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  • What began as a movement of farmers opposed to environmental rules is now one of the country's dominant political parties. The nation's agricultural exports are second only to the United States.
  • This weekend in the arts: San Diego Opera's "El último sueño de Frida y Diego"; "Up Close and Personal" at San Diego Dance Theater; Bread and Puppet Theater comes to North Park; "Portraits from the Anthropocene at WE Gallery"; Roberto Salas at Bonita Museum and the "Welcome tu Las Californias" music festival in Baja.
  • A new festival celebrates an accessible, enduring and analog form of art and archiving in Oceanside. Dozens of zinemakers, artists, musicians and vendors join the event at The Hill Street Country Club.
  • The Consumer Product Safety Commission's album addresses the most common hazards among those 13-24, through a variety of genres. It's called We're Safety Now Haven't We, and you'll want to hear it.
  • California officials may vote Tuesday to slash how much water a major bottling company can pull from a watershed in the San Bernardino National Forest.
  • Epidemic media can range from spanking new care affordances (like test-kits or self-check devices) to sophisticated aggregative technologies (disease surveillance networks like FluNet) and pioneering medical platforms (diagnostic and prognostic). Drawing on "The Virus Touch: Theorizing Epidemic Media" (forthcoming Duke UP, 2023), Ghosh argues that high epistemic value of "new," "smart," or "sophisticated" media habitually bypasses the significance of low-tech media crucial for the regulation and control of acute infection. Often located at clinical points of care, these media appear as mundane commodities circulating within global biomedical infrastructures; there seems nothing creative or innovative about them. Focusing on "patient files" as a case in point, Ghosh theorizes the ordinary "media care" of chronic infection at two HIV/AIDS health centers—the Site B clinic Khayelitsha (Cape Town) and Sanjeevani at Humsafar Trust (Mumbai). Following Cornelia Vismann (2008), Ghosh argues that files accumulative tendency readies these technologies for tracking infection beyond clinical confines. Files attune caregivers to the "interior milieu" of an individual patient but they are baggy enough to open into the greater disease milieu. As such, these are smart epidemic media that eschew an anthropocentric approach for a multispecies politics of health. Biography: Bishnupriya Ghosh is faculty in the English and Global Studies departments at UC Santa Barbara. She has published two monographs, "When Borne Across: Literary Cosmopolitics in the Contemporary Indian Novel" (Rutgers UP, 2004) and "Global Icons: Apertures to the Popular" (Duke UP, 2011) on global media cultures. Her current work on media, risk, and globalization includes the co-edited "Routledge Companion to Media and Risk" (Routledge 2020) and a new monograph, "The Virus Touch: Theorizing Epidemic Media" (forthcoming from Duke University Press, May 2023). She is starting research on media environments of viral infection in a book of essays tentatively entitled, "Epidemic Intensities." About the Media Care Talk Series: Dozing at the movie theater, listening to the podcast on the subway, counseling via Zoom appointments, searching immigration policy on the internet…In this increasingly crumbling world, media offer maintenance and sustain our vitality while they also harm our well-being through abuse and addiction. This talk series examines the concept of care and showcases the process of knowledge production surrounding artificial care in media practice. We will browse a range of media objects and platforms - from cinema to teletherapy, from smart drugs to sleep apps - and explore the habitual, affective, and material potential of healing and solidarity within film and media theories. This series is co-organized by the Film Studies Program and the Suraj Israni Center for Cinematic Arts at UC San Diego with generous support from the following: 21 Century China Center, Department of Communication, Department of Visual Arts, Department of Literature, and the Institute of Arts & Humanities. Speaker: Bishnupriya Ghosh, professor, UC Santa Barbara Respondent: Lisa Cartwright, professor, Departments of Visual Arts and Communication, UC San Diego Hosted by Wentao Ma, Ph.D. student, Department of Literature, UC San Diego By registering for this event you agree to receive future correspondence from the Suraj Israni Center for Cinematic Arts, from which you can unsubscribe at any time.
  • In this talk, Qian thinks about documentary as a caring medium: it mediates relationships across and around the camera, and out of such relationships, it creates attentional formations that make specific forms of care possible. In particular, Qian excavates documentary's important presence in the hard and soft film debate in China's 1930s. By discussing Cheng Bugao's docu-fictions as oppositional to the infotainment of the newsreel and the illusory transparency of the Capitalist process film, and by reading Liu Na'ou's home movies and travelogues as a colonial subject's search for grounding, connectivity, and horizontal relationships that could offer solace and protection, Qian shows that the hard and soft film camps, despite their pronounced differences, proposed complementary ways to care. Qian ends the talk with a 1940 docu-fiction, "The Light of East Asia," made in Chongqing on reforming Japanese POWs through theater and cinema. With this film, Qian thinks further about the potential of theater and film production to initiate transindividual processes of healing, on condition that such productions were democratically organized to practice equity and respect for all people involved in the process. Biography: Ying Qian is associate professor of Chinese Cinema and Media in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia University. Her first book, "Revolutionary Becomings: Documentary Cinema in 20th Century China" (Columbia University Press, forthcoming in 2023) studies the making of documentary cinema – broadly defined to include newsreels, educational, industrial and scientific films – in 20th century China, treating it as a prism to examine how media and revolutions are mutually constitutive of each other: how revolutionary movements gave rise to media practices that reconfigured political and social relationships in specific ways, and how these media practices in turn informed and delimited the particular paths of revolutions’ actualization. She’s now working on a new monograph on media and the ecologies of knowledge in social movements. Her articles have appeared in Critical Inquiry, New Left Review, China Perspectives, Oxford Handbook of Chinese Cinemas, New Literary History of Modern China, and other journals and volumes. She curates, makes videos, and contributes to activist communities whenever she can. About the Media Care Talk Series: Dozing at the movie theater, listening to the podcast on the subway, counseling via Zoom appointments, searching immigration policy on the internet…In this increasingly crumbling world, media offer maintenance and sustain our vitality while they also harm our well-being through abuse and addiction. This talk series examines the concept of care and showcases the process of knowledge production surrounding artificial care in media practice. We will browse a range of media objects and platforms - from cinema to teletherapy, from smart drugs to sleep apps - and explore the habitual, affective, and material potential of healing and solidarity within film and media theories. This series is co-organized by the Film Studies Program and the Suraj Israni Center for Cinematic Arts at UC San Diego with generous support from the following: 21 Century China Center, Department of Communication, Department of Visual Arts, Department of Literature, and the Institute of Arts & Humanities. Speaker: Ying Qian, associate professor of Chinese Film and Media, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University Respondent: Géraldine A. Fiss, associate teaching professor of Inter-Asia and Transpacific Studies: China Focus, Department of Literature, UC San Diego Hosted by Wentao Ma, Ph.D. student, Department of Literature, UC San Diego This event will be held via Zoom Webinar -- registrants will receive the Zoom link prior to the event start time. By registering for this event you agree to receive future correspondence from the Suraj Israni Center for Cinematic Arts, from which you can unsubscribe at any time.
  • Daniel Mason's gorgeous fifth novel tells of a yellow house deep in the woods of western Massachusetts — and its motley succession of occupants who leave their mark on the property.
  • NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Mitski about her new album The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We.
  • Heading to college is hard for anyone. But have you tried being at least 30 years older than most of your classmates? James Hatch did.
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