Ponderance

(May 2003 - March 2007.) Tama's thoughts on the blogosphere, podcasting, popular culture, digital media and citizen journalism posted from a laptop computer somewhere in Perth's isolated, miniature, urban jungle ...

78th Annual Academy Awards ... My Predictions

Tuesday, January 31, 2006
Nominations for the 78th annual Oscar nominations have been announced. I thought this year I'd go out on a limb and make some predictions ...

Best Picture: Brokeback Mountain
Actor: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Capote.
Actress: Keira Knightley, Pride & Prejudice.
Supporting Actor: George Clooney, Syriana( or Jake Gyllenhaal, Brokeback Mountain).
Supporting Actress: Rachel Weisz, The Constant Gardener.
Director: Ang Lee, Brokeback Mountain.
Adapted Screenplay: Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana, Brokeback Mountain.
Original Screenplay: George Clooney and Grant Heslov, Good Night, and Good Luck.
Animated Feature Film: Howl's Moving Castle.
Art Direction: King Kong.
Cinematography: Brokeback Mountain.
Sound Mixing: King Kong.
Sound Editing: King Kong.
Original Score: Brokeback Mountain, Gustavo Santaolalla (I guess ... I really didn't think it was a brilliant year for film scores.)
Original Song: Travelin' Thru from Transamerica, Dolly Parton.
Costume: Memoirs of a Geisha.
Documentary Feature: March of the Penguins.
Makeup: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
Visual Effects: King Kong (interesting to see Episode III didn't even get a nomination in this category!)

I've left out a few categories where I've seen none or only one of the nominated films ... let's see how I go on the night!

Australia Day 2006

Friday, January 27, 2006
From very Australian pies ...
The Great Aussie Pies!
... to the wonderfully spectacular fireworks of the Skyshow...
Fireworks III
... Australia Day 2006 has been and gone. I've got a bit of an Australia Day Photoset up on Flickr, and for something very "the streets find uses for things" check out Nic's didgeridoo playing using a vacuum cleaner! [Quicktime Movie] [iPod Video Fomatted Movie]

Also, today saw the results of the 2006 Australian Blog Awards announced. A huge congratulations to Robert Corr for Redrag's win as WA's most popular blog (Rob, come back to the blogosphere!). Congrats, too, to Anthony with Spiceblog coming in second place. And thanks to everyone who voted for this blog which came in at a respectable third. :)

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William Gibson: "Time Machine Cuba"

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

William Gibson's "Time Machine Cuba" appears in the latest Infinity Matrix:
I learned of science fiction and history in a single season.


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CFP: Beyond the Reality Studio: Cyberpunk and the New Millennium

Sunday, January 22, 2006
Another great sounding CFP which, with any luck, will lead to a very interesting collection ...
CFP: Beyond the Reality Studio: Cyberpunk and the New Millennium, eds. Graham J. Murphy and Sherryl Vint. Contributions are invited for a critical anthology focussing on the contemporary relevance of "cyberpunk" in the new millennium.

Cyberpunk was an immensely popular movement in science fiction (SF) and, as Bruce Sterling writes in Mirrorshades: The Cyberpunk Anthology, it was a "a product of the Eighties milieu" in its focus on multinational corporations, cybernetic and virtual technologies, posthuman cyborg embodiments, postmodernist tendencies, and punk fashion aesthetic. Cyberpunk generated attention from such diverse areas as SF fandom, popular media outlets, mainstream film and television, and academic scholarship, much of which is explored in a defining anthology that encapsulated the then-fledgling movement: Larry McCaffery's Storming the Reality Studio (1991).

