Aca-Media

A podcast offering an academic perspective on media, from the Society for Cinema and Media Studies

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    • Ep. 80: Jordan Sjol Interviews José Rivera
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    • Ep. 63: That's Not Funny! The Right-Wing Comedy Complex (Matt Sienkiewicz and Nick Marx)
    • Ep. 62: Cinema Is a Cat (Daisuke Miyao)
    • Ep. 61: Interview with SCMS President Paula Massood
    • Ep. 60: Lara Logan Spreads Misinformation (Drew Zolides)
    • Ep. 59: A Whole Bunch of Cranky Academics (Dimitri Latsis, 100 Best Sitcoms list)
    • Ep. 58: Faye Wanted You to Find Her (Maureen Mauk and Mary Huelsbeck on Faye Emerson)
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    • Ep. 53: Just a Plain Curiosity (Paul Taberham, Ryn Marchese)
    • Ep. 52: Reality Matters (Chiara Ferrari and Quinn Winchell in Matera; Fieldnotes: Thomas Elsaesser)
    • Ep. 51: A Culture of Access (Elizabeth Ellcessor and Margaret Price; Catherine Grant)
    • Ep. 50: Looking Backward and Looking Forward (Pam Wojcik, Usha Iyer)
    • Ep. 49: Pretty Good for the Dog Days of Summer (Juan Llamas-Rodriguez, Kanopy)
    • Ep. 48: Double the FOMO (Streaming Roundtable, SCMS and Comic-Con)
    • Ep. 47: We Are a Sleep-Deprived Group (Al Martin and Michael Newman on SCMS award committees)
    • Ep. 46: New Year, New Opportunities (B. Ruby Rich, Derek Kompare on being chair)
    • Ep. 45: Be Good to Each Other (Job Market part 2)
    • Ep. 44: Can a Game Make You Cry? (Job Market part 1, Felan Parker on Ebert and Video Games)
    • Ep. 43: Very Special Episode (Precarity in US and UK academia)
    • Ep. 42: We’re All in This Together (“Teaching in Trump Times,” Fieldnotes: Hamid Naficy)
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    • Ep. 40: Explode Out of the Chimney onto the Public Sphere (Will Brooker, Maggie Hennefeld)
    • Ep. 39: There’s More to Newark Than Whole Foods (Amanda Lotz, Brandon Arroyo)
    • Ep. 38: This Really Is Summer (Angelo Restivo, FieldNotes: Lynn Spigel)
    • Ep. 37: A Much More Open Listening Practice (Steven Cohan, Alec Badenoch on Radio Garden)
    • Ep. 36: I Don’t Think I Have the Option to Remain Silent (2016 election and protests)
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    • Ep. 34: Redoubled My Devotion to Teaching (Susan Ohmer, Leslie LeMond)
    • Ep. 33: Partake in the Factional Wrangle (Kirk Combe and Sangeet Kumar, Cynthia Meyers)
    • Ep. 32: Following My Fascinations (Chuck Tryon, Fieldnotes: Constance Penley)
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    • Ep. 30: Something You Do, Not Something You Study (Academy Film Archive, Nicholas Mirzoeff)
    • Ep. 29: Creating a Space (Radio Preservation Task Force Conference, SCMS Latino/a Caucus)
    • Ep. 28: Everything You Thought You Knew Is Going to Dissolve, But- (Film Matters, Tom Gunning)
    • Ep. 27: A Much Broader Context of the Medium Out There (Jun Okada, Grad student-run journals)
    • Ep. 26: A Chill in the Air (Vicky Johnson on Sports Fandom, Lisa Schmidt on Horror, Elana Levine)
    • Ep. 25: How Improvisational It All Is (Debra Ramsey, Fieldnotes: James Naremore)
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    • Ep. 19: I Love to Hear Those Stories (Rielle Navitski, Fieldnotes: Thomas Elsaesser)
    • Ep. 18: You're Gonna Scare Him Again (Jennifer Hyland Wang, SCMS Undergrad Conference)
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    • Ep. 80: Jordan Sjol Interviews José Rivera
    • Ep. 79: SCMS25 Live Episode (GSO Rep, Matt Payne, AJ Christian)
    • Ep73: Thinking With Our Ears: Jacob Smith on Audio Scholarship
    • Ep71: Justin Rawlins on Method Acting
    • Ep70: Jordan Sjol and Medium Specificity
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Aca-Media_Ep44_Filmstrip2_750px.jpg

