IDC-ers,<br><br><br>On the commemoration of the birth and life of MLK, I wanted to turn our attention to the practice of remixing and the issue of race with this video response to Michael Wesch's "A Vision of Student's Today." (
<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=Ln6WUy29fAA">http://youtube.com/watch?v=Ln6WUy29fAA</a>)<br><br>(Re)Visions of Today's Students<br><a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=Ln6WUy29fAA" target="_blank">http://youtube.com/watch?v=Ln6WUy29fAA
</a><br><br>A little context first<br><br>Michael Wesch has produced two widely publicized videos. The first, "The Machine is Us/ing," has been the subject of discussion for quite some time. The second, "A Vision of Students Today." has received less attention, but still about 1 million views. Liz Losh mentioned the film here <
<a href="https://lists.thing.net/pipermail/idc/2007-December/003015.html" target="_blank">https://lists.thing.net/pipermail/idc/2007-December/003015.html</a>> as an illustration of in-class use of Google Docs. Wesch's says this video "was originally created as Part 2 of a 3 part series
on Higher Ed. Part 1 has been published as <a target="_blank" href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=-4CV05HyAbM" onclick="javascript:urchinTracker('/outbound/youtube.com/watch?v=-4CV05HyAbM?ref=/ksudigg/?p=124');">Information R/evolution
</a>" <<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=-4CV05HyAbM">http://youtube.com/watch?v=-4CV05HyAbM</a>>.<br><br>
Recently I've been considering these two videos, "Us/ing" and "A Vision," in light of each other. The one seems to capture the excitement some of us feel about various new software applications (mostly in free beta release). It creates a dream-like celebration o the software that is part of that contested and derided category (Web
2.0). That first video seemed to give us a teaser for today, a trailer for contemporary technologies in which we are the full-access subjects, the transcendental eye balls floating through all levels of media (from code to interface), able to make the internet dance.
This was the video that established Wesch as an authority on these topics.<br><br>The second video focuses on one of these technologies, Google Docs, but, by contrast, also brings in images of human users. If the voice of "Us/ing" is a timeless, bodiless voiceover, in "A Vision," that bodiless commentator (made of text alone) shares the screen with the faces of some of the 200 other contributors. What's more, because these students are represented not merely text, we now have something else to contend with: their bodies. These are the bodies of "Students Today," though perhaps that title should be qualified to "students in Michael Wesch's KSU class room on the day of the recording." They are more than just color-coded user-names collaboratively generating a document. They are human subjects.
<br><br>As the video proceeds, these students become a (low-affect) medium for the information from the Google Doc. With nonplussed faces, they hold up placards that reveal statistics about the state of their computer use and their other academic habits. The implicit suggestion is that these students are not what we expect and that they are different from those who came before them. They Facebook in class. They buy expensive books they never use. A number of these students have laptops. And they are a wall of white.
<br><br>It is their image of their raced bodies that carries so much information and yet goes uncommented.<br><br>Of course, Michael Wesch doesn't have to deal with every topic every time he makes a video, but I would argue that the homogeneity in the featured students' appearances communicates something about race, even if that was not the intention. This isn't to rehash representational politics but to comment on what happens when Wesch's subjects go from social software to sample students.
<br><br>Now it's not that the video isn't representative. Surely, KSU doesn't have anything to apologize for. It's demographics are not too different from state demographics with respect to race and ethnicity. It's economic diversity also shows its openness. (Nor am I suggesting that other universities get the mix of diversity better.)
<br><br>But this video isn't about KSU. Part of the problem may be that due to the success of Wesch's Web 2.0 video, this "Vision" has taken a kind of hegemonic weight. Again, its title offers the video as an image, albeit ONE image, of "students today" (in America, presumably) and in the process ignores its own implicit message about race.
<br><br>My first reaction is: I'm not surprised. In my experience, white students do not tend to think about race. As one professor has pointed out to me elsewhere, students from homogeneous environs don't nec. think about race with the same frequency that students growing up in more integrated environs do.
<br><br>My second reaction is: I'm concerned. How often do our conversations about "this generation" of internet-using, always-Googling, Facebooking students drop questions of race, or the questions of access or institutionalized discrimination that underlie them.
<br><br>For my mock-up, I attempted to use Wesch's collaborative technological approach from "Us/ing" to remix and rewrite "A Vision," not as a "gotcha," but as my own contribution to that Google Doc and a small reflection for MLK day.
<br><a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=Ln6WUy29fAA" target="_blank"></a><br>Of course, the critique doesn't merely reduce the issue to black and white. There are many other groups that don't appear in this video (though might even be in the room). The critique is that the group does not notice or comment on something that becomes quite central to the display technology.
<br><br>The fundamental questions that interests me here are: How do questions of technological possibilities obscure questions of access? When we think about spreading media literacy are we first thinking about the students that already have high degrees of access? Do euphorias about new technologies and the participation they afford obscure other questions about opportunities to obtain literacy or about technological use varying among communities? Does the sense of our new generation of technology users lead us into much older traps of universalizing our observations or falsely homogenizing our image of our students?
<br><br><br>By the way, Wesch has offered the following responses to criticism and a thread for even more feedback here:
<br><a href="http://mediatedcultures.net/ksudigg/?p=124" target="_blank">http://mediatedcultures.net/ksudigg/?p=124</a> and there is much more on his blog.<br><br>Wesch has also included a link to the Google Document here:
<br><a href="http://docs.google.com/View?docid=dfnq2hd6_26cs5w6j">http://docs.google.com/View?docid=dfnq2hd6_26cs5w6j</a><br><br>
Here's a link to a further discussion of my video at WRT:<br>
<a href="http://writerresponsetheory.org/wordpress/2008/01/20/a-revision-of-students-today-remixing-wesch/" target="_blank">http://writerresponsetheory.org/wordpress/2008/01/20/a-revision-of-students-today-remixing-wesch/
</a><br>
<br><br>**Remixing Videos**<br><br>I also wanted to use this post as an opportunity to discuss the practice of remixing videos. Liz Losh has produced her own remix of video content in the context of military maneuvers:<br>
<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=X2AOX9Al8Sk" target="_blank">http://youtube.com/watch?v=X2AOX9Al8Sk
</a><br><br>She also uses the video to comment on itself, here by inserting other images.<br><br>These kinds of videos suggest ways of response we can, of course, take on with our students.<br><br><br>Anyway, these practices of writing back with some of these emerging technologies may be great tools for our politics of resistance, to our agitation for change, which seems a fine topic for MLK day.
<br><br>Best,<br>Mark Marino<br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Writing Program<br>University of Southern California<br><a href="http://WriterResponseTheory.org" target="_blank">
http://WriterResponseTheory.org</a><br><a href="http://CriticalCodeStudies.com" target="_blank">
http://CriticalCodeStudies.com</a>