Pronouncements as to cyberpunk's demise amidst cultural acceleration and economic commodification quickly followed its meteoric success. Yet, eulogies for cyberpunk may be premature. Like the avant-garde whose death, according to Paul Mann, need not be its "termination, but its most productive, voluble, self-conscious and lucrative stage," cyberpunk has continued to be both productive and voluble. Its post-Eighties authors - including Neal Stephenson, Melissa Scott, Laura J. Mixon, and, more recently, Richard K. Morgan, Lyda Morehouse, Jeff Noon, Justina Robson, and M. M. Buckner - have expanded the genre beyond its initial first-generation tropes while its motifs continue to find resonance in a variety of cultural contexts, notably in such media forms as movies and video games. However, a critical anthology that provides an academic overview of the more-recent manifestations of cyberpunk has been lacking.

Beyond the Reality Studio: Cyberpunk and the New Millennium seeks to redress this oversight by presenting a more expansive understanding of cyberpunk in its contemporary focus. The scope of the anthology is twofold. First, it will offer selected reprints of academic articles published post-Storming the Reality Studio that address the changes in cyberpunk scholarship in the last two decades. Second, contributions are being sought for new articles that provide post-millennial considerations of contemporary cyberpunk. Topics of investigation might include (but are not limited to): the current state of cyberpunk; American vs. British thematic tropes; representations in film; cyberpunk in gaming environments, including video and online; posthuman embodiment in post-millennial cyberpunk; cyberpunk and the graphic novel; new theoretical approaches to cyberpunk; and/or, race or queer studies of cyberpunk.

This volume seeks to highlight the mutation of cyberpunk by blending a sampling of recent academic scholarship with new critical approaches in an anthology that can be readily accessible to academics, scholars, teachers, and students alike. Finally, Beyond the Reality Studio has already generated significant interest from an academic publisher. One-page abstracts (Word, WordPerfect, or RTF) and brief bios are invited by April 15, 2006. Submissions and queries can be sent to Dr. Graham J. Murphy (GrahamMurphy AT trentu.ca) and/or Dr. Sherryl Vint (svint AT stfx.ca). Snail mail addresses will be provided upon request.

Now the question is, do I try and write something on Greg Egan or return to my old haunts and write more on William Gibson's Bridge trilogy?

Memoirs of a Hollywood Studio


Memoirs of a Geisha is visually stunning and captures the elegance and refinement that is Geisha, but in a rather hollow and Hollywood idea of what Japan once entailed. While I'm sure the outstanding cast lineup of Ziyi Zhang, Michelle Yeoh, Gong Li and Ken Watanabe all did exactly as the director--Rob Marshall who made 2002's Chicago--asked, I fear Marshall just didn't know what to make of the story or the elegance and politics is entailed (although, to be fair, I've not read the book, but I presume given its popularity that it can't be as reductive as the film). I actually expected the film to be in Japanese (or maybe Cantonese given that most of the cast are from China; a point of some controversy), but the English language was chosen and in many ways wipes the cultural specificities that are integral to such a story. Don't get me wrong, there are some absolutely sumptuous visuals and the cinematography was outstanding, but the story itself, which purports to show the possibilities for resistance and happiness for someone sold to a Geisha house, seem clich�-ridden and to have a message of empowerment more at home in the 1930s and than the 2000s (which could have been fine had the film felt like a period-piece, but its studio-production reduced any historical or cultural resonance to a cardboard-cutout minimum). David Stratton, I think, hit the nail on the head in his weekend review in The Australian:
Memoirs of a Geisha is a movie about Japan for people who don't like, or would never dream of going to see, Japanese movies.


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Done.

Saturday, January 21, 2006
I enroled as a doctoral canditate in February, 2001. I submitted my PhD thesis for examination yesterday at 5.06pm. I'm done. Wow. That took a while.

The thesis:
My PhD Thesis!

And the silly mug you get in exchange for 4 copies of your life's work:
Phinshed

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2006 Australian Blog Awards

Monday, January 16, 2006

I am delighted to find out that Ponderance has been nominated for two awards in the 2006 Australian Blog Awards in the categories of Best West Australian Blog and Best Australian Personal Blog. Also, the collaborative blog that my students and I maintained for the iGeneration course has been nominated for the Best Australian Collaborative Blog. Cool! The nominees across the board showcase much of the fine blogging (and vlogging and podcasting) talent in the Australian blogosphere and I'm flattered to be in their company.

