In the final paper from our Voices and Ethics panel, Professor Craig Howes (Centre for Biographical Research, University of Hawai’i) argues that digital technologies are bringing into being new biographical forms that demand critical attention – from Facebook ‘Year in Review’ slideshows to military drone operators’ ‘kill lists.’
Public Roundtable: Voices and Ethics Part Three with Craig Howes
Tags: craig howes, data, drones, necrobiography, politics, simulation, social media, talks, video
Public Roundtable: Voices and Ethics Part Two with Alfred Hornung
The second paper from our Voices and Ethics panel sees Alfred Hornung (Professor, Chair of American Studies, Department of English & Linguistics, Johannes Gutenberg University) reflecting on interdisciplinary collaboration in relation to his experiences working on the project Life Sciences, Life Writing: Boundary Experiences of Human Life between Biomedical Explanation
Tags: alfred hornung, interdisciplinarity, life sciences, life writing, talks
Public Roundtable: Voices and Ethics Part One with Gillian Whitlock
In the first paper from our September 2015 Voices and Ethics panel Gillian Whitlock (ARC Professorial Research Fellow, University of Queensland) discusses her research on 21st century testimony, addressing texts produced by migrants and asylum seekers detained in Australia’s Nauru processing centre.
Tags: biography, digitization, migration, politics, talks, testimony, video