[csaa-forum] CCR Seminar Series 08: Morley & Brunsdon - Feb 14

Reena Dobson R.Dobson at uws.edu.au
Tue Jan 29 09:59:51 CST 2008


  

   

Centre for Cultural Research

University of Western Sydney

 

invites all to attend

a special session of the CCR Seminar Series 2008

featuring

Professor David Morley (Goldsmiths College, University of London) 

Professor Charlotte Brunsdon (University of Warwick)

Date: Thursday, 14th February

Time: 2.30pm - 5.00pm

Venue: Building EA, Room 1.31, Parramatta Campus

RSVP: Ania Ajiri a.ajiri at uws.edu.au or 9685 9600

Communications and Transport: Towards a Materialist Communication
Studies

 

This lecture will outline a new research agenda for an approach to a non
media-centric, materialist communications studies, which defines its
concerns as encompassing not only the movement of information, but also
that of people and commodities. Building on current work in cultural
geography, and on the `spatial turn' in cultural studies, David Morley
will argue for a new paradigm for the study of communications which
attends to both its material and symbolic dimensions and re-integrates
the study of transport systems within its remit, thus returning the
discipline to the full range of its classical concerns.

 

David Morley is Professor of Communications in the Dept of Media and
Communications, Goldsmiths College, University of London. He is the
author of Spaces of Identity: Global Media, Electronic Landscapes and
Cultural Boundaries (Routledge 1995, with K Robins); Home Territories:
Media, Mobility and Identity (Routledge 2001) and most recently, Media,
Modernity and Technology (Routledge 2006).

 

Approaching the Cinematic City: Three London Journeys

 

With illustrations from a wide range of films, Charlotte Brunsdon will
explore London as a cinematic city through the journeys that are made to
and within it. She will discuss  the extent to which 'the arrival in the
city' or 'crossing the River' can be used as structuring devices to
understand not just the cinematic geographies of particular films, but
something of the history of London as a cinematic city as it comes to
terms with the end of empire.

 

Charlotte Brunsdon is Professor of Film and Television Studies at the
University of Warwick and has published widely in the fields of film,
television and cultural studies. Her books include London in Cinema: The
Cinematic City since 1945 (London: British Film Institute, 2007); The
Feminist, the Housewife and the Soap Opera Oxford, The Clarendon Press,
2000 (Selected by Choice as an outstanding academic book of 2000);
Screen Tastes: Soap Opera to Satellite Dishes (London: Routledge, 1997);
Feminist Television Criticism (co-editor, with Julie D'Acci and Lynn
Spigel) Oxford, The Clarendon Press, 1997 and Everyday Television:
Nationwide (co-authored with David Morley) BFI books, 1982. 

 

Parramatta Campus Map and Directions 
http://www.uws.edu.au/about/locations/maps/parramattamap
<http://www.uws.edu.au/about/locations/maps/parramattamap>    

  

David Morley and Charlotte Brunsdon's visit to Australia is sponsored by
the ARC Cultural Research Network. 

 

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://bronzewing.cdu.edu.au/pipermail/csaa-forum/attachments/20080129/b2562800/attachment.html 
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: not available
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 2729 bytes
Desc: image001.jpg
Url : http://bronzewing.cdu.edu.au/pipermail/csaa-forum/attachments/20080129/b2562800/attachment.jpe 
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: CCRSeminarSeries08_Morley&Brunsdon_Feb14.pdf
Type: application/octet-stream
Size: 159466 bytes
Desc: CCRSeminarSeries08_Morley&Brunsdon_Feb14.pdf
Url : http://bronzewing.cdu.edu.au/pipermail/csaa-forum/attachments/20080129/b2562800/attachment.obj 


More information about the csaa-forum mailing list