Dr. Chris Ingraham
Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Communication
at the University of Utah. He is also on the core faculty of the U's Environmental
Humanities graduate program, and faculty affiliate with the Global Change and Sustainability
Center.
Thursday, February 9th | 3:00 PM - 4:30 PM
LNCO 2120, Reading Room
Modularity, Plants, and Power
In this talk, Chris Ingraham shares his working thoughts about the ways modularity
operates as a hierarchical structure valued for its presumed efficiency and support of theoretically endless growth. Though modularity is often
associated with business and systems-design literature, Ingraham explores its underacknowledged
importance for critically-inflected materialist approaches to media theory and the
environmental humanities. Moving between LEGOs, plant physiology, and the Great Exhibition
of 1851, he'll underscore the complexity of ruling modularity out as a generative
model of worldbuilding, while also suggesting that modularity can be understood fundamentally--and
problematically--as a structure for maintaining power.