Recent Press Coverage

Current News and Events

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  • Sam Nunn Discusses the Threat from North Korea and President Trump’s Temperament

    March 13, 2017

    In Part 1 of a two-part interview with Dennis O'Hare of WABE which aired on March 13, 2017, Senator Sam Nunn discussed the Threat Posed by North Korea and President Trump’s Temperament in Handling Military and Security.

    Published in: WABE

    Senator Sam Nunn
  • Time To Talk To North Korea, Former Georgia Sen. Sam Nunn Says

    March 13, 2017

    Sam Nunn, distinguished professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was interviewed in “Time To Talk To North Korea, Former Georgia Sen. Sam Nunn Says” by WABE.

    Excerpt:

    This week, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson begins a trip to Asia, with scheduled visits to Japan, South Korea, and China.  Tensions have increased in the a region after North Korea recently conducted new tests of missiles, which North Korea says could carry nuclear warheads.

    Former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn, a Democrat from Georgia, is the co-chair and CEO of the Nuclear Threat Initiative. In part one of a conversation with Denis O'Hayer on "Morning Edition," Nunn talked about how serious a threat North Korea poses, and about the complicated diplomacy he says the new Trump administration must pursue to head off the possibility of a nuclear confrontation with that country.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: WABE

    Senator Sam Nunn
  • Trump Expected to Roll Back Obama's Climate Change Plan

    March 7, 2017

    Marilyn Brown, professor in the School of Public Policy, was quoted in “Trump Expected to Roll Back Obama's Climate Change Plan” by WABE.

    Excerpt:

    The Clean Power Plan has never gone into effect because two dozen states, including Georgia, sued to block it.

    Still, many coal-fired power plants have closed anyway, because natural gas is cheaper than coal.

    “Market forces, particularly with gas prices being so low, have created a great deal of momentum in the right direction,” said Marilyn Brown, a professor at Georgia Tech's School of Public Policy. “But those are all really short-term advances. The question is, what are we going to be able to do to meet the longer-term goals? There's so much uncertainty.”  

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: WABE

  • Closer Look: Outkast Class; Atlanta Traffic; And More

    March 7, 2017

    Joycelyn Brown, visiting professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was interviewed in “Closer Look: Outkast Class; Atlanta Traffic; And More” by WABE.

    Excerpt:

    • 33:27: Dr. Joycelyn Wilson, visiting professor at Georgia Tech, discusses her class, "Exploring the Lyrics of Outkast and Trap Music to Explore Politics in Social Justice,” and what lessons can be learned from hip-hop.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: WABE

    Joycelyn Wilson
  • ‘Artificial Intelligence’ Has Become Meaningless

    March 4, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Literature, Media, and Communication, wrote “‘Artificial Intelligence’ Has Become Meaningless” for The Atlantic.

    Excerpt:

    In science fiction, the promise or threat of artificial intelligence is tied to humans’ relationship to conscious machines. Whether it’s Terminators or Cylons or servants like the “Star Trek” computer or the Star Wars droids, machines warrant the name AI when they become sentient—or at least self-aware enough to act with expertise, not to mention volition and surprise.

    What to make, then, of the explosion of supposed-AI in media, industry, and technology? In some cases, the AI designation might be warranted, even if with some aspiration. Autonomous vehicles, for example, don’t quite measure up to R2D2 (or Hal), but they do deploy a combination of sensors, data, and computation to perform the complex work of driving. But in most cases, the systems making claims to artificial intelligence aren’t sentient, self-aware, volitional, or even surprising. They’re just software.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Atlantic

    Ian Bogost
  • Trump Officials Calm Allies' Worries About U.S. Commitment to Europe

    March 3, 2017

    General Philip Breedlove,a distinguished professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was interviewed on the March 3, 2017 episode of Morning Edition for NPR.

    Listen to the full segment here

    Published in: NPR

    Gen. Philip Breedlove
  • The Wisdom of Nokia's Dumbphone

    February 28, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Literature, Media, and Communication, wrote “The Wisdom of Nokia's Dumbphone” for The Atlantic.

    Excerpt:

    They weighed heavy in pockets and jackets and bags, for they were thick and bulky, not lithe and narrow. Harried professionals never clutched one ostentatiously to say silently, “I’ve got better things to do than listen to this pitch or order this coffee.” Fashionable youth never dangled one nonchalantly from fingers as a flirty pique. Nothing was less sexy or less useful than a cell phone.

    How is it possible, then, that Nokia has announced an updated edition of one of its most popular phones of the early aughts, the 3310? In short, because nothing has become less sexy or less useful than a smartphone.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Atlantic

    Ian Bogost
  • Georgia Tech Class Uses Outkast to Teach Social Justice

    February 27, 2017

    Joycelyn Wilson, visiting professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was quoted in “Georgia Tech Class Uses Outkast to Teach Social Justice” by WXIA-TV.

