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Worlds Enough and Time: Towards a Comparative Global Humanities

MIT School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences (SHASS) presents:Worlds Enough and Time: Towards a Comparative Global Humanities When: Friday, Nov 12, 2021 08:00 AM - 12:00PM (Eastern Standard Time)Saturday, Nov 13, 2021 08:00 AM - 11:00AM (EST)Program Schedule | Speakers ListRegister for the Conference**same link for both Friday & Saturday; password will be emailed. This conference advocates for a new Comparative Global Humanities: the integrative transformation of the Humanities through a radical foregrounding of geographical scope and temporal depth. It embodies the belief that to create more equal societies in the present, we need to create more equality for other places and other pasts — and learn from all they have to offer. We aim to develop new comparative methodologies based on the world’s archives and conceptual vocabularies. This allows us to address the social, political, and creative functions of cultural heritage in today’s world and to advocate more effectively for social justice, and for cultural understanding and reconciliation. Hosts: Wiebke Denecke, Literature, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alexander Forte, Literature & History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Tristan Brown, History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology More information here https://comparativeglobalhumanities.mit.edu/

MIT Transmedia Storytelling Initiative presents, “Boundary Conditions: Architecture, Simulation, Cinema”

A SYMPOSIUM ON VIRTUAL PRODUCTION FROM ANALOGUE IMAGINARIES TO THE DIGITAL PRESENT Once an analogue interplay between stop-motion, artful props, and post-production manipulation, cinematic imaginaries now bloom in increasingly virtual digital worlds. Rendering space, time, and characters through veridical simulations of reality that appeal to fuzzy logics of perception, makers enter entirely new boundary conditions that allow both documentary and fiction to build immersive storyworlds. Virtual production was well underway before the global pandemic, but has accelerated under the pressure of enforced social and spatial distance. Today, virtual production practices drive the creation of immersive spatialized worlds – our symposium panels examine, celebrate, and critique the devices of imagination that shape ubiquitous creativity. Metahumans have arrived, deepfakes are here, and even black holes can function as characters in spacetime – what meanings will we make in the expansive ethical and aesthetic spaces of the new metaverse? Friday, November 12, 2021 @ 12:00 PM – 7:00 PM EST Register Here:https://www.eventbrite.com/e/boundary-conditions-architecture-simulation-cinema-registration-194675649107 More Info: https://architecture.mit.edu/news/unbounded-transmedia-boundary-conditions Physical Location: MIT Long Lounge, MIT 7-429  

Literature Section
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Avenue 14N-407
Cambridge, MA 02139
tel: (617) 253-3581