Radical media, politics and culture.

Announcements

Anonymous Comrade writes:

"Beyond Capitalism: Marx's Concept of an Alternative"
Five Discussions Beginning Jan. 23, 2005 in New York City

What concepts can help break through the prevailing notion that there is no alternative to existing society? Is it possible today to develop an alternative to all forms of capitalism, whether in its "free market" or statist varieties? Can a concept of a new society that transcends value production animate today's forces of revolt to go beyond reformism and one-sided critiques of U.S. imperialism that fail to articulate what we are for?

These five meetings will address these questions by exploring a work by Karl Marx that contains his most extensive discussion of a new society — his “Critique of the Gotha Program.” We will explore Marx's Critique in light of ongoing theoretic and practical debates in the radical movement.

Rethinking Foucault, Rethinking Political Economy

March 17–18, 2005, University of Leicester, UK

Workshop Theme:

Foucault was clearly concerned with rethinking political economy. This
concern ranged from his direct engagement in The Order of Things with the
formation of the economic subject in relation to political economy, and
also involved him in all manner of debates throughout his life about how
one might understand the political economy. After his death these debates
continued as his work has been extended in a variety of different attempts
to rethink political economy both in general terms and also in terms of
the analysis of specific politico-economic micro-practices and related
technologies of subjectification.

Alob writes:

Crosswalk: Space Ships

Call for Papers

"The ship is the heterotopia par excellence. In civilizations without boats, dreams dry up, espionage takes the place of adventurers, and police take the place of pirates." — Michel Foucalt

Crosswalk is a publication dedicated to further investigations of contemporary psychogeography, experimental public art, critical architectrural theory, and all matters in between.

FREE CULTURE
COLLECTIVE PRACTICES
RANSOMS ON SPACE
INTERVENTIONIST DIARIES
CONTEMPORARY NOMADISM

OPEN CALL: Crosswalk is now accepting texts and images for an upcoming issue, due out in late January. Please contact:
meredithyounger@gmail.com

Anonymous Comrade writes:


International Anti-G8 Meeting

Tuebingen, Germany, Feb. 26–27, 2005


Here's the final invite and the draft agenda for the International Networking and Co-ordination Meeting for all those interested or involved with building radical resistance to the 2005 G8 Summit. Tha agenda has been drafted by the Dissent! International Networking Group and is open to comments, alteration and additions. Send all comments to: info-g82005@riseup.net

APOC writes:
APOC 2005

Following up a successful 2003 Anarchist People of Color conference in Detroit, Michigan, the next Anarchist People of Color conference is being proposed for October in Houston, Texas.


Since the 2003 event, there have been APOC regional gatherings new collectives and many projects, and we're still going strong. Where are we as a unified movement? Come discuss Community Action, Theory, Internal Struggles, External Struggles, with the larger theme of "We are one, we are many, and we are a part of something bigger…"

Sixth Annual Montreal Anarchist Bookfair

May 21-22, 2005

Callout for Workshops and Presentations at
Montreal's Anarchist Bookfair (May 21, 2005)
and Day of Workshops (May 22, 2005)

Deadline for proposals is February 15, 2005!

The Montreal Anarchist Bookfair collective is currently planning the next
Anarchist Bookfair (our sixth in a row!). This year's bookfair will take
place on Saturday, May 21, 2005, to be followed on Sunday, May 22, 2005 by
a full day of anarchist-themed presentations, panels, debates and
workshops. We will return to the same venue as last year: The CEDA Adult
Education Center at 2515 Delisle (near Lionel Groulx metro) in the Little
Burgundy neighborhood, just west of downtown Montreal.


Peer-to-Peer A general call to all P2P-users


As of late the MPAA's and RIAA's of the world are claiming that we are robbing them of their rightly earned money and are trying to find ways to legally put and end to it. The scare tactics have been fruitful, it would seem as they keep getting settlements out of court and probably make a profit out of it.

This campaign of theirs, of course, isn't to target and eradicate filesharing as much as an attempt to control the market and where our money goes. Most of us feel that they should very well look into availability and affordable prices instead of claiming higher moral ground. The wealthiest nowadays decide what we shall listen to and watch, using staggering PR campaigns, and most releases are "format" productions, where talent and creativity comes second only to business concept and money.

Read the rest at Infoanarchy.org"

Media and Belief in an Interdependent World

4-5 March 2005, The American University of Paris

An international conference organised by the Department of International Communications at The American University of Paris

This small international conference will explore the relationship between media practice and various definitions of belief.


Contemporary developments in media have made us aware of how interdependent media and cultures are in our world. The Internet has made media from other cultures and languages available to us with relative ease but also has broken down the traditional systems of authorisation of news and made rumours more powerful, global and faster. These rumours have powerful effects and depend on the gullibility or incredulity of media audiences. Events are increasingly organised in order to be reported, for their media exposure. In a type of inflation of the media event, they become more and more macabre and frightening perhaps in attempt to make themselves believable.


Media globalisation may have given way to international media regionalisation. Different parts of the world now look at different media and read each other's media in different ways. The most striking example of this has been the rise of Arabic language satellite news networks which tell very different stories. Given the sudden perceived importance of media in the relations between the various civilisations, the question of belief and how and why people believe has become a central and important question for understanding the role of media in various societies


The rise of reality television provides publics with whole new ways of dealing with television, cutting the barriers between the old genres of fiction, drama, documentary and game. The circulation of reality television formats is very important indeed. American Idol has been followed by Arab Idol; Big Brother by the French Loft Story. The way the real is being represented has radically changed not only in news but also in other programming.


Corporations increasingly spend larger and larger budgets on building brand identities around aesthetic choices but also value systems. Branding is more and more a process of making believe in a possible world associated with the brand. Political parties in some countries have indulged in complex branding.


What then is happening to belief? Do audiences believe media in new ways? How does it differ according to religious or cultural background or national tradition? How does the decline of public broadcasting and the development of huge media corporations through mergers affect these questions? What are the permutations of media belief in contemporary Western society? What is the role of celebrity? How do pleasure, identity and belief mesh together?

greenfever writes:

2005 Marijuana Music Awards

Offering 15 categories of music with entries accepted in 8 languages, the 2005 Marijuana Music Awards are open to everyone around the world with music with a marijuana theme.
The Awards include 15 Music Categories plus Video & Poetry Categories. Entries accepted in 8 languages.


Winners announced and Best Live Performance Award held at Nimbin Mardi Grass 30 April/ 1 May 2005.


Closing Date (Best Recorded Track Award) 1 March 2005


For entry details check here.

"The Green Mountain Manifesto"

Thomas Naylor, Second Vermont Republic


Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is the Second Vermont Republic?


The Second Vermont Republic is a peaceful, democratic, grassroots, libertarian populist movement opposed to the tyranny of the U.S. Government, Corporate America, and globalization and committed to the return of Vermont to its rightful status as an independent republic as it once was between 1777 and 1791.


2. What is the primary objective of the movement?


Independence. To extricate Vermont peacefully, legally, and democratically from the United States as soon as possible and create an independent nation-state based on the Swiss Model.


3. Does that mean secession?

Yes.

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