<div dir="ltr">Dear Colleagues,<div>I
am so pleased to announce that the CaMP reading group is starting up
again this year with Michael Lempert as the featured author tomorrow at
noon East Coast time. </div><div> <br>He has asked us to read the
preface and introduction. Please read as much as you can, but do feel
free to join us even if you haven't managed to read everything.<br><br>The reading can be found here:</div><div><div><a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jF0N7A_htfKDXuzAU-aiwz16HPAzhS2s/view?usp=sharing">https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jF0N7A_htfKDXuzAU-aiwz16HPAzhS2s/view?usp=sharing</a></div><div><br></div><div>The meeting will be 12-1 pm east coast time tomorrow and can be reached by clicking on this Zoom link:<br><br><a href="https://iu.zoom.us/j/949202698" target="_blank"> https://iu.zoom.us/j/949202698</a><br></div><div><br></div><div>
<div>If you want to see the full line-up for this year, you can find it here: <a href="https://campanthropology.org/virtual-reading-group/">https://campanthropology.org/virtual-reading-group/</a></div>
</div><div><br></div><div>Looking forward to seeing you all virtually,<br><br>Ilana</div></div><div><br></div><div>Press blurb: <span style="color:rgb(58,58,58);font-family:"Source Serif Pro","Times New Roman","serif";font-size:18px">In
this ambitious, wide-ranging book, anthropologist Michael Lempert
offers a conceptual history that explores how, why, and with what
effects we have come to think of interactions as “scaled.” Focusing on
the sciences of interaction in midcentury America, Lempert traces how
they harnessed diverse tools and media technologies, from dictation
machines to 16mm film, to study communication “microscopically.” In
looking closely, many hoped to transform interaction: to improve
efficiency, grow democracy, curb racism, and much else. Yet their
descent into a microworld created troubles, with some critics charging
that these scientists couldn’t see the proverbial forest for the trees.
Exploring talk therapy and group dynamics studies, social psychology and
management science, conversation analysis, “micropolitics,” and more,
Lempert shows how scale became a defining problem across the behavioral
sciences.</span></div><span style="color:rgb(58,58,58);font-family:"Source Serif Pro","Times New Roman","serif";font-size:18px"> </span><br style="box-sizing:border-box;margin-bottom:0px;color:rgb(58,58,58);font-family:"Source Serif Pro","Times New Roman","serif";font-size:18px"><span style="color:rgb(58,58,58);font-family:"Source Serif Pro","Times New Roman","serif";font-size:18px">Ultimately,
he argues, if we learn how our objects of study have been scaled in
advance, we can better understand how we think and interact with
them—and with each other—across disciplinary and ideological divides.
Even as once-fierce debates over micro and macro have largely subsided,
Lempert shows how scale lives on and continues to affect the ethics and
politics of language and communication today.</span>
<br></div>