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Kirsten berkman klein center
Kirsten berkman klein center









kirsten berkman klein center kirsten berkman klein center

Previously, she was an associate professor in the Labor Relations, Law, and History Department of Cornell University’s Industrial and Labor Relations School (ILR), where she received the Junior Faculty Champion Award from Cornell University and earned tenure in 2020. Bell Award from the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). Professor Ajunwa is a 2019 recipient of the NSF CAREER Award, and a 2018 recipient of the Derrick A. She is also the founding director of the Artificial Intelligence Decision-Making Research (AI-DR) Program at UNC Law. Ifeoma Ajunwa is a tenured law professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law and an adjunct associate professor at the Kenan-Flagler School of Business where she is a Rethinc.

  • “Hypermediating the Game Interface: The Alienation Effect in Violent Videogames and the Problem of Serious Play.” Communication Quarterly 58.1 (2010).Dr.
  • “Mapping the Digital Empire: Google Earth and the Process of Postmodern Cartography.” New Media & Society 12.6 (2010).
  • “Historicizing Mobile Media: Locating Transformations in Embodied Space.” The Mobile Media Reader.
  • “Creative Misuse as Resistance: Surveillance, Mobile Technologies, and Locative Games.” Surveillance & Society 12.3 (2014): 377-388.
  • kirsten berkman klein center

    “Infrastructures of Mobile Social Media.” Social Media + Society 1, no.“Stories, Spaces, and Bodies: The Production of Embodied Space Through Mobile Media Storytelling.” Communication Research and Practice 1.2 (2015): 101-116.“Objects as Audience: Phenomenologies of Vibrant Virtuality in GPS Art.” Leonardo Electronic Almanac 21.1 (2016): 196-209.“Surveillance from the Middle: On Interception, Infrastructure, and the Material Flows of Asynchronous Communication.” Media Fields, 11.1 (2016):.“Repair and Software: Updates, Obsolescence, and Mobile Culture’s Operating Systems.” Continent, 6.1 (2017): 20-24.“Mobile Media Stories and the Process of Designing Contested Landscapes.” Networked Self and Platforms, Stories, Connections.“Invisible and Instantaneous: Geographies of Media Infrastructure from Pneumatic Tubes to Fiber Optics.” Media Theory 2.1 (2018): 1-22.Parisi, David and Jason Farman, “The Time of Touch: Efficiency and Delay in Haptic Communication.” Convergence 25.1 (2019): 40-59.Jason Farman. New York: Routledge Press, 2014. The Mobile Story: Narrative Practices with Locative Technologies. Ed.Foundations of Mobile Media Studies: Essential Texts on the Formation of a Field.Co-authors: Tara McPherson, Anne Balsamo, Lisa Parks, Heidi Rae Cooley, Elizabeth Losh, Lindsay Graham, Daniel Grinberg, Lindsay Palmer, Bo Reimer, and Patrick Vonderau. Applied Media Studies: Theory and Practice. Ed.Winner of the 2012 Book of the Year from the Association for Internet Research. 2nd Edition Released in 2020. Mobile Interface Theory: Embodied Space and Locative Media.Delayed Response: The Art of Waiting from the Ancient to the Instant World.Embodiment and Space in the Digital Age (graduate).Mobile Media Culture (undergraduate, Digital Cultures & Creativity course).Materiality and Networked Society (graduate).Perspectives on Digital Cultures and Creativity (honors undergraduate).

    kirsten berkman klein center

    Space, Place, and Identity in the Digital Age (graduate).American Culture in the Information Age (“i-series” course).M.A., Claremont Graduate University, 2002.in Digital Media and Performance Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles. He has also been interviewed on NPR, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, the Associated Press, the Christian Science Monitor, the Baltimore Sun, the Denver Post, among others. Farman has been a contributing author for The Atlantic, Atlas Obscura, Real Life Magazine, and The Chronicle of Higher Education. He has edited two collections: The Mobile Story: Narrative Practices with Locative Technologies (2014) and Foundations of Mobile Media Studies: Essential Texts on the Formation of a Field (2016). He has published scholarly articles on such topics as mobile technologies, Google maps, social media, videogames, digital storytelling, digital performance art, and surveillance. He is author of the books Delayed Response: The Art of Waiting from the Ancient to the Instant World (Yale University Press, 2018) and Mobile Interface Theory: Embodied Space and Locative Media (Routledge, 2012 - winner of the 2012 Book of the Year Award from the Association of Internet Researchers). He is also a faculty member with the Human-Computer Interaction Lab ( HCIL) and a Faculty Associate with Harvard University’s Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society. Jason Farman is a Professor at University of Maryland, College Park in the Department of American Studies and the Director of the Design Cultures & Creativity Program.











    Kirsten berkman klein center