Theorizing the Web: Day One

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.

New Money (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Angela Cirucci, Ricky Crano, Marika Rose, Gwera Kiwana. Moderator: Guy Schaffer
Unpaid affective labor, social debt through social media metrics, and Silicon Valley’s courting the apocalypse fuels today’s post-rational techno-capitalist economy.

Ways of Knowing (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: S.E. Hackney, Jason Farman, Nicholas A. Hanford, Sylvia Gutierrez. Moderator: TBA
Knowledge creating is a matter of organization as well as content, an endless negotiation with what is already known and the forms in which that knowledge circulates. Knowledge work means not only creating new ideas but assessing the containers and habitats in which they might take root and flower.

Image Layers (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Abdelrahman Hassan, Hannah Barton, Siân Brooke, Maggie Mayhem. Moderator: Seth Barry Watter
As images circulate, they provide a grammar for political expression. Even when they are only barely tweaked, they can take on whole new meanings and contexts in connection with previously shared content.

Ethics of Connection (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Joshua McWhirter, Benjamin Haber, Caitlin Turner, Anna Jobin. Moderator: Michael Lachney
Networks aren’t neutral: They perform an implicit moral function in how and when they link their members and serve as ethical actors in their own right.

I, Human (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Noah Hutton, Maya Indira Ganesh, Abie Hadjitarkhani, Jacqueline Feldman. Moderator: Yotam Shmargad
The imperfections of humanity are often most visible when we strive for perfection, as the development of artificial intelligence has demonstrated. Does AI examplify how our digital creations are extensions of ourselves?

Disrupting Disruption (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Renée Reizman, Elisabeth Friedman, Lior Zalmanson, Chloe O’Neill. Moderator: Joelle Woodson
Silicon Valley’s politics and economics of disruption also produce opportunities for both resistance and retrenchment.

Invited Panel: Get Ready for Some Game Theory (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Austin Walker, Naomi Clark, Stephanie Jennings, Michael Thomsen. Moderator: Jeremy Antley
Games allow us to enter new worlds and become new characters, but they are also generators of threshold spaces where questions of identity and authenticity are debated by designers and players alike.

Select All (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Krista Schnell, Lindsay Weinberg, Jack Kahn, Jürgen Geuter. Moderator: Wesley Goatley
Collecting ever more data into ever larger sets does not make for more objectivity. Nor does it water down the effects on those being surveilled. Instead it makes them more governable and vulnerable, subject to the values are encoded into the means of ever larger data collection and ever more hidden interpretation.

Don’t Trend on Me (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Sara Lillo, Jess Maddox, Jozie Nummi and Thaddeus Atzmon, Brian Justie. Moderator: Amanda Hess
The web was long hailed as inherently democratic, yet the current moment is marked by antidemocratic politics and manipulated media reaction. How are communications technologies fueling the rise of populist authoritarianism? How might they be used to stabilze political discourse? What of “2016” as a cultural and political style?

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

Keynote Panel 1: Weblandia (6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m.)
Panelists: Ava Kofman, Kate Losse, Sharon Zukin, Kyle Chayka. Moderator: David Banks
In the web’s early days, commentators often predicted a radical decentralization of work and play. Video chat and email, the thinking went, would render offices, cities, and commuting moot. But cities are more desirable than ever as urban life becomes more predictable, less gritty, and more individualistically oriented. Fueling this transformation is the convergence of the city and the smartphone. Mapping, ride hailing, and image-sharing apps are among the many recent innovation that simultaneously require cities’ unique characteristics of density, scale, and diversity to function, but also impose a sort of orderliness and control that was once only found in post-war suburbs. This panel will explore the homogenizing, commodifying, and revitalizing forces that digital networks bring to bear on our built environments.

Keynote Panel 2: Where Truth Lies (7:30 p.m.–9:00 p.m.)
Panelists: Tara Isabella Burton, Alexa O’Brien, Aaron Cantú, Jay Rosen. Moderator: Natasha Lennard
Fake news and post-truth, alternative facts and filter bubbles: our moment’s politics are both too chaotic and too predictably on the nose. On Brexit and Trump, journalists and experts had their expectations refined down to a decimal point, but their odds-making produced more confusion than certainty. Meanwhile, the lack of a basis for shared knowledge has allowed hoaxes and propaganda to proliferate. We are fresh off a campaign that was run, covered, and won like a reality show. What of this chaos epistemology, a tactical approach that has long been part of web culture but is now installed in the seat of power? Do we want to strengthen knowledge-producing institutions? Build new ones? What does it mean to produce and consume news information when the very shape of the world is contested, and any fact feels impossible? We will grapple with these topics on this panel, with a special focus on the role of social media.

Party (9:00 p.m.–10:30 p.m.)
Drinks, pizza, and music











When: Fri., Apr. 7, 2017 at 12:00 pm - 10:30 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.

