Theorizing the Web: Day Two

Theorizing the Web is an inter- and non-disciplinary annual conference that brings together scholars, journalists, artists, activists, and technology practitioners to think conceptually and critically about the interrelationships between the Web and society. We deeply value public engagement, and consider insights from academics, non-academics, and non-“tech theorists” alike to be equally valuable.

The first Theorizing the Web conference was held in 2011 at the University of Maryland, as was the second in 2012. In 2013, the conference moved to New York, where it was hosted by the CUNY Graduate Center in Manhattan. In 2014 we moved outside of institutional settings into a Windmill Studios warehouse in Brooklyn and expanded to two full days of programming. The 2015 event moved back to Manhattan, on the Bowery, to the then-unfinished new International Center of Photography space. In 2016 and 2017, we’re at our third borough, in the beautiful spaces within the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens.

Both days of programming will feature invited speakers as well as presentations from competitively selected open-submission system.

It Me (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Piergiorgio Degli Esposti and Paola Parmiggiani, Mitra Azar, Faye Chevalier, Rachel Katz. Moderator: Millie Christie-Dervaux

Originally seen as a disembodying force, the web offers opportuntities for new kinds of embodiment and identity construction that redraw traditional boundaries while inventing different ones.

Home Screens
(12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Jessika Tremblay, Diana Buendía, Ted Perlmutter, Shane Tilton. Moderator: Christopher Cox
Whether you are leaving home or seeing home from a distance for the first time, the view from the web can be both starkly revealing and subtly distorted.

Regulating Bodies
(12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Ada Cable, Ashley Dallot, Gabi Schaffzin and Zachary Kaiser, Md Nabil. Moderator: Jessie Patella-Ray
Bodies are a crucial piece of wetware that keeps the web running and, like all things related to computers, there is a tension between binaries and more inclusive gradients.
Novel Fantasies (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Monica Torres, Grace Sloan, Cynthia Hua, Stephanie Monohan. Moderator: Sarah Wanenchak

The technologies we fantasize about are just as important as the technologies we actually make. Looking at the way the web plays a character in movies and television can help us understand the role it plays in our lives.

Privacy and Control (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Kate Sim, Chris Kerich, Kate Mannell and Robbie Fordyce, Geoff Shullenberger. Moderator: Whitney Mallett

As thousands of people compete to get noticed by collecting likes and reviews, thousands more just want to be left alone. Breaking, dodging, and unpacking digital surveillance have become necessary skills in a networked era.

Woke Up Like This (1:30 p.m. -2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Britney Summit-Gil, Sara Reinis, Leah Schrager, Sofya Glebovna. Moderator: Whitney Erin Boesel

The web’s foregorunding of attention metrics such as shares, upvotes, and likes reshapes beauty standards just as it transforms self-expression.

Invited Panel: Apocalypse Buffering (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Tim Maughan, Damien Patrick Williams, Jade E. Davis. Moderator: Ingrid Burrington

Invited Panel: The (mis)Use of Culture (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: manuel arturo abreu, Mayukh Sen, Maya Binyam, Rooney Elmi. Moderator: Zara Rahman

Virality is often the result of effacing the cultures from which the memes emerged; at the same time, “real time,” and “live” sharing imposes hegemonic attitudes about race and other forms of difference. How things circulate articulates cultural values as much as any image’s apparent content.

Sights of Power (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Roshan Abraham, Liat Berdugo, Nicole Brown and Ben Grosser, Mariela Libedinsky. Moderator: Apryl Williams
The web was never going to free us from all inequality and racist violence, but it has made these more visible and possibly more susceptible to organized action.

Food/Social Break (4:15 p.m.- 6:00 p.m.)

Keynote Panel 3: Misinfo Wars
(6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m.)
Panelists: Vasily Gatov, Adrian Chen. Moderator: Rachel Rosenfelt
Kompromat, disinformation, or propaganda — whether you think these are the same, different, or otherwise related, it is clear that all of them will be prominent in our lives for the foreseeable future. Examining who benefits from these media practices and how that shapes our future political environment is of primary importance. It is critical to take an international perspective, with a special focus on Russia: Has Russia’s role in the worldwide politics of disinformation been accurately described? Instead of focusing on the supposed unprecedented nature of Putin’s Russia, might there be other analogues for our current politics that provide cautionary tales for this uncertain time?

Keynote Panel 4: Twitter and Tear Gas
(7:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m.)
Panelist: Zeynep Tufekçi. Moderator: John Knefel
Our century has already seen its fair share of world-changing political events. The web’s role in these events is no longer in question, but the character, scope, and political valence of its influence certainly is. How social movements form with and around social media is a pressing question with still too few answers. Join Zeynep Tufekçi, who has spoken at each Theorizing the Web, as she sits down with John Knefel to discusses her new book Twitter and Tear Gas.











