Posts Tagged ‘SIAH’

Closing Remarks from Yesterday’s SIAH Symposium

Here are my closing remarks from yesterday’s symposium for the Summer Institute in the Arts & Humanities. Thanks to all who made it out.

Over the past eight weeks, as part of the seventh annual Summer Institute in the Arts and Humanities, I had the privilege of working with a group of faculty and undergraduates from across the disciplines, and the awesome variety of work presented today should give you, if nothing else, a taste of what that work looked like, how it came to be, and where it’s going. To sum up that work in my closing remarks would be neither sufficient nor fair enough to anyone in the room. Still, what I can do today is briefly address what I have learned from each of these students and faculty and articulate the ways in which that learning altered how I understand undergraduate research in the arts and humanities.

One thing I learned is that, in highly interdisciplinary contexts, both students and faculty can easily fall back on foundations—on what they are experts in. Obviously, we are most comfortable conversing about what we know, and this knowledge base often gives academics a feeling of control, a sense of place, and a steering wheel for knowledge-making. In this sense, expertise is framed around the individual, who is a person with a specialized set of skills and an authority on a particular subject. Yet what is striking to me about the very word “expert” is that, at least in the English language, it was a verb before it was a noun. While, starting in the 15th century, “expert” was a verb meaning “to experience” or “to know by experience,” it was not until the 19th century that it became a noun implying a person who is an authority or a specialist. That former definition—”expert” as an action—is now recognized as obsolete. However, from what I witnessed during the Institute, it is anything but. This summer, the most productive learning and novel creations occurred when “expert” shifted from a noun to a verb or from a person to an experience.

Premised on this shift, undergraduate research during the Institute attended not to effects or products, but to process and revision. Specifically, it emerged from collaborations among students—collaborations which did not assume agreement as a necessary ingredient, yet never failed to generate new and exciting lines of inquiry. It also emerged from an openness to and emphasis on change and flexibility. During the Institute, I saw students undo a day’s worth of their own labor, learn software that was new to them in a short span of time, rethink assumptions that subtended their previous work, drastically alter how they were imagining their projects, and, perhaps most importantly, take some serious risks, be they institutional, artistic, or even personal. That said, research was not only experiential; it was experimental. Last week, during their “In Process” exhibition, students turned the Jacob Lawrence Gallery into a laboratory for the arts and humanities, with many of them literally soliciting feedback from their audience, others presenting in a gallery space for the first time, and all of them realizing ways for others to inhabit and participate in their ideas. I could stand here and commend each of them for all of these things and validate their work; but I don’t have to. They already know they have succeeded, because they experienced success and know how to recognize it. As experts of a new sort, they developed competencies and proficiencies—and not just skills—that will allow them, in the very near future, to mobilize their experiences during the Institute for new conversations, here on campus and elsewhere.

For the kind of interdisciplinary, undergraduate research I have witnessed this summer, thanks both to the students and the faculty, is about listening, not just talking; it’s about unpacking what motivates a question, not simply posing one. And, of course, it does not do away with expertise; it displaces it and refigures it. These are the marks of creativity. And, this summer, I was fortunate enough to see and hear such creativity in action, and I learned so much from everyone involved. For this opportunity and on behalf of the students and faculty involved in the seventh annual Summer Institute in the Arts and Humanities, I would like to thank the Undergraduate Research Program, the Simpson Center for the Humanities, Undergraduate Academic Affairs, the Office of Research, UW Educational Outreach, and the Mary Gates Endowment for Students. Because of support from programs and offices such as these at the University Washington, the expert in undergraduate research is well on the way to becoming a verb again.

The Seventh Annual Symposium for the Summer Institute in the Arts & Humanities at the UW

The symposium for “Media and the Senses” is this Friday, August 15th, in Odegaard Library 220 (map). Here’s the schedule:

8:30-9:00: Refreshments

9:00-9:30: Welcome and Opening Remarks

Kathleen Woodward, Director, Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities, Professor of English

Jennifer Harris, Associate Director, Undergraduate Research Program, Undergraduate Academic Affairs

