News : Faculty : Courses : Labs and Classrooms : DMOC : A:D:A:P:T
Christopher Coleman (Christopher.Coleman@du.edu) is an Assistant Professor in the DMS department. His research Interests include control systems, chaos and order, digital interaction, physical interaction, borders, animation, appropriation, technological decay, art as activism, audio/video manipulation, systems in nature, and object creation.
Bill Depper (wdepper@du.edu) is an assistant professor within the Digital Media Studies program. His primary teaching areas include web development, interactive media and 3d modeling and animation. Bill's creative work explores text/image relationships found within digital media. These explorations are expressed through interactive works, experimental video pieces and computer-based animation. He has a M.A. in Digital Media Studies at DU as well as a M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Iowa and a B.A. in English from the University of Denver.
Rafael Fajardo (rfajardo@du.edu) Through his artistic and intellectual work, Rafael Fajardo investigates cultural identity and cultural representation--specifically the Latin American voice and influence along the north-south vectors of diffusion. His early work has been featured in the American Center for Design's 100 Show. He recently premiered two video-games that simulate illegal border crossing on the Rio Grande, one from the point of view of the crossers, and the other from the
point of view of the border patrol agents. Professor Fajardo's students have garnered recognition from Millia, the international competition for new media held annually in Cannes; Walt Disney Imagineering, the group responsible for all of Disney's theme parks and attractions; and, Mexicarte, a nationally recognized cultural space in Austin. His educational background includes two undergraduate degrees from The University of Texas at Austin, and an MFA in design from the Rhode Island School of Design.
W. Scott Howard (showard@du.edu), Associate Professor, Department of English, received his Ph.D. in English and Critical Theory from The University of Washington. His digital publications, interviews, and course syllabi may be found here. Scott's essays in Anglo-American poetics and cultural theory have recently appeared in: Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture; Studying Cultural Landscapes (Arnold, Inc. & Oxford); Grief and Gender: 700-1700 (Palgrave); and The World in Time and Space (Talisman House). Some of his interests for teaching and research include: Shakespeare and film; landscape, media and cultural memory; digital archives, modernity (early- thru post-) and authorship.
Jim LaVita (lavita@du.edu) is currently Professor of Social Sciences in the Division of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Denver, where he had formerly been Professor of Computer Science and before that Professor of Mathematics. He holds two doctorates, in applied mathematics (New York University, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences) and in anthropology ( University of Texas, Austin) as well as an M.A. in Folklore ( University of California, Berkeley). He was chairman of the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science nine years. His scholarly interests are in: technology, computing and culture; dance ethnology and dance history; folklore; performance, aesthetics and expressive culture. Prof. LaVita spent six summers in Norway and Sweden studying traditional couple dancing, and was the recipient of a Norwegian Marshall Fund Grant to study there. He has been a research associate in the Department of Scandinavian Studies and the Department of Mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley and also a visiting scholar at the University of Texas, Austin. He has studied, taught, lectured and written about traditional dance, its social settings, and its improvisatory techniques. He is currently artistic co-director of 3rd Law Dance/Theater, a modern dance/theater company which creates a unique and exciting brand of performance: dramatic soundscapes, moving imagery, thoughtful and engaging narration, vivid and imaginative costuming and lighting.
Carl Raschke (crashke@du.edu), Ph.D. Harvard University, has wide-ranging interests and engagements. He is the author of numerous books and hundreds of articles on topics ranging from postmodernism to popular religion and culture to technology and society. His best-known work, Painted Black (Harper Collins, 1991), surveys the relationship between certain religious cults and violence in contemporary society. His book, The Interruption of Eternity (Nelson-Hall, 1980) is regarded as a standard reference work on the origins of the New Age movement. His most recent books include Fire and Roses: Postmodernity and the Thought of the Body (State University of New York, 1995) and The Engendering God (Westminster, 1995), which deals with feminist strains in early Christianity. Dr. Raschke is also past-president and former executive director of the American Association for the Advancement of Core Across the Curriculum and past-Director of the University of Denver's Humanities Institute; he has also served on national committees of the America Academy of Religion. He is co-founder and senior editor of The Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory and has been involved heavily in recent years in the development of national online learning initiatives, including The Syllabus Institute.