    Excerpt:

    Radio meets the real world in Dr. Joycelyn Wilson's classroom.

    "Oh my gosh, this class has been amazing," said fourth year student Raianna Brown.

    The course is about going beyond the mindset of the car or the club where many typically enjoy hip-hop, to understand what these performers are saying about the lives and experiences of others.

    "I really love the conversations that we have," said Amidat Sonekan, a third year student. "For someone who's not really good with words, it kind of helps me find those words that help explain why hip-hop is so important."

    The course is called Exploring the Lyrics of Outkast and Trap Music to Explore Politics of Social Justice.  Students meets once a week for three hours, listening to music, breaking down lyrics and engaging in discussions about the meanings behind the beats.

    For the full article, read here.

     

    Published in: WXIA-TV

    Joycelyn Wilson
  • Aliens as Immigrants: How ‘Arrival’ Became the Latest Political Sci-Fi Film

    February 24, 2017

    Jay Telotte and Lisa Yaszek, professors in the Ivan Allen College School of Literature, Media, and Commuincation, were quoted in “Aliens as Immigrants: How ‘Arrival’ Became the Latest Political Sci-Fi Film” by The Washington Post.

    Excerpt:

    Jay Telotte, a Georgia Tech professor who studies science fiction film and TV, says that political metaphors can be found in genre films of all sorts. In Westerns and musicals, he says, “the same thing happens — you find ways of displacing your anxieties and putting them into this other form. It’s not as threatening, and certainly it’s not as polemical.”.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Washington Post

    Jay Telotte
  • Review: Sisters of Tomorrow: The First Women of Science Fiction

    February 24, 2017

    Lisa Yaszek, professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Literature, Media, and Commuincation, had her new book, Sisters of Tomorrow: The First Women of Science Fiction, reviewed in “Review: Sisters of Tomorrow: The First Women of Science Fiction” by Amazing Stories.

    Excerpt:

    Sisters of Tomorrow makes it clear that not only have women been trying harder for at least forever, and particularly for the past century, they’ve actually accomplished quite a bit that we are not at all properly familiar with.

    To put a fine point on it: reading this book will force you to confront your unconscious biases head on. The first several pages of the introduction might be more appropriately titled You Had No Idea as it relentlessly catalogs the enormous accomplishments of what it describes as at least a “16th of the sf community”:

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Amazing Stories

    Lisa Yaszek - Professor and Associate Chair
  • Bogost Interviewed on Marketplace Tech

    February 24, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was interviewed about a new website for protest-based games on the February 24, 2017 episode of Marketplace Tech for American Public Media.

    Listen to the full episode here

    Published in: American Public Media

    Ian Bogost
  • Two Millennials Launch Bookmobile for New Generation of Readers

    February 23, 2017

    Julia Turner, an alumna of the School of Literature, Communication, and Culture (now the School of Literature, Media, and Communication), was featured in “Two Millennials Launch Bookmobile for New Generation of Readers” by The Chicago Tribune.

    Excerpt:

    I recently met two young women who are living my dream job.

    I hate them.

    No, I do not hate Julia Turner and Christen Thompson Lain, both 27, both of North Charleston, S.C. I envy them, their youth, their promise, their drive.

    Their bookstore. 

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Chicago Tribune

    Julia Turner
  • Smart Mines, A Smaller Army, and the Trump Buildup That Won't Happen: Winnefeld

    February 23, 2017

    Admiral James A. “Sandy” Winnefeld, former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and a distinguished professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, was quoted in “Smart Mines, A Smaller Army, and the Trump Buildup That Won't Happen: Winnefeld” by Breaking Defense.

    Excerpt:

    Trump’s promised defense budget boost probably won’t materialize, the former Vice-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs said today, so we can’t afford to grow a larger military. Instead of more ships and troops, retired Adm. James Winnefeld said in a rare public appearance, the military should prioritize investment in new ideas. His own service, for example, should overcome its post-1945 reluctance to lay mines off enemy shores and deploy networks of smart mines. The Army should cut soldiers to buy more modern equipment and stockpile a lot of it in Europe.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Breaking Defense

    James A. “Sandy” Winnefeld
  • How a Million-Dollar Superwatch is Fighting Back Against Computing

    February 16, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Literature, Media, and Communication, wrote “How a Million-Dollar Superwatch is Fighting Back Against Computing” for The Atlantic.

    Excerpt:

    At its heart, a mechanical watch is a fancy spring. A metal coil stores power when the crown is wound tight. A series of gears harnesses that energy in even increments. It spins a central wheel, whose oscillations are geared to turn the watch’s hands.

    Once gears spin, it’s possible to add more complications, as watchmakers call them. A date display, for example, can be accomplished by adding a reduction gear mechanism to cause a calendar disc to rotate every two full revolutions of the hour hand. A similar mechanism can track the phases of the moon. A more complex one, called a perpetual calendar, can account for months less than 31 days and even leap years. The more complications, the more complexity, cost, labor, value, and mechanical drama.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Atlantic

    Ian Bogost
  • Getting Russia Right

    February 14, 2017

    Gen. Philip Breedlove was asked by the Washington Times to share perspective on U.S. relations with Russia. Breedlove retired in 2016 from his position as the Supreme Allied Commander of Europe and Commander U.S. European Command and is distinguished professor in the Ivan Allen College Sam Nunn School of International Affairs. The article was completed prior to Russia deploying a cruise missile in violation of the 1987 arms treaty that bans land-based American and Russian intermediate-range missiles.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Washington Times

    Gen. Philip Breedlove
  • President Trump's Tough Trade Talk Concerns Georgia Manufacturers

    February 13, 2017

    Usha Nair-Reichert, associate professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Economics, was quoted in “President Trump's Tough Trade Talk Concerns Georgia Manufacturers” by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    Excerpt:

    When it comes to ice cream, exports from Georgia have quadrupled since 2010, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. More than one-third of the roughly $16 million in state ice cream exports went to Mexico last year.

    “There’s a sizable market to be tapped in the ice cream sector, there’s no doubt about that,” said Usha Nair-Reichert, an economist at Georgia Tech.

    She questioned pulling out of NAFTA, especially given the economic interdependence of the three countries. She also pointed out that if disagreements with Mexico cause the Peso to fall, Mexican exports become more competitive. Comments by the president since his election have been linked to fluctuations in that country’s currency.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Usha Nair-Reichert
  • OutKast in Class: Using Hip-Hop to Teach Social Justice

    February 7, 2017

    Joycelyn Wilson, visiting professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was interviewed in “OutKast in Class: Using Hip-Hop to Teach Social Justice,” a segement on NPR's All Things Considered.

    Excerpt:

    The Georgia Institute of Technology is known for graduating its students from nationally-ranked programs in science, technology, engineering and math.

    A new class taught by visiting professor Dr. Joyce Wilson is using hip-hop to take those students down a more creative pathway than their STEM studies to learn about issues such as race, poverty and cultural identity.

    The class is titled “Exploring the Lyrics of OutKast and Trap Music to Explore Politics of Social Justice.”

    Dr. Wilson joined me in the studio to explain why she’s teaching trap at Tech.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: NPR

    Joycelyn Wilson
  • Thomas Lux, Esteemed Georgia Tech Teacher and Poet

    February 6, 2017

    "Thomas Lux, Esteemed Georgia Tech Teacher and Poet" by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution is an appreciation piece for the late Thomas Lux, who was the Margaret T. and Henry C. Bourne, Jr. Chair in Poetry in the School of Literature Media, and Communication.

    Excerpt:

    Distinguished by his booming laugh, his arresting poetry readings and his passion for baseball, Bourne Professor of Poetry at Georgia Tech Thomas Lux, was a self-described “literary oddball” who threw himself into teaching while remaining a dedicated master of the craft.

    After weekly readings at Georgia Tech, “he would invite everyone who was at the reading to come to his house, and everyone would,” said Jericho Brown, associate professor of English and creative writing at Emory University. “I would say he was an idol of mine.”

    When Lux, 70, died Sunday, the internet came alive with reminiscences from those who held him and his work in high esteem.

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Thomas Lux
  • The Value of ‘Object Lessons’ and Learning Everything About One Thing

    February 3, 2017

    Ian Bogost, professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was mentioned in “The Value of ‘Object Lessons’ and Learning Everything About One Thing” by The Chicago Tribune.

    Excerpt:

    "Object Lessons" describes themselves as "short, beautiful books," and to that, I'll say, amen. Overseen by Ian Bogost of Georgia Tech ("Play Anything") and Christopher Schaberg of Loyola University New Orleans ("The End of Airports"), the books have such scintillating titles as "Remote Control," "Shipping Container" and "Refrigerator."

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Chicago Tribune

    Ian Bogost
  • Making the Grade: Tech Professor Blends Music, Computer Coding

    January 31, 2017

    Brian Magerko, associate professor in the Ivan Allen College School of Literature, Media, and Communication, was mentioned in “Making the Grade: Tech Professor Blends Music, Computer Coding” by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    Excerpt:

    The program grew out of conversations between Freeman and his EarSketch co-founder, Brian Magerko a musician and professor of digital media at Tech. “We were looking at ways to collaborate and settled on this problem of how to engage students in coding,” said Freeman. “We both saw the same thing: We use computers, but very few of us understand how they work, let alone how to control them or understand their potential.”

    For the full article, read here.

    Published in: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Brian Magerko

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