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post industrial media,
                       web 2.0 and media
                           studies 2.0
                              aka alphabet soup in a post-literate age




                                        Strathvea December 2010
                                               Adrian Miles



Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     clear distinction between professional and non professional practice

                     capital expenses extremely high
                              • entry
                              • distribution
                              • hardware

                     access (to making and seeing) highly constrained




                                                                                         heritage
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     so premium placed on ‘professional’ values
                              • production
                              • performance
                              • technical

                     (though the majority of these all revolve around a pretty simple realism)




                                                                                          heritage
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     variety of what are recognised as industrial and capitalist models developed

                     complex relationships between audiences, advertising, and time — what we are
                     willing to pay for consumption where ‘blocks of time’ (or blocks of attention)
                     become the product

                     this would be one explanation for why linear (and serialised) forms dominate




                                                                                          heritage
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     distinction between professional and non professional no longer as distinct

                     capital expenses approach zero
                              • entry
                              • distribution
                              • hardware

                     access to the tools, resources and knowledge now distributed and open




                                                                      post industrial media
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     for some, premium placed on ‘professional’ values
                              • but these now located outside of the professional class

                     for others, it is about audience in terms of scale and reach
                              • YouTube stars out of their bedrooms, viral clips

                     (sometimes both align, eg “Old Spice”)

                     from the pov of heritage media it is
                              • first nothing (as not ‘professional’ or ‘institutional’ media)
                              • then possible audience
                              • beginning to be understood as community
                              • a risk and a threat




                                                                                    post industrial media
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     professional values (those attributes any professional class uses to define itself
                     and to which you must be acculturated to to be a member of that class) only
                     matter to that class

                     when only the professional class could ‘do’ the task this is easy and does not
                     need to be considered

                     when access is open the professional class, by insisting on its own (self granted)
                     privilege, risks decline

                     is also explanation for why professional elites get toey when either
                     ‘professional’ or ‘elite’ starts to soften




                                                                        post industrial media
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     not the same as social media but is the architecture that enables social media
                              • web is now a platform (we use it to do stuff on, not just publish to and read) -
                                and also heralds the decline of applications, and they provide rich experiences
                                (flickr)
                              • it harnesses the collective (the link, Google, amazon.com, wikipedia) and so users
                                add value - and must be trusted to do so
                              • data is what matters (actually allowing relations to be created within the data is
                                what matters) and it is public, and the long tail matters as it is narrow niches that
                                matter
                              • no more release cycles (shift from artefacts to services), it is continuous and
                                ongoing, things are always in beta, incremental change
                              • lightweight models (in programming terms near enough is good enough - RSS,
                                googlemaps), allows for remix, syndication, NOT coordination, intellectual
                                property regimes need to reflect this, don’t make monoliths but services that
                                cooperate
                              • software not about a single device (iTunes, an app, an appliance, retail, browser),
                                not about applications but ecologies and infrastructure




                                                                                                       web 2.0
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     authority is determined in situ and through practice and not institutional/
                     professional identity

                     leads to the development of what are known as ‘trust networks’

                     blogs remain an exemplar for web 2.0

                     many of the models of ‘industrial’ computing and software are gone or
                     disappearing




                                                                                           web 2.0
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     so what web 2.0 is doing to computers is similar to what is happening in media
                     industries and practice, which has been used to think about media studies and
                     so leads us to media studies 2.0




Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     media studies 1.0 (Gauntlett)
                              • emphasis on experts to read popular culture
                              • a traditional (top down) canon of works and key texts (cultural and academic)
                              • celebration of works which challenge
                              • students to be taught how to ‘read’ in an appropriate critical manner
                              • emphasis on traditional media forms (TV, radio, music, film, press)
                              • conventional research methods, audiences are ‘receivers’ makers are ‘producers’




                                                                                     media studies 2.0
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     media studies 2.0 (Gauntlett)
                              • everyday meanings produced by everyday users/readers with use of new
                                qualitative research methods
                              • canonical works complemented by DIY and long tail, independent projects
                              • western replaced by recognition of globalisation and cultural diversity/specificity
                              • internet not marginal but changed how we experience/use all media
                              • recognise students/audiences already highly capable readers and users, so
                                thinking about their use of media, rather than the media’s use of them
                              • new research methods that recognise individual’s creativity and shift ideas about
                                elite producers and mute audiences
                              • relation of media to audience and the autonomy/power of media as networks of
                                power over passive populations shifted.




