Profiles
Meghan Dougherty, PhD
Associate Professor Digital Communication
Contact
Education
PhD Communication 2007, University of Washington
Archiving the Web: Collection, documentation, display and shifting knowledge production paradigms
Meghan Dougherty is a media scholar whose research focuses on three areas: communication technologies and media cultures, critical studies of media infrastructures, and media archaeology. She joined the faculty in 2010, and teaches courses in media theory, digital culture, interactive storytelling, and environmental impacts of digital information infrastructure.
Dr. Dougherty’s current research aims to materialize Internet infrastructure in wild, protected, and public lands to understand more about the real world costs of our digital lives.
Specialty Area
Communication technologies and media cultures, critical studies of media infrastructures, media archaeology, research methodologyCourses Taught
Research Interests
Critical studies of media infrastructure, communication technologies and media cultures, media archaeology, sustainable media infrastructures, digital media and the environment, critical software studies, media and materiality.
Publications
Tiidenberg K., Markham, A., Pereira, G., Rehder, M., Dremljuga, R., Sommer, J., Dougherty, M. (2017) “I’m An Addict” and Other Sensemaking Devices: A Discourse Analysis of Self-Reflections on Lived Experience of Social Media. Conference Proceedings #SMSociety17, July 28-30, 2017, Toronto, ON. DOI: 10.1145/3097286.3097307
Dougherty, M. & Meyer, E.T. (2015). Community, Tools, and Practices in Web Archiving: The state of the art in relation to humanities and social science research needs. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology.
Dougherty, M. (accepted 2015). "Invisible Dynamics of Everyday Life in New Media Ecological Systems." Journal Systema.