<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<issues>
	<issue issue_id="6">
		<title>Difference</title>
		<url>http://vectors.usc.edu/issues</url>
		<season>Fall</season>
		<year>2007</year>
		<volume>Volume 3</volume>
		<issue_num>1</issue_num>
		<meta>
			<introduction intro_author_1="57" intro_author_1_fullname="Tara McPherson" intro_author_1_place="" intro_author_2="0" intro_author_2_fullname="" intro_author_2_place=""><![CDATA[<i>This issue is dedicated to the memory of Roy Rosenzweig, a true pioneer of the digital humanities.</i><br /><br />Over the last several years, I have simultaneously been doing two very different kinds of writing about new technology, one examining race and digital media, often in relation to representation and identity, and one engaging the formal and phenomenological structures of new media.  I am continually amazed by how easy it is to hold these two types of work apart and have come to believe that <i>the very forms</i> of electronic culture encourage just such a partitioning or modularity, making it hard to sustain connections across fields of knowledge.  In our engagement with digital media, we tend to focus at one level or on isolated examples, unable to move between modules or across scales.<br /><br />Many writing on new technology in the mid 1990s commented on the parallels between the ways of knowing modeled in computer culture and in theories of poststructuralism.  Meanwhile, critical race and postcolonial scholars have highlighted how certain tendencies within poststructuralist theory simultaneously respond to and marginalize blackness. This maneuver may at least partially be possible because of a parallel and increasing dispersion of electronic forms across culture, forms which simultaneously enact and shape these new modes of thinking.  Certain modes of racial visibility and knowing coincide or dovetail with specific technologies of vision: if the electronic underwrites today's key modes of vision and is a central technology in post-World War II America, these technologized ways of seeing and knowing took shape in a world also struggling with shifting knowledges and representations of race.  <br /><br />In trying to understand how difference matters in the digital era, we should perhaps suspect that the very structures of our information economy (and of the code that underwrites it) look a particular way today precisely because the Civil Rights and other freedom movements happened at mid-century.  Both cybernetics and Civil Rights were born in quite real ways of World War II and are caught in tight feedback loops. Certain aspects of modularity, fragmentation, and dispersion that are endemic to digital media also structure the more covert forms of racism and racial representation that categorize post-Civil Rights discourse.  I am not so much arguing that one mode is causally related to the other, but, rather, that they both represent a move toward fragmentary or modular ways of knowing and of organizing information, knowledges increasingly prevalent in the later half of the 20th century.  From Charles Babbage's 19th century "Difference Engine" to Derrida's 1980s neographism "Diff&eacute;rance," the notion of difference has served as a provocative metaphor for thinking about language, culture, politics, technology and identity, while it has simultaneously fueled our thinking about both race and identity. <br /><br />This issue of <i>Vectors</i> stages multiple examinations of the notion of difference as it plays out in a variety of spheres, discourses and practices, while also privileging race and ethnicity as a central throughline of digital culture, a recurring ghost in our networked machines.  Wendy Chun's "Programmed Visions" queries the work of the archive in the 20th century, investigating in particular our continued cultural beliefs that race is somehow knowable and mappable.  In creating a kind of anti-archive, this project hints at the many ways in which race and (genetic) code mutually construct each other.  In "Nation on the Move," Minoo Moallem deploys the Persian carpet as a powerful analytic for the varied ways that nations travel and differences are consumed.  The project toggles across scales, moving fluidly between theoretical paradigm and lived reality and resisting the temptation to fix the meaning of the carpets in only one register or place.  Jennifer Terry's "Killer Entertainments" seeks to contextualize a diverse collection of video footage related to the Iraq War, drawing out threads of connected meaning between what might seem to be diverse clips.  She asks probing questions about each video, designed to focus our attention on the larger political and social webs of meaning that engender each excerpt's production and circulation.  <br /><br />Projects by David Goldberg and Christian Sandvig also tease out the oft-repressed connections that structure diverse aspects of daily life, in times of both crisis and normalcy.  "Blue Velvet's" evocative explorations of the cityscapes of New Orleans both pre- and post-Katrina help us to understand that the seeds of the devastation wrought by Katrina were sown years before the storm touched ground.  In mining the subterranean layers of the city's history -- from historic redlining to the budget cuts of the neoliberal era -- the project powerfully connects the dots between culture, politics, economics, and ideology.  In "The RED Project," Sandvig and his team extend our conceptions of redlining from real estate or insurance policies to the invisible Wi-Fi networks that enable so much of our privileged connectivity in the present.  They have created a prediction machine that refuses the purely indexical and quantitative dreams of so much of technology, instead pushing us to question what operations of power such mimetic fantasies paper over or conceal.<br /><br />Mark Kann likewise questions a certain faith in predictability or rationality.  In "Deliberative Democracy and Difference," he argues that theories of deliberative democracy must suppress certain variables or predispositions in order to model a world of rational discourse and democracy and instead offers a simulated glimpse into how such theories are likely to fall short.  The final project of this issue, "ThoughtMesh," continues our goal of including in each issue lively "tools to think with," projects that serves as springboards to collaboration or interaction rather than as mostly "finished" pieces.  As with "The RED Project," the team behind ThoughtMesh invites you to push beyond the surface of your screen and the modular nature of much of digital culture toward larger enmeshed meanings.]]></introduction>
			<acknowledgements><![CDATA[The <i>Vectors</i> site represents a long, continuing collaboration among many people and institutions.  The site design was orchestrated by our Creative Directors, Raegan Kelly and Erik Loyer, with input from the editors.  The site was built by Erik, Raegan and Craig Dietrich with assistance from Chris Wittenberg, Chris Hanson, Kevin Tanaka, Steve Fong, and expert "behind the scenes" support from Willy Paredes (IML Systems Administrator). Additional syndication oversight provided by Greg Smith.<br /><br />Ongoing support has been provided by USC's Institute for Multimedia Literacy and, originally, by the Annenberg Center for Communication, and we would particularly like to thank Elizabeth Daley, Anne Balsamo, Stephanie Barish, Mark Kann, and Bruce Zuckerman, and the staffs at IML and ACC, especially Vanessa Lee, Shahril Ibrahim, Roberto Gomez, Stacy Patterson, Shelley Cooke, Dave Lopez, Elizabeth Harmon, John Zollinger, Josie Acosta, Rich Edwards, and Steve Adcook.  <br /><br />Various other colleagues have also offered valuable advice and support, including Scott Fisher, Marsha Kinder and the Labyrinth team, John Seely Brown, Joe Hellige, Cathy Davidson, Jeffrey Schnapp, Kathy Woodward, and David Theo Goldberg, as well as members of our Editorial Board and attendees at an early brainstorming session for the journal in summer, 2003.  Alex Ceglia and the Stamen team came aboard in the final push to launch in 2005.  We're thankful for their vision and hard work.<br /><br /><i>Vectors</i> is especially grateful for the ongoing support of <a href="http://www.hastac.org" target="_blank"> HASTAC</a> and the recent support of  <a href="http://www.digitalpromise.org" target="_blank"> Digital Promise</a>.]]></acknowledgements>
			<issue_credits><![CDATA[<p>The <i>Vectors</i> site represents a long, continuing collaboration among many people and institutions.  The site design was orchestrated by our Creative Directors, Raegan Kelly and Erik Loyer, with input from the editors.  The site was built by Erik, Raegan and Craig Dietrich with assistance from Chris Wittenberg, Chris Hanson, Kevin Tanaka, Steve Fong, and expert "behind the scenes" support from Willy Paredes (IML Systems Administrator). Additional syndication oversight provided by Greg Smith.<br /><br />Ongoing support has been provided by USC's Institute for Multimedia Literacy and, originally, by the Annenberg Center for Communication, and we would particularly like to thank Elizabeth Daley, Anne Balsamo, Stephanie Barish, Mark Kann, and Bruce Zuckerman, and the staffs at IML and ACC, especially Vanessa Lee, Shahril Ibrahim, Roberto Gomez, Stacy Patterson, Shelley Cooke, Dave Lopez, Elizabeth Harmon, John Zollinger, Josie Acosta, Rich Edwards, and Steve Adcook. <br /><br />Various other colleagues have also offered valuable advice and support, including Scott Fisher, Marsha Kinder and the Labyrinth team, John Seely Brown, Joe Hellige, Cathy Davidson, Jeffrey Schnapp, Kathy Woodward, and David Theo Goldberg, as well as members of our Editorial Board and attendees at an early brainstorming session for the journal in summer, 2003.  Alex Ceglia and the Stamen team came aboard in the final push to launch in 2005.  We're thankful for their vision and hard work.<br /><br /><i>Vectors</i> is especially grateful for the ongoing support of <a href="http://www.hastac.org" target="_blank"> HASTAC</a> and the recent support of  <a href="http://www.digitalpromise.org" target="_blank"> Digital Promise</a>.]]></issue_credits>
