סמינר מחלקתי, 22.4.2014: ד"ר מרסי ברינק-דנן/Colloquium: Marcy Brink-Danan
מרצה: ד"ר מרסי ברינק-דנן, האוניברסיטה העברית
תאריך: 22.4.2014
שעה: 12:15-13:45
מרצה: ד"ר מרסי ברינק-דנן, האוניברסיטה העברית
תאריך: 22.4.2014
שעה: 12:15-13:45
כותרת: עבר זמנם? דיונים מפתיעים בקהילות מקוונות למבוגרים
מרצה: ד"ר גלית נמרוד, אוניברסיטת בן-גוריון בנגב
תאריך: 25.2.2014
שעה: 12:15-13:45
חדר: רבין 8001
Title: Outcomes and Antecedents of Drug-Related Information Seeking Among US College Students: Implications for Intervention
Lecturer: Prof. Lourdes Martinez (Michigan State University)
Date: 5.3.2014 (Wednesday)
Time: 14:15-15:45 (Please note the irregular time and day)
Abstract:
Previous research on determinants have focused on proximal factors (e.g., attitudes, norms, perceived behavioral control). However, the existing body of work has largely ignored the role of information seeking, a more distal factor, in shaping behavior as mediated through more proximal determinants. This talk presents recent research exploring this issue and identifies antecedents and outcomes of information seeking in the context of drug misuse among college students in the US, and offers implications for designing interventions.
Title: New Insights into Seclective Exposure: Party-based differences and (sometimes) seeking the other side
Lecturer: Prof. R. Kelly Garrett (The Ohio State University)
Date: 11.3.2014
The talk is part of the MOST seminar on partisan selective exposure.
Title: Stories Without Borders: Global Iconic Events and Transnational Media
Lecturer: Julia Sonnevend (University of Michigan)
Date: 4.3.2014
Time: 12:15-13:45
Abstract:
Global iconic events are news events that are covered extensively and remembered ritually by international media. Events like 9/11 and the fall of the Berlin Wall split off from the regular rhythms of daily life and stand out in memory as unique, marked as uplifting or traumatic. We isolate these occurrences from whatever came before and after, strip off their contradictions and complexities, and discard their webs of causes. In the stories we tell, such events become stand-alone items, compressions of time and space, elevated above the repetitive flow of time. Focusing on the initial and anniversary coverage of the fall of the Berlin Wall, in this talk I examine how storytellers build up certain events so that people in distinct parts of the world can and will remember them for long periods of time. How do stories of particular events turn into global myths, while others fade out – due to counter-narration, forgetting, and other factors that are hard to pin down? In other words, what characterizes the transnational narration of global iconic events?