Alternate Reality: A Pervasive Play Project
Professor Sha Xin Wei, experimental phenomenologist & media artist, and Patrick Jagoda, (University of Chicago, Professor of English & New Media), collaborate on a year-long transmedia gaming project.
Patrick Jagoda
I am interested in the ubiquity of networks, as metaphors and material systems, in the post-1945 period. My research examines how contemporary American literature, film, television, and new media deploy different forms to render the complexities of global networks. I study what I call ?network aesthetics" by exploring narrative, visual, and algorithmic approaches to interconnection. From the terrorist networks of Stephen Gaghan's film Syriana to the emerging infectious disease ecologies of the computer game Killer Flu, from the webs of geopolitical power in Thomas Pynchon's novel Gravity's Rainbow to the social networks of David Simon’s television show The Wire, decentralized structures inspire numerous cultural hopes and anxieties.
More generally, I am fascinated by different media and the spaces between them. My research and teaching interests extend to video game studies, the culture of online synthetic worlds, science fiction, electronic literature, the encyclopedic novel, graphic novels, and American culture. In addition to my scholarly work, I am currently working on a number of projects related to transmedia games. More info.
Sha Xin Wei
Sha Xin Wei directs the Topological Media Lab in Montréal, Canada, a studio-laboratory for the study of gesture and materiality from computational and phenomenological perspectives. His graduate courses at Concordia University combine critical studies of computation and technology with studio work in responsive environments and live events. Sha's major art research work includes the TGarden responsive environments, Hubbub speech-sensitive urban surfaces, Membrane calligraphic video, and Softwear gestural sound instruments, and most recently kinetic sculpture and low resolution displays responding to movement and gesture.
Sha Xin Wei was trained in mathematics at Harvard and Stanford Universities, and worked for more than 12 years in the fields of scientific computation, mathematical modeling and the visualization of scientific data and geometric structures. In 1995, he extended his work to network media authoring systems and media theory, coordinating a three-year workshop on interaction and computational media at Stanford. In 1997, he co-founded Pliant Research with colleagues from Xerox PARC and Apple Research Labs, dedicated to designing technologies that people and organizations can robustly reshape to meet evolving socio-economic needs. In 1998, Sha also co-founded the Sponge art group in San Francisco, to build public experiments in the phenomenology of performance. With Sponge and other artists, Sha Xin Wei directed event/installations in prominent experimental art venues including Ars Electronica Austria, V2 The Netherlands, MediaTerra Greece, Banff Canada, Future Physical United Kingdom. He has also exhibited media installations at Postmasters Gallery New York and Suntrust Gallery Atlanta. These works have been recognized by awards from major cultural foundations such as the Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art, Science and Technology; the LEF Foundation; the Canada Fund for Innovation; the Creative Work Fund in New York; and the Rockefeller Foundation.
After obtaining an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in 2001 at Stanford on differential geometric performance and the technologies of writing in Mathematics, Computer Science, and History & Philosophy of Science, Sha joined the faculty of the School of Literature, Communication and Culture at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, and the research faculty in the Graphics, Visualization and Usability Center in the College of Computing, where he founded the Topological Media Lab, dedicated to the study of gesture, distributed agency and materiality with application to the phenomenology of performance and the built environment.
In 2004-2005, Dr. Sha was Visiting Scholar in the History of Science at Harvard University, and the Program in Science, Technology, and Society at MIT, writing about agency, materiality, performance, and topological media. In 2005, Dr. Sha became director of Hexagram?s Active Textiles and Wearable Computers Axis.
Dr. Sha is a co-editor of the Artificial Intelligence and Society journal, the Experimental Practices book series (Rodopi Press), FibreCulture, and the Creative Interfaces & Computer Graphics journal. Publications include the essays "Resistance is Fertile: Gesture and Agency in the Field of Responsive Media," Configurations 2003, "Demonstrations of Expressive Softwear and Ambient Media," Ubicomp 2003, "Whitehead's Poetical Mathematics," in Configurations (2006), and "TGarden As Experimental Performance," in Modern Drama (2006). He is currently writing a book on poetics and enchantment in topological matter.