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Monday, November 10, 2025
- 12:30 PM1h 15mEli Stine, Guest Lecturer (Part of the "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance" Lecture Series)Eli Stine is an internationally active media artist, software engineer, and educator. Projects that Stine has designed sound and written code for have been mentioned in the New York Times, USA Today, The Wire, The Economist, and on NPR, and have toured Europe, Asia, and India. Stine is an assistant professor of computer music and digital arts at Oberlin Conservatory in the Technology In Music And Related Arts program. Prior to that, Stine worked as a software engineer at Meta (formerly Facebook) Reality Labs Audio Research. Stine received Ph.D. and masters degrees in composition and computer technologies as a Jefferson Fellow at the University of Virginia and bachelor’s degrees in technology in music and related arts and computer science from Oberlin College and Conservatory. Stine's work spans immersive electronic music, mixed reality story-telling, interactive multimedia experiences, and frequent collaboration between disciplines, artistic and otherwise.This event is part of the lecture series "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance," sponsored by the Franco Family Institute for Liberal Arts and the Public Good, the Department of Music, and the Technology & Digital Studies Program. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1h 15mEli Stine, Guest Lecturer (Part of the "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance" Lecture Series)Eli Stine is an internationally active media artist, software engineer, and educator. Projects that Stine has designed sound and written code for have been mentioned in the New York Times, USA Today, The Wire, The Economist, and on NPR, and have toured Europe, Asia, and India. Stine is an assistant professor of computer music and digital arts at Oberlin Conservatory in the Technology In Music And Related Arts program. Prior to that, Stine worked as a software engineer at Meta (formerly Facebook) Reality Labs Audio Research. Stine received Ph.D. and masters degrees in composition and computer technologies as a Jefferson Fellow at the University of Virginia and bachelor’s degrees in technology in music and related arts and computer science from Oberlin College and Conservatory. Stine's work spans immersive electronic music, mixed reality story-telling, interactive multimedia experiences, and frequent collaboration between disciplines, artistic and otherwise.This event is part of the lecture series "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance," sponsored by the Franco Family Institute for Liberal Arts and the Public Good, the Department of Music, and the Technology & Digital Studies Program. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1h 15mEli Stine, Guest Lecturer (Part of the "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance" Lecture Series)Eli Stine is an internationally active media artist, software engineer, and educator. Projects that Stine has designed sound and written code for have been mentioned in the New York Times, USA Today, The Wire, The Economist, and on NPR, and have toured Europe, Asia, and India. Stine is an assistant professor of computer music and digital arts at Oberlin Conservatory in the Technology In Music And Related Arts program. Prior to that, Stine worked as a software engineer at Meta (formerly Facebook) Reality Labs Audio Research. Stine received Ph.D. and masters degrees in composition and computer technologies as a Jefferson Fellow at the University of Virginia and bachelor’s degrees in technology in music and related arts and computer science from Oberlin College and Conservatory. Stine's work spans immersive electronic music, mixed reality story-telling, interactive multimedia experiences, and frequent collaboration between disciplines, artistic and otherwise.This event is part of the lecture series "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance," sponsored by the Franco Family Institute for Liberal Arts and the Public Good, the Department of Music, and the Technology & Digital Studies Program. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1h 15mEli Stine, Guest Lecturer (Part of the "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance" Lecture Series)Eli Stine is an internationally active media artist, software engineer, and educator. Projects that Stine has designed sound and written code for have been mentioned in the New York Times, USA Today, The Wire, The Economist, and on NPR, and have toured Europe, Asia, and India. Stine is an assistant professor of computer music and digital arts at Oberlin Conservatory in the Technology In Music And Related Arts program. Prior to that, Stine worked as a software engineer at Meta (formerly Facebook) Reality Labs Audio Research. Stine received Ph.D. and masters degrees in composition and computer technologies as a Jefferson Fellow at the University of Virginia and bachelor’s degrees in technology in music and related arts and computer science from Oberlin College and Conservatory. Stine's work spans immersive electronic music, mixed reality story-telling, interactive multimedia experiences, and frequent collaboration between disciplines, artistic and otherwise.This event is part of the lecture series "Sonifying the Body: Embodied Technologies in Electronic Music Performance," sponsored by the Franco Family Institute for Liberal Arts and the Public Good, the Department of Music, and the Technology & Digital Studies Program. Originally published at music.nd.edu.
- 4:30 PM45mRecovery is Spoken Here (iRISH)Join us in being iRISH! This 45-minute Recovery is Spoken Here, recovery-informed training and certification program from the McDonald Center for Student Well-Being, is for students who want to build hope around recovery and a compassionate community. You'll learn to challenge stigma, practice inclusive language, and gain the confidence to have supportive conversations. Get certified and make a difference on campus. Sign up through the form on the McDonald Center ND Central page. Only 20 students per session, so sign up quickly to claim your spot! Register here. Originally published at mcwell.nd.edu.
- 4:30 PM45mRecovery is Spoken Here (iRISH)Join us in being iRISH! This 45-minute Recovery is Spoken Here, recovery-informed training and certification program from the McDonald Center for Student Well-Being, is for students who want to build hope around recovery and a compassionate community. You'll learn to challenge stigma, practice inclusive language, and gain the confidence to have supportive conversations. Get certified and make a difference on campus. Sign up through the form on the McDonald Center ND Central page. Only 20 students per session, so sign up quickly to claim your spot! Register here. Originally published at mcwell.nd.edu.


