Aswin Punathambekar
@aswinp.bsky.social
1.9K followers 510 following 34 posts
Prof., Annenberg School for Communication @Upenn; focus on media & cultural change in postcolonial & diasporic contexts; Director of the Center for Advanced Research in Global Communication. https://www.asc.upenn.edu/people/faculty/aswin-punathambekar-phd
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Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
asc.upenn.edu
Congrats to @David Lydon-Staley on his promotion to Associate Professor with tenure!

He spoke about what this milestone means and what’s next in his research and teaching journey.

Read more: www.asc.upenn.edu/news-events/...
David Lydon-Staley, wearing round glasses and a light blue button-up shirt, smiling in front of a wooden bookshelf filled with books
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
jessigrace.bsky.social
Keep scrolling if you’ve already watched a tortoise and a dachshund playing with a soccer ball today ⚽

📽️RudyJanssens
aswinp.bsky.social
Dear TIAA-CREF university reps., please don't send emails now about "growing your retirement nest egg." Just don't.
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
burrata.bsky.social
Canvas is “popular” in the way that back pain is popular — a lot of people have to deal with it.
hypervisible.blacksky.app
“To help universities integrate Claude into their systems, Anthropic says it’s partnering with the company Instructure, which offers the popular education software platform Canvas.”

It’s like announcing that Sinestro is partnering with Grodd.
Anthropic launches an AI chatbot plan for colleges and universities | TechCrunch
Anthropic is launching Claude for Education, a competitor to OpenAI's ChatGPT Edu, to let higher education institutions access its AI chatbot, Claude.
techcrunch.com
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
jmittell.bsky.social
As #scms25 approaches (first of the post-twitter era!), feel free to follow this conference feed in Bluesky to track the discourse:
aswinp.bsky.social
Journal/book editors - if you are looking (and you should be!) to broaden your focus beyond the anglophone West, take note - there is a lot of excellent scholarship on African film and media at #SCMS25.
jennblaylock.bsky.social
In an effort to make scholarship on African film and media at #SCMS25 visible, please note and share widely these papers and panels with an African focus.
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
politybooks.bsky.social
‘Three major figures in analysis of #race in contemporary culture have joined forces to craft a powerful critique of recent mutations in mediated #racism.’
- David Hesmondhalgh

Anamik Saha, @gavant.bsky.social, @francescasobande.bsky.social ‘The Anti-Racist Media Manifesto’ is OUT NOW!
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
annenbergcargc.bsky.social
This Wednesday (3/26), please join CARGC Associate Director Juan Llamas-Rodriguez @llamasjr.bsky.social for a screening of Y Tu Mamá También and the release of his book on the film clals.sas.upenn.edu/events/juan-....
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
kdriscoll.aoir.social.ap.brid.gy
"Farewell to Jonathan Sterne", a nice collection of memories posted by Duke University Press 💔 https://dukeupress.wordpress.com/2025/03/21/farewell-to-jonathan-sterne/
Farewell to Jonathan Sterne
We are very sad to learn of the death of communication scholar Jonathan Sterne, after a long battle with cancer. He was 54 years old. Sterne was James McGill Professor of Culture and Technology at McGill University. He chronicled his illness on his blog and wrote about it in his scholarship as well. Senior Executive Editor Ken Wissoker says, “We have lost one of our most original and brilliant thinkers. A kind, generous person, and a true genius. Jonathan would take a commonplace understanding, open it up, rethink its history and how it actually worked. The results—whether about sound as culturally and historically specific or our ideas about impairment—changed what thinking was possible. His untimely passing is a deep and unfathomable loss.” Sterne’s scholarship is concerned with the cultural dimensions of communication technologies, especially their form and role in large-scale societies. He is the author of _The Audible Past_ (2003), a now-classic text that explores the cultural origins of sound reproduction; _MP3: The Meaning of a Format_ (2012), which unpacked the history and meaning of a common audio format; and _Diminished Faculties_(2022), in which he wrote about his own impairment due to a paralyzed vocal chord. Sterne also wrote articles for the Duke University Press journals _differences_ and _Social Text_. He was a co-editor (with Lisa Gitelman) of the book series Sign, Storage, Transmission, which publishes books offering new ways of thinking through the interconnectedness of knowledges, technologies, subjectivities, and cultures. Sterne also contributed chapters to two edited collections published by the Press: _Keywords in Sound_ and _Digital Sound Studies_. _The Audible Past_ received the 2004 Book of the Year award from the National Communication Association Critical and Cultural Studies Division. MP3 received the 2014 Katherine Singer Kovacs Book Award of Distinction from the Society for Cinema and Media Studies and the Association for Recorded Sound Collections Certificate of Merit in the Best General Research in Recorded Sound category. And _Diminished Faculties_ was the winner of the 2023 Gertrude J. Robinson Book Prize, presented by the Canadian Communication Association. Sterne received his doctorate from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1999. He taught at the University of Pittsburgh before moving to McGill University in 2004. He was a beloved teacher and served as a PhD advisor for dozens of students. He was generous with his time, reviewing many book manuscripts for Duke University Press and other presses and serving on countless committees at his own institution and around the world. Rob Drew, author of _Unspooled_ , reflects on Sterne’s generosity: “I met Jonathan Sterne in an airport after a conference in the early 2000s. I knew his work but assumed he didn’t know me from Adam. The first words out of his mouth were, ‘Your book rocks!’ I thought, does this guy read everything? Twenty years later I finally had another manuscript and thought it might be good for the Signs Storage Transmission series. I emailed him and within a half hour got an email from Ken Wissoker. I got a contract, but more than that it was Jon’s work on MP3s and music formats that allowed me to develop my whole line on cassettes. Though I never got to work closely with him, I’m another guy out there in cult-stud academe who felt his positive influence.” Lucas Hilderbrand, author of _The Bars Are Ours_ and _Inherent Vice_ , also benefited from Sterne’s help when publishing with us. “ _The Audible Past_ inspired much of my thinking for my dissertation and first book,” he says. “When I submitted my manuscript, Jonathan was my top request for a reader, and he modeled academic generosity both in his attentive feedback and in inviting conversation by disclosing his identity. He has been a mentor and a model for how to live an intellectual life. He invented fields of thought and shaped lives.” Executive Editor Courtney Berger worked with Sterne on his latest book, _Diminished Faculties_. She says, “Not only was Jonathan a tremendous scholar, he was a dedicated mentor, friend, and colleague. He drew people into his orbit with his honesty, generosity, and sharp wit. He was eager to share what he knew—about writing, teaching, and navigating academic life—and he was just as eager to learn. I feel lucky to have worked alongside Jonathan, to have learned from him, and to have been his friend.” Marketing Manager Laura Sell worked with Sterne all three of his books. “Publicists do have favorite authors,” she says, “and Jonathan was one of my favorites. He was gracious and appreciated the people who worked behind-the-scenes on his books. He was also extremely funny and we bonded over a shared love of cats. I’m proud to have had a part in disseminating his important scholarship and feel lucky to have known him personally.” We send our condolences to Jonathan’s partner, Carrie Rentschler, also a Duke University Press author, and to his family, colleagues, students and friends. ### Join the Conversation: * Tweet * * Email * Bluesky * More * * * * Reddit * Print * Threads * Like Loading...
dukeupress.wordpress.com
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
pavisuri.bsky.social
The US leadership in science and academia has created global public goods in terms of associational life, publishing, and conference infrastructure. Importantly the funding of US scientists enables teams across the world. This is not zero sum and we will all suffer if American academia suffers
fgenovese.bsky.social
Hard agree.