			<title_graphic_path>common/images/difference_logo.jpg</title_graphic_path>
			<introtopofissuetext>80</introtopofissuetext>
			<introtopofprojectlist>192</introtopofprojectlist>
			<intro_author_1_place></intro_author_1_place>
			<intro_author_2_place></intro_author_2_place>
		</meta>
		<announcements>
			<announcement ann_id="39" datetime="2008-05-30 10:45:06" title="ThoughtMesh featured in The Chronicle of Higher Education" date_formatted="5/30/08"><![CDATA[An article in the March 30th Chronicle of Higher Education featured three projects developed at The University of Maine's New Media Department including ThoughtMesh, created with <i>Vectors</i>. Andrea Foster writes, "ThoughtMesh is a Web site that tags open-access scholarly papers with key words. Visitors can jump to passages in papers that contain those words. And they can see others' papers, throughout academe, tagged with the same words. A "cloud" of tagged words hovers above each paper."]]></announcement>
			<announcement ann_id="38" datetime="2008-04-07 09:38:02" title="Blue Velvet to be exhibited at Electronic Literature Organization conference" date_formatted="4/07/08"><![CDATA["Blue Velvet," by David Theo Goldberg, Stefka Hristova, and Erik Loyer, will be featured in the Media Art Show at this year's Electronic Literature Organization conference in Vancouver, Washington. Featured in the Difference issue of <i>Vectors,</i> "Blue Velvet" enables users to submerge themselves in a poetic wordscape describing the contours of American racial politics post-Katrina.]]></announcement>
			<announcement ann_id="37" datetime="2008-01-30 08:43:38" title="Vectors' Fellow Kim Christen featured on BBC's Digital Planet" date_formatted="1/30/08"><![CDATA[<i>Vectors'</i> fellow Kim Christen was recently interviewed on the BBC's <i>Digital Planet</i> about her continued work developing innovative archives with indigenous peoples.  <br /><br />Kim's <i>Vectors'</i> project, "Digital Dynamics Across Cultures" (in the Ephemera issue), was an early effort in this regard.  She has gone on to receive numerous grants and to continue to work with <i>Vectors'</i> team member, Craig Deitrich.]]></announcement>
			<announcement ann_id="36" datetime="2008-01-30 08:37:48" title="Public Secrets selected for transmediale 08" date_formatted="1/30/08"><![CDATA[Public Secrets, by Sharon Daniels and Erik Loyer, has been named an official selection at transmediale 08 in Berlin.  The piece, included in the <i>Vectors'</i> Perception issue, explores issues of women's incarceration.  <br /><br />As a festival for art and digital culture, transmediale presents advanced artistic positions reflecting on the socio-cultural impact of new technologies. It seeks out artistic practices that not only respond to scientific or technical developments, but that try to shape the way in which we think about and experience these technologies. transmediale understands media technologies as cultural techniques which need to be embraced in order to comprehend, critique, and shape our contemporary society.]]></announcement>
			<announcement ann_id="35" datetime="2007-04-10 13:03:43" title="Public Secrets Wins Webby Honoree Award" date_formatted="4/10/07"><![CDATA[<a href="http://www.webbyawards.com/webbys/current_honorees.php?season=11" target="_new"><img src="images/webbyAwardNormalSize.jpg" style="margin: 5px 12px 5px 0px;" align="left" alt="" /></a>Congratulations to Vectors Fellow Sharon Daniel and Co-Creative Director, Erik Loyer!<br /><br />Vectors has received a Webby Honoree Award in the Activism category for their piece, <a href="http://vectors.usc.edu/index.php?page=7&projectId=57">"Public Secrets".</a>  The piece, a sophisticated and powerful exploration of the incarceration of women in California, is part of the latest issue of Vectors on the theme of "Perception" and was created as part of the Vectors Fellowship Competition. <br /><br />The Official Honoree distinction is awarded to work that scores in the top 15% of all work entered into the Webby Awards.  With over 8,000 entries received from all 50 states and over 60 countries, this is an outstanding accomplishment for Sharon and Erik.]]></announcement>
		</announcements>
		<project_updates>
			<update project_id="84" datetime="2008-06-11 18:29:37" title="ThoughtMesh now includes 'submeshes', or, the ability to link essays together within a group." date_formatted="6/11/08"></update>
		</project_updates>
		<projects>