New Money (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Angela Cirucci, Ricky Crano, Marika Rose, Gwera Kiwana. Moderator: Guy Schaffer
Unpaid affective labor, social debt through social media metrics, and Silicon Valley’s courting the apocalypse fuels today’s post-rational techno-capitalist economy.

Ways of Knowing (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: S.E. Hackney, Jason Farman, Nicholas A. Hanford, Sylvia Gutierrez. Moderator: TBA
Knowledge creating is a matter of organization as well as content, an endless negotiation with what is already known and the forms in which that knowledge circulates. Knowledge work means not only creating new ideas but assessing the containers and habitats in which they might take root and flower.

Image Layers (12:00 p.m.–1:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Abdelrahman Hassan, Hannah Barton, Siân Brooke, Maggie Mayhem. Moderator: Seth Barry Watter
As images circulate, they provide a grammar for political expression. Even when they are only barely tweaked, they can take on whole new meanings and contexts in connection with previously shared content.

Ethics of Connection (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Joshua McWhirter, Benjamin Haber, Caitlin Turner, Anna Jobin. Moderator: Michael Lachney
Networks aren’t neutral: They perform an implicit moral function in how and when they link their members and serve as ethical actors in their own right.

I, Human (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Noah Hutton, Maya Indira Ganesh, Abie Hadjitarkhani, Jacqueline Feldman. Moderator: Yotam Shmargad
The imperfections of humanity are often most visible when we strive for perfection, as the development of artificial intelligence has demonstrated. Does AI examplify how our digital creations are extensions of ourselves?

Disrupting Disruption (1:30 p.m.–2:45 p.m.)
Panelists: Renée Reizman, Elisabeth Friedman, Lior Zalmanson, Chloe O’Neill. Moderator: Joelle Woodson
Silicon Valley’s politics and economics of disruption also produce opportunities for both resistance and retrenchment.

Invited Panel: Get Ready for Some Game Theory (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Austin Walker, Naomi Clark, Stephanie Jennings, Michael Thomsen. Moderator: Jeremy Antley
Games allow us to enter new worlds and become new characters, but they are also generators of threshold spaces where questions of identity and authenticity are debated by designers and players alike.

Select All (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Krista Schnell, Lindsay Weinberg, Jack Kahn, Jürgen Geuter. Moderator: Wesley Goatley
Collecting ever more data into ever larger sets does not make for more objectivity. Nor does it water down the effects on those being surveilled. Instead it makes them more governable and vulnerable, subject to the values are encoded into the means of ever larger data collection and ever more hidden interpretation.

Don’t Trend on Me (3:00 p.m.-4:15 p.m.)
Panelists: Sara Lillo, Jess Maddox, Jozie Nummi and Thaddeus Atzmon, Brian Justie. Moderator: Amanda Hess
The web was long hailed as inherently democratic, yet the current moment is marked by antidemocratic politics and manipulated media reaction. How are communications technologies fueling the rise of populist authoritarianism? How might they be used to stabilze political discourse? What of “2016” as a cultural and political style?

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

Keynote Panel 1: Weblandia (6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m.)
Panelists: Ava Kofman, Kate Losse, Sharon Zukin, Kyle Chayka. Moderator: David Banks
In the web’s early days, commentators often predicted a radical decentralization of work and play. Video chat and email, the thinking went, would render offices, cities, and commuting moot. But cities are more desirable than ever as urban life becomes more predictable, less gritty, and more individualistically oriented. Fueling this transformation is the convergence of the city and the smartphone. Mapping, ride hailing, and image-sharing apps are among the many recent innovation that simultaneously require cities’ unique characteristics of density, scale, and diversity to function, but also impose a sort of orderliness and control that was once only found in post-war suburbs. This panel will explore the homogenizing, commodifying, and revitalizing forces that digital networks bring to bear on our built environments.

Keynote Panel 2: Where Truth Lies (7:30 p.m.–9:00 p.m.)
Panelists: Tara Isabella Burton, Alexa O’Brien, Aaron Cantú, Jay Rosen. Moderator: Natasha Lennard
Fake news and post-truth, alternative facts and filter bubbles: our moment’s politics are both too chaotic and too predictably on the nose. On Brexit and Trump, journalists and experts had their expectations refined down to a decimal point, but their odds-making produced more confusion than certainty. Meanwhile, the lack of a basis for shared knowledge has allowed hoaxes and propaganda to proliferate. We are fresh off a campaign that was run, covered, and won like a reality show. What of this chaos epistemology, a tactical approach that has long been part of web culture but is now installed in the seat of power? Do we want to strengthen knowledge-producing institutions? Build new ones? What does it mean to produce and consume news information when the very shape of the world is contested, and any fact feels impossible? We will grapple with these topics on this panel, with a special focus on the role of social media.

Party (9:00 p.m.–10:30 p.m.)
Drinks, pizza, and music

Buy tickets/get more info now