When: Sat., Apr. 8, 2017 at 12:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Where: Museum of the Moving Image
36-01 35th Ave.
718-777-6888
Price: Registration is pay-what-you-wish and includes access to both days. All tickets include same-day admission to the Museum.
Buy tickets/get more info now
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Theorizing the Web is an inter- and non-disciplinary annual conference that brings together scholars, journalists, artists, activists, and technology practitioners to think conceptually and critically about the interrelationships between the Web and society. We deeply value public engagement, and consider insights from academics, non-academics, and non-“tech theorists” alike to be equally valuable.

The first Theorizing the Web conference was held in 2011 at the University of Maryland, as was the second in 2012. In 2013, the conference moved to New York, where it was hosted by the CUNY Graduate Center in Manhattan. In 2014 we moved outside of institutional settings into a Windmill Studios warehouse in Brooklyn and expanded to two full days of programming. The 2015 event moved back to Manhattan, on the Bowery, to the then-unfinished new International Center of Photography space. In 2016 and 2017, we’re at our third borough, in the beautiful spaces within the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens.

Both days of programming will feature invited speakers as well as presentations from competitively selected open-submission system.

It Me (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Piergiorgio Degli Esposti and Paola Parmiggiani, Mitra Azar, Faye Chevalier, Rachel Katz. Moderator: Millie Christie-Dervaux

Originally seen as a disembodying force, the web offers opportuntities for new kinds of embodiment and identity construction that redraw traditional boundaries while inventing different ones.

Home Screens
(12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Jessika Tremblay, Diana Buendía, Ted Perlmutter, Shane Tilton. Moderator: Christopher Cox
Whether you are leaving home or seeing home from a distance for the first time, the view from the web can be both starkly revealing and subtly distorted.

Regulating Bodies
(12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Ada Cable, Ashley Dallot, Gabi Schaffzin and Zachary Kaiser, Md Nabil. Moderator: Jessie Patella-Ray
Bodies are a crucial piece of wetware that keeps the web running and, like all things related to computers, there is a tension between binaries and more inclusive gradients.
Novel Fantasies (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Monica Torres, Grace Sloan, Cynthia Hua, Stephanie Monohan. Moderator: Sarah Wanenchak

The technologies we fantasize about are just as important as the technologies we actually make. Looking at the way the web plays a character in movies and television can help us understand the role it plays in our lives.

Privacy and Control (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Kate Sim, Chris Kerich, Kate Mannell and Robbie Fordyce, Geoff Shullenberger. Moderator: Whitney Mallett

As thousands of people compete to get noticed by collecting likes and reviews, thousands more just want to be left alone. Breaking, dodging, and unpacking digital surveillance have become necessary skills in a networked era.

Woke Up Like This (1:30 p.m. -2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Britney Summit-Gil, Sara Reinis, Leah Schrager, Sofya Glebovna. Moderator: Whitney Erin Boesel

The web’s foregorunding of attention metrics such as shares, upvotes, and likes reshapes beauty standards just as it transforms self-expression.

Invited Panel: Apocalypse Buffering (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Tim Maughan, Damien Patrick Williams, Jade E. Davis. Moderator: Ingrid Burrington

Invited Panel: The (mis)Use of Culture (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: manuel arturo abreu, Mayukh Sen, Maya Binyam, Rooney Elmi. Moderator: Zara Rahman

Virality is often the result of effacing the cultures from which the memes emerged; at the same time, “real time,” and “live” sharing imposes hegemonic attitudes about race and other forms of difference. How things circulate articulates cultural values as much as any image’s apparent content.

Sights of Power (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Roshan Abraham, Liat Berdugo, Nicole Brown and Ben Grosser, Mariela Libedinsky. Moderator: Apryl Williams
The web was never going to free us from all inequality and racist violence, but it has made these more visible and possibly more susceptible to organized action.

Food/Social Break (4:15 p.m.- 6:00 p.m.)

Keynote Panel 3: Misinfo Wars
(6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m.)
Panelists: Vasily Gatov, Adrian Chen. Moderator: Rachel Rosenfelt
Kompromat, disinformation, or propaganda — whether you think these are the same, different, or otherwise related, it is clear that all of them will be prominent in our lives for the foreseeable future. Examining who benefits from these media practices and how that shapes our future political environment is of primary importance. It is critical to take an international perspective, with a special focus on Russia: Has Russia’s role in the worldwide politics of disinformation been accurately described? Instead of focusing on the supposed unprecedented nature of Putin’s Russia, might there be other analogues for our current politics that provide cautionary tales for this uncertain time?

Keynote Panel 4: Twitter and Tear Gas
(7:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m.)
Panelist: Zeynep Tufekçi. Moderator: John Knefel
Our century has already seen its fair share of world-changing political events. The web’s role in these events is no longer in question, but the character, scope, and political valence of its influence certainly is. How social movements form with and around social media is a pressing question with still too few answers. Join Zeynep Tufekçi, who has spoken at each Theorizing the Web, as she sits down with John Knefel to discusses her new book Twitter and Tear Gas.

Buy tickets/get more info now