                                                                                       media studies 2.0
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     pedagogy remains unquestioned in this

                     the intellectual shift reflects a disciplinary effort/reaction to the shift from a
                     broadcast to a networked model of making, distribution, and reception

                     it is not about the death of old media (though a decline)

                     the intellectual shift reflects the problematisation of the concept of ‘audience’
                     which has been fundamental to media studies’ self definition




                                                                               media studies 2.0
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     William Merrin:

                     Instead of massaging our media world to fit into our established frameworks
                     we need to reconsider the basic classification, content, categories and concepts
                     of broadcast-era media studies, dispensing with aspects that fetter our
                     understanding and radicalising our ideas and arguments to capture the
                     processes that actually form our present. The post-broadcast era gives us the
                     chance to rewrite these models and find entirely new frameworks of analysis;
                     to explore older, deeper, non-linear histories and to realise the inter-
                     disciplinary potential of media studies. The latter is media studies’ great
                     strength. Instead of the limited, conservative, controlled and patrolled zone
                     found in mainstream textbooks and approaches we need to synthesise a more
                     radical, exciting, innovative and forward-looking discipline.




                                                                           media studies 2.0
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     ... and William Merrin again...

                     But new media don’t just impact upon our discipline and knowledge they also
                     have the potential to transform how we teach and transmit it. Perhaps one of
                     the most important ways they can do this is by transforming academic
                     publishing and the dissemination of our ideas. Universities are products of
                     literate modernity, stamped with literate values and academics internalise
                     these, subscribing to a hierarchy of academic publishing that privileges books
                     and journals above other forms of expression. This academic publishing follows
                     a scarcity-led broadcast model in which a publisher broadcasts academic
                     output to a national or international audience, with limitations on the number
                     of titles each publisher can produce and the page count of each text together
                     with the need to make each book economically successful necessitating careful
                     editorial decisions and the employment of readers and referees to assess
                     submissions and monitor content. Academics may complain in private at this
                     model and its processes, but they depend upon it for publication.




                                                                          media studies 2.0
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au



                    students come thinking that what they need to learn are still heritage practices

                    (most of the rest of the university thinks about us like this too)

                    but if you don’t need to come to RMIT to:
                         • get access to a camera
                         • editing system/tools
                         • show your work
                         • or even possibly courseware/expertise

                    then why? And what is the pedagogy that would enable this?

                    how do we realise media studies 2.0 in form and not just content?




                                                                              coupla questions
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                     from Rhoten, et al

                     self directed, interest driven, peer based, practice focused, mastery orientated.
                              • affinity and utility
                              • professionals and amateurs
                              • content creation not content delivery
                              • distributed and integrated
                              • integration and linking of physical and virtual (blended)
                              • embedded and authentic assessment




                                                                     teaching in the 21st century
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                      from Rhoten, et al:

                     “mastery of subject matter and complex language through interaction and
                     application in a real‐world context;

                     processes of critical thinking and systems thinking, collective practice and
                     complex problem solving;

                     development of multistructural, relational, and extended abstract thinking;

                     abilities to communicate and collaborate, evaluate and generate knowledge and
                     artifacts;

                     information, visual, and computational literacies (e.g., Photoshop is a virtual
                     tutorial on the human visual system, and in combination with design work
                     involves high‐level literacies and technical skills); and,

                     intellectual entrepreneurialism to design and engineer, transfer and execute
                     learning on‐demand and over a lifecourse, and;

                     dispositions and identities to engage with a broader public and to contribute to
                     the public good within community.”
                                                               learning outcomes for 21st
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




              Gauntlett, David, ‘Media Studies 2.0 – Article on Future of Media Studies by David Gauntlett at Theory.org.uk’,
              Theory.org.uk: Media/Identity/Resources and Projects, 2007 <http://www.theory.org.uk/mediastudies2.htm>.

              Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0 Forum: Media Studies 2.0 - My Thoughts...’, Media Studies 2.0 Forum, 2008
              <http://twopointzeroforum.blogspot.com/2008/01/media-studies-20-my-thoughts.html> .

              Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0: Digital Media News: April 2009’, Media Studies 2.0, 2009 <http://
              mediastudies2point0.blogspot.com/2009/05/digital-media-news-april-2009.html> .

              Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0: Studying Me-Dia: The Problem of Method in a Post-Broadcast Age’, Media
              Studies 2.0, 2010 <http://mediastudies2point0.blogspot.com/2010/03/studying-me-dia-problem-of-method-
              in.html>.

              Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0: UNDERSTANDING ME-DIA: THE SECOND REFORMATION’, Media
              Studies 2.0, 2010 <http://mediastudies2point0.blogspot.com/2010/03/understanding-me-dia-second-
              reformation.html>.

