Enlightened Anthropocentrism; the test.

Anthropocentrism (/ˌænθroʊpoʊˈsɛntrɪzəm/; from Greek Ancient Greek: ἄνθρωπος, ánthrōpos, “human being”; and Ancient Greek: κέντρον , kéntron, “center”) the belief that considers human beings to be the most significant entity of the universe and interprets or regards the world in terms of human values and experiences.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropocentrism whereas, enlightened anthropocentrism holds the view that humans do have ethical obligations toward the environment, but they can be justified in terms of obligations toward other humans. Both of these terms are new to me, and I am glad I have discovered them. Recently, I have been thinking about the progression of ‘man’ simultaneous to the evolution of our planet. The term Anthropocentrism thus its antidote ‘enlightened anthropocentrism’ both date back to the ages of Ancient Greek, ultimately meaning that these ideas surrounding mans’ ‘role’ have been discussed and debated for centuries. Despite these terms being literally ancient however, the concepts of global warming, carbon footprints and climate change are all quite modern and only being recently educated to the contemporary masses. Therefore, providing contemporary generations with a sense of enlightened anthropocentrism. Although this in essence is good for the futurewhat really is worrying me is the unproductively of the past.

“While Europe maintained the museums and cultures of the past, America thought of itself as a forging new frontier” (p17), writes Rushkoff as he explains the catalyst of Western society’s ‘current shock’. Similarly, I think the same is presenting itself in the issue of climate change and man’s inability to shift his anthropocentrism to enlightenment. How far have our humanities actually evolved if we’re still fighting a debate on whether climate change exists?! This makes me sad, because if we have been aware of perhaps that man is human and therefore connected to the process of earth, why haven’t we changed ourselves within the last couple of thousand years and adopted a philosophy which is beneficial to all. This makes me sad… Come on humans. And yet, as I ponder this I type it down on my aluminum covered laptop, which was ripped from the earth in order to exist. *Sigh*. Oh the sad, sad, brutal irony of this education.

PB1 – 25 minute activity PASSPORT

Describe it

Pocket sized. A dark blue book with golden embroidery. The embroidery illustrates a scene where a kangaroo and emu stand apart and opposite one another, in between them is some sort of plaque. The interior of plaque is divided up into six seperate squares, with each square housing a different illustration inside it; a cross with straight edges, a crown with dots five dots scattered underneath, a double edged cross, the silhouette of what looks to be a bird – perhaps an eagle, a swan and then a lion. Above this symbol the letters A.U.S.T.R.A.L.I.A are printed in capitals, and at the bottom of the page the letters P.a.s.s.p.o.r.t are placed, all in lowercase despite the first letter ‘P’. Underneath this there is a rectangular symbol that is divided by a horizontal line. Placed in the middle of this line is a golden circle that is placed in the middle of the rectangle, no sides are touching.

The book is made up of 42 double sided pages. The pages are not lined, however, there is a background image on each page that displays an array of Australian cultural characteristics. The images are different on each page, but are systematically repeated. The third page is dedicated to identifying a person. There is a coloured image accompanied to the right by writing, printed on a landscape format. The image is a head shot of a person and covers 1/3 of the page. The edges of this image are curved, and the image is printed in colour. To the right of this image details are printed. In light blue is the subject matter asked and the response to this ‘question’ is written in black.This page is sealed with a gloss, which make it unlike the other pages which have a matte finish.

What does it do?

Identifies individuals on a global scale through universal law. It is a document that demonstrates, legally, a representation of that person by portraying that persons nationality, place of birth, age, name, physical appearance (since photo is printed in colour this demonstrates their eye colour, hair colour, weight, sex, race) and a depiction of their signature. Along with this it associates each person with a unique global code characterised as a passport number. This passport number is used as a legal credential and can be associated as a institutionalised signature that represents the individual and their rights and responsibilities within a state. Used on forms, the passport number declares an individuals legalities almost moreso perhaps then an individual’s personalised signature which usually acts as a declaration of acknowledgement.

It permits and negotiates entry into different countries and is a protection of liberties, which at times strain the legalities and clarity of a states sovereignty and power over individuals within it. It is legally an electronic documentation of travel records, not only portraying the countries in which an individuals has travelled to within a ten year period but also a demonstration of each countries sovereignty at that time, symbolised through each stamp provided to the passport at the gate. An e-chip, which combines paper and electronics that contains biometric information can be used to authenticate the identity of travellers. This standardised biometric uses facial recognition, finger print recognition and iris recognition. The E-chip’s ability to recognise provides a higher level of protection for an individual’s identity in the case where a passport is stolen and attempted being used.