		  	<project project_id="81" title="Deliberative Democracy and Difference" subtitle="" url="http://www.vectorsjournal.net/issues/05_issue/deliberativedemocracy/main.html" xml_path="xml/projects/deliberative_democracy_and_difference_v1.xml" screen_background_path="" screen_style_sheet_path="" icon_path="projects/icons/deliberative_democracy.jpg" primary_authors_string="Mark Kann" secondary_authors_string="Alessandro Ceglia">
		  		<authors>
		  			<author firstname="Mark" middlename="" lastname="Kann" bio="Mark E. Kann, Professor of Political Science and History, holds the USC Associates  Chair in Social Science at the University of Southern California.  He has spent several decades researching and writing on issues related to gender and politics in American history.  More recently, he has focused on the relationship between digital technology and democracy." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="" email="mkann@usc.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Author" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Mark Kann"></author>
		  			<author firstname="Alessandro" middlename="" lastname="Ceglia" bio="Alessandro was born in Milan, Italy and was educated in the U.S.  He received his B.A. from Dartmouth College in Art History and Asian Studies, and then spent five years abroad in various parts of Asia and Europe.  He returned to the U.S. in 2001 to work as an interactive designer and developer.  He is now based in Los Angeles, and continues to work on interactive projects while pursuing an M.F.A. in animation and digital art at USC's School of Cinematic Arts." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="http://www.alessandroceglia.com" email="alex_ceglia@hotmail.com" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Designer Programmer" is_primary="0" is_secondary="1" fullname="Alessandro Ceglia"></author>
		  		</authors>
		  	</project>
		  	<project project_id="82" title="Blue Velvet" subtitle="Re-dressing New Orleans in Katrina's wake" url="http://vectors.usc.edu/issues/05_issue/bluevelvet/" xml_path="xml/projects/blue_velvet_v1.xml" screen_background_path="" screen_style_sheet_path="" icon_path="projects/icons/blue_velvet.jpg" primary_authors_string="David Theo Goldberg &amp; Stefka Hristova" secondary_authors_string="Erik Loyer">
		  		<authors>
		  			<author firstname="David" middlename="Theo" lastname="Goldberg" bio="Director of the systemwide University of California Humanities Research Institute and Professor of Comparative Literature and Criminology, Law and Society at the University of California, Irvine.  DTG is the co-founder of HASTAC (Humanities, Arts, Social Sciences Advanced Collaboratory, www.hastac.org) and co-administers the Macarthur Foundation's Digital Media and Learning Competition (www.dmlcompetition. net).  He has published widely on race and racism, on social and political theory, on postcolonialism, on gender studies, and on technological trends in the humanities. He serves on the board of VECTORS, among numerous other journals and organizations." place="University of California Humanities Research Institute" avatar_url="" website_url="www.uchri.org" email="goldberg@uci.edu" is_project_admin="1" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Author" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="David Theo Goldberg"></author>
		  			<author firstname="Stefka" middlename="" lastname="Hristova" bio="" place="" avatar_url="" website_url="" email="" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Information Architect" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Stefka Hristova"></author>
		  			<author firstname="Erik" middlename="" lastname="Loyer" bio="Erik Loyer's interactive artworks have been exhibited online and in festivals and museums throughout the United States and abroad, including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Prix Ars Electronica; and Transmediale. Loyer is the creator of &lt;a href=&quot;http://marrowmonkey.com/lair&quot;&gt;&lt;i&gt;The Lair of the Marrow Monkey,&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/a&gt; one of the first websites to be added to the permanent collection of a major art museum, and &lt;a href=&quot;http://marrowmonkey.com/chroma&quot;&gt;&lt;i&gt;Chroma,&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/a&gt; an award-winning web serial about the racial politics of virtual reality. As Creative Director for &lt;i&gt;Vectors,&lt;/i&gt; he has designed numerous multimedia essays in collaboration with leading humanities scholars. Loyer's commercial portfolio includes Clio and One Show Gold Award-winning work for Vodafone as well as projects for BMW and Sony. He is the recipient of a Rockefeller Film/Video/Multimedia Fellowship, and his works have been honored in the Montreal International Festival of New Cinema and New Media and the California Design Biennial. Loyer has a B.A. in Cinema/Television Production from the University of Southern California." place="" avatar_url="images/contributors/erikloyer.gif" website_url="http://www.erikloyer.com" email="erik@song.nu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Designer Programmer" is_primary="0" is_secondary="1" fullname="Erik Loyer"></author>
