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By Heather D. Freeman
4.9
1515 ratings
The podcast currently has 22 episodes available.
In this last episode of Familiar Shapes, we’ll look at the brighter sides of the history of witchcraft, as well as efforts to make sure digital technologies are safe and equitable. We’ll say a fond farewell to our speakers – and launch ourselves into future histories.
In this episode Heather Freeman interviews:
Dr. Nicholas Christakis, the Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University
Dr. Alexander Cummins, an independent historian researching early modern European and early American religion, philosophy, medicine, and magic
Prof. Owen Davies Reader in Social History at the University of Hertfordshire
Susan Etlinger, industry analyst for the Altimeter Group
Alex Hogan Managing Partner of Etic Labs
Prof. Ronald Hutton Head of the School of Humanities and Professor of History at the University of Bristol
Paolo Parigi, Lead Trust Scientist for AirBnB and instructor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University
Dr. Samira Shaikh Assistant Professor in Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Dr. Tim Weninger Associate Professor in Computer Science at the University of Notre Dame
Dr. Samuel Woolley Assistant Professor of Journalism at the University of Austin at Texas.
Special thanks to Jeff and Quinn Murphy, the producer’s family.
Sound Design by Seth Grant www.sethgrantmedia.com
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits and additional thanks and credits for the Familiar Shapes podcast series.
In this second-to-last episode of Familiar Shapes, we’ll look at magical thinking in the digital age. We may not all be chaos magicians, but yelling at broken machines sure feels good.
In this episode Heather Freeman interviews:
Dr. John Callow, Visiting Lecturer at the University of Suffolk
Dr. Nicholas Christakis, the Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University
Prof. Owen Davies Reader in Social History at the University of Hertfordshire
Prof. Marion Gibson Associate Dean for Education in the College of Humanities, and Professor of Renaissance and Magical Literatures at the University of Exeter
Dr. Douglas Guilbeault Assistant Professor in the Management of Organizations, University of California - Berkeley
Alex Hogan Managing Partner in Etic Labs
Prof. Ronald Hutton Head of the School of Humanities and Professor of History at the University of Bristol
Paolo Parigi, Lead Trust Scientist for AirBnB and instructor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University.
Dr. Samuel Woolley Assistant Professor of Journalism at the University of Austin at Texas.
Sound Design by Seth Grant www.sethgrantmedia.com
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
We consider the moral challenges of big data, machine learning, and the need for ethics in computer science and information technology.
In this episode Heather Freeman interviews:
Susan Etlinger, industry analyst for the Altimeter Group
Dr. Douglas Guilbeault Assistant Professor in the Management of Organizations, University of California - Berkeley;
Alex Hogan Managing Partner in Etic Labs;
Dr. Srijan Kumar Assistant Professor, School of Computational Science and Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology;
Paolo Parigi, Lead Trust Scientist for AirBnB and instructor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University.
Dr. Samuel Woolley Assistant Professor of Journalism at the University of Austin at Texas.
Sound Design by Seth Grant www.sethgrantmedia.com
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
This week’s episode focuses on the research of Dr. Patrick Bergemann, which was the basis of his 2019 book Judge Thy Neighbor: Denunciations in the Spanish Inquisition, Romanov Russia, and Nazi Germany.
Heather Freeman interviews:
Prof. Patrick Bergemann, Assistant Professor of Organization and Management at the Paul Merage School of Business at the University of California, Irvine.*
Prof. Marion Gibson Associate Dean for Education in the College of Humanities, and Professor of Renaissance and Magical Literatures at the University of Exeter
*At the time of the interview, Prof. Bergemann was an Assistant Professor at the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago.
Sound Design by Seth Grant www.sethgrantmedia.com
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
We consider solutions to the social media monsters we all feed — even if only a few of us are their creators.
In this episode Heather Freeman interviews:
Susan Etlinger, industry analyst for the Altimeter Group;
Dr. Douglas Guilbeault Assistant Professor in the Management of Organizations, University of California - Berkeley;
Dr. Srijan Kumar Assistant Professor, School of Computational Science and Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology;
Paolo Parigi, Lead Trust Scientist for AirBnB and instructor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University.
Dr. David Rand, Associate Professor of Management Science and Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT;
Dr. Samira Shaikh Assistant Professor in Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte;
Dr. Tim Weninger Associate Professor in Computer Science at the University of Notre Dame;
Dr. Samuel Woolley Assistant Professor of Journalism at the University of Austin at Texas.
Sound Design by Seth Grant www.sethgrantmedia.com
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
When and why did the early modern witch trials end — or did they?
