M

Posts Tagged ‘infovis’

The challenge of unlearning (science).

In music-esque, My Work on October 28, 2009 at 1:38 pm

Ethnographic research is difficult, in the way it challenges the more scientific approach to research. Instead of going in with a theory, as is typical of deductive reasoning in most scientific approaches, an inductive approach demands that we begin with observation. The identification process is not identifying a problem and hypothesizing a solution, but identifying an interesting phenomenon, and immersing yourself in it. This is pretty easy to understand. We do no go in assuming we know how Mendelssohn responded to his reception in England, nor can one go into a study of Kabuki theatre in Japan claiming to know anything. Yet in that context, music is the focus, supported by research into the social, historical and cultural contexts, vis-à-vis fieldnotes and general immersion (especially in ethnomusicology) into the musical world.

One of the things I recall from my ethnomusicology course, was a simple question: What do you do, while in the process of writing your ethnography, you encounter information that challenges or contradicts what you have been writing in your analysis? It’s not a trick question.

A Model of Musicianship

In Design, music-esque on May 19, 2009 at 8:07 pm

Musicianship Quad Chart

As part of our first week of the “Visual Thinking” class I am taking, we were asked to used a quad chart (presenting your idea in four different modes) to brainstorm ideas for what kind of artifact we’d like to achieve by the end of the class. You know you want to read more.

Syncronous Objects

In Design, music-esque on April 6, 2009 at 12:35 pm

This is beautiful. A visualization of choreographic information around William Forsythe’s “One Flat Thing”. It’s multi-faceted, engaging, inspiring, and just beautiful to play with. Now, if I only understood dance…

via infosthetics.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.