Japanese Film Workshop
ryan.cook at yale.edu
ryan.cook at yale.edu
Thu Oct 7 10:02:13 EDT 2010
Woops! Thought I saw Pat in the "to" line. Sorry to the list for the
unintended mail!
Ryan
Quoting Patrick Noonan <patricknoo at gmail.com>:
> Dear KineJapaners,
>
> Please join us for the next meeting of the Japanese Film Workshop on
> Thursday, October 14 from 7 to 9PM, at Meiji Gakuin University,
> Shirokane Campus. The venue is *room 7418* on the 4th floor of the
> Hepburn hall (a tall building standing next to the main building).
> The Japanese Film Workshop is open to all, and directions from
> stations and the campus map are attached below as a PDF file.
>
>
> "Bishōjo Games: Techno-Intimacy and the Virtually Human in Japan"
> Patrick W. Galbraith
> Ph.D., Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Information Studies,
> University of Tokyo
> http://www.otaku2.com/articleView.php?item=213
>
>
> Otaku are intimately connected to the global imagination of living
> with media and technology. They are described as “children of media
> and technology” (Grassmuck 1990), “socially inept but often
> brilliant technological shut-ins” (Greenfeld 1993) or
> “pathological- techno-fetishist[s]” (Gibson 1996). In their
> world, “Technology is your companion. Technology is your teacher.
> Technology is your friend. Technology is your livelihood.
> Ultimately, technology becomes your reality” (Greenfeld 1994). The
> overarching theme is that otaku are “posthuman,” more
> comfortable with technology than people, confused about the
> difference between the real and the virtual. The basic logic,
> summarized as losing humanity to the onslaught of technology,
> desperately needs to be problematized. This paper proposes that otaku
> are seeking a new understanding of (human) being in the
> technological condition. It examines bishōjo games, which run the
> gamut from conversation to pornography, and comprise a huge industry
> in Japan that blurs the line between direct, mediated and purely
> machine contact.
>
>
> For more information, please contact: patnoonan at berkeley.edu
>
> Patrick Noonan
> PhD Candidate
> East Asian Languages and Cultures, Film Studies
> U.C. Berkeley
>
>
>
>
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