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On 27 September 2021, the ODI in partnership with the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence (LCFI) at the University of Cambridge and the Center for Responsible AI at NYU (NYU R/AI) convened an online roundtable to explore experimentation in data policy and practice around how structurally under-represented communities in North America and the EU can be transnational emergent forces that renegotiate or reimagine the social contract under the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
Experimentalism/Ursula Le Guin roundtable: Opening Remarks From Our Head Of Public Policy Dr Mahlet (“Milly”) Zimeta. June 2022
Experimentalism/Ursula Le Guin roundtable: A Provocation On Valuation From Professor S Craig Watkins, University Of Texas At Austin. June 2022.
Experimentalism/Ursula Le Guin roundtable: A Provocation On Valuation From Professor S Craig Watkins, University Of Texas At Austin. June 2022
Experimentalism/Ursula Le Guin roundtable: The Keynote From Os Keyes, University Of Washington. June 2022
Experimentalism/Ursula Le Guin roundtable: A Provocation On Evaluation From Davey Jose, Artist. June 2022
The bathynaut's journey is long...will she find what she is seeking? "Diving into the Rift" was written by Dennis Mombauer. Dennis currently lives in Colombo, Sri Lanka, where he works on climate change and as a writer of speculative fiction and textual experiments. He is co-publisher of a German magazine for experimental fiction, “Die Novelle – Magazine for Experimentalism,” and has published fiction and non-fiction in various magazines and anthologies. His first English novella, “The House of Drought,” (Stelliform Press) and first English novel, “The Fertile Clay,” (Nightscape Press) are both scheduled to be published in 2022.Learn more at https://dennismombauer.com/ Support the show
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The second roundtable took place on Monday 20 September and focuses on experimentation in data policy and practice around environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) data and global supply chains. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with Delta 8.7 and the Future of Sustainable Data Alliance (FoSDA).
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The second roundtable took place on Monday 20 September and focuses on experimentation in data policy and practice around environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) data and global supply chains. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with Delta 8.7 and the Future of Sustainable Data Alliance (FoSDA).
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The second roundtable took place on Monday 20 September and focuses on experimentation in data policy and practice around environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) data and global supply chains. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with Delta 8.7 and the Future of Sustainable Data Alliance (FoSDA).
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The second roundtable took place on Monday 20 September and focuses on experimentation in data policy and practice around environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) data and global supply chains. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with Delta 8.7 and the Future of Sustainable Data Alliance (FoSDA).
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The second roundtable took place on Monday 20 September and focuses on experimentation in data policy and practice around environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) data and global supply chains. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with Delta 8.7 and the Future of Sustainable Data Alliance (FoSDA).
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The second roundtable took place on Monday 20 September and focuses on experimentation in data policy and practice around environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) data and global supply chains. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with Delta 8.7 and the Future of Sustainable Data Alliance (FoSDA).
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The first roundtable took place on Monday 19 July and focuses on new parameters in data policy and practice. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with the Office for National Statistics (ONS)and the Behavioural Data Science Group at the Alan Turing Institute.
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The first roundtable took place on Monday 19 July and focuses on new parameters in data policy and practice. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with the Office for National Statistics (ONS)and the Behavioural Data Science Group at the Alan Turing Institute.
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The first roundtable took place on Monday 19 July and focuses on new parameters in data policy and practice. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with the Office for National Statistics (ONS)and the Behavioural Data Science Group at the Alan Turing Institute.
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The first roundtable took place on Monday 19 July and focuses on new parameters in data policy and practice. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with the Office for National Statistics (ONS)and the Behavioural Data Science Group at the Alan Turing Institute.
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The first roundtable took place on Monday 19 July and focuses on new parameters in data policy and practice. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with the Office for National Statistics (ONS)and the Behavioural Data Science Group at the Alan Turing Institute.
Experimentalism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution is an ambitious new ODI policy project, which explores how data policy makers and data practitioners can work in more innovative and experimental ways to adapt to, and leverage, the fast-moving societal and economic challenges and opportunities around new data availability and associated digital technologies. The first roundtable took place on Monday 19 July and focuses on new parameters in data policy and practice. It was convened by the Open Data Institute in partnership with the Office for National Statistics (ONS)and the Behavioural Data Science Group at the Alan Turing Institute.
