Agendamelding: How we use traditional and social media to create personal digital community

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The School of Journalism and Communication is proud to present a public lecture by Dr. Donald Shaw, professor emeritus at University of North Carolina’s School of Media and Journalism.

Wednesday, October 12 at 5:30pm to 7:00pm

Lawrence Hall, 115

“Modern media audiences are very active in the way they mix agendas from traditional and social media. In fact, audiences meld the agendas from these two types of media, along with their personal experiences, to find rewarding agenda communities. So, there is a potential loss in vertical power of traditional media and a gain in power of social media. The result is, we argue, a decline in the power and prestige of traditional institutions, including the traditional press, and a gain in connectivity of newly-empowered interest groups, including online communities. Ready for a flatter society? This is just a start.”

An Evening with Reza Aslan: Religion, Identity, and the Future of America

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Don’t miss this lecture by best-selling author, public intellectual, scholar of religions, producer, and television host, Reza Aslan. Aslan will deliver a lecture titled “An Evening with Reza Aslan: Religion, Identity, and the Future of America.”

Tuesday, October 18th

7:30 p.m. in 156 Straub Hall.

“Through the lens of his own experience—his family fled Iran during the Revolution in 1979 and settled in the U.S. when Reza was seven—and the conflicts he faced as an immigrant growing up, Aslan will examine the crisis of identity that is currently gripping the U.S., and suggest some possible ways in which we should think differently about race, religion, and identity in order to abolish the hatred and discrimination that has led to this crisis. As Aslan points out, America has, from the beginning, been a diverse nation, built on immigration and ethnic diversity.

Reza Aslan is the author of the international bestsellers No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam (2005), and Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth (2013). He is also the author of Beyond Fundamentalism: Confronting Religious Extremism in the Age of Globalization (paperback edition, 2010), in addition to being the editor of two volumes: Tablet and Pen: Literary Landscapes from the Modern Middle East and Muslims and Jews in America: Commonalties, Contentions, and Complexities. His next book, The Story of God, will be published by Random House (release date TBA). He is a contributing editor to The Daily Beast, and he also has written for the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, The Washington Post, the Boston Globe, The Guardian, The Nation, Slate, and The Christian Science Monitor.

In addition to his dedication to the written word (he is currently a professor of Creative Writing at UC-Riverside), Aslan believes in the power of other forms of media to educate and shape perceptions. He is a television producer and the founder, President, and CEO of Aslan Media Inc. which runs BoomGen Studios, a media company focused on providing alternative coverage of the Middle East and its diaspora communities. In addition, he is executive producer of a new ABC TV drama, Of Kings and Prophets, a dramatic retelling of the biblical story of King David, from shepherd to king and prophet. He is also the host of a new CNN spiritual adventure series titled “Believer” (set to debut in 2017), which follows Aslan as he immerses himself in various forms of worship, ritual, and rites of passage found in religious traditions from around the world. Aslan is a frequent guest on television and radio programs.

Aslan holds a BA in religious studies from Santa Clara University; a Masters of Theological Studies from Harvard Divinity School; a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Iowa’s Writers’ Workshop, and a PhD in the sociology of religions from UC Santa Barbara.”

The lecture is free and open to the public, and will be followed by a book sale and signing. It will be live-streamed at: ohc.uoregon.edu.

Seating is limited to 500; no tickets or reservations.

Doors will open at 7 p.m. For more information or for disability accommodations (which must be made by Oct. 11th) please call (541) 346-3934 or ohc@uoregon.edu

Oregon Rare Books Initiative Talk

 

The Oregon Rare Books Initiative is one of the many amazing resources here at the University of Oregon that fly under that radar – keep them in mind and don’t miss out on their first event of the year!

