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Talks on breasts, AI and more highlight Pittsburgh Humanities Festival

The Pittsburgh Humanities Festival hosts expert talks on "moral AI," the sociology of breasts, soul food and ASMR. Sarah Thornton, author and sociologist, is speaking at the revamped Pittsburgh Humanities Festival, which includes talks on breasts, AI, soul food, and the web-enabled phenomenon known as ASMR. Thornton's research led to her book "Tits Up," which aims to reclaim the role of breasts as food sources and emblems of mammalian evolution. The festival, which is being hosted by the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust and Carnegie Mellon University’s Humanities Center, also includes presentations on “moral AI” by Vincent Conitzer, food historian Adrian Miller, and ASMR by Chia Kwa. Thornton hopes the book will allow people to feel more pride in their breasts.

Talks on breasts, AI and more highlight Pittsburgh Humanities Festival

ที่ตีพิมพ์ : 2 เดือนที่แล้ว โดย Bill O'Driscoll ใน Tech

It was only after her double mastectomy that Sarah Thornton really got interested in breasts.

And not just her own, which the author and sociologist had removed in 2018, after years of biopsies, as a way to avoid breast cancer.

“I didn’t know what I’d lost,” said Thornton, now 59. “I’d lived with these things for 40 years and not really given them much thought.”

The research that followed begat “Tits Up: What Sex Workers, Milk Bankers, Plastic Surgeons, Bra Designers, and Witches Tell Us About Breasts,” out May 7 on W.W. Norton.

Thornton is among the experts speaking at this year’s revamped Pittsburgh Humanities Festival, running Wed., April 3, to Sat., April 6, at the Greer Cabaret Theater.

The festival, organized by the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust and Carnegie Mellon University’s Humanities Center, also features presentations on “moral AI,” by CMU researcher Vincent Conitzer; soul food, by food historian Adrian Miller; and the web-enabled phenomenon known as ASMR, by performer Chia Kwa.

The four events comprise a scaled-down version of the festival, which had previously featured a dozen or more talks over the course of a weekend.

Thornton, based in California, made her name writing about the business of art, both for The Economist magazine and in her best-selling 2008 book “Seven Days in the Art World.”

For “Tits Up,” she took a similarly ethnographic approach, immersing herself in the five subcultures named in the book’s subtitle. (The sex workers employed in a strip club; the self-identified witches are participants in a pagan retreat in a redwood forest.)

While Western civilization’s fixation on breasts as sex objects began centuries ago, Thornton said, it’s only become more thoroughgoing. Thornton learned that she’d unwittingly absorbed these attitudes, to the detriment of breasts as food sources and emblems of mammalian evolution.

“I was shocked at how little I know about breasts, and I was shocked at how regularly they were dismissed as dumb boobs,” she said.

The book seeks to reclaim those other functions.

“The main argument of the book is that not even feminists are not really aware of how patriarchy has invaded our perspective on our breasts,” she said.

Her April 7 presentation here will last an hour with time for questions and answers. She added, “I hope the book will allow people to feel a little more pride in their chests.”

More information on the Humanities Festival is here.


หัวข้อ: AI

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