In this episode, Heather Freeman interviews:
Dr. John Callow, Visiting Lecturer at the University of Suffolk
Prof. Owen Davies Reader in Social History at the University of Hertfordshire
Prof. Marion Gibson Associate Dean for Education in the College of Humanities, and Professor of Renaissance and Magical Literatures at the University of Exeter
Prof. Ronald Hutton Head of the School of Humanities and Professor of History at the University of Bristol
Prof. Sean McCloud Associate Professor of Religious Studies and American Studies, and Communication Studies Faculty Affiliate at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Sound Design by Seth Grant www.sethgrantmedia.com
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
It’s been said that personal data is the new oil. Just a few years ago, companies like Cambridge Analytica bought user data from social media companies to create hyper-targeted political ads. Cambridge Analytica isn’t around anymore, but the practice is still with us, it’s evolved, and poses a real challenge to democracies around the world.
In this episode, Heather Freeman interviews:
Dr. Douglas Guilbeault Assistant Professor in the Management of Organizations, University of California - Berkeley;
Dr. Srijan Kumar Assistant Professor, School of Computational Science and Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology;
Dr. David Rand, Associate Professor of Management Science and Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT;
Dr. Samira Shaikh Assistant Professor in Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte;
Dr. Tim Weninger Associate Professor in Computer Science at the University of Notre Dame;
Dr. Samuel Woolley Assistant Professor of Journalism at the University of Austin at Texas.
Recommended Resources
Noujaim, J. & Amer, K. (Directors). (2019). The Great Hack. Netflix. https://www.netflix.com/title/80117542
Edelman, G. (2020, March 3). Why Don’t We Just Ban Targeted Advertising? From protecting privacy to saving the free press, it may be the single best way to fix the internet. WIRED. https://www.wired.com/story/why-dont-we-just-ban-targeted-advertising/
Brown, S. (2020, June 29). Privacy Isn’t a Right You Can Click Away: Senator Sherrod Brown wants to drastically scale back the permitted uses of your personal data—and ban facial recognition outright. WIRED. https://www.wired.com/story/privacy-isnt-a-right-you-can-click-away/
Witt, J., & Pasternack, A. (2019, July 26). The strange afterlife of Cambridge Analytica and the mysterious fate of its data. FastCompany.com. https://www.fastcompany.com/90381366/the-mysterious-afterlife-of-cambridge-analytica-and-its-trove-of-data
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
Sound Design by Charlie A. Franco https://www.instagram.com/charliepunkoi/
Racy, frightening, and sensationalist, early modern pamphlets about witch trials were the clickbait of their day. And just like clickbait today, they shaped popular beliefs in dangerous ways.
In this episode, Heather Freeman interviews:
Dr. John Callow, Visiting Lecturer at the University of Suffolk
Dr. Vikki Carr, an independent scholar researching witchcraft beliefs of Early Modern England and Scotland
Dr. Alexander Cummins, an independent historian researching early modern European and early American religion, philosophy, medicine, and magic.
Prof. Owen Davies Reader in Social History at the University of Hertfordshire
Prof. Marion Gibson Associate Dean for Education in the College of Humanities, and Professor of Renaissance and Magical Literatures at the University of Exeter
Dr. Douglas Guilbeault Assistant Professor in the Management of Organizations, University of California - Berkeley;
Prof. Ronald Hutton Head of the School of Humanities and Professor of History at the University of Bristol
Dr. Charlotte-Rose Millar, a postdoctoral fellow in the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Queensland.
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
It’s incredibly easy to build a bot. And incredibly hard to track down their makers.
In this episode, Heather Freeman interviews:
Dr. Douglas Guilbeault Assistant Professor in the Management of Organizations, University of California - Berkeley;
Dr. Srijan Kumar Assistant Professor, School of Computational Science and Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology;
Dr. Samira Shaikh Assistant Professor in
Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte;
Dr. Samuel Woolley Assistant Professor of Journalism at the University of Austin at Texas.
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
We check out the legal structures surrounding the early modern witch trials and consider how Matthew Hopkins, the infamous 17th-century ‘Witchfinder General’, was himself pestered him by diabolic familiars.
In this episode, Heather Freeman interviews:
Dr. John Callow, Visiting Lecturer at the University of Suffolk
Dr. Vikki Carr, an independent scholar researching witchcraft beliefs of Early Modern England and Scotland
Prof. Marion Gibson Associate Dean for Education in the College of Humanities, and Professor of Renaissance and Magical Literatures at the University of Exeter
Prof. Ronald Hutton Head of the School of Humanities and Professor of History at the University of Bristol
Prof. Sean McCloud Associate Professor of Religious Studies and American Studies, and Communication Studies Faculty Affiliate at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Dr. Charlotte-Rose Millar, a postdoctoral fellow in the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Queensland.
Guest appearances by Jeff Murphy and Quinn Murphy.
Sound Design by Charlie A. Franco https://www.instagram.com/charliepunkoi/
Additional sounds from Freesound.org, ccMixter, Free Music Archive.
Visit https://www.familiarshapesthemovie.com/episodes for the full list of music credits.
The podcast currently has 22 episodes available.