Radical media, politics and culture.

Announcements

:: Call for Contributions // Presentations // Provocations::

The Future in The Present: Occupying the Social Factory

May 2-4, 2006 - Digby House at Oadby, Leicester, UK

http://www.refusingstructures.net/future.html

From everyday insurgencies to global antagonisms, recent decades have borne witness to multiple and overlapping cycles of social struggle, as well as attempts to incorporate these sources of social wealth and creativity. From transformations in the circuits of global capital to the morphing of state structures, border controls and forms of sovereignty, the development of neoliberal governmentality has constantly run to catch up with our multiplicitous desires to create new forms of self-determining community and sociality. Multidirectional lines of command attempt to recuperate innovations at the level of everyday life, while myriad microrevolutions branch out, weave together new possibilities, and sometimes directly attack the networks of control.

What is the meaning of autonomy today, both as a theoretical category and as a practice? And what can the thought of refusal contribute to the organization of refusals in our daily lives? How can we create forms of antagonism directed against the lines of command that cut across the economic and social fabric, and which seek to incorporate affective, biological, and symbolic processes into forms of production? How can we prevent our antagonism being subsumed into the working of power and turned them against us? Rather than to creating overarching concepts that describe a new historical epoch, what would it mean to look at the specific modulations of how productive forces and regimes of command are changing in response to the social creativity and struggles of political actors? And what possibilities for political and social change are contained within these transformations? This is to start from the multiple inscriptions of power and resistance: from the bare life and bodies of the migrant worker to the precarious temp employee, from the unwaged to laborers in export processing zone archipelagos.

This gathering will attempt to break down the format and constraints of the traditional academic conference as well as forms of theorizing divorced from on-going social struggles and organizing. It will seek to create a living dialogue and encuentro, a series of collisions of bodies and minds, drawing from the history of autonomist politics and organizing, to draw out possible directions for the future buried beneath the weight of the present. Rather than fixing autonomous practices as objects of study it will draw together theorists, organizers, and activists considering questions of what class composition, insurgent sociality, and autonomous political practice could mean today. Possible topics could include but are not limited to:

- The reception of the immaterial labour and biopolitical production concepts.

- The social factory and the new forms of metropolitan strike.

- The refusal of work and the rise of cognitive proletariat.

- Constituent power, exodus, and non-state democracy.

- Gender, libidinal economy and affective labour.

- Formats of resistance: class, movement, multitude, network.

- Strategies of resistance: biopolitical weapons and radical imagery.

- San Precario, the precariat and the Euromayday.

- Digital commons, networked multitudes, knowledge economy.

Proposals for discussions, presentations, and panels of 500 – 1000 words should be sent to futureinthepresent@refusingstructures.net by Friday January 27th, 2006.

There will be an issue of the futureinthepresent@refusingstructures.net or visit http://www.refusingstructures.net/future.html. Registration before January 31st is highly encouraged.

Sponsored by the Autonomedia

DonQuijote writes:

"Artivism"

Don Quijote

Permitidopermitir


An intervention in streets sinalization in Brazil, South America.

Saudações

Don Quijote

Jay Critchley writes:


"Holiday Greetings from The Maskuerade Ball"

Bush, Cheney & Santa


The Maskuerade Ball

Protect/Protest

Let’s play with masking and disguise, and redefine its significance.


The Maskuerade Ball aims to activate people and elicit a deeper understanding of what our real concerns and problems are in our lives. The simple, ubiquitous surgical mask has recently become a visible, worldwide emblem of fear and panic. But who’s fear? Who’s voice? Should the media’s spoon-fed, Flu-of the-Month scares direct our energy and attention?


Masking is an ancient practice. Anthropologically, masquerading with costume and mask engenders a ritualized transformation of the self into the spirit world of nature and creates communion with the supernatural − often honoring our ancestors. Culturally, Mardi Gras, Al Hallows Eve and the Day of the Dead have continued our communal need to purge our fears and the evil forces in the world. These rituals reconnect us with our deep emotional and psychic identity and release us from the burdens of the human condition.


Who Is Protecting Whom?


Artistically, masks are a vehicle for visual expression, creating illusions, characters, multiple personalities and disguises — sometimes to protect, sometimes to play. And now, to create fear. In a global environment of war, hunger, ecological collapse, global warming, poverty, pathogenic illnesses and media saturation, the simple surgical mask has become a symbol of both the state of the planet and our inability to address its ailments. The mask has become a symbol of facelessness, isolation and political silencing. We are being told what the dread of the month is and are expected to step in line. Terrorism? — Stop talking with strangers, don’t trust anyone. SARS? —You better watch out, it’s coming. Avian Flu? — Stop breathing deeply, avoid chickens, farms, birds and nature.


To participate in The Maskuerade Ball:


— Acquire a trove of cheap surgical masks and non-toxic markers or oil sticks

— Create or join a political, cultural or social gathering

— Ask individuals: What are you terrified of? What is intimidating to you?


— What threatens you?