Also puzzled by this zero sum framing.

The US is a fundamental Higher Education powerhouse. Europe is still holding status despite the big impoverishment of the past 15 years.

I know the liberalized market logic asks otherwise but we need each other and should fight the same fight.
donmoyn.bsky.social
+1 on this: The US stands out relative to other country because of decades of big-time investment in scientific infrastructure. That is why the US won on science and attracting talent.
Trump is dismantling that infrastructure now, but it has never existed in other countries to the same degree.
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
jennblaylock.bsky.social
In an effort to make scholarship on African film and media at #SCMS25 visible, please note and share widely these papers and panels with an African focus.
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
pavisuri.bsky.social
One of the more sad yet fascinating things happening in America right now is watching a country known for small d democracy, & everyday political participation really flailing at achieving collective action against the rapid destruction of the federal government.
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
roxanegay.bsky.social
Surreal to watch Trump and Vance so thoroughly humiliate themselves and give the rest of the world the final motivation they need to unite against the Putin surrogacy. It’s so shocking!
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
aaup-penn.bsky.social
Philly, come out to 2000 Market right now and say it loud: hands off our healthcare, hands off our research, hands off our jobs!
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
jdcmedlock.bsky.social
I hope America is as lucky as the delta jet - everyone survives but the right wing explodes
Video obtained by CNN shows the rear landing gear of the jet buckling and the right wing shearing away in a fireball after the plane landed hard on the runway.
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
epopppp.bsky.social
1/ I am seeing a lot of comments on the slashing of NIH support along the lines of “universities should just spend their huge endowments.”

I’m the last person to cheer on the institutional stratification rising endowments have contributed to. But let me explain why this is not a solution.
aswinp.bsky.social
If only university administrators would grasp this 😥
neilabrams.bsky.social
As a political scientist who studies countries that managed to stop the slide into authoritarianism, I can assure you that ***refraining from provoking the authoritarian*** is not how it works.

Without further ado, I will now go tear out another chunk of hair.
annmlipton.bsky.social
"activist leaders have told him and colleagues that they fear protests against Trump might eventually be used as a predicate for declaring martial law. Other House Democrats echoed this privately"

Something something in advance

www.cnn.com/2025/02/16/p...
Reposted by Aswin Punathambekar
normative.bsky.social
It should be a source of profound embarrassment that a bunch of FedSoc lifers are taking a more vocal and principled stand against the corrupt Eric Adams deal than most elected Dems.