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Big Data and The Ladies Finger: Online Gods #1

Online Gods

Release Date: 08/07/2017

Break and Futures  show art Break and Futures

Online Gods

We’ve recently published episode 16 of Online Gods and decided it’s time to take a short break. We’re going to put our heads together in the autumn and think about Season 2. In the meantime we’re really excited to announce a new partnership with EPW Engage. They are going to be republishing the entire first season of Online Gods and, when we meet to plan the new season, we’ll do so with them in mind.

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Technopolitics and the Indian Atheists: Online Gods #16 show art Technopolitics and the Indian Atheists: Online Gods #16

Online Gods

This month we're talking with Iginio Gagliardone about Technopolitics and Swati about the Indian Atheists.

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News Images and Surveillance: Online Gods #15 show art News Images and Surveillance: Online Gods #15

Online Gods

What is it that allows certain things to circulate through digital networks and others not? What sort of labour goes into moving certain things along and holding certain things up? How aware are we of the digital architectures through which data – our data – flows?

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Nerd Politics and Gaylaxy: Online Gods #14 show art Nerd Politics and Gaylaxy: Online Gods #14

Online Gods

This month we're speaking about Nerd Politics with John Postill and Gaylaxy Magazine with Sukhdeep Singh. Online Gods is a monthly podcast on digital cultures and their political ramifications, featuring lively conversations with scholars and activists. Presented by anthropologist Ian M. Cook, the podcast is a key initiative of the five year ERC project ONLINERPOL www.fordigitaldignity.com led by media anthropologist Sahana Udupa at LMU Munich. We are podcast partner of AAA.

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Religious Nationalism and Political Comics: Online Gods #13 show art Religious Nationalism and Political Comics: Online Gods #13

Online Gods

This month we're speaking about Religious Nationalism with Peter van der Veer and Political Comics with Appupen.Online Gods is a monthly podcast on digital cultures and their political ramifications, featuring lively conversations with scholars and activists. Presented by anthropologist Ian M. Cook, the podcast is a key initiative of the five year ERC project ONLINERPOL www.fordigitaldignity.com led by media anthropologist Sahana Udupa at LMU Munich. We are podcast partner of AAA.

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The Body and Me Too India: Online Gods #12 show art The Body and Me Too India: Online Gods #12

Online Gods

This month we’re speaking with Marwan Kraidy about the body and with Mahima Kukreja about Me Too India. Online Gods is a monthly podcast on digital cultures and their political ramifications, featuring lively conversations with scholars and activists. Presented by anthropologist Ian M. Cook, the podcast is a key initiative of the five year ERC project ONLINERPOL www.fordigitaldignity.com led by media anthropologist Sahana Udupa at LMU Munich. We are podcast partner of AAA.

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Scalable Sociality and The Logical Indian: Online Gods #11 show art Scalable Sociality and The Logical Indian: Online Gods #11

Online Gods

This month we're speaking with Daniel Miller about scalable sociality and Abhishek Mazumdar about The Logical Indian. Online Gods is a monthly podcast on digital cultures and their political ramifications, featuring lively conversations with scholars and activists. Presented by anthropologist Ian M. Cook, the podcast is a key initiative of the five year ERC project ONLINERPOL www.fordigitaldignity.com led by media anthropologist Sahana Udupa at LMU Munich. We are podcast partner of AAA.

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Critiques of the Public Sphere and Fake News Busting: Online Gods #10 show art Critiques of the Public Sphere and Fake News Busting: Online Gods #10

Online Gods

This month we talk with with Francis Cody about the public sphere and Govindraj Ethiraj about fake news busting. Online Gods is a monthly podcast on digital cultures and their political ramifications, featuring lively conversations with scholars and activists. Presented by anthropologist Ian M. Cook, the podcast is a key initiative of the five year ERC project ONLINERPOL www.fordigitaldignity.com led by media anthropologist Sahana Udupa at LMU Munich.

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The Digital Age and Instagram My Life: Online Gods #9 show art The Digital Age and Instagram My Life: Online Gods #9

Online Gods

This month we speak to Faye Ginsburg about the digital age and Waseem Shan about his Instagram account Mangalore My Life. Online Gods is a monthly podcast on digital cultures and their political ramifications, featuring lively conversations with scholars and activists. Presented by anthropologist Ian M. Cook, the podcast is a key initiative of www.fordigitaldignity.com led by media anthropologist Sahana Udupa at LMU Munich, and cohosted by HAU Network for Ethnographic Theory.

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The Public Sphere and Digital Privacy: Online Gods #8 show art The Public Sphere and Digital Privacy: Online Gods #8

Online Gods

This month we speak to Craig Calhoun the public sphere and Sunil Abraham about digital privacy.

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More Episodes

Online Gods - A Podcast about Digital Cultures in India and Beyond

Online Gods is a monthly podcast on digital cultures and their political ramifications, featuring lively conversations with scholars and activists. Presented by anthropologist Ian M. Cook, the podcast is a key initiative of the five year ERC project ONLINERPOL www.fordigitaldignity.com led by media anthropologist Sahana Udupa at LMU Munich, and cohosted by HAU Network for Ethnographic Theory. Online Gods represents our collective commitment to multimedia diffusion of research in accessible and engaging formats.

Online Gods is part theoretical exploration into some of the key concepts in the anthropology of media, and part research into how increased online interaction is changing the public sphere. Taking India and the India diaspora as its focal point, the podcast continues in the great anthropological tradition of bringing the global and the specific into conversation with one another as it analyses what online cultures do to political participation, displays of faith and feelings of national belonging. Each podcast will feature news, a discussion with a scholar about a key concept and a chat with an online god – one of the key players in India’s e-public sphere.

We are intrigued as to whether a podcast can produce ethnographic theory. As notions of ethnographic fieldwork continue to be reimagined in the digital age, we believe the podcasts are not just a platform that can disseminate what is already gathered, analyzed and theorized. We use podcasts as a way to communicate academic concepts, and as well engage in conversations with people who have carved out new pathways of public participation through the digital. These conversations could be yet another way to approach the mediated, interlocked and territorially eclectic fields that we, as anthropologists, are increasingly drawn into.

We believe it is possible to be both sophisticated and yet comprehensible, and that the spoken form can bring forth an accessibility that is sometimes missing from the canonical written forms. We even wonder whether academic podcasting might herald a technologically-enabled return to the centrality of oral traditions in intellectual exploration - can podcasting weaken reading's hegemonic hold on consumption of academic knowledge?

The podcast’s parent project ONLINERPOL is funded by the European Research Council Starting Grant Agreement Number 714285.  Taking contemporary landscapes of digital politics in India and the Indian diaspora in Europe as the primary focus, the five year project examines how online media recasts questions of faith and nation, and reshapes political participation. At the core of our endeavor is the value of digital dignity – to study and advocate for spaces where political expression can expand in an enabling culture of contacts, without the fear of shame and intimidation.

 “Online Gods” is one effort to foster an enabling culture of contacts by disseminating critical concepts that have inspired latest scholarly thinking on digital media. It is also a platform where scholars, activists and general interest publics can meet through the easy conversational form of the podcasts.

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In this episode we speak to Ralph Schroeder about Big Data and Nisha Susan about The Ladies Finger.