Martin J Irvine
Title
Founding Director & Assoc Prof
Department
COMMUNICATION, CULTURE & TECHNOLOGY
General profile
Portrait

Phone
202-687-3097
Location
311 Car Barn
Office hours
Tues. 11-12 PM
Bio
Martin Irvine is the Founding Director of the graduate program in Communication, Culture & Technology (CCT) and Associate Professor in CCT. He has also served as Associate Vice President for Technology Strategy in the Office of the Vice President and CIO. He has a B.A. from the State University of New York at Buffalo and M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University.
Professor Irvine has an extensive multidisciplinary background that includes ancient and modern languages and literature, media and communication theory, Internet technologies, intellectual history and semiotics, art history, cultural theory, and the study of visual culture.
Dr. Irvine has been a professor at Georgetown since 1988, and he has also taught at Harvard, Wayne State University, and the University of Virginia. He has been involved in the Internet and higher education since 1991, and set up Georgetown’s first Website, The Labyrinth, in 1993. He has published extensively on literature, literary theory and semiotics, the Internet in higher education, and more recently on contemporary art and visual culture.
Professor Irvine’s recent research and teaching interests include the emerging field of visual culture and the transdisciplinary study of contemporary media and the visual arts. He also teaches courses on the social contexts of media and communication, mediology, and the theory and institutions of contemporary visual art. He is currently working on a project involving the study of the social and economic institutions of contemporary art and the economics of culture. His research projects and lectures are available from his web site.
Dr. Irvine is an active art collector and founded an art gallery in Washington, D.C., Irvine Contemporary, which features emerging and mid-career artists with rising national and international reputations. Dr. Irvine also participates nationally and internationally in professional activities in the art world, including museum exhibitions and collaborations with international artists and galleries.
Professor Irvine has an extensive multidisciplinary background that includes ancient and modern languages and literature, media and communication theory, Internet technologies, intellectual history and semiotics, art history, cultural theory, and the study of visual culture.
Dr. Irvine has been a professor at Georgetown since 1988, and he has also taught at Harvard, Wayne State University, and the University of Virginia. He has been involved in the Internet and higher education since 1991, and set up Georgetown’s first Website, The Labyrinth, in 1993. He has published extensively on literature, literary theory and semiotics, the Internet in higher education, and more recently on contemporary art and visual culture.
Professor Irvine’s recent research and teaching interests include the emerging field of visual culture and the transdisciplinary study of contemporary media and the visual arts. He also teaches courses on the social contexts of media and communication, mediology, and the theory and institutions of contemporary visual art. He is currently working on a project involving the study of the social and economic institutions of contemporary art and the economics of culture. His research projects and lectures are available from his web site.
Dr. Irvine is an active art collector and founded an art gallery in Washington, D.C., Irvine Contemporary, which features emerging and mid-career artists with rising national and international reputations. Dr. Irvine also participates nationally and internationally in professional activities in the art world, including museum exhibitions and collaborations with international artists and galleries.
CV
Download cv.pdf
Education
- Ph.D. (1982) Harvard University, English Literature
- M.A. (1980) Harvard University, English Literature
- B.A. (1975) State University of New York, Buffalo, Literature, Philosophy, Classics
Languages
- English, Middle (1100-1500) ()
- English, Old (ca. 450-1100) ()
- French (read)
- German ()
- Latin ()
Upcoming Events
- Nov 24, 12pm-1pm: CCT Library Research Help with David Gibbs
- Dec 1, 12pm-1pm: CCT Library Research Help with David Gibbs
- Dec 1, All day: Application to Graduate
- Dec 3, 2pm-3pm: Your 60 Second Pitch
- Dec 9, 10am: From Technology Assessment to Complexity Science