October 5, 2016

4:45 pm in the Browsing Room, Knight Library
Cynthia Herrup (History, USC, emerita)

Why pardons fail

“Whenever a presidency draws to its end, we Americans brace for the announcement of the president’s final pardons. We brace and then we complain: should George W Bush have commuted the sentence of Scooter Libby? Was it right for Bill Clinton to pardon financier Marc Rich? Had Gerald Ford promised in advance to pardon Richard Nixon? Pardons are meant to do good —to evoke mercy and to provide a necessary remedy to the sometimes overly harsh application of carousel_2_1the law, but it is far easier to name scandals attached to them than wrongs righted. We accept the necessity of pardons but we fret that they are unfair, socially biased and too often products of special access. We don’t lack for critiques of pardoning, but these critiques usually concentrate on the specifics of who gives pardons, who gets pardons, and who benefits from pardons. In this lecture I want to turn in a different direction, to show how the history of pardoning in the early modern era suggests that the problem with pardons lies in the concept of pardoning itself. By looking at the history of pardons in the tumultuous world of seventeenth-century England, we can begin to rethink why we have pardons and whether they can ever do what we expect of them.”

Thanks to a third year of funding from the Oregon Humanities Center and from the Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship of Scholars in Critical Bibliography at Rare Book School (UVA), as well as to support from our co-sponsors, Special Collections and University Archives and the Clark Honors College.

The First Graduate School Distinguished Alumni Speaker of 2016

Bill Hawley, an expert on mosquito-borne illness will kick off the Graduate School’s Distinguished Alumni Speaker Program on Wednesday Oct 5 at 4:00 in Jaqua 101. Bill got his PhD in Biology from the UO and has traveled the world since, studying mosquitoes and the problems they cause, for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)’s Entomology Branch in the Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria (hello, Zika!).

All grads (in fact, ALL people – including community members) are invited. In this general audience presentation, he will speak about having a career outside of academia, among other things.

Read more here: https://around.uoregon.edu/content/graduate-school-launches-distinguished-alumni-speaker-series

There are other opportunities to meet with Bill while he’s here!

Please contact Jessica Wilson in Biology (wilson21@uoregon.edu) to find out more.

UO Financial Aid & Scholarships

It’s always a good idea to keep an out for scholarship deadlines, most of which fall writing-828911_960_720between now and early 2017. The University’s Office of Student Financial Aid and Scholarships is available to help in any way you might need: more information, writing strategies, resume help to be the most competitive candidate you can be.

This fall, they are putting on a series of workshops that might be exactly what you have been looking for!  And in the meantime, learn more about these links —

General University Scholarships

Diversity Excellence Scholarships

Scholarship Bulletin – lists postings of outside private donors

If you have any questions, contact the Office of Student Financial Aid and Scholarships at financialaid@uoregon.edu or 541-346-3221.

Thursday, October 6
Session I:   How to Find and Compete for Scholarships 1:00–2:00 p.m. EMU Mallard Room
Session II:   How to Write Essays for Scholarships 2:00–3:00 p.m.  EMU Mallard Lake Room

Wednesday, October 12
Session I:   How to Find and Compete for Scholarships 2:00–3:00 p.m.  EMU Spruce Room
Session II:   How to Write Essays for Scholarships 3:00 a.m.– 4:00 p.m.  EMU Spruce Room
Tuesday, October 18
Session I:   How to Find and Compete for Scholarships  11:00 a.m.– Noon  EMU Spruce Room
Session II:   How to Write Essays for Scholarships Noon – 1:00 p.m.  EMU Spruce Room
Monday, November 7
Session I:    How to Find and Compete for Scholarships 1:00–2:00 p.m.  EMU Diamond Lake Room
Session II:    How to Write Essays for Scholarships 2:00–3:00 p.m.  EMU Diamond Lake Room
Tuesday, November 15
Session I:   How to Find and Compete for Scholarships 2:00–3:00 p.m.  EMU Diamond Lake Room
Session II:   How to Write Essays for Scholarships 3:00–4:00 p.m.  EMU Diamond Lake Room

 

JSMA Artist Talks – TOMORROW!!

logoThe Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art is a great place to relax, escape from the chaos and noise of campus, and of course, surround yourself with art! Their calendar of events is an excellent thing to keep tabs on so you don’t miss out on the numerous opportunities they work so hard to put on for everyone – and if you are a current student, just fill out a card for free membership!

gay-outlaw-abyss-pressTomorrow, Saturday October 1st, they will begin the year with two artist talks – San Francisco-based Gay Outlaw, whose exhibit Mutable Objects is currently being featured in the Harold and Arlene Schnitzer Gallery gallery will speak at 2pm.

btwamAnd Berkeley native Mildred Howard, whose work is featured in the current exhibition Between the World and Me: Contemporary African American Artists Respond to Ta-Nehisi Coates, will speak at 2:30.

