| Description | This course explores interactive media in the
context of influential artistic, scientific, and
philosophical thought on information technologies
and their impact on different forms of interaction
and participation. In mapping both historical and
contemporary landscapes of interactive media, the
course surveys key perspectives on human-machine
interaction and technologically mediated
perception; explores cybernetics and its influence
on media aesthetics and culture; and questions
discourses of novelty ("new" media) that continue
to shape emerging media platforms. Students
consider common formal elements that define
interactive arts with focus on electronic art and
design, as well as understand cultural and
political forces that have shaped their production
and circulation. Course material emphasizes the
work of theorists, artists, and designers who have
developed interactive media, alongside engineers
and mathematicians who innovated computing
technologies and attendant models of
communication. Course lectures and assignments
engage students in critical dialogue with
historical movements alongside contemporary
interactive electronic arts. |
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