Harold Innis and the North cover detail

Harold Innis and the North Book Launch

Crafting a new narrative about the nature and scope of Harold Innis’s intellectual project and providing a unique appreciation of the multi-faceted professional identity of one of the founders of Canadian political economy and communication studies.

Join us to celebrate the launch of MHRC member William J. Buxton‘s edited collection Harold Innis and the North: Appraisals and Contestations (McGill-Queen’s University Press), and the launch of James S. McLean’s Inside the NDP War Room: Competing for Credibility in a Federal Election.

Thursday, December 5
7:00 pm

Drawn & Quarterly
211 Bernard West

Drinks to follow.

Flyer: William Buxton, Innis and the North

Sponsored by the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada and the Media History Research Centre at Concordia University.

Deus in Machina … LIVE!

What sorts of things come to light when one allows religion and technology to mingle freely?

Join us for a panel discussion in honour of Jeremy Stolow’s edited volume Deus in Machina: Religion, Technology and the Things in Between (Fordham University Press, 2013).

Featuring presentations by:

Jeremy Stolow (Communication Studies, Concordia)
Darin Barney (Art History and Communication Studies, McGill University)
Krista Lynes (Communication Studies, Concordia)

Friday, September 27
2:30 pm

CJ building room 1.114
7141 Sherbrooke Street West
Loyola Campus
Concordia University

A reception will follow.

Flyer: Jeremy Stolow, Deus in Machina

For more information about Deus in Machina and other projects, visit Jeremy Stolow’s website. Concordia has also prepared a news release on this fascinating book.

Sponsored by the CURC Communication Studies and CURC Media and Contemporary Literature.

Plucking Fluxes: Media Archaeology to the Metal

a descent to the ferro-magnetic surface of a unique class of media objects

This talk by Dr. Matthew Kirschenbaum will adopt a media archaeological framework for considering floppy disks (the ubiquitous remnant of the first great home computer age) and their virtual simulacra, the disk image. The conceit of an “image” confers a complex epistemological status, bearing the inheritance of centuries of Western philosophical thought about the nature of mimesis and representation, with concomitant implications for archival notions of evidence, authenticity, and integrity. We will therefore descend to the ferro-magnetic surface of this unique class of media objects to examine their import and legacy from both a technical and theoretical standpoint.

Wednesday, March 20
6:15 – 8:15 pm

CJ Building 1.114
7141 Sherbrooke Street West
Loyola Campus
Concordia University

Matthew Kirschenbaum is Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Maryland and Associate Director of the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH, an applied think-tank for the digital humanities). He is also an affiliated faculty member with the College of Information Studies at Maryland, and a member of the teaching faculty at the University of Virginia’s Rare Book School. A 2011 Guggenheim Fellow, his next book, Track Changes: A Literary History of Word Processing, is forthcoming from Harvard University Press.

Flyer: Matthew Kirschenbaum, “Plucking Fluxes”

Sponsored by the CURC Communication Studies and CURC Media and Contemporary Literature.
Image credit: Chris Berry, “Floppy disk shutters 2.”