The Ballot and voting procedure does involve a signup, but please do check out some of the best Aussie blogs and have yourself a vote! And congratulations to everyone else who was nominated. :)

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Lessig on Google Book Search

Wednesday, January 11, 2006
Professor "Free Culture", Lawrence Lessig always gives a powerful and straight-forward arguement when addressing the import legal questions surrounding digital culture. Lessig has been a champion of Google?s Print/Book Search as fair use, and has put together a wonderful (if rather large) quicktime movie (mp4) build using a recent presentation that asked the question: Is Google Book Search Fair Use?

Due to its size you can only download the presentation via bittorrent, but I strongly encourage you so; this is a concise argument about why Google Book Search matters and why it should be supported, not just for Google's sake, but for the sake of users across the board in our digital culture. Read more at Lessig's blog.

Oh, and Lessig is also using this presentation as an experiment in ways of putting presentations together ... I think it works admirably!

[Cross-posted from my eLearning blog.]

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New Job!

Monday, January 09, 2006
Just a quick note to say I've started my new job at the Centre for Advancement of Teaching and Learning at UWA where I'm now a full-time lecturer in higher education. During the week there will probably be a bit more posting over at Tama's eLearning Blog since that's part of my work, while Ponderance will take a little more of a back seat for a while.

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Harry Potter and the Goblet of Bad Direction

Wednesday, January 04, 2006
I've heard a lot about the ending of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and must say that it lived up to expectations of being horrific - Ralph Fiennes looks to be a very promising He Who Must Not Be Named (or, presumably, blogged) and the scene itself did a great job of finally introducing the major villain of the Potterverse. However, I must confess the film itself didn't live up to expectations. After Alfonso Cuar�n's outstanding job on the previous film, Mike "Four Weddings and a Funeral" Newell seemed an odd choice for Goblet and seemed to be completely overwhelmed by the size of the source material (the book, in all fairness, is rather large). However, the choices Newell made diminished the depth of almost every character and simply did away with some of the key sub-plots; I was really disappointed to have barely no Rita Skeeter, even though Miranda Richardson was excellent in her almost non-existent screen time. The story was rushed along, but without reading the books closely and recently, I suspect the characterisation would leave many people feeling like even Ron, Harry and Hermione were cardboard cutouts who only had personal depth due to the previous films. I was also annoyed that Hermione's feisty independence which had grown over the first three films is completely ignored in this one, while almost all the female characters were far more ineffective than in past films - even Cl�mence Po�sy's Fleur Delacour ends up being rather ineffective, despite being a TriWizard competitor.

The film did have some stunning visuals and the end left you hanging for the next films where the Dark Lord finally starts getting down to business, but I do hope a more creative and adventurous director comes on board for The Order of the Phoenix (200 pages of Harry's teen angst does not lead well to a direct book-as-script adaptation!).

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The Year In Review ... (Bye, Bye, 2005!)

Sunday, January 01, 2006
A few last thoughts on 2005 as I wave goodbye on what proved quite an up and down year, but one which, I hope should lead into a fantastic 2006! I enjoyed teaching throughout the year, especially teaching Communication Studies in Hong Kong which was also a great experience since I'd never been there before and thanks to some of my students I was even invited to participate in Hong Kong's 1st International Day Against Homophobia Parade. I also really enjoyed teaching my honours course iGeneration, which was almost an indulgence since I got to talk to great students about participatory culture for two hours a week! On a media front it was a great year for me (and for this blog!) as quotes from Ponderance and myself appeared in "IT Alive" section of The Australian, LA Times and Sunday Times's "STM" Magazine.

