Lecture presentation & discussion
Colonised by data – the hollowing out of digital society
Live at the Goethe-Institut Hanoi and Live-Recording at the Deutsches Haus, Ho Chi Minh City.
Registration at 6:30 p.m.
Start at 7 p.m.
Online via Zoom
Start at 6:45 p.m.
Zoom Link to the discussion
Nick Couldry
is Professor of Media, Communications and Social Theory at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). As a sociologist of media and culture, he approaches media and communications from the perspective of the symbolic power that has been historically concentrated in media institutions. He is interested in how media and communications institutions and infrastructures contribute to various types of order (social, political, cultural, economic, and ethical). Couldry is author or editor of twelve books including most recently The Mediated Construction of Reality (with Andreas Hepp, Polity, 2016), Ethics of Media (2013 Palgrave), Media, Society, World: Social Theory and Digital Media Practice (Polity 2012) and Why Voice Matters: Culture and Politics After Neoliberalism (Sage 2010). His lecture will draw on the author’s book with Ulises Mejias, The Costs of Connection: How Data Colonizes Human Life and Appropriates it for capitalism (Stanford University Press 2019).
Dang Nguyen (Nguyễn Hồng Hải Đăng)
Doctoral candidate at the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies at the University of Melbourne. Currently lives and researches in Ho Chi Minh City.
Dang Nguyen (Nguyễn Hồng Hải Đăng) is a doctoral candidate at the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies at the University of Melbourne. She was also a 2019-2020 Fox Fellow at Yale University.
Prior to commencing her PhD at University of Melbourne she completed her Master of Science at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford.
She has taught digital media and communication studies at the tertiary level in Vietnam, Singapore, and Australia. Dang’s research interests broadly concern the following topics: digital communication, social studies of technology, internet studies, health informatics, and internet pop culture. She currently lives in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
Giang Nguyễn Thu
is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow (2020-2022) at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities of the University of Queensland. She obtained her doctorate at the University of Queensland in 2016. From 2018-2020, she worked as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center of Advanced Research in Global Communication at the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania. Her book Television in Post-Reform Vietnam: Nation, Media, Market (Routledge 2019) is the first monograph in English about contemporary Vietnamese media. Her postdoctoral project at the University of Queensland explores the gendered politics of precarity in late-socialist Vietnam through different case studies of digital motherhood. She is also interested in cultural memory, especially the constant reconstruction of the socialist past in now highly globalized and marketized Vietnam. At the University of Pennsylvania, she taught the undergraduate course entitled Media, Memory, and Cultural Identity.
Details
Goethe-Institut Hanoi
56-58-60 Nguyen-Thai-Hoc-Str., Ba Dinh
Hanoi
Vietnam
Language: Vietnamese & English
Price: Free with registration
+84 24 32004494
kultur-hanoi@goethe.de
Part of series Internet and society