Episode 44:Can a game make you cry?(July, 2018)

July 26, 2018 by Chris Becker in Podcast

Share this one with everyone you know who is on the academic job market!  We present the first of a two-part series on job searches, with advice and empathy from those who are currently contending with the vagaries of the market. Producer Stephanie Brown talks with job seekers, adjuncts, and search-committee members in order to gain insight into the often frustrating process of gaining academic employment. Commiseration is provided!  Then Christine Becker talks with Felan Parker about his new CJ article on Roger Ebert and the wars over video games as "art," including their relevance for more recent cultural struggles over games and gamers. 

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LINKS FOR THIS EPISODE

Opening Banter

The Old Farmer’s Almanac, “Surviving Power Outages During a Storm”
Magic Lantern Shows at the Plain & Fancy Theatre, The Only Permanent Magic Lantern Theatre
Chicago Cubs Radio Network
Steep
Force Majeure avalanche scene

The job market (Part I)

Music: "Jog to the Water" by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue)
Clip was from Girls (HBO 2011-2017): season 6, episode 9, “Goodbye Tour” (April 9, 2017)

Interviewees:

Lori Morimoto
Mark Stewart
Jennifer Moorman
Yana Kuchirko
Diane Elliot

McSweeney’s Job ad
Survey on experiences on the job market used in this segment
Yana and Diane’s Survey on Adjunct on the job market - please circulate!
Women’s Caucus 2018 Report: "Concerns about Precarious Labor and the Crisis in Academic Labor"
Negotiating Precarious Positions (Cinema Journal Teaching Dossier)
"New Faculty Majority: Women and Contingency Project"
Article about fake job searches (mentioned in interview by Diane and Yana in a segment that was cut for time)

Felan Parker Links

Felan Parker’s website
Felan on Twitter
Felan’s Cinema Journal article, “Roger Ebert and the Games-As-Art Debate”

Wikipedia entries for:

Interactive art
Planescape: Torment
Journey
Dada
Fluxus
Relational art
Andy Warhol
Video games as an art form
Roger Ebert
Gam’ergate controversy

Celia Pearce, Associate Professor, Game Design, Northeastern University, on Twitter
John Sharp’s website, on Twitter, Works of Game
Anastasia Salter, Toxic Geek Masculinity in Media: Sexism, Trolling, and Identity Policing
Christopher Paul, The Toxic Meritocracy of Video Games: Why Gaming Culture is the Worst
Mark Furstenau, Carleton University
Robert Yang’s website, blog, Twitter
Caty McCarthy, “Robert Yang dreams of a progressive future for VR, but is it possible?”
Robert Yang, “'If you walk in someone else's shoes, then you've taken their shoes': Empathy Machines as Appropriation Machines”
Julie Muncy, Wired, “Stop Expecting Games to Build Empathy”
Colin Campbell, Polygon, "Gaming’s Toxic Men, Explained"

Key posts from Roger Ebert on video games as art:

“Doom Movie Review & Film Summary (October 2005)
“Movie Answer Man: Critics vs. Gamers on ‘Doom’” (October 2005)
“Movie Answer Man: Why Did the Chicken Cross the Genders?” (November 2005)
“Movie Answer Man: A Buddhist Walks into a Chat Room…” (November 2005)
“Gamers Fire Flaming Posts, E-Mails…” (December 2005)
“The Art of the Game 2” ( December 2005)
“The Game of Art 3” (December 2005)
“Feedback: Gamers and Artists” (July 2007)
Games vs. Art: Ebert vs. Barker (2007)
“Video Games Can Never Be Art” (April 2010)
“Okay, Kids, Play on My Lawn” (July 2010)

Roger Ebert’s New York Times obituary: “A Critic for the Common Man”

July 26, 2018 /Chris Becker
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