Advanced Topics in Comparative Media: Extractive Media

Brian Larkin and Debashree Mukherjee

The Advanced Topics in Comparative Media course explores in depth a particular topic in the history and theory of media. The topic is studied comparatively across geographies. Content varies from year to year. This graduate seminar will explore topics related to Extractive Media, an ongoing faculty working group and the theme of CCM programming in 2024-2025. 

About Extractive Media: Questions of resource extraction are now front and center in almost every academic discipline across the humanities and social sciences. Propelled by the urgency of planetary climate crisis, scholars are reinventing their core research questions to ask how we came to this pass, and also where do we go from here? The Extractive Media working group seeks to take this conversation beyond fossil fuels to track the ways in which energy economies span continents and oceans, differentially affect unequal bodies and lives, and bleed across disparate sites such as the coal mine and the computer screen. We begin with the question of how media forms (print, architecture, photography, cinema, or, more recently, computational media) have historically contributed to material and imaginative modes of extraction, and, further, how we might turn to these very forms to find new possibilities for equitable futures?