a public lecture by charles l. briggs

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EO/AA/ADA instuon commied to cultural diversity. Accommodaons for people with disabilies will be provided if requested in advance by contacng [email protected] or calling 541-346-1505. Thursday May 17, 2018 –1:30-2:45 pm Condon Hall 204, 1321 Kincaid St. Charles L. Briggs is the Alan Dundes Distinguished Professor of Folklore in the Department of Anthropology of the University of California, Berkeley, where he also co-directs the Medical Anthropology Program and the Berkeley Center for Social Medicine. His books include The Wood Carvers of Córdova, New Mexico; Learning How to Ask; Voices of Modernity (with Richard Bauman); Competence in Performance; Stories in the Time of Cholera (with Clara Mantini-Briggs); Making Health Public (with Daniel Hallin); and Tell Me Why My Children Died (with Clara Mantini-Briggs). This lecture points beyond discussions of how folklore is disseminated in "the media"— including social media—by drawing attention to what can be learned from research on "mediatization," particularly as emerging in Latin America and Europe. Rather than projecting folklore and "the media" as distinct Bourdieuian social fields, it suggests that we attend to heterogeneous and shifting relationships between folklorization and mediatization by looking analytically and ethnographically at parallels between critical efforts in both arenas to rethink fundamental disciplinary objects and replace a focus on products in favor of processes. Moving beyond "the Media": Critical Intersections between Folklorization and Mediatization Interseconsby XoMEoX A Public Lecture by Charles L. Briggs University of California, Berkeley Sponsored by: Folklore, Anthropology, School of Journalism and Communicaon, Oregon Humanies Center and Linguiscs

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Page 1: A Public Lecture by Charles L. Briggs

EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity. Accommodations for people with disabilities will be provided if requested in advance by contacting [email protected] or calling 541-346-1505.

Thursday

May 17, 2018 –1:30-2:45 pm

Condon Hall 204, 1321 Kincaid St.

Charles L. Briggs is the Alan Dundes Distinguished Professor of Folklore in the Department of Anthropology of the University of California, Berkeley, where he also co-directs the Medical Anthropology Program and the Berkeley Center for Social Medicine. His books include The Wood Carvers of Córdova, New Mexico; Learning How to Ask; Voices of Modernity (with Richard Bauman); Competence in Performance; Stories in the Time of Cholera (with Clara Mantini-Briggs); Making Health Public (with Daniel Hallin); and Tell Me Why My Children Died (with Clara Mantini-Briggs).

This lecture points beyond discussions of how folklore is disseminated in "the media"—including social media—by drawing attention to what can be learned from research on "mediatization," particularly as emerging in Latin America and Europe. Rather than projecting folklore and "the media" as distinct Bourdieuian social fields, it suggests that we attend to heterogeneous and shifting relationships between folklorization and mediatization by looking analytically and ethnographically at parallels between critical efforts in both arenas to rethink fundamental disciplinary objects and replace a focus on products in favor of processes.

Moving beyond "the Media": Critical

Intersections between Folklorization

and Mediatization

“Intersections” by XoMEoX

A Public Lecture by

Charles L. Briggs

University of California, Berkeley

Sponsored by: Folklore, Anthropology, School of

Journalism and Communication, Oregon

Humanities Center and Linguistics