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Friday, January 27, 2012
Start: 10:30
End: 20:00



Friday, January 27th, 2012

10:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., Institute for Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies, 3487 Peel
[Workshop venue]

6:00 p.m.
- 8:00 p.m., Grande Bibliothèque auditorium, 475 Maisonneuve Est [Keynote and Panel venue]
 
In May 2011, renowned economist Joseph E. Stiglitz wrote an article titled “Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%” in that month’s issue of Vanity Fair. His message of extreme inequality in US society and the historical consequences resulting from the polarization of wealth in the hands of a few, resonated in the Occupy protests that began in Wall Street early last fall. “We are the 99%” fast became the motto of the social movement that transgressed New York boundaries and evolved into a worldwide movement, with more than 80 countries and one thousand cities witnessing their own manifestation of protest camps in the months that followed.

Despite the phenomenal scope of civil society in the Occupy movement, Stiglitz’ warning that the 1% will only belatedly awaken to the importance of maintaining the welfare of the largest slice of the population will, in all likelihood, be realized. Nonetheless, many compelling issues have been borne from the protests: from the mainstream media’s initial disregard of the events to the communication of activists within the camps and the policing methods adopted by each city. Media@McGill will be hosting a free public event on Friday, January 27, 2012 to address many of the media, political and social themes that have transpired during the months-long Occupy protests.

Thursday, February 2, 2012
Start: 17:30
End: 18:30

Thursday, February 2, 2012, 5:30 p.m., Arts W-215

Media@McGill visiting scholar, Professor Laura Murray will be giving a talk on conversation as a conceptual model of the commons as part of the Department of Art History and Communication Studies Speaker Series

In discussions about Intellectual Property law and creative practice, the "commons" has become a touchstone for everything good, and yet it has proven to be a difficult concept to define or locate. I suggest in this paper that the knowledge commons is all around us in ordinary conversation, and furthermore, that conversation is a more fundamental and versatile conceptual model for creative labour than the utilitarian or rights discourses that prevail in much policy thinking, or the gift or sharing discourses valorized in critiques of the same. While conversation is often considered a diversion from the important tasks and moments of life, it is in fact an ideological and cultural necessity to social relations. Most of what we know about expression, originality, creativity, and community we learn from, and continually practice in, conversation. Our contributions to conversation establish us both as individuals and as members of a group, or groups. Whether or not we are “creative” conversationalists in an aesthetic sense, our words help to create social outcomes for ourselves and for others. Conversation is a noncommodified creative activity, one in which every human participates. It is not governed by rules, but neither is it a free-for-all, and it exists in numerous specific modes and types. Thus as a model for creative labour, conversation invites us to emphasize and characterize collaboration, process, and local value rather than genius, rules, and market value. We all know that conversation is not always easy or pleasant, and we daily experience the new and newer technologies turning our desire to converse into money: as a model conversation will not incline us to romanticize the commons or neglect issues of power and capital. But it allows us to start where we are: in the everyday. To sketch out the power of conversation as conceptual model, the paper will draw on eighteenth-century etiquette manuals, nineteenth-century fur trade journals, twentieth-century literary theory, and twenty-first century linguistics.

Biography: Laura Murray (PhD Cornell) is Associate Professor in the Departments of English and Cultural Studies at Queen's University, and a visiting scholar this term at Media@McGill. She comes to work in copyright and cultural theory from work in American literature and journalism before the Civil War and Indigenous Studies. Coauthor with Sam Trosow of Canadian Copyright: A Citizen's Guide (Between the Lines, 2007), which will go into an updated second edition later this year, she is working with Tina Piper (Law, McGill) and Kirsty Robertson (Visual Art, UWO) on a book manuscript Putting Intellectual Property in its Place: Creative Labour, Rights Discourses, and the Everyday, of which this talk will form a part.

Thursday, February 9, 2012
Start: 11:00
End: 21:00
 women_girls_power
 
Thursday, February 9, 2012, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m., Leacock 232, 855 Sherbrooke West [map]
 
The influence of media on society has long been debated, especially with regard to the correlation between violence exposed in various communication and entertainment mediums and aggression among teenagers. However, what of the correlation between the representation of women in the media and roles of power for women in Western society?
 
Media@McGill and the Institute for Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies invite you to join us for a panel discussion on the theme of media representation of women which will be based on issues raised in the 2011 documentary, Miss Representation, by Jennifer Siebel Newsom. The panel is free and open to the public, but online registration is advised as places are limited. Screenings of Miss Representation will also be shown throughout the day.

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