Tacit Knowledge … RETHINK

‘In VCE the tacit knowledge you have is to read an exam and how to get the points, yet the content (that is explicit knowledge) is usually forgotten within months after the exam’. Tacit knowledge is what you need in this subject, it is ‘know how’ instead of ‘what’.

What is the difference between Tacit Knowledge and Explicit Knowledge, and how does one define internal cognitive movement anyhow? This studio is trying to shift the idea that theory is taught knowledge, and is instead a practice that can be applied to everyday life.

Ecology’s definition is ‘the branch of biology that deals with the relations of organisms to one another and their physical surroundings’.
Thus, ‘ecology’, to me, at this present stage, in essence focuses on the physical exchange between nature and nurture. Lets shift our trained ignorance regarding relationality and sieve through the materiality of our everyday elements.

PB4 ~ Group Conclusion ~

One of the most pivotal learning points I have learnt from Project Brief 4, is the importance of understanding and respecting each group members different approach to academia and time management. Personally, my work ethic designates small portions of each day to a project, making it slowly progress whilst continuously form. The nature of PB4 as a group task with multiple components and layers, meant that there had to be symbiotic relationship between group work and personal initiative. Luckily, due to the successful teamwork dynamic my group shared, we were able to contribute through individual’s progress to the project’s process. Initially, we discussed our Media 1 strengths and weaknesses allowing forming a clear common-ground understanding about what we wanted our PB4 to look like, and whether it was actually achievable. Thus,  pre-production stage focused on the Media 1’s structure and teachings,  establishing that the history of public to private broadcasting held significance to our given topic ‘institutions’. The pop-culture and music industry we discussed is arguably an institution as we see the genres strong influence over audience’s habit and beliefs, paralleling it with the sphere of influence present in the broadcast era. As a subcategory we chose K-POP, as it’s controversial nature provided each member with a genuine interest and desire to research. Using José van Dijck & Thomas Poell article Making Public Television Social (2014), we could see K-POP’s ‘social media’s infiltration on all segments of everyday life [that] has impacted the fabric of social institutions, disrupting broadcasters convention production and distribution logistic’ (2014), thus making through social trends, collectivist communities. Therefore, the production process of PB4 was successful due to the communicative relationship made between each member of the group. As we all shared research responsibilities it allowed each member to find genuine interest in the controversial nature of K-POP, whilst attempting to find a modernised definition of  institutions today.

However, within the production stage problems arose regarding the designation and responsibility of editing, as people became situated in hierarchical areas of influence. Unlike pre-production, where each member of the group could go home and contribute research that furthered the shape of our currently unknown puzzle, productions designation of responsibility made the group dynamics re-structure. By having two individuals to take physical control of the audio and visual files post rough cut stage, it only allowed for the other members of the group to contribute physically during weekly meetings. As we did not want to ‘share’ the files – in fear that exporting a working Premiere Pro document could corrupt footage – it reconstructed creative rights that were previously shared equally.
As a way of overcoming this problem, we devised a schedule of meetings that allowed each person to contribute a percentage of found footage. This allowed each member to still have an active role in the project’s formation, along with relieving the burden of editing unfairly falling onto the members shoulder who housed the file. Consequently, the group continuously discussed the production process with one another,  yet the responsibility to edit whatever homework was left did eventually fall onto a specific individual. This is one element of group projects I will keep in mind for the future, as it is not fair for one individual to fall behind in sacrifice for a group mark. As we became aware of the lengthy time it would take to edit, each member was assigned specific tasks that would help contribute eg. writing and editing of scripts, finding footage for video, translating news articles from Chinese to English etc. We aided one another by capitalising on the personal strengths we found in the course (e.g. I wrote scripts, Kris translated Korean media items, Vanessa found footage, and Isobell edited). These tasks weren’t designated completely to one person, and everyone pitched in and helped with one another, however it was due to our communication skills and initiate that the project’s weight was shared among all of us.

