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Calling the Question Series
Spring 2000: Technology and Culture

All programs are from 3:30-5:00 P.M. and are FREE and
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. A reception follows each program. 
Call 202-783-5277 to reserve, seating is limited.

The Politics of Culture and Technology and
Reception Book Party: The Politics of Culture
TUESDAY, MARCH 14
Program at National Building Museum Auditorium
401 F Street NW, Washington, DC

E-Culture?

TUESDAY, APRIL 11
Program at National Building Museum Auditorium
401 F Street NW, Washington, DC

On-Line Culture and The Public Interest

MONDAY, MAY 8
Program at National Public Radio
635 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, DC

The information technology revolution is in full swing.  Newspaper headlines, television programs, and on-line services offer constant updates on the transformations, opportunities and dangers ushered in by computer networks and an on-line society.

The cultural sector is embracing new technologies along with the rest of the world.   What are the implications of this revolution for cultural institutions and American culture more broadly?  Join the Center for Arts and Culture for an exploration of the cultural and policy implications of this new world in a thought-provoking series of conversation that will shape the Center's research agenda and policy recommendations.

Help us consider topics that will shape public policies about the arts and humanities in the new century.  These three programs will identify technology issues in the Center's national initiative on policy challenges in arts and culture facing the next President and the next Congress.

The Center for Arts and Culture is grateful for the continuing support of The Howard Gilman Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation. Over the past year it has received additional support from The Nathan Cummings Foundation, Ford Foundation, J. Paul Getty Trust, Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts, Pew Charitable Trusts, and the Henry Luce Foundation.

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