              O'Reilly, Tim, ‘What Is Web 2.0 - O'Reilly Media’, O'Reilly, 2005 <http://oreilly.com/web2/archive/what-is-
              web-20.html>.

              Rhoten, Diana, Laurie Racine, and Phoenix Wang, Designing for Learning in the 21st Century - Working Paper -
              Draft (Startl, 2010) <http://startl.org/about/the-future-of-learning/>.




                                                                                                         references
Wednesday, 15 December 2010
adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au




                              http://vogmae.net.au/




Wednesday, 15 December 2010

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Post Industrial Media 2.0

  • 1. post industrial media, web 2.0 and media studies 2.0 aka alphabet soup in a post-literate age Strathvea December 2010 Adrian Miles Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 2. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au clear distinction between professional and non professional practice capital expenses extremely high • entry • distribution • hardware access (to making and seeing) highly constrained heritage Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 3. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au so premium placed on ‘professional’ values • production • performance • technical (though the majority of these all revolve around a pretty simple realism) heritage Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 4. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au variety of what are recognised as industrial and capitalist models developed complex relationships between audiences, advertising, and time — what we are willing to pay for consumption where ‘blocks of time’ (or blocks of attention) become the product this would be one explanation for why linear (and serialised) forms dominate heritage Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 5. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au distinction between professional and non professional no longer as distinct capital expenses approach zero • entry • distribution • hardware access to the tools, resources and knowledge now distributed and open post industrial media Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 6. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au for some, premium placed on ‘professional’ values • but these now located outside of the professional class for others, it is about audience in terms of scale and reach • YouTube stars out of their bedrooms, viral clips (sometimes both align, eg “Old Spice”) from the pov of heritage media it is • first nothing (as not ‘professional’ or ‘institutional’ media) • then possible audience • beginning to be understood as community • a risk and a threat post industrial media Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 7. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au professional values (those attributes any professional class uses to define itself and to which you must be acculturated to to be a member of that class) only matter to that class when only the professional class could ‘do’ the task this is easy and does not need to be considered when access is open the professional class, by insisting on its own (self granted) privilege, risks decline is also explanation for why professional elites get toey when either ‘professional’ or ‘elite’ starts to soften post industrial media Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 8. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au not the same as social media but is the architecture that enables social media • web is now a platform (we use it to do stuff on, not just publish to and read) - and also heralds the decline of applications, and they provide rich experiences (flickr) • it harnesses the collective (the link, Google, amazon.com, wikipedia) and so users add value - and must be trusted to do so • data is what matters (actually allowing relations to be created within the data is what matters) and it is public, and the long tail matters as it is narrow niches that matter • no more release cycles (shift from artefacts to services), it is continuous and ongoing, things are always in beta, incremental change • lightweight models (in programming terms near enough is good enough - RSS, googlemaps), allows for remix, syndication, NOT coordination, intellectual property regimes need to reflect this, don’t make monoliths but services that cooperate • software not about a single device (iTunes, an app, an appliance, retail, browser), not about applications but ecologies and infrastructure web 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 9. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au authority is determined in situ and through practice and not institutional/ professional identity leads to the development of what are known as ‘trust networks’ blogs remain an exemplar for web 2.0 many of the models of ‘industrial’ computing and software are gone or disappearing web 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 10. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au so what web 2.0 is doing to computers is similar to what is happening in media industries and practice, which has been used to think about media studies and so leads us to media studies 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 11. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au media studies 1.0 (Gauntlett) • emphasis on experts to read popular culture • a traditional (top down) canon of works and key texts (cultural and academic) • celebration of works which challenge • students to be taught how to ‘read’ in an appropriate critical manner • emphasis on traditional media forms (TV, radio, music, film, press) • conventional research methods, audiences are ‘receivers’ makers are ‘producers’ media studies 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 12. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au media studies 2.0 (Gauntlett) • everyday meanings produced by everyday users/readers with use of new qualitative research methods • canonical works complemented by DIY and long tail, independent projects • western replaced by recognition of globalisation and cultural diversity/specificity • internet not marginal but changed how we experience/use all media • recognise students/audiences already highly capable readers and users, so thinking about their use of media, rather than the media’s use of them • new research methods that recognise individual’s creativity and shift ideas about elite producers and mute audiences • relation of media to audience and the autonomy/power of media as networks of power over passive populations shifted. media studies 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 13. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au pedagogy remains unquestioned in this the intellectual shift reflects a disciplinary effort/reaction to the shift from a broadcast to a networked model of making, distribution, and reception it is not about the death of old media (though a decline) the intellectual shift reflects the problematisation of the concept of ‘audience’ which has been fundamental to media studies’ self definition media studies 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 14. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au William Merrin: Instead of massaging our media world to fit into our established frameworks we need to reconsider the basic classification, content, categories and concepts of broadcast-era media studies, dispensing with aspects that fetter our understanding and radicalising our ideas and arguments to capture the processes that actually form our present. The post-broadcast era gives us the chance to rewrite these models and find entirely new frameworks of analysis; to explore older, deeper, non-linear histories and to realise the inter- disciplinary potential of media studies. The latter is media studies’ great strength. Instead of the limited, conservative, controlled and patrolled zone found in mainstream textbooks and approaches we need to synthesise a more radical, exciting, innovative and forward-looking discipline. media studies 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 15. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au ... and William Merrin again... But new media don’t just impact upon our discipline and knowledge they also have the potential to transform how we teach and transmit it. Perhaps one of the most important ways they can do this is by transforming academic publishing and the dissemination of our ideas. Universities are products of literate modernity, stamped with literate values and academics internalise these, subscribing to a hierarchy of academic publishing that privileges books and journals above other forms of expression. This academic publishing follows a scarcity-led broadcast model in which a publisher broadcasts academic output to a national or international audience, with limitations on the number of titles each publisher can produce and the page count of each text together with the need to make each book economically successful necessitating careful editorial decisions and the employment of readers and referees to assess submissions and monitor content. Academics may complain in private at this model and its processes, but they depend upon it for publication. media studies 2.0 Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 16. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au students come thinking that what they need to learn are still heritage practices (most of the rest of the university thinks about us like this too) but if you don’t need to come to RMIT to: • get access to a camera • editing system/tools • show your work • or even possibly courseware/expertise then why? And what is the pedagogy that would enable this? how do we realise media studies 2.0 in form and not just content? coupla questions Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 17. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au from Rhoten, et al self directed, interest driven, peer based, practice focused, mastery orientated. • affinity and utility • professionals and amateurs • content creation not content delivery • distributed and integrated • integration and linking of physical and virtual (blended) • embedded and authentic assessment teaching in the 21st century Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 18. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au from Rhoten, et al: “mastery of subject matter and complex language through interaction and application in a real‐world context; processes of critical thinking and systems thinking, collective practice and complex problem solving; development of multistructural, relational, and extended abstract thinking; abilities to communicate and collaborate, evaluate and generate knowledge and artifacts; information, visual, and computational literacies (e.g., Photoshop is a virtual tutorial on the human visual system, and in combination with design work involves high‐level literacies and technical skills); and, intellectual entrepreneurialism to design and engineer, transfer and execute learning on‐demand and over a lifecourse, and; dispositions and identities to engage with a broader public and to contribute to the public good within community.” learning outcomes for 21st Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 19. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au Gauntlett, David, ‘Media Studies 2.0 – Article on Future of Media Studies by David Gauntlett at Theory.org.uk’, Theory.org.uk: Media/Identity/Resources and Projects, 2007 <http://www.theory.org.uk/mediastudies2.htm>. Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0 Forum: Media Studies 2.0 - My Thoughts...’, Media Studies 2.0 Forum, 2008 <http://twopointzeroforum.blogspot.com/2008/01/media-studies-20-my-thoughts.html> . Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0: Digital Media News: April 2009’, Media Studies 2.0, 2009 <http:// mediastudies2point0.blogspot.com/2009/05/digital-media-news-april-2009.html> . Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0: Studying Me-Dia: The Problem of Method in a Post-Broadcast Age’, Media Studies 2.0, 2010 <http://mediastudies2point0.blogspot.com/2010/03/studying-me-dia-problem-of-method- in.html>. Merrin, William, ‘Media Studies 2.0: UNDERSTANDING ME-DIA: THE SECOND REFORMATION’, Media Studies 2.0, 2010 <http://mediastudies2point0.blogspot.com/2010/03/understanding-me-dia-second- reformation.html>. O'Reilly, Tim, ‘What Is Web 2.0 - O'Reilly Media’, O'Reilly, 2005 <http://oreilly.com/web2/archive/what-is- web-20.html>. Rhoten, Diana, Laurie Racine, and Phoenix Wang, Designing for Learning in the 21st Century - Working Paper - Draft (Startl, 2010) <http://startl.org/about/the-future-of-learning/>. references Wednesday, 15 December 2010
  • 20. adrian.miles@rmit.edu.au http://vogmae.net.au/ Wednesday, 15 December 2010