As an introduction, a free 45-minute tour will talk place at 1pm.

Even if you cannot make it to these events, be sure to take advantage of this excellent resource we are so lucky to have directly on our campus. Everyone who works their is very nice, happy to help, and always eager to talk about art and art-making!

NMCC Open House!!

Friday October 14, 9:30-10:30am

Digital Scholarship Center, Rm 142, Knight Library

The New Graduate Resource Fair last week was a great success, now it’s time to follow it up with another!

Come join students and staff from across campus for a 348scasual coffee and snacks, and a chat about all things ‘new media and culture’!  Meet and connect with current and prospective participants, get a feel for the valuable interdisciplinary aspect of the program, and get your questions answered by the GE Emily Shinn and the Director, Professor Kate Mondloch.

We hope to see you there!

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Assistant Professor Of Creative Arts And Technologies at SUNY Polytechnic

logo3The Department of Communication and Humanities, College of Arts and Sciences at SUNY Polytechnic Institute seeks to hire Assistant Professor whose research and practice addresses the intersections between the creative arts and technologies. The Department offers a B.A. in Interdisciplinary Studies, a B.S. in Communication and Information Design, a B.S. in Interactive Media and Game Design, and an M.S. in Information Design and Technology, and provides a range of general education in the arts and humanities. SUNY Polytechnic is developing a state-of-the-art maker-space and collaborative interdisciplinary learning environment and is seeking candidates who can leverage these facilities to explore and capitalize upon the intersections between the arts and technologies.”

SUNY Polytech “is New York’s globally recognized, 180px-sunypolysealhigh-tech educational ecosystem and the world’s most advanced, university-driven research enterprise, dedicated to the goal of building a diverse and inclusive teaching, research, and working environment. Potential applicants who share this goal, especially underrepresented minorities, women, persons with disabilities, and veterans are strongly encouraged to apply.”

Interested applicants should submit:

  • Resume
  • Contact information for three work-related references
  • Letter of application
  • and SUNY Polytechnic employment application to www.sunypoly.edu/employment.

Review of applications will begin on October 14, 2016.

Position open until filled.

Minimum Qualifications:

  • A Ph.D. earned by the date of appointment from a college or university accredit by the US Department of Education or internationally recognized organization.
  • Demonstrated scholarly interests and/or creative practice involving the arts, design, and technologies. Candidates with an undergraduate or graduate background in technical and/or artistic fields, in addition to an arts and/or humanities-based Ph.D. in a field that engages the intersections between the creative arts and technologies, are especially desired.
  • The ability to work at the levels of theory and practice, integrating insights and applications in the arts, humanities, and technologies to engage students to become creative thinkers, practitioners, and problem-solvers.

    Applicants must address in their applications their abilities to work with a culturally diverse population. This position is contingent on the satisfactory completion of a background check; this position may require annual background checks.

Responsibilites

  • To develop and teach a range of undergraduate and graduate courses that encourage students to explore and develop their creative, aesthetic, and technical abilities and that contribute to the degree programs and general education mission of the Department.
  • The typical annual teaching load is three courses per semester, with course reductions available for tenure-track faculty starting research programs.
  • Scholarship and/or creative activities, and service including advising and collegial participation in the life of the University. Other reasonable duties as assigned.

 

The NMCC blog is on summer vacation!

PuddlesCongrats again to all of our 2016 graduates!

The NMCC blog will be on summer vacation for the next few months but will return in September to kick off the 2016-2017 school year! We wish everyone a safe and relaxing summer, and we look forward to seeing both new and returning NMCC students in the fall. Don’t forget to stop by our table at the annual Graduate Student Resource Fair!

See you in September for another great year with NMCC! 


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