I have been invited by a friend of mine, Eta Farmacelia Nurulhady, to give a webinar on literature and media studies at Universitas Diponegoro in a couple of days. This will be the first time in more than a decade that I have to connect my current research interest to literature. I am a bit nervous since I know that my knowledge of literary analysis is already rusty. That is why I choose to discuss the concept of ‘close reading’ in literature since this concept intertwines with medium-specific analysis in film and video game studies. I hope I will be clear enough to discuss the connections between close reading (in literature), ‘close watching’ (in film studies), and ‘close playing (in video game studies). Do join the webinar if this is a topic that you’d be interested in!
Category: Event
Excited to be participating in this symposium. I will be giving a presentation on the historical trajectory of Atari and dingdong, a local form of video game arcades, under the New Order regime. Come check it out if you are in the area!
Organizing this event for my Global Video Games course this semester.
This one here is a video from the Conversations Across Screen Cultures event that’s part of the Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival (FLEFF) in 2021. I am very humbled and honored to be invited by the organizers of this event to talk about my personal trajectory as a scholar in global digital humanities. Big thanks again to the organizers of the event: Patty Zimmermann, Leah Shafer, Enrique González-Conty, and Jiangtao “Harry” Gu, as well as everyone who came to the event.
This one is a video from the Global Digital Humanities event in February 2021 that I moderated. Our guest speaker was Moya Bailey, co-author of the #HashtagActivism: Networks of Race and Gender Justice (MIT Press, 2020). I really enjoyed moderating this event. Among other things, Moya and I discussed about the position of hashtag activism as a new form of digital activism, especially for people of color and people with disability, and the accusation of hashtag activism as a lazy form of activism, or what they called “slacktivism.” The video is “unlisted,” so it can only be watched directly on YouTube.
I just realized that I have several videos scattered on YouTube. So in the hope of archiving them, I am going to post them here.
This one here is from the keynote session of the Punk Scholars Network Indonesia 2020. I had a good experience in this session. Thanks William Anthony Yanko for moderating and Muhammad Fakhran Al Ramadhan for organizing the event!