Each media’s construction demonstrated different affordances as there was an audio and video based media. The audio essay seemed pretty straight forward; recording a dossier,  a script, inserting sound effects and attaching reference files. In contrast the video file was  quite complicated and multi-layered. Having to juggle visual elements with narration and audio editing, the videos referencing and organisation become messy as files were sent through USB’s were lost and corrupted. However, my having the two medias present it taught us the conflicting and similarities found within each other. As audio is a singular and one sense experience, whilst video has two active senses with multi-layered visuals and components, we experienced the difference length of time each took to construct and to cite.

Conclusively, Project Brief Four’s collaborative process has been a great experience and has taught me about teamwork, time management, the creative process along with the construction of audio and video based media. I will definitely take forth the significance and important of teamwork demonstrated from my group, hoping to establish the same productive and respectful relationships made contextually.

Van Dijck, José and Poell,Thomas (2014) Making Public Television Social? Public Service Broadcasting and the Challenges of Social Media, Television & New Media 2015, Vol. 16(2) 148–164 © The Author(s) 2014 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav. Sage Prints, London.

Coming to an end

Today is the last day i’ll be attending RMIT for my first semester of university, and as I sit in building 80 sipping on my $4.50 regular flat white with soy milk I can’t help but feel a little sad my coffee love affair with this building. I have been very happy with the way RMIT has accommodated me and my learnings, being genuinely proud to be at a university which applauses and acknowledges modernity in both architecture and learning. The space provided ~ big reference to building 80 ~ allows for a relaxed vibe which compliments the university’s artistic and educational ambitions. Looking back at when Brian played and introduced me to the This Must Be The Place by Talking Heads, my happiness at RMIT was set. The song’s melody has been a track that I play regularly now, enforcing the happiness and future optimism I felt on that first tute.

It’s weird to think how quickly the time has gone by ~ maybe due to the years new coordination as Semesters, rather then terms ~, and as sad as I am to see the Semester end I am truly excited for what next semester will bring as we start workshops!! My experience in volunteering as crew in Offbeat was absolutely amazing as it allowed me to get some live-on-air experience that has only heighten my artistic ambitions within the Film and Television industry.

MEETING LOG ~~ Summary

MEETING LOG

Vanessa, Kris, Isobell and Joss

Institutions

Date Discussion Future/ Homework
29/4/2016

Workshop

PRE-PRODUCTION

  • The subject of institution was given to us
  • Brainstormed our ideas of institutions (jails, schools, religion, large scale cooperation)
  • K-POP as an institution
  • MTV as an institution
  • Are these pop-culture channels institutions? Lengthy discussion on whether promotion of behavior qualifies an organization as an institution
  • What is the difference between an organization and institution?
  • Facebook group was made with all members of group ~ easy contact
  • Annotated bibliography (due in 2 weeks) ~ each member needs six different academic sources
  • We need to figure out what an institution is and if these pop culture channels apply
  • What is Korean Pop? Lets take a closer look… youtubes, articles etc.
4/5/2016

Private meeting

PRE-PRODUCTION

  • Over the weekend all members found articles about K-POP and brought them forward for discussion
  • Watch K-POP Vice Documentary (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wWKjxxM6q8) ~ Seoul Fashion Week – K-Pop to Double Eyelid Surgery
  • Discussed balance between K-POP itself being an institution and whether the image they produced being institutionalized
  • Quick discussion on video essay and audio essay approach
  • Continue on with annotated bibliographies (everyone is around half way now)
  • Continue watching K-POP documentaries and reading articles
  • Everyone now following K-POP Daily on Facebook ~ a page dedicated to K-POP news ~ and see how media represents idols
6/5/2016

Workshop

PRE-PRODUCTION

  • Started brainstorming points for the video essay (what kind of approach should we use)
  • Everyone was given a paragraph for homework to write up to help develop script
    Origins of K-POP: Isobel

Growth and Progression: Vanessa

Sphere of Influence: Joss

Demonstration of control: Kris

  • Continue on annotated bibliography (everyone should have AT LEAST 4 by the end of next week)
  • Write up 250 words each on prescribed topic (making 1000 words all up) ~ around 5 minutes of talking
  • Continue research and get REFERENCES!
11/5/2016