		  		</authors>
		  	</project>
		  	<project project_id="83" title="Nation on the Move" subtitle="" url="http://vectors.usc.edu/issues/05_issue/nationonthemove/index.html" xml_path="xml/projects/nation_on_the_move_v1.xml" screen_background_path="" screen_style_sheet_path="" icon_path="projects/icons/notm.jpg" primary_authors_string="Minoo Moallem" secondary_authors_string="Erik Loyer">
		  		<authors>
		  			<author firstname="Minoo" middlename="" lastname="Moallem" bio="Minoo Moallem is a professor of gender and women studies at UC Berkeley.  She is the author of Between Warrior Brother and Veiled Sister. Islamic Fundamentalism and the Cultural Politics of Patriarchy in Iran, University of California Press, 2005, the co-editor (with Caren Kaplan and Norma Alarcon) of Between Woman and Nation. Nationalisms, Transnational Feminisms and The State, Duke University Press, 1999.  Trained as a sociologist, she writes on transnational feminist cultural studies, gender and consumer culture, immigration and diaspora studies, and Iranian cultural politics and diasporas." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="" email="mmoallem@berkeley.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Author" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Minoo Moallem"></author>
		  			<author firstname="Erik" middlename="" lastname="Loyer" bio="Erik Loyer's interactive artworks have been exhibited online and in festivals and museums throughout the United States and abroad, including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Prix Ars Electronica; and Transmediale. Loyer is the creator of &lt;a href=&quot;http://marrowmonkey.com/lair&quot;&gt;&lt;i&gt;The Lair of the Marrow Monkey,&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/a&gt; one of the first websites to be added to the permanent collection of a major art museum, and &lt;a href=&quot;http://marrowmonkey.com/chroma&quot;&gt;&lt;i&gt;Chroma,&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/a&gt; an award-winning web serial about the racial politics of virtual reality. As Creative Director for &lt;i&gt;Vectors,&lt;/i&gt; he has designed numerous multimedia essays in collaboration with leading humanities scholars. Loyer's commercial portfolio includes Clio and One Show Gold Award-winning work for Vodafone as well as projects for BMW and Sony. He is the recipient of a Rockefeller Film/Video/Multimedia Fellowship, and his works have been honored in the Montreal International Festival of New Cinema and New Media and the California Design Biennial. Loyer has a B.A. in Cinema/Television Production from the University of Southern California." place="" avatar_url="images/contributors/erikloyer.gif" website_url="http://www.erikloyer.com" email="erik@song.nu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Designer Programmer" is_primary="0" is_secondary="1" fullname="Erik Loyer"></author>
		  		</authors>
		  	</project>
		  	<project project_id="84" title="ThoughtMesh" subtitle="Tag your writing. Join the conversation." url="http://vectors.usc.edu/thoughtmesh" xml_path="xml/projects/thoughtmesh_v1.xml" screen_background_path="projects/backgrounds/thoughtmesh.jpg" screen_style_sheet_path="" icon_path="projects/icons/thoughtmesh.jpg" primary_authors_string="Jon Ippolito &amp; Craig Dietrich" secondary_authors_string="">
		  		<authors>
		  			<author firstname="Jon" middlename="" lastname="Ippolito" bio="Jon Ippolito thinks up new ways to build and sustain networks, a fact that often makes him unpopular with media monopolists, bureaucrats, and other apologists for hierarchic culture. Ippolito works with the Variable Media Network to devise new preservation paradigms to rescue digital culture from obsolescence, with the Open Art Network to promote open architectures for media art, and with the Interarchive working group to find net-native ways to connect online scholarship. He's exhibited collaborative artworks at the Walker Art Gallery, ZKM, and Harvard; curated shows for the Guggenheim on virtual reality and Nam June Paik; and written for the Washington Post, Artforum, and Leonardo. Ippolito's collaborative architectures such as The Pool and ThoughtMesh have nabbed Wired headlines, while his book At the Edge of Art, co-authored with Joline Blais, offers an expansive definition for art of the 21st century." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="http://three.org/ippolito/" email="jippolito@umit.maine.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Conceptual architect, client-side designer, and client-side engineer" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Jon Ippolito"></author>