M is tasked with retrieving an urgent file from deep within the archives. The only problem being, some people that go in, never return. You’ve been listening to the Night’s End podcast which is a production of Dissonance Media. Descent into the Archives was written by Dennis Mombauer. Dennis Mombauer currently lives in Colombo, Sri Lanka, where he works as a consultant on climate change and as a writer of speculative fiction, textual experiments, and poetry. He is co-publisher of a German magazine for experimental fiction, "Die Novelle – Magazine for Experimentalism," and has published fiction and non-fiction in various magazines and anthologies. His first English novel, "The Fertile Clay," was published by Nightscape Press in 2020. Homepage: www.dennismombauer.com | Twitter: @DmombauerWriter Dennis is also the author of our Patron-exclusive episode, Halls of Silt and Seawater. This episode was narrated by John Stinson from the spooky tales podcast where he and his co-host Louise chat about all things spooky. Just search The Spooky Tales podcast where you get your podcasts. https://linktr.ee/thespookytalespodcast Armitage was performed by Brandon Marsh from The ParaUnity Podcast. From ghosts to cryptids to UFOlogy; they discuss them all. Just search ParaUnity podcast wherever you get your podcasts or head to https://paraunitypodcast.wixsite.com/ Jimmy Horrors was performed by James Barnett. This episode was edited and produced by James Barnett. Support the Night’s end on Patreon to receive bonus content and merch: www.patreon.com/nightsendpodcast Or support us by purchasing directly from our shop: www.nightsendpodcast.com/shop Donations: www.ko-fi.com/nightsendpodcast And as always, stay horrific everyone.
Cities@Tufts Lectures explores the impact of urban planning on our communities and the opportunities to design for greater equity and justice with professor Julian Agyeman and host Tom Llewellyn. Collective Governance, an Enabling State, Pooling Economies, Experimentalism, and Technological Justice: these are the five design principles of The Co‐Cities Protocol. Together, they set up the necessary conditions to rethink the city as a commons: the inclusive space where various initiatives of collective action for the urban commons emerge, relate, and become sustainable. In this week's episode, professor Sheila Foster discusses her work with LabGov, Co-Cities, and how urban commons can be created and sustained in different political, social, and economic environments. You can find out more information about Sheila and their work by visiting Labgov.city. Cities@Tufts Lectures is produced by Tufts University and Shareable.net with support from The Kresge Foundation. Lectures are moderated by Professor Julian Agyeman and organized in partnership with research assistants Meghan Tenhoff, and Perri Sheinbaum. Robert Raymond is our audio editor, Elizabeth Carr manages communications and editorial with support from Neal Gorenflo, Joslyn Beile handles operations, and the series is produced and hosted by Tom Llewellyn. “Light Without Dark” by Cultivate Beats is our theme song.
Some topics covered in this wide ranging conversation: John Vervaeke;; Joker; 4 Human drives; Transrationalism; Nomadology; Ecotopianism; Cosmopolitanism; Experimentalism; Communism Emergence; The trickster DONATE ON PAYPAL Patreon Medium Rebel Wisdom Articles Twitter Facebook Links to books by Alexander Bard with Jan Söderqvist: The Futurica Trilogy (2012) Syntheism – Creating God in the Internet Age (2014) Digital Libido - Sex, power and violence in the network society Writing etc by Andrew Sweeny: Patreon Medium Rebel Wisdom Articles Twitter Facebook Intro music: Beautiful Machines, By Andrew Sweeny --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/andrew-sweeny/message
Rabbi Neil Amswych of Temple Beth Shalom in Santa Fe, NM, interviews Maggie McGuinness, poetry tutor at St. John's College. They discuss experimentalism, and what makes poetry different. They also read and dissect the poems, “The Archaic Torso of Apollo” by Rainer Maria Rilke, and, “God’s Grandeur” by Gerard Manley Hopkins.
The Garbage Mandala by Dennis Mombauer. Narrated by J.S. Arquin. Featuring an afterword recorded by Dennis Mombauer. #fantasy #experimental #podcast #fiction Something stuck out of the garbage, and Vasto immediately recognized its strangeness. This week alone, he and his coworkers had cleaned out hundreds of bins, bags and containers, fed their contents to Devora and delivered it all to the Facility, but they had never come across a thing like this. Dennis Mombauer currently lives in Colombo as a freelance researcher and writer of speculative fiction, textual experiments, and poetry. He is co-publisher of a German magazine for experimental fiction, "Die Novelle - Magazine for Experimentalism," and has published fiction and non-fiction in various magazines and anthologies. His first English novel "The Fertile Clay" will be published by Nightscape Press in late 2019/early 2020. Find him online at https://dennismombauer.com/ or on Twitter @DMombauer. Please help support The Overcast. Become a Patron Today! Subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher so you never miss an episode. And please don't forget to leave a review!
