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Richard Grusin
Director,
Associate Professor,
School of Literature, Communication, and Culture
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Richard Grusin, Associate Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies
in the School of Literature, Communication, and Culture (LCC), received
his Ph.D. from the
University of California at Berkeley
in 1983. He is the
author of a book on interpretive theories in nineteenth-century America
and of several articles on the theory and cultural history of technologies
of representation. He has been the recipient of several national awards,
including two research fellowships from the National Endowment of the
Humanities. His current teaching interests include courses on multimedia
and the history of electronic communication in LCC's Masters' program in
Information Design and Technology (IDT). In addition he is actively
overseeing the integration of electronic media into LCC's undergraduate
communication and humanities curriculum. Current GVU-related research
projects include a book on the visual and verbal representation of nature
in nineteenth-century America and a series of essays on the cultural and
theoretical implications of information technologies, including the essay
"What Is an Electronic Author?" in the book
Virtual Realities and Their Discontents (Johns Hopkins, 1996).
Contact information:
Richard Grusin
Graphics, Visualization & Usability Center
College of Computing
801 Atlantic Drive
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, GA, 30332-0280
E-mail: richard.grusin@lcc.gatech.edu
 
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