Trace Reddell (treddell@du.edu)
is a digital media artist and theorist exploring the interactions of multimedia production, networking technologies, media theory, literary criticism, space rock and ambient music, and the history of drug cultures. His live cinema work with Timothy Weaver, “microMacroCosm,” debuted at the University Theater, Amsterdam, in June 2006. Trace also performed new solo work at Melkweg, as part of Upgrade! Amsterdam. His vlog, “It’s a Psych-Out!,” launched in December 2005 to explore the personal media dimensions of expanded cinema. His net.art and audio works may be found at Electronic Book Review, Stasis_Space, djrabbi.com, on several microsound.org compilations, and The Communications of Tomorrow label. His score to Philip K. Dick's last novel, Radio Free Albemuth , is out on the Sine Fiction label. Trace contributed the sound track to the multimedia remix of Guy Debord’s “Society of the Spectacle,” a collaboration with Mark Amerika and Rick Silva. Since debuting at the Paris Bienniale in February 2004, “SOS” has screened ot over 30 international venues including galleries and new media festivals in New York, London, Glasgow, Berlin, Zurich, Seoul, Hong Kong, and Tehran. Recent publications include articles in Leonardo Electronic Almanac and the Contemporary Music Review. Trace’s chapter, “The Social Pulse of Telharmonics: Functions of Networked Sound and Interactive Webcasting,” is included in Cybersounds: Essays on Virtual Music Culture (Peter Lang Publishing, 2006). Trace is Assistant Professor of Digital Media Studies at the University of Denver, and the graduate director of the M.A. in Digital Media Studies. He edits the music/sound/noise thread at Electronic Book Review and is the producer of Alt-X Audio. More
may be found at Trace's web site. [+]
Adrienne Russell (Adrienne.Russell@du.edu) is an Assistant Professor in the DMS department. Her research interests center on emerging media tools and practices and how they impact contemporary communication culture. Before joining the DMS faculty, she held a two-year fellowship at the University of Southern California's Annenberg Center, where she collaboratively wrote and edited a book on networked publics to be published by MIT Press in 2008 and where she helped organize the first
annual 24/7: DIY Video Summit to be held at USC in February 2008. Adrienne is currently working on a book on journalism called "Networked," which explores contemporary newsroom cultures and the evolving relationship between the news and the public. A chapter on the 2005 civil unrest in France appeared in the October issue of
Critical Studies in Media Communication. Adrienne also co-edited "International Blogging," a volume of case studies on the way national and local contexts influence blogging around the world. The book will be published in 2008 by Peter Lang as part of Steve Jones's Digital
Formations series. Adrienne holds a BA in Cultural Studies from University of California Santa Cruz, an MS in Media Studies from Stanford University, and a Ph.D. in Communication from Indiana University. More on her current
projects and interests can be found at her website
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Timothy Weaver (tweaver2@du.edu) is an Assistant Professor of e-MAD and Digital Media Studies and a new media artist whose concerted objective has been to contribute to the broadening of creative inquiry at the art | technology interface. Timothy's recent onsite and online new media projects have been featured at the International Festival of Electronic Language (Sao Paulo, Brazil), the European Media Arts Festival, the Darklight Digital Film and New Media Festival (Dublin, Ireland), d>art 00 (Sydney, Australia), Museum of Modern Art in Cuenca, Ecuador and nationally at Boston CyberArts/MIT, SIGGRAPH, the New York Digital Salon and the National Institutes of Health. Additionally, Weaver has conducted visiting artist projects at the University of Gävle, Creative Media Lab/Creative Programming in Gävle, Sweden and with KTH/Swedish Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm. His course areas include interactive art and design, net art and design, and introductory visual meaning. Timothy received an MFA in Sculpture from University of Colorado at Boulder in 1993, an MS in Environmental Engineering and a BS in Microbiology from Purdue University. Timothy's research interests range from new forms of interactivity and narrativity, biologically inspired computing, shared interactive 3D space, network driven installation to multimedia therapies. Projects and more information are linked on his web site. [+]