PATREON SUPPORT NOW STANDING AT 431 – LAST WEEK 428 HELP US GET TO 500 PATREON SUPPORTERS.Main Fiction: "A Fear of Falling" by Dennis MombauerThis story is original to StarShipSofa.Dennis Mombauer currently lives in Colombo, Sri Lanka, as a writer of speculative fiction, textual experiments, and poetry. He also works as a freelance researcher on climate change adaptation, sustainable urban development, and autism spectrum disorder. He is co-publisher of a German magazine for experimental fiction, Die Novelle – Magazine for Experimentalism, and has published fiction and non-fiction in various magazines and anthologies. His German novel Das Maskenhandwerk (The Mask Trade) came out in 2017 (AAVAA Press). He can be found online at dennismombauer.com, and on Twitter via @DMombauer. Narrated by: Tatiana GreyTatiana is a critically acclaimed actress of stage, screen, and the audio booth. She has been nominated for dozens of fancy awards but hasn’t won a single damned thing. She went to NYU and lives in Brooklyn, New York. You can find her at tatianagrey.com.Fact: Looking Back At Genre History by Amy H Sturgis See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Coming UpGood Evening: 00:00:42Dennis Mombauer's The Feasting Dream (Tales to Terrify Original) as read by Stephen Kilpatrick: 00:05:24Robert E. Howard's Skulls in the Stars as read by Seth Williams: 00:29Pleasant Dreams: 00:55:37Pertinent LinksLove what you hear? Support us on Patreon!TerrorVision: www.imdb.com/title/tt0092074The Green Slime: www.imdb.com/title/tt0064393Death Spa: www.imdb.com/title/tt0099384Dead Ant: www.imdb.com/title/tt5265898Dennis Mombauer: dennismombauer.comDennis Mombauer @ Twitter: twitter.com/DMombauerDie Novelle – Magazine for Experimentalism: novelle.wtfStephen Kilpatrick: skk.blueRobert E. Howard: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._HowardSeth Williams: www.theboojum.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
I suspect this chat with A.J. Carruthers about experimental poetry in Australia will kick start your next poem. We cover a lot of ground, from defining sound poetry to whether experimental work needs more recognition. But my favourite moment is when A.J. says: ‘Poetry is not a profession. It doesn't profess, but it does. It's about … Continue reading "Ep 86. A.J. Carruthers on sound poetry and experimentalism"
In this forty-fifth episode of the Philosophy Bakes Bread radio show and podcast, we interview Dr. Brian Butler of the University of North Carolina Asheville. We talk with Brian about two applications of the idea known as "democratic experimentalism" that have been at the heart of his work. One application concerns Constitutional law. The other involves the history of Black Mountain College, an experiment in democratic experimentalism applied to higher education, where art was central to education in the college. Dr. Butler is the Thomas Howerton Distinguished Professor of Humanities and Professor of Philosophy at the UNC Asheville. He recently published his book, The Democratic Constitution: Experimentalism and Interpretation, with the University of Chicago Press. He was also the Project Director in 2010 for a large grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities’s “We the People” Grant program, which focused on “Black Mountain College: An Artistic and Educational Legacy.” Black Mountain College was founded in 1933 in North Carolina as was an experimental college with a central role for art in liberal arts education. John Dewey's philosophy of education was a fundamental inspiration for the college. Listen for our “You Tell Me!” questions and for some jokes in one of our concluding segments, called “Philosophunnies.” Reach out to us on Facebook @PhilosophyBakesBread and on Twitter @PhilosophyBB; email us at philosophybakesbread@gmail.com; or call and record a voicemail that we play on the show, at 859.257.1849. Philosophy Bakes Bread is a production of the Society of Philosophers in America (SOPHIA). Check us out online at PhilosophyBakesBread.com and check out SOPHIA at PhilosophersInAmerica.com.
“The Breeding Dust” by Dennis Mombauer (Originally published in Outliers of Speculative Fiction.) Silent, angular houses with white plaster, a sand-suffocated well and a couple of stunted palms huddled together on the low ground, a once bustling city that only the ghostly desert wind inhabited now. The sun gleamed down without mercy, hanging in the sky as a swirling ball that made the air flicker, and the small caravan decided to rest in this ancient oasis. The camels were led down the loose sand dunes and racked up in the shadow of the ruined walls, while the men sought refuge in one of the best-preserved buildings. Scattered sunbeams fell in through holes in the roof and illuminated dusty rubble, but it was comfortably cool compared to the heat outside. Everyone looked for a place to sit, drank freshly cooked tea and tried to pay as little attention as possible to the wind, which seemed to carry along doleful whispers from a prouder time. The men agreed to wait for nightfall or late afternoon before they would continue their journey, although a short examination found the well waterless and the rest of the city equally empty, not even home to bones or mummified remains. Dennis Mombauer was born in 1984 in the namesake capital of the Bonn Republic and raised along the Rhine river. He currently lives and works as a theater agent and freelance author in Cologne, and rites weird fiction, textual experiments, and literary essays as well as non-naturalist drama and English poetry acculturated with German. He translates both fiction and non-fiction, and is the editor, co-founder, and