Our Changing Relationship with Images

Our Changing Relationship with Images

Stanford film professor Shane Denson spoke about his recent book Discorrelated Images for the Media Arts and Technology program’s Seminar series last week. He told a UCSB virtual audience that digital technologies bring us closer to the images we see in time and space and introduce an element of chance by regenerating moving images every time we see them.

 Student Spotlight: Molly McAnany Shares Her Passion for Ireland

Student Spotlight: Molly McAnany Shares Her Passion for Ireland

A Student Spotlight on Molly McAnany, a fourth-year double major in political science and english. McAnany shares her passion for music, classic literature, and educating others. She is able to combine all of these passions in her radio show on KCSB, “Shamrocked,“ where she airs Irish music and poetry.

Turning the Spotlight on Race in the News

Turning the Spotlight on Race in the News

UCSB Film and Media faculty members Lisa Parks and Anna Everett have launched a campaign to improve on the underrepresentation of people of color working in the news business — and featured on camera. They spoke in a recent webinar about how American media scholars can work to influence news executives to improve coverage of race issues in the news.

Of Memes, Linguistics and Creative Computing

Of Memes, Linguistics and Creative Computing

Thanks to UC Santa Barbara’s Creative Computing Initiative, graduate student Kevin Whitesides incorporated hands-on multimedia projects in his Linguistics course Memes: When Language and Culture Go Viral . Donor Ross Dowd ‘94, has provided funds for Humanities and Fine Arts instructors and students to apply computer technology and digital tools to their areas of study.

The Pandemic Book Club: Entering a Timeless World

The Pandemic Book Club: Entering a Timeless World

Inspired to spend some of this pandemic time entering a timeless world of book reading together, the English Department has been hosting an online Pandemic Book Club. As faculty and students share their readings from isolation, the club encourages people to join and be part of a literary community to create strong networks of support.

 Jesmyn Ward: Writing Through Trauma Toward Hope

Jesmyn Ward: Writing Through Trauma Toward Hope

The 2020 Diana and Simon Raab Writer-In-Residence Jesmyn Ward and IHC Director Susan Derwin discuss Ward’s exploration of trauma in her work, in a virtual presentation hosted by the “Living Democracy” series of UC Santa Barbara’s Interdisciplinary Humanities Center and the Writing Program.

Reviving Indigenous Languages

Reviving Indigenous Languages

UCSB’s Linguistic Department hosted Tasha Hauff, a Mnikȟowožu Lakȟota scholar, teacher, and language activist who works on new ways to apply linguistic research to Indigenous communities. Hauff discussed rapid language loss and revitalizing Indigenous languages through education and activism.

Coral Reefs and Climate Change: Learning Through Crochet

Coral Reefs and Climate Change: Learning Through Crochet

In a seminar hosted by Media Arts and Technology science writer and and artist Margaret Wertheim discussed the intersection of math and art in a project started with her twin sister Christine Wertheim, called Crochet Coral Reef, where they use the craft of crochet to create sculptural representations of coral reefs. The project was an artistic response to climate change and exists at the nexus of art, science, math, and community engagement.

Then and Now: Art and Literature for Social Change

Then and Now: Art and Literature for Social Change

UC Santa Barbara historian John Majewski explains how the artistic and literary creative works of Black abolitionists in the 1840s and 1850s acted as a critical catalyst for the abolition of slavery, and compares the creative political action of then to that of 2020.

Theater That Pushes Zoom's Boundaries

Theater That Pushes Zoom's Boundaries

UCSB Theater and Dance’s program Naked Shakes staged its first 100 % Zoom production of the fall season, Immortal Longings, where each actor, theater technician and the play’s adapter and director, Irwin Appel, presented the production from various locations across the country.

Focus on  Faculty: Let's Talk About Art

Focus on Faculty: Let's Talk About Art

New faculty member Iman Djouini shares her work and interests in the the first Art Colloquium presentation of the fall, hosted by the UC Santa Barbara’s Art Department.

A summer bootcamp for screenwriting

A summer bootcamp for screenwriting

This summer, the Carsey-Wolf Center and the Department of Film and Media Studies collaborate to create a new screenwriting course for students, Advanced Television Writing. The course will be broken up into two sections and will take place over the span of six weeks. The course aims to teach students how to create both a television script bible and a pilot screenplay.

Intern Noe Padilla sat down with the director of the Carsey-Wolf Center, Patrice Petro, to get a better understanding of the course.

Memory: An Interdisciplinary Exploration

Memory: An Interdisciplinary Exploration

Second year psychological and brain sciences major Eddie Lo delves into an engaging experimental course called “Memory: an Interdisciplinary Exploration.“

Alumni All-Stars: Sing Hang Tam on Art, Home and Humanity

Alumni All-Stars: Sing Hang Tam on Art, Home and Humanity

The HFA sat down with UCSB alumi Sing Hang Tam to discuss his artistic practice and exploration of identity and belonging. Since graduating UCSB in 2016 with a degree in art, Tam became the first ever Hong Kong person to graduate from the Royal College of Art in London with an MRes in Arts and Humanities and an MA in sculpture. He currently lives in London and teaches art as an associate lecturer at the London College of Fashion, and is a visiting lecturer at the University of Westminster.

Through My Ears: A New Music Department Podcast

Through My Ears: A New Music Department Podcast

The HFA sat down with Connor Long, the producer Through My Ears, a new podcast by UCSB’s Department of Music. Long discusses his original intent and message behind the podcast, as well as his hopes for how it can continue to grow in the future.

Korean Pop Goes Beyond the Music Scene

Korean Pop Goes Beyond the Music Scene

Dongguk University media and communication professor Ha Sung Hwang’s research focuses on the effects of social media and the role it plays in the global popularity of Korean pop music. In a lecture hosted by UCSB’s East Asia Center, where she is a visiting fellow, she discussed how BTS and its ARMY are contributing to a new and diverse boy band culture fueled by digital power.

The Bruhns Twins: A Profile of Two Arts Graduates

The Bruhns Twins: A Profile of Two Arts Graduates

As the academic year comes to a close, many stories from this years senior will go unheard as the pandemic forces Commencement to take place online. To highlight some graduates from the Division of Humanities and Fine Arts, Noe Padilla an HFA intern, interviewed the Bruhns Twins, Cooper and Calvin, and asked them to reflect on their time at UCSB. Cooper is graduating in Theater and Calvin is graduating in Film and Media Studies.

 History Student Leads a UCSB Protest for a Better Future

History Student Leads a UCSB Protest for a Better Future

UCSB history student Michael Sanders recently organized the “Justice for George Floyd: Solidarity March,” to support the Black Lives Matter movement by peacefully protesting against police brutality. He sat down with HFA intern Raymond Matthews to talk about the protest and the experience of Black students.