Axel Roesler, Assistant Professor for Interaction Design, School of Art

Carrie Bodle, Visiting Lecturer, School of Art

9:30-10:25: Session I

Kendal Lund, English

William Damon, English and Law, Societies & Justice

Nishali Nanayakkara, Comparative History of Ideas

Andrew Franks, DXArts

Sohroosh Hashemi, Business Administration

10:25-10:40: Q&A and Closing Remarks for Session I

10:40-10:50: Break

10:50-11:45: Session II

Julia Bruk, DXArts

Jennifer Mao, Photography and Psychology

Nichole Poinski, Comparative Literature

Christopher Stevenson, English and Creative Writing

Justin Vice, Comparative History of Ideas

11:45-12:00: Q&A and Closing Remarks for Session II

12:00-1:15: Lunch

1:15-2:10: Session III

Gretchen Cook, Design Studies and Women Studies

Ari Kirby, Classics, Greek, Linguistics and English

Seungwha Lee, Art History and Communication

Regina Wandler, Community, Environment & Planning and Comparative History of Ideas

Sarah Wang, Informatics

2:10-2:25: Q&A and Closing Remarks for Session III

2:25-2:35: Break

2:35-3:30: Session IV

Brittany Dennison, Philosophy and Creative Writing
Claire Fox, Comparative History of Ideas and Comparative Literature

Sol Hashemi, Photography

Jason Hirata, Photography and Comparative History of Ideas

Laura Paul, Comparative History of Ideas and DXArts

3:30-3:45: Q&A and Closing Remarks for Session IV

3:45-4:00: Closing Remarks

Jentery Sayers, Teaching Associate and PhD Candidate, English

If you are in Seattle this Friday, then I hope to see you there.

Summer Institute in the Arts and Humanities: In Process Exhibition

The “In Process Exhibition for the Seventh Annual Summer Institute in the Arts and Humanities” is just around the corner.

Here are the dates, times and location, together with a brief description of the exhibition, a flier (in .pdf), a link to the Facebook event page, and a student-made video:

In Process Exhibition

@ the Jacob Lawrence Gallery (University of Washington Art Building, Room 132)

Opening Reception and Student Presentations: Monday, August 4th, 12-4pm

Exhibition Duration: Monday, August 4th – Saturday, August 9th, 2008, 12-4pm

The 2008 UW Summer Institute in the Arts and Humanities (SIAH) In Process Exhibition presents student project work-in-progress as a means for experimentation with concepts and work at the intersections of the 2008 SIAH theme, “Media and the Senses.” This is the first year that the SIAH student work has been shown in-progress and highlights academic production as an on-going process. These projects have emerged from the first five weeks of SIAH. In these first weeks, students examined such topics as the perception of time and space as place, space, and experience; site specific, installation and new media art; affect; making and production; and the reception and distribution of media.

Flier for the exhibition (in .pdf, including names of all participants and a list of sponsors)

Exhibition event page on Facebook

I hope you can make it to the Jake Gallery at some point next week. Or, if you are not in Seattle, stay tuned for ways to see and hear work from the In Process Exhibition online. Thanks!

Words that Move (Me)

Dear Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries (hereafter referred to, in the soup fashion, as “YHCHI”):

I’ve been reading your moving words and taking notes on your Flash styles. I also read an interview (conducted by Thom Swiss) in The Iowa Review, which ends with your saying:

There’s a tendency to read quickly on the Internet. Speed is everything, and densely written texts, be they creative or critical, seem to make the reader anxious — maybe because of the phone bill. Then again, maybe another reason for the dearth of critical Web writing is that there’s nothing to criticize — Web writing might not be very good.

Well, I’ll tell you this, YHCHI: your web writing is quite good, particularly in all of its consistency–sticking to language, forgetting about graphic design, and maintaining (unlike some of us) an engaging aesthetic across your work.

And in light of the “Animating 1919″ class, the 2008 SIAH on “Media and the Senses,” and, generally speaking, my growing interest in mapping the digital humanities onto Anglo-American modernism, I’m glad to see that critics are picking up your work and writing about it, namely Jessica Pressman, in “Reading the Code between the Words: The Role of Translation in Young-hae Chang Heavy Industries’s Nippon” (in dichtung-digital nr. 37).

The future of the past, in motion, is looking good.

Tho I need to take my time with these moving words and watch each one again, right now “Beckett’s Bounce”, “The Art of Silence” and “Artist’s Statement No. 45,730,944: The Perfect Artistic Web Site” (ENGLISH, K0REAN, FRANCAIS, or ESPAN0LA) are top on my shelf.

But, to answer your question, at least in regards to my own cyberpractices, I AM! That said, let me stop wasting your time. I know that you–and everyone else–are in quite a hurry.

Yours truly,

The Cyber Selfish