co-publisher of Die Novelle – Magazine for Experimentalism. Dennis' publications have appeared in various small- to medium-sized magazines and anthologies. He can be found online at dennismombauer.com. About the Narrator: Cheyenne Wright is a freelance illustrator and concept artist. He is the color artist on the three-time Hugo Award winning steampunk graphic novel series Girl Genius, and co-creator of many other fine works; Including 50 Fathoms and the Ennie award winning Deadlands Noir for the Savage Worlds RPG. He has also produced graphics for Star Trek Online, the Champions MMO, and t-shirt designs for TV’s Alton Brown. Cheyenne lives in Seattle with his wife, their daughter, and an ever growing stack of unpainted miniatures. In his spare time he is teaching himself animation, and narrates short stories for a variety of audio anthologies where he is known as podcasting’s Mr. Buttery ManVoice™. You can find him online at arcanetimes.com. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
How can scholar-artists best balance their scholarly and creative endeavors? Can sound media and podcasting make exclusive spaces more accessible? How do the words we use to describe ourselves affect how we and others perceive our work? In episode 43 of the Imagine Otherwise podcast, host Cathy Hannabach talks with video artist Marcella Ernest about why complex subjects require complex film techniques, how scholar-artists can use their academic pursuits as inspiration for their creative endeavors and vice versa, imagining and building a different world requires a new relationship between humans, land, and resources. Transcript and show notes: https://ideasonfire.net/43-marcella-ernest
What comes to mind when you think about East Germany during the Cold War? Transnational black experimentalism? On today's episode of Sound It Out historical musicologist Harald Kisiedu traces the development of experimental jazz through the innovative musical dynamo Ernst-Ludwig Petrowsky. Kisiedu shows how the institutional discourses of the time pinpoint aesthetics as a critical … Continue reading Episode #40 The Origins of Jazz Experimentalism in East Germany – Harald Kisiedu talks about Ernst-Ludwig Petrowsky →
What comes to mind when you think about East Germany during the Cold War? Transnational black experimentalism? It’s not the first thing right? On today’s episode of Sound It Out, the historical musicologist Harald Kisiedu traces the development of experimental jazz through the innovative musical dynamo, Ernst-Ludwig Petrowsky. Kisiedu shows how the institutional discourses of the time pinpoint aesthetics as a critical location for the negotiation of political values, particularly surrounding imperialism, democracy, the West, and the Soviet Union. Hear about socialist realism, the specter of decadence, and the rooting of experimentalist influences from the United States in this meticulously researched lesser-known history of an important branch of experimentalism as a transnational phenomenon. This originally aired on CFRU 93.3FM on May 24, 2016 at 5pm. Tune in every second Tuesday to listen, or stream it live at cfru.ca.
This week we we’ll usher you into the program with a “cold open” monologue over the strains of Dub Physix’s “The Clock Ticks.” Then a community choir helps bless the boats as part of the Pacific Rim Whale Festival. Screenwriter Erin McMullan pops by the studio for a live chat about her thrilling experience attending the Vancouver International Women in Film Festival (put on by the folks at www.womeninfilm.ca/) the previous weekend. We’ll take a look at what goes in to turning words into a Hollywood blockbuster and ask her about a memorable #horizon moment. We have a Vancouver Island musician call in live to the program from Mexican surf town Sayulita. He’ll give us the skinny on the environment @apparat was surrounded by when they created one of their best tracks. I’ll give you breaking news about public beach access improvements, Tofino’s plan to crack down on Air BnB hosts operating illegally, and give you a sense of the community’s efforts to push British Columbia in a more “green” direction — at least as far as its investments are concerned. (Set to an Infected Mushroom track). Plus we’ll play music from Calibre, @shogunaudio, @logisticsmusic, + @tiesto; and throw in a couple “Dels” for good measure: @lana-del-rey and @lewis-del-mar (I have a quota of two per episode, so we’ll have to save Del the Funky Homosapien @zartan-drednaught-cobra for next time lol). ******* Then, we’ll do something we’ve never done before — get heavy down into an experimental synthesizer performance at the hands of temporary #Tofino local Fabian Konrad. And I do mean heavy. >>>get ready for one hell of a noise/sound/art experiment.... There will be starting and stopping, lush electronics and soundboard switch-ups all live in studio at 90.1 FM Tuff City Radio studio. Expect plenty of emotive moments, live interviews and random recorded performance clips all thrown in together. (Originally aired March 15, 2016 on 90.1 FM Tuff City Radio, Tofino, B.C., Canada)
Minimalism, as James Wallman, author of Stuffocation, states is a practice. It's a conscious way of living that positively reinforces that you don't have to be rich to be an experimentalist. With James Wallman as our guest here on GluckRadio, we discuss the importance of having the right people in our lives as opposed to materialistic goods because after all, experience with the people who matter is what stays with us. Material goods are replaceable but people are, in essence, not. To find out more about how to de-clutter, check out James Wallmans book at www.stuffocation.org.