interested in music and the Internet/social media, leading her to the NMCC. She wanted to learn about digital humanities and making musicology public and accessible. Liu always wanted to take courses outside of music to meet faculty and students across campus.

Liu received a Student Presentation Award for the ACTOR Y6 Workshop and will present a chapter from her master’s thesis about shidaiqu vocal timbre. She also co-authored a paper on Peking opera vocal timbre with her advisor, Zachary Wallmark, and it is to be published in Music & Science in the coming months.

Looking ahead, Annie Liu envisions her website, shanghaisong.org, as a dynamic and interactive platform. This space will not only serve as a repository for songs but also foster collaboration among scholars interested in the genre or the time period. Her aspiration is to create a vibrant academic community that thrives on shared knowledge and collaboration.


Liu seated at her computer desk, surrounded by books and screens, smiling at the camera
Annie Liu, Class of 2024

Recommendations

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Rhythm:

Event: Break The Game | film screening and director Q&A

Join the SOJC’s Game Studies minor for an evening with Jane Wagner, director of a new documentary about legendary Zelda speedrunner Narcissa Wright.

When: Thursday, May 30 at 4:30 PM

Where: EMU, Room 214 (Redwood)

What: Film screening and Q&A with the director

Sponsored by the Game Studies Minor, Media Studies Area, SOJC, UO Esports Program, Price Science Library, and the New Media and Culture Certificate

Description: Video games and the community around them have meant everything to Narcissa Wright. Her quests to set speed run records in numerous game titles have allowed her to own competitions and stages across the globe. But as much as she loves the challenge of conquering virtual worlds, her biggest challenge will come from the community whose love and affection she yearns for as she comes out as transgender. Hell-bent on setting a new speedrunning world record in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, Narcissa struggles to balance the volatile nature of internet fandom and the prospect of building a fulfilling life outside the confines of pixels and sprites.

OHC Interview with Aimée Morrison now live

OHC’s interview with NMCC’s 2024 annual lecturer, Aimée Morrison, is now live on YouTube. 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3pBypE8BBw&ab_channel=OregonHumanitiesCenter

 

Aimée Morrison’s lecture “Touch Grass” made a case for reclaiming learning techniques we’ve outsourced to technology and returning to the power of our hands, particularly in reference to hand-written notetaking. She then led a workshop for faculty and grads demonstrating the power of “sketch-noting.”

 

NMCC Alumna Returns for Guest Lecture

NMCC and Art History Alumna Emily Lawhead (PhD ’22) returns to UO to give the annual Gordon Gilkey Lecture for the History of Art and Architecture dept. Her presentation will share forthcoming research on AI and photography.   Please join us on Wednesday, May 22, at 5:30 to hear her wonderful and timely research.

“Art, Technology, and Discontent: Artificial Intelligence and the History of Photography” 5:30 pm, Wednesday, May 22, Pacific 123

Emily Lawhead (PhD ’22), Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Utah Museum of Fine Arts

Abstract: Heated debates have followed the emergence of new technologies in art for centuries. In fact, today’s discourse surrounding AI mimics historical reactions to and the trajectory of photography as an artistic medium. This talk will draw on the history of photography a data-based medium that has laid the groundwork for considering AI as a critical field of art history.

“Thinking with Your Hands:” A sketchnoting workshop with Dr. Aimee Morrison

On Friday, May 17 at 1:30 pm, Annual Lecturer Aimée Morrison will lead a hands-on workshop for NMCC affiliates interested in learning more about sketchnoting as a research practice. Tea will be served and art supplies will be provided!

Spots are limited – RSVP here! 

Grad students will receive priority, with any remaining spots going to faculty, staff, and undergraduate students in order of RSVP.

What is sketchnoting?

Also called visual note-taking, sketchnoting is the use of diagrams, symbols, drawings, doodles, illustrations, and other visual cues in combination with written notes. This creative, graphic note-taking style can improve focus and help with retention and synthesis of key information from a lecture or reading, and may be particularly helpful for neurodivergent folks. Here’s a quick video intro from Mike Rodhe, who has published a couple of books on the technique: