In June this year ABC’s The Drum published Once upon a time loving books was easy, my op ed that explored the social experience of books, literacy development and technology. This week Screen Education ran Cutting With Rhythm, my new profile about Ben Joss (pictured), a film and television editor I’ve worked with on short film productions, and the ‘rhythmic programming’ that shapes the way he cuts footage. I’m pleased with how both stories turned out. Since finishing my Post Doctoral Research Fellowship I’m building on my interest in how people use technology for communication, but in media spaces beyond health promotion.
My short term teaching duties in the Arts Industries unit at Victoria University left me with little time and made writing, blogging and participating in social media more difficult. Now that classes and marking have finished, I’ve been able to reflect on these non-fiction pieces. What stands out for me from a writing and research perspective is that the articles consider the factors shaping how technology is used and applied – including where they limit engagement with storytelling, and where they facilitate creativity. Although they are quite different stories, and I did not plan to write them together, this work continues my exploration of the relationship between people and technology, and the context that influences the production of text and audio+visual content across a range of digital media platforms.
Tags: ABC, access, arts, Australia, barriers, Ben Joss, books, bookstores, career, cultural and linguistic diversity, digital, editing, eReader, families, film, filmmaking, finance, information communication technology, iPad, James Cameron, libraries, literacy, literacy development, management, Meanland, media, migrant, movies, multilingual, multimodal, participation, reading, refugee, schools, Screen Education, Script, second hand books, storytelling, technology, The Drum, uncertainty, William Givson
Essay, Refugee and Migrant, digital technology, short film | benomara |
November 2, 2011 1:38 pm |
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My new story has been published as a weekly feature at Eureka Street. High-tech Health in the Bush makes a case for affordable and user friendly technological innovation to effectively support the health and wellbeing of Australia’s diverse range of communities, such as culturally and linguistically diverse groups in rural and remote areas.

High-tech Health in the Bush
The story was a great way to draw on my travel experiences and research work in regional Australia, and also poorer communities in South Africa.
Tags: audio visual, computer, cultural diversity, digital doorway, digital technology, eHealth, health, hospitals, information communication technology, innovation, internet, low cost, migrant, northern territory, refugee, remote, rural, south africa, video
Eureka Street | benomara |
April 12, 2010 2:09 pm |
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The end of 2009 is shaping up as conference time for me. I will be presenting on the use and application of ICT to communicate messages of health and wellbeing for refugee and migrant communities at:
I will also be presenting on writing for short film production at the 2009 AAWP Annual Conference: Margins and Mainstream, Hamilton, New Zealand, 26-28 November.
Tags: creative writing, creativity, health and wellbeing, immigrant, information communication technology, Italy, migrant, New Zealand, refugee, short film, social action technology, south africa
Conferences | benomara |
September 12, 2009 5:00 pm |
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