On the personal front the year ended sadly with my cousin's death. However, during the year I saw more of my extended family than I have for over a decade, which included a visit back to Dunedin for my Grandad's 80th birthday where I fell in love with my home town once more. While we were there, my little sister, Simone, and her partner, Paul, got engaged, hot on the heels of her finishing her PhD. The engagement party a few weeks ago was quite an event, too!

One of the best things about 2005, though, was the fact that I finally finished writing my PhD thesis after starting it in February 2001! We'll have to see how the markers like it when I get results later this year, but it's a great weight lifted from my shoulders finishing and, to be honest, I think it does some quite interesting work even if I do say so myself!

Films

Last year I managed a top ten list, but sadly 2005 has been very light on the film front, so I can't even really justify a top list, but a few films that enter my mind when thinking about the year...
[X] Films I Most Enjoyed in 2005: Batman Begins, Serenity, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory & Howl's Moving Castle
[X] Film I Was Most Surprised Was Good: Constantine
[X] Film That Most Annoyed Me: Doom (it has three minutes worth watching, and even that's only because it's close to a game-play POV which you can get by playing a game!).

Digital Cultural Events/Things

Last year I also managed a top ten digital culture thingies list. 2005 had a few highlights as well...

[X] Podcasting - 2005 was the year podcasting exploded. I've enjoyed listening to many and in my iGeneration course I even recorded one (and parts of others) as well as getting my students to create podcasts, which worked out fantastically with some great results. Vast improvements to anyone-can-do-it services like Odeo mean that podcasting is increasingly accessible for wired citizens. Of course, the "moment" was probably when iTunes 4.9 was released and with a one-click podcasting synchronisation service.
[X] The Mediascape & The London Bombings - While tragic, the UK's brush in July with terrorism and the rather British stiff upper which followed also saw a massive awareness and increase in citizen media with even the BBC running amateur cameraphone images in their main news services, while the blogosphere ran red-hot.
[X] Katrina: The Aftermath, The Politics & Citizen Media [I] [II] [III] [IV] [V] - the amazingly bad mismanagement of the aftermath of hurricane Katrina in the US kickstarts citizen media into an even louder role. One of the key examples followed Kayne West's controversial statement "George Bush doesn't care about black people," The Legendary K.O's mashup and remix is widely embraced, while Franklin Lopez's video remix completing the production of a powerful political music video.
[X] Wikipedia Comes of Age - The Wikipedia is now large enough to battle real controversy when it's contents aren't up to the job. While am important debate, the fact that it's happening at all speaks volumes about the success of the wiki form.
[X] Machinima - Machinima really exploded in 2005 (with a lot more to come in 2006, I suspect), with "The French Democracy" widely cited as an excellent example of both machinima and citizen media.
[X] Battle over Google Print (or Google Books) - Google's book search service and it's database is the most controversial Googleplex element this year, but one I'm 100% in favour of - the book search function is a fantastic for finding and checking quotes as an academic!
[X] Dean Gray Tuesday - The American Edit leads to a second Grey Tuesday, showing the power of citizen media and the ridiculously archaic mechanisms still being used by big music.
[X] Battlestar Galactica and Doctor Who - These two shows epitomise, for me at least, the rapid normalisation of the digital in everyday life. CGI Daleks and Cylons in franchises revived to either parallel the best of their earlier incarnations or, in many ways (and especially BSG) to surpass them with plots that are about digital life (are we responsible for the Cylons if they're our artificial progeny? can the Daleks be seen as unhappy lost soliders? can it be coincidence that both major villians in these shows embrace religion during a time of global wars on "terror" that look a lot like the old crusades?). These shows also made a strong case for getting shows released quickly in other countries since both are widely downloaded outside (and inside) the countries in which they were first screened.

While it looks like 2005 was dominated by citizen media, it had some powerful examples of participatory culture, but my prediction is that 2006 will be the year when citizen media really takes hold and becomes part of everyday life in a non-trivial, non-novel way. I hope to finally get around to doing a podcast series, but we'll have to see if time permits ...

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