Field Researcher / Historian

Role

Studies immersive media as a cultural field through projects, festivals, people, institutions, and histories.

Description

A Field Researcher / Historian studies immersive media as a field: its works, festivals, institutions, technologies, careers, and the patterns that connect them across decades. They build the records and analyses from which the field can know its own history.

The urgency is practical. Works vanish with their hardware, festival programs disappear from the web, and the people who built the field's first waves are still available to interview — for now. Primary sources that are cheap to collect today will be impossible to reconstruct in twenty years.

Discipline-Specific Description

This is research about the field rather than for a production: its outputs are histories, databases, archives of programs and interviews, and analyses of how the practice has developed.

Scope Note

Includes primary source collection, oral history interviews, festival and exhibition documentation, database and timeline construction, comparative analysis across periods and regions, and publication for both academic and practitioner audiences.

Boundary Note

The Field Researcher / Historian studies the field itself; the Field Researcher gathers real-world context for making a particular work. The role leans on Archivists for preservation and overlaps with critics on interpretation, but its center is the historical record.

Collaboration Note

Relies on archivists and media conservators, festival organizations willing to open their records, critics, academic researchers, and the practitioners whose memories are the primary sources.

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