06.25.06

Up Next…

Posted in General at 9:02 pm by nicolemandala

Tomorrow I will be interviewing Jason Crow, access coordinator at Cambridge Community Television (CCTV) and creator of the Media Policy Blog, to get a community media perspective on local efforts to fuse media activism and new digital technologies with social change. CCTV is a leader in community access television and at the forefront of a new wave of innovation concerning digital platforms and increased access to autonomous media. Jason will no doubt have a lot to contribute to this discussion and I’m looking forward to hearing his thoughts on where we are headed in terms of technology and activism.

I’m just finishing Dan Gillmor’s “We the Media” – a really interesting read. He is definitely coming from a journalist’s perspective—an intriguing mix of a mainstream journalist’s perspective and a tech-saavy media democracy advocate—but has a lot of really great insight into placing new technologies into their social context and exploring how different groups with different goals and mindsets use and respond to new technological trends, specifically the expanding realm of citizen reporting and open publishing.

I’m looking forward to being able to devote more time to this study after next week when my first session of summer classes ends and to get out and talk with more people working on media projects. I’m also thinking it may be time to re-read “Free Culture” by Lawrence Lessig, to revisit some of the themes around creative control and copyright and see how those concepts may apply to this study on a local level.

Check back for my thoughts on my conversation with Jason after tomorrow.

06.14.06

Future Active: Media Activism and the Internet

Posted in Notes on Texts at 9:05 pm by nicolemandala

"Future Active: Media Activism and the Internet" is a book by Graham Meikle that has completly changed the way I am thinking about this research project. When I set out to do this study, my original aim was to examine the local media (activism) landscape in Boston and focus on how local organizations, individuals, collaborations, etc. were using new digital technologies in innovative ways for social change. While this is still very much part of my focus, Meikle's book inspired me to think backwards, in a sense. What I kept stumbling over was the fact that I, for the most part, already knew the answers to the questions I was asking. Not only that, but I can't possibly complete–with the time and resources currently available to me–a comprehensive study of all of the local projects relating to this topic. Attempting to do so would almost cause me to make political, biased, or uneducated decisions about who I did and did not include in my research.

But there was a specific passage in "Future Active" that made me stop and think about how I should focus my research, and has caused me to read other related texts differently. The passage addressed the concept of the "in-built politics of technologies". He used an example relating to film saying,

"film scholar Richard Dyer described how photographic media and cinematic lighting have been developed to favour the filming of white people–on the assumption that this was where the money was–to the extent that within the film industry 'photographing non-white people is typically construed as a problem.' Dyer traces how photographic innovation has customarily used the filming of the human face as its benchmark, and taken white faces as the standard. He describes how experiments with lighting, aperture size, development times, and the chemistry of film stock 'all proceeded on the assumption that what had to be got right was the look of the white face.' Technologies of photography, then, come with in-built politics."

Meikle desribes this in terms that recalls Marshall McLuhan: "Not just those messages that we think of as content, but those that are embodied within the form of the medium itself."

The digital technologies that I am interested in for this study–open source software, Wiki, Blogging, digital distribution platforms, virtual communites, electronic civil disobidience, etc.–may not have in-built politics that are as clearly defined as the example above, however, by using the same thinking and applying them to the concepts of the Internet as an "open system" that fosters creativity, sharing, conversation and democratic media versus a "closed system" that is profit-driven and one-to-many communicative and using local efforts as a case for the larger theoretical subject, I think I can write a much more interesting paper.

I have also often thought about the parallels between the radio and the internet, how each was established and what ultimatley became (is becoming) of each both in terms of use and of the interests that they serve. With the infrastructure for both radio and the internet being developed and funded by the government, each was initially touted as a revolutionary tool for communication, education, public service, etc. Now we see the Internet being commercialized in the same was that radio was. Yet both technologies have been extremely successful tools for organizing, activism and social change as well. I'm interested in exploring this connection further and thinking about it in terms of in-built politics…not from a perspective of technological determinism, but rather what it says about medium itself as new uses are developed that transcend the use for which it was originally conceived.

More on this text later…there is so much good stuff here.

Currently reading: "We the Media: Grassroots Journalism By the People For the People" by Dan Gillmor
If anyone out there happens to read this, I welcome all your comments and suggestions.

Getting Started

Posted in General at 8:23 pm by nicolemandala

I’m setting up this blog to serve as a forum and an archive for a project I’m working on this summer for school. Using Boston-area media activism and innovation as a case-study, I’m researching and writing a paper on the varying concepts of “tactical media”, the in-built politics of digital media technologies, and how both of these are being used locally for social change.

It is my hope that in addition to providing a place for me to organize my thoughts this blog can develop into a discussion that includes a larger community of people interested in Internet politics and technology for social change.