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Require Presence in Virtual Classes, but Keep Cameras Optional

January 15, 2021 by Museum Fatigue

The question of presence in online classrooms is so interesting. Do we require students to have cameras on or off? How can one be virtually present online, when all they need to do in an actual classroom is show up and breathe—precisely what we want to avoid during a pandemic! Requiring cameras turned on in a virtual environment is an easy equivalent to just sitting in class, and does make students accountable for at least the minimal engagement of showing […]

Categories: Teaching • Tags: cameras, online teaching, surveillance

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The Convenience Store at the End of the World

October 24, 2018 by Museum Fatigue

If it is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism, then the post-apocalyptic grocery store is there to help imagine both. Catastrophically emptied of employees with shelves left stocked waiting to be raided by roving bands of survivors—it is common to the mise en scène of the end-of-the-world film genre as a sign of the collapse of the economic relations that define our current globalized-capitalist-market-economic system. Products in the store-at-the-end-of-the-world are left unguarded and free […]

Categories: Consumption, End of Times, Retail • Tags: consumption, post-apocalyptic, smart store, surveillance, the eerie

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Every Wall Has a Hole: Utopian Strategies, Everyday Tactics

October 24, 2018 by Museum Fatigue

Lately I’ve been reading a lot about the implementation of surveillance technology and “social credit” in China—variously described in the Western press as “dystopian,” the work of a “digital dictatorship,” “high tech authoritarianism,” or a “surveillance technostate,” Regardless of the terms used, the implication is that the system the Chinese government is building looks to be right out of the pages of a Western SF novel—1984, Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World, We—or the BBC television show Black Mirror. While traveling in China, being […]

Categories: Surveillance, Utopian Gestures, Utopias and Dystopias • Tags: distopia, making do, social credit, surveillance, tactics and strategies, Utopia

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“Sing Red to Fight Darkness”: Chinese Urban Development as Apocalypse

July 23, 2014 by Museum Fatigue

“Yes, people are constructed by their material world, but often they are not themselves the agents behind that material world through which they must live” (Miller 2009: 84). “The apocalyptic describes not just the spilling forth of the unseen, but also of the undifferentiated matter of the possible, of what could have been and was not, of what neither came to be nor what went away” (Williams 2011: 6). While in Dalian last month I found myself with a free […]

Categories: China, End of Times, Material Culture, Mythologies, Photo Essays, State of Emergency, Urban • Tags: apocalypse, Chinese Communist Party, corruption, 红色年代, Dalian, Daniel Miller, Evan Calder Williams, 钉子户, homes, Mao Zedong, nail houses, neighborhood, Omega Man, security, slogans, surveillance, tea, urban planning, 口号, 拆, 人情味

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Museum Fatigue Reads, April 12, 2014

April 12, 2014 by Museum Fatigue

香港將於33年後毀滅 Hong Kong will be destroyed after 33 years Tiananmen Conference 2014: Keeping the Memory Alive at Harvard Say Goodbye to ‘Peaceful Unification’           Medicinal Soft Drinks and Coca-Cola Fiends: The Toxic History of Soda Pop Jail House Recipes: Prison Cuizine Jennifer 8 Lee: The Hunt For General Tso   Ephemera: Ethics of the Brand Why We’re in a New Gilded Age                           Aral: Fishing […]

Categories: Food, Surveillance • Tags: Aral Sea, brands, Coca-Cola, Hong Kong, Peaceful Unification, recipies, Science Fiction, storytelling, surveillance, Taiwan, Tiananamen, Tiananmen Conference, Windows XP

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