Private Meeting

PRE-PRODUCTION

  • Go through audio script
  • Discussion on incorporating MTV into PB4 to create comparisons about each pop industry’s promotion of culture and ethics
  • MTV (16 and pregnant) vs. KPOP (affirmation of their idol’s perfection)
  • Exploitation of young mothers for entertainment vs. South Korea’s elevated desire for ‘innocence’/virginity ~ how are these two institutions different and why?!
  • Made Hodgson our main reference for institution definition
  • Recorded first draft of audio script  
  • Go and research MTV
  • Find out why MTV has changed from a liberated channel of music to now providing ‘crap’ TV shows about either upper or lower class (no middle class… why?
  • Continue editing 250 words, we need more references
  • Understand what started K-POP
13/5/2016

Workshop

PRODUCTION

  • Played audio script to Rachel and class ~ overall good feedback however….
  • Rachel questions whether K-POP actually is an institution… we need to do research on how to prove it is
  • Annotated bibliographies were due ~ discussed what everybody found ~ a lot more interest in K-POP then MTV
  • Discussion on institution vs. institutionalized thinking (what do they both mean) (is collectivist thinking portrayed through social media trends?)
  • More editing on video script
  • Started discussion on audio script ~ what will be the differences between audio and video?
  • How do we define K-POP as an institution  

https://drive.google.com/drive/u/1/folders/0B6iiXPd4UFtoLUFzWG1od3hlOEE ~~ doc in Google Drive

  • More research!
  • If we see any videos or articles on the internet about K-POP start to save them and put into Google drive folder
  • Decide whether or not we are interested in doing MTV? We seem to be sitting on the fence with this one (very interested in it’s sexualisation of young girls but is that really relevant?)
16/5/2016

Private Meeting
PRODUCTION

  • Started ball rolling for video script; we want to record some time this week! Pretty much all done now
  • Scrapping of MTV idea ~ makes the portrait have too many subjects and parts. Having only K-POP makes it easier to show that it is an institution
  • Writing up of audio script (have to present it this Friday in workshop)
  • Discussion on the approach we should take on audio script
  • Writing up and finalizing script before recording on Wednesday
  • Re-edit previous script work that referenced MTV as we have now dismissed our case study of it
  • Watch more documentaries and attempt to understand what is K-POP
18/5/2016

Private Meeting

PRODUCTION

  • Recording of audio script in Building 9
  • Once recording and spoken out loud there were obvious grammatical errors that had to be re-typed
  • Re recorded segment of audio essay… Kris speaking foreign language which where will over
  • Everyone go home and re-read both scripts ~ make sure they are easy to read and comprehensible
  • Continue to gather video essay footage (REMEMBER TO CITE!
20/5/2016

FINAL

Workshop

PRODUCTION

  • Workshop and showed Rachel our video and audio takes so far
  • Positive feedback, especially in regards to audio
  • Started sorting through Google Drive and organising folders of audio and video elements
  • Re-ran through script for final recording nect week
  • – As end of semester is now approaching everyone needs to go home and make sure that the Dossier, and Google Drive elements are all up to scratch
  • – A shared
24/5/2016

Private Meeting

PRODUCTION

  • Re-record video script
  • Record audio introduction again
  • Video script reworked
  • A shared USB was passed around and we downloaded everyones found footage onto it to maximise editing
  • Produced table of content for video script, started including
  • Final week of editing really begins
  • Continously send files and clips of how video and audio editing is progressing
  • Make sure blogs are up to date
  • Joss and Isobell take home found footage and start making essays
26/5/2016

Private Meeting

PRODUCTION

  • Do one last major take of video essay with final edit
  • Moved rooms Sound Suites on ground level of Building 9 ~~ a MUCH HIGHER sound quality rather than in the basement where you could hear the opening and closing of door/ muffled sound of voices
  • Re-recorded an introduction for audio essay
  • Made sure everyone is up to date with blogs
  • Apply all the recordings made for this session onto Premiere so next week we only have to worry about visuals
30/5/2016

Private Meeting

PRODUCTION

  • Isobell and Vanessa brought in what they had made of essays so far
  • Group discussed what could be re-edited and structure
  • Final touch ups for audio essay ~~ MEGA trim of length … Went overtime nearly 10 minutes
  • Video essay discussion
  • Isobell go home and trim audio essay ~ by now pretty much all the editing is done and we just need to focus on time management
  • Video essay needs more visual work, but narration and time length is sound
1/6/2016

Private Meeting

PRODUCTION

  • Second