UC New Media Research Directory
Chien, Irene
January 27th, 2007 under Grad Students

Graduate Student, Film Studies Department, UC Berkeley
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Irene Chien is a doctoral student in Film Studies at UC Berkeley, where she writes and teaches about race and gender in cinema and new media. Her current research is on body-activating video games such as Dance Dance Revolution, and the intersection of kung fu cinema and video games.


 Links:      Home page | ZeroOne San Jose: a Global Festival of Art on the Edge | UC Berkeley Film Studies Department

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poem by Nari
Code may be mysterious, cryptic, and in a sense unknowable, but it is, as Ted Warnell’s “Lascaux Symbol.ic” reminds us, made. Analogizing the cave painting to code, “Lascaux” reminds us that the hand — craft, skill, technical expertise — comes in between code and surfaces of inscription, here the wall of the cave. Code may in a general sense be opaque and legible only to specialists, much like a cave painting’s sign system, but it has been inscribed, programmed, written. It is conditioned and concretely historical. Whether or not non-human agents have had a 'hand' in its formulation, code remains not only a constructing force but also that which is constructed.
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