Tuesday, April 3, 12:30 pm
Berkman
Center, 23 Everett Street, second floor
RSVP required for those attending in person via the form below
This event will be webcast live at 12:30 pm ET and archived on our site shortly after.
Knowledge grows, but it also contracts as outmoded facts and theories are replaced with new ones. This talk will discuss our intuitions about knowledge domains and the methods by which such intuitions could be modeled empirically. Along the way, Dennis will unpack the "information as organism" metaphor, construct taxonomies of epistemological lifeforms, and consider evolutionary pressures on knowledge systems. The talk will conclude with a conversation about the health of the academic publishing industry, and about the challenges of doing comparative work between new and old media.
Dennis Tenen is a literary scholar and a recovering software
engineer. He is a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and
Society, working with metaLab and the Cooperation Group. His
research concerns the poetics of human-computer interaction, the
study of co-authorship and editorial practice, the formation of
cultural capital, and experimental criticism.
He is joining the faculty of the English Department at Columbia University as an Assistant Professor of Digital Humanities and New Media in the fall.
Dennis's class at metaLab:
Literature 110: Introduction to Experimental Criticism
Last updated April 03, 2012