		  			<author firstname="Craig" middlename="" lastname="Dietrich" bio="Craig teams with scholars and designers on &lt;i&gt;Vectors&lt;/i&gt; projects solving creative and information challenges, and creates tools for online scholarly production. Craig is also a lecturer at &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.usc.edu&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;USC&lt;/a&gt;'s &lt;a target=&quot;_blank&quot; href=&quot;http://iml.usc.edu&quot;&gt;Institute for Multimedia Literacy&lt;/a&gt; where he teaches project design and creative hypertext, and a researcher at the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.umaine.edu&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;University of Maine&lt;/a&gt;'s Still Water lab where he develops culturally-sensitive software. He is presently in production of &lt;a href=&quot;http://magic.craigdietrich.com/proposal&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;Magic&lt;/a&gt;, a project documenting innovation in humanties-centered interactive media. His recent collaborations include the &lt;a target=&quot;_blank&quot; href=&quot;http://mukurtuarchive.org&quot;&gt;Mukurtu Archive&lt;/a&gt; and &lt;a href=&quot;http://libarts.wsu.edu/plateaucenter/portalproject&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;Plateau People's Web Portal&lt;/a&gt; content manager based on Aboriginal cultural protocols, &lt;a target=&quot;_blank&quot; href=&quot;http://thoughtmesh.net&quot;&gt;ThoughtMesh&lt;/a&gt;, a semantic online publishing system, the &lt;a href=&quot;http://vectorsjournal.org/dbg&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;Dynamic Backend Generator&lt;/a&gt;, a MySQL-based relational data writing canvas, and an upcoming metadata server for artworks and artists. Craig has recently exhibited at Without Borders in Orono, &lt;a href=&quot;http://artspace404.blogspot.com/&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;ArtSpace404&lt;/a&gt; in Santa Rosa, &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.legionarts.org&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;Legion Arts&lt;/a&gt; in Cedar Rapids, and ZeroOne in San Jose." place="" avatar_url="images/contributors/cdietric.jpg" website_url="http://www.craigdietrich.com" email="cdietrich@cinema.usc.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Designer and server-side engineer" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Craig Dietrich"></author>
		  			<author firstname="John" middlename="" lastname="Bell" bio="John Bell is a web developer and data artist at the University of Maine. He has contributed to the development of The Pool, a system for fostering and documenting distributed creativity in digital arts, released several open-source web authoring tools, and given birth to an artificial intelligence that accidentally committed suicide.  Many of his projects focus on trust in online communities and maintaining intellectual integrity in environments where there are few consequences to ignoring it.  His work has been featured in Wired online and he presented CodePlay@UMe at Ars Electronica's Electrolobby Kitchen in 2003.  He is currently a research fellow for Still Water working on the Variable Media Network's &quot;Forging the Future&quot; project." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="" email="john.bell@umit.maine.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Telamon.js author and remote scripting contributor" is_primary="0" is_secondary="0" fullname="John Bell"></author>
		  		</authors>
		  	</project>
		  	<project project_id="85" title="Programmed Visions" subtitle="" url="http://vectors.usc.edu/issues/05_issue/programmedvisions" xml_path="xml/projects/programmed_visions_v1.xml" screen_background_path="" screen_style_sheet_path="" icon_path="projects/icons/programmed_visions.gif" primary_authors_string="Wendy Hui Kyong Chun" secondary_authors_string="Raegan Kelly">
		  		<authors>
		  			<author firstname="Wendy Hui" middlename="Kyong" lastname="Chun" bio="Wendy Chun is an associate professor of Modern Culture and Media at Brown University. She has studied both Systems Design Engineering and English Literature, which she combines and mutates in her current work on digital media. She is author of _Control and Freedom: Power and Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics_ (MIT, 2006), and co-editor (with Thomas Keenan) of _New Media, Old Media: A History and Theory Reader (Routledge, 2005). She has been a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard and a Wriston Fellow at Brown. AY 2006-2007, she was a visiting scholar and visiting associate professor in the History of Science Department at Harvard forx. She is currently working on a monograph entitled _Programmed Visions: Software, DNA, Race_ (forthcoming MIT, 2008)." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="http://www.brown.edu/Departments/MCM/people/chun/" email="Wendy_Hui_Kyong_Chun@brown.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Author" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Wendy Hui Kyong Chun"></author>
