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Peter Lunenfeld. Peter Lunenfeld (born 1962, in New York City) is a critic and theorist of digital media, digital humanities, and urban humanities.He is a professor and the Vice Chair of the Design Media Arts department at UCLA, director of the Institute for Technology and Aesthetics (ITA), and founder of mediawork: The Southern California New Media Group.
During her tenure at UCLA, Wendrich became the Faculty Director of the UCLA Digital Humanities Incubator Group, and, in 2013, the Faculty Director of the Center for Digital Humanities at UCLA. She also served as the Co-director of the Keck Digital Cultural Mapping Program at UCLA from 2008 until 2012.
Digital humanities incorporates both digitized (remediated) and born-digital materials and combines the methodologies from traditional humanities disciplines (such as rhetoric, history, philosophy, linguistics, literature, art, archaeology, music, and cultural studies) and social sciences, [6] with tools provided by computing (such as hypertext ...
In 2007, Anderson and Holly Willis won a HASTAC/MacArthur Foundation Digital Media and Learning grant to create CriticalCommons.org, public media archive. [ 4 ] In 2014-15 he received a prestigious Digital Innovation Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) to support his project "Technologies of Cinema: A Critical ...
Rita Raley is an American researcher who focuses on digital literature. [2] Her research interests include new media, electronic literature, digital humanities, contemporary arts (literature, media), activism and social practices, tactical media, global English, discourse on globalization, and language and information politics.
Johanna Ruth Drucker was born in 1952 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to a Jewish family, the daughter of Barbara (née Witmer) and Boris Drucker (1920–2009). Her father was a cartoonist whose works were published in diverse publications as The Saturday Evening Post and The New Yorker.
Amy Villarejo is an American scholar in cinema and media studies, specializing in feminist and queer media, critical theory, and television studies.She is currently chair of the Department of Film, Television, and Digital Media (FTVDM) and professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
Christine L. Borgman is a distinguished Professor and Presidential Chair in Information Studies at UCLA. [1] She is the author of more than 200 publications in the fields of information studies, computer science, and communication.