— Words are then inscribed on the surgical masks and participants are requested

to wear them, and the fun begins


— The masks and the messages will elicit comments, conversation, and a sense

of connectedness ± a new fashion statement! At political gatherings or

demonstrations the masks can make a unified visual statement by activists,

and a great photo op.

Protect/Protest.


For more information contact:

The Maskuerade Ball

Jay Critchley

SPACE Winter Courses, 2006


The New SPACE
(The New School for Pluralistic Anti-Capitalist Education)

Winter 2006 Courses, New York City

THE SPIRIT OF UTOPIA

Alex Steinberg

Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

8 sessions: January 25 - March 15

Tuition: $90 - $115, sliding scale

MARX'S _CAPITAL_, VOLUMES II AND III

Andrew Kliman

Wednesdays, 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

15 sessions: January 25 - May 17

(except for March 22 and April 12)

Tuition: $150 - $180, sliding scale

(Vol. II only: $75 - $100; Vol. III only: $100 - $120)

ERICH FROMM'S ENCOUNTER WITH MARX AND FREUD

Charles Herr

Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

6 Sessions: January 31 - March 7

Tuition: $75 - $100, sliding scale

FROM DADA TO ANTHROPOFFERJISM

Erika Biddle

Alternate Tuesdays, 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

6 Sessions: January 31, February 14, 28,

March 14, 28 and April 4

Tuition: $75 - $100, Sliding Scale

See course descriptions below. Please see the New SPACE website for additional information on courses and registration.

dave negation writes:

Grand Jury Targets Portland, Oregon Activists

Two Portland activists, Frank Winbigler and Shannon (Nonny) Urick, were today served with papers ordering them to be a witness for a federal Grand Jury, and were also advised that they are both a target of the Grand Jury’s investigation. Nonny and Frank both have a long history of human, animal and environmental activism. The Grand Jury is scheduled for 3/16/06 in Eugene, Oregon.

From the office of attorney Robert Bryan, lead counsel for Mumia Abu-Jamal...:

Mumia Abu-Jamal Gets New Judicial Review

Robert Bryan

Dear Friends and Supporters:


Today the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
issued the most important decision affecting my client, Mumia Abu-
Jamal, since the lower federal court ruling in December 2001. An
order was issued this morning that the court will accept for review
the following issues, all of which are of enormous constitutional
significance and go to the very essence of Mumia's right to a fair
trial due process of law, and equal protection of the law under the
Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution:

ben@autonomedia.org wrote:

"Zapatistas, Cheap Books, Passage of Time"

Autonogram


Greetings Autonomedia list subscribers, and many apologies for the lag
between emails. As usual, we've got more going on here than we can handle.
Here's a quick breakdown:

1. New books: Subcomandante Marcos, Conversations with Durito; Richard
Kostelanetz, Film and Video: Alternative Views; 2006 Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee
Saints
; Data Browser vols 1 and 2.

2. New online bookstore, and 20% discount on all Autonomedia books
(bookstore.autonomedia.org)

3. NYC events in December: Richard Kostelanetz, Peter Lamborn Wilson


4. Recent headlines from the Interactivist Network

Ben Spatz writes:

Urban Researh Theater

New York City, Jan.–Feb. 2006


The Urban Research Theater is an institute for practical research in physical and vocal craft. Performance artists, practitioners of traditional forms, and other interested parties are invited to enter into specific lines of inquiry with the human body and voice. The use of props, notebooks, spoken language and other technologies will be strictly limited. This work can be a kind of active meditation, focused on balancing precision with spontaneity. We will practice stretches, exertions, repetitions, precise movement structures, and song fragments as tools for developing quality in awareness.

Winter Work Session: Call for Participants
New York City, January-February 2006

Flyer: http://www.junkriver.org/winter.pdf
Website: http://www.junkriver.org/
Contact: urt@junkriver.org

Zapatista Intercontinental Encuentro


Communiqué from the Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee –
General Command of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation

Mexico, November of 2005

To the Peoples of the World:

Brothers and Sisters:

Concerning the Intercontinental proposed in the Sixth Declaration of the
Selva Lacandona, and in general regarding the international aspects of
this statement, the CCRI-CG of the EZLN says its word:


First — The Intergalactic Committee of the EZLN, headed by Lieutenant
Colonel Insurgente Moisés, has been named for the coordination and
monitoring of the international part of the Sexta. There will be a
rotating team of comandantes and comandantas from the CCRI-CG of the EZLN,
in addition to help from the EZLN’s Sixth Committee.

Simon Goldin writes:

Flack Attack on Autonomy

We invite you to contribute to Flack Attack, a new magazine coming out of The Port (http://www.theport.tv/), a community-driven space inside the online 3D world Second Life (http://secondlife.com/). The production process of Flack Attack will be continually featured on artport (http://artport.whitney.org/), the Whitney Museum's portal to Internet Art, as a gate page during the month of December 2005. Using The Port as a point of departure we are pursuing a series of investigations into the potential of networked public spheres and the organization of participatory production.

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