		  			<author firstname="Raegan" middlename="" lastname="Kelly" bio="Co-Creative Director and site designer for &lt;i&gt;Vectors&lt;/i&gt; through the &lt;a href=&quot;http://vectors.usc.edu/issues/index.php?issue=5&quot;&gt;Difference issue&lt;/a&gt; (5), Raegan Kelly has worked as an interactive designer, programmer, cinematographer, and screen printer for the last 15 years. Raegan is leaving to focus her creative energies on a solo venture in innovative, functional and non- toxic material design. She has a BA from UC Berkeley and an MFA in Film from CalArts." place="" avatar_url="images/contributors/raegankelly.jpg" website_url="" email="raegank@gmail.com" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Designer Programmer" is_primary="0" is_secondary="1" fullname="Raegan Kelly"></author>
		  		</authors>
		  	</project>
		  	<project project_id="86" title="Killer Entertainments" subtitle="" url="http://vectors.usc.edu/issues/05_issue/killerentertainments" xml_path="xml/projects/killer_entertainments_v1.xml" screen_background_path="" screen_style_sheet_path="" icon_path="projects/icons/killer_entertainments.jpg" primary_authors_string="Jennifer Terry" secondary_authors_string="Raegan Kelly">
		  		<authors>
		  			<author firstname="Jennifer" middlename="" lastname="Terry" bio="Jennifer Terry is a professor of Women's Studies at the University of California at Irvine. She is the author of An American Obsession: Science, Medicine, and Homosexuality in Modern Society (University of Chicago Press, 1999) and co-editor of Deviant Bodies: Critical Perspectives on Difference in Science and Popular Culture (Indiana University Press, 1995) and Processed Lives: Gender and Technology in Everyday Life (Routledge, 1997). She has written articles on reproductive politics, the history of sexual science in the United States, and contemporary scientific approaches to the sex lives of animals. She is writing a book on Killer Entertainments: Militarism and Consuming Desires of American Empire. The project focuses on the history of military morale management in the US during the expansion of the nation into an international empire by theorizing the dynamics of governmentality and sentimentality as they manifest in the mutual provocations between entertainment forms, hygienic technologies, and militarism." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="" email="jterry@uci.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Author" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Jennifer Terry"></author>
		  			<author firstname="Raegan" middlename="" lastname="Kelly" bio="Co-Creative Director and site designer for &lt;i&gt;Vectors&lt;/i&gt; through the &lt;a href=&quot;http://vectors.usc.edu/issues/index.php?issue=5&quot;&gt;Difference issue&lt;/a&gt; (5), Raegan Kelly has worked as an interactive designer, programmer, cinematographer, and screen printer for the last 15 years. Raegan is leaving to focus her creative energies on a solo venture in innovative, functional and non- toxic material design. She has a BA from UC Berkeley and an MFA in Film from CalArts." place="" avatar_url="images/contributors/raegankelly.jpg" website_url="" email="raegank@gmail.com" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="0" is_journal_author="0" role="Designer" is_primary="0" is_secondary="1" fullname="Raegan Kelly"></author>
		  		</authors>
		  	</project>
		  	<project project_id="87" title="The RED Project" subtitle="Rendering Electromagnetic Distributions" url="http://pactlab-dev.spcomm.uiuc.edu/red/" xml_path="xml/projects/RED_project_v1.xml" screen_background_path="" screen_style_sheet_path="" icon_path="projects/icons/red_project.png" primary_authors_string="Christian Sandvig" secondary_authors_string="">
		  		<authors>
		  			<author firstname="Christian" middlename="" lastname="Sandvig" bio="Christian Sandvig is an Assistant Professor of Speech Communication at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Associate Fellow of Socio-Legal Studies at Oxford University.  His research focuses on the development of new communication technologies and public policy.  In 2002 he was named a &quot;next-generation leader in science and technology policy&quot; in a junior faculty competition organized by Columbia, Rutgers, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In 2006 he received the Faculty Early Career Development Award from the US National Science Foundation (NSF CAREER).  Sandvig received the Ph.D. in Communication from Stanford University in 2002." place="" avatar_url="" website_url="http://www.niftyc.org/" email="csandvig@uiuc.edu" is_project_admin="0" can_manage_project_id="87" is_journal_author="0" role="Producer" is_primary="1" is_secondary="0" fullname="Christian Sandvig"></author>
		  		</authors>
		  	</project>
		</projects>
	</issue>
</issues>
