<div dir="ltr"><div><p class="">Hello all,</p>
<p class="">My name is Pooja Rangan. I am one of Trebor's colleagues at the Department of Culture and Media at the New School. My research and teaching deals broadly with the convergence of documentary and humanitarian cultures, as well as the questions they raise about the relationship between media visibility and empowerment, documentary epistemologies and otherness. My book, <i>Immediations: Humanitarianism, Otherness, Documentary </i>(Duke UP, anticipated 2017) takes up some of these issues as they pertain to participatory documentary interventions involving marginalized social subjects from children to refugees to disabled individuals. </p>
<p class="">The question of labor is one that I have addressed in relation to the affective and creative work of children in producing a visual culture of innocence (published as "Immaterial Child Labor" in <i>Camera Obscura, </i>2011). In such a context, I find the notion of labor to be a useful rhetorical tool in identifying the contradictions of contemporary debates against child labor. Relatedly, the performative and rhetorical work achieved by the concept of immaterial or affective labor in articulating solidarities across different modalities of precariousness is interesting to me (I am thinking here of the work of some of the scholars associated with Autonomist Marxist inquiry). At the same time I feel concern about the ways in which differences articulated along the lines of class, race, language, and so on fall out when making a claim regarding the hegemony of post-Fordist modalities of labor. Often these are differences that have been substantially theorized in the postcolonial and feminist traditions, but which often appear in a distorted form when they are presented through the utopian and dystopian visions that I frequently encounter in ongoing conversations about digital labor. <br></p>
<p class="">These are the questions and concerns that orient my point of entry into the conversations taking place at DL; I will be participating as a moderator/respondent. The infrastructure and format of this conversation, as well as the economy of attention, time, and labor involved in keeping track of each others' introductions seem like an important issue to take up and theorize, given that we are here to talk about digital labor. <br></p><p class="">I look forward to meeting you all in person!</p><p class="">Best,<br>Pooja</p></div>-- <br>POOJA RANGAN<br>Assistant Professor of Culture and Media<br>Eugene Lang College, The New School<br>64 West 11th Street Room 115<br>New York NY 10011
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