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Created: May 15, 2007
Updated: Aug 25, 2009
Viewed: 7 times

Bruce Caron

bcaron
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Email: bruce [at] tnms.org
 
Address: Santa barbara
United States
 
I Am: Community Organizer
 
Member Since: May 15, 2007
 
Local Time: Sat Nov 28 20:19:18
 
My Groups: DigitalOcean

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About

Bruce Caron, PhD., the founder and current executive director of the New Media Studio and the New Media Research Institute in Santa Barbara, was trained as a social anthropologist and an urban cultural geographer. He is skilled in a variety of multimedia authoring tools, and completed the first multimedia dissertation at UC Santa Barbara. Through the New Media Studio, he is realizing the goal of bringing new tools and skills to the public to help democratize the technological advantages of the digital revolution.

I have a webbook based on my dissertation. Community, Democracy and Performance. "Performing Democracy...

The role of the public performance in the display and maintenance of cultural and social meanings and institutions has been variously described in and out of anthropology and sociology for some time, but this is only now emerging as a central topic in urban sociology, cultural geography and cultural studies. My work updates the ethnographic critique of public performance within more general critiques of modernity and urban cultural practice.

My work reaches out to issues of civic space, civil society, popular culture, and the public sphere. The festival under study is a focal place for local democracy, and a tactical space of resistance to cultural hegemony by the state/marketplace. For "the festival" is also a primary example of civic participation, and offers a particularly clear model for community action within the modern public sphere.

Kyoto, Japan is an exceptionally valuable site for the study of urban festivals, due to the numbers of festivals that annually occur; the range of meanings imputed to these festivals; the central place of Kyoto's main civic festivals as cultural properties within Japan's national cultural self-image. Kyoto's Higashi-kujo Madang festival was organized by members of an undercaste community made up of Koreans permanently residing in Kyoto together with Japanese citizens from a stigmatized neighborhood called a "buraku." I was extremely fortunate to have begun my study of this festival from the time of its initial planning and performance through its second year.

My critique of Kyoto is also aimed at the Japanese nation-state, where most of the efforts at cultural management are situated. Koreans in Japan are making demands that the society open itself up to multicultural civic participation. But what are the current qualities of the public sphere in Japan, and how does this open (or close up) to participation by a diasporic community?"

Madangme

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schetikos over 2 years ago
Great work Bruce. Have you done much "global community" organizing? This would appear to be a great opportunity for someone like you. Cheers and keep in touch.
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