Public Group active 1 month, 2 weeks ago

GC Composition & Rhetoric Community (GCCRC)

The Graduate Center Composition and Rhetoric Community (GCCRC), a DSC-chartered organization, is comprised of a diverse group of students and faculty interested in not only what texts say, but how they say it, and how they come to say it – in short, how they are composed. This interdisciplinary group has been of particular interest to those who are teaching while pursuing their degrees because of our commitment to exploring writing-centered pedagogies, offering a support network for new and continuing graduate student instructors and hands-on training sessions for anyone interested. The GCCRC aims to foster discussions of writing studies and composition theory alongside our own local classroom experiences; these important connections between theory and practice regularly develop into extended discussions that group members have presented at national conferences.

Find out more on the Commons wiki, or see what we’ve been reading on Zotero.

Avatar image by craigmdennis, via flickr.

DHI event of interest

  • On Thursday April 4, 2013 we are honored to host Kari Kraus (University of Maryland) for a discussion of her work with design fiction. Details are below – we look forward to seeing you there!

    Kari Kraus (University of Maryland)

    “Experiments in Design Fiction”

    http://cunydhi.commons.gc.cuny.edu/2013/03/28/april-4-kari-kraus-design-fiction/

    Thursday April 4, 2013, 6:30pm-8:30pm

    CUNY Graduate Center, Room 6421

    Please register here: http://design_fiction.eventbrite.com/. The event is free and open to the public, registration is not mandatory.

    The last few years have seen a growing interest in future-oriented and speculative design in areas as diverse as media archaeology, human-computer interaction, and alternate reality game design. The application domains are equally diverse, extending to public policy, entertainment, and commercial product development. In this talk I show and discuss some of the low-tech design fiction experiments my collaborators, students, and I have undertaken since 2010, with an emphasis on methodological mashups that cut across the arts & humanities, the social sciences, and the design disciplines. A larger objective of the talk is to think through what an interdisciplinary research and teaching program in long-term thinking that incorporates technology and humanistic design as critical components might look like.

    About Kari Kraus:

    Kari Kraus is an Assistant Professor in the College of Information Studies and the Department of English at the University of Maryland. Her research and teaching interests focus on digital humanities, game studies and transmedia fiction, and digital preservation. She is currently writing a book under contract to the MIT Press on long-term thinking and design.

    Save-the-date for all of of our Spring Speaker Series events, details here: http://cunydhi.commons.gc.cuny.edu/2013/02/25/spring-2013-cuny-digital-studiesdigital-humanities-seminar-schedule/

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