TY - BOOK
T1 - Live Coding as a Model for Cultural Practice & Cultural-Epistemological Aspects of Live Coding
AU - Cox, Geoffrey
PY - 2013/9/20
Y1 - 2013/9/20
N2 - This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Seminar 13382 “Collaboration and learning through live coding”. Live coding is improvised interactive programming, typically to create electronic music and other digital media, done live with an audience. Our seminar
was motivated by the phenomenon and experience of live coding. Our conviction was that those represent an important and broad, but seldom articulated, set of opportunities for computer science and the arts and humanities. The seminar participants included a broad range of scholars, researchers, and practitioners spanning fields from music theory to software engineering. We held live coding performances, and facilitated discussions on three main perspectives, the humanities, computing education, and software engineering. The main outcome of our seminar was better understanding of the potential of live coding for informing cross-disciplinary scholarship and practice, connecting the arts, cultural studies, and computing.
The report is edited by Alan Blackwell and Alex McLean and James Noble and Julian Rohrhuber.
AB - This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Seminar 13382 “Collaboration and learning through live coding”. Live coding is improvised interactive programming, typically to create electronic music and other digital media, done live with an audience. Our seminar
was motivated by the phenomenon and experience of live coding. Our conviction was that those represent an important and broad, but seldom articulated, set of opportunities for computer science and the arts and humanities. The seminar participants included a broad range of scholars, researchers, and practitioners spanning fields from music theory to software engineering. We held live coding performances, and facilitated discussions on three main perspectives, the humanities, computing education, and software engineering. The main outcome of our seminar was better understanding of the potential of live coding for informing cross-disciplinary scholarship and practice, connecting the arts, cultural studies, and computing.
The report is edited by Alan Blackwell and Alex McLean and James Noble and Julian Rohrhuber.
M3 - Project Report
BT - Live Coding as a Model for Cultural Practice & Cultural-Epistemological Aspects of Live Coding
PB - Schloss Dagstuhl–Leibniz-Zentrum f"ur Informatik
ER -