Radical media, politics and culture.

Announcements

Anonymous Comrade submits:

Greetings, fellow office-workerbees, from the Beehive Design Collective in
Eastern Maine! We are pleased to report that our Hive is finishing up some
fantastic revisions to our FTAA and Plan Colombia graphics for a massive
upcoming print run! We're also excited to announce the opportunity for
groups to collaborate on this print run, as a means to share these
effective popular education, outreach, and fundraising tools with others
working to build awareness and mobilization against the upcoming FTAA
meetings in Miami this November! So. for the first time ever, we're
offering at-cost beehive posters!

jim submits:

"Vox Pop: Locating and Constructing the 'Voice of the People'"


6th Annual University of South Carolina Comparative Literature Conference

26-28 February, 2004, Columbia, SC, U.S.A.


Building from a millennia-old maxim -- the voice of the people is the voice
of God -- the desire to locate, fabricate, and appropriate the vox populi has
been especially pervasive for at least the last two centuries. What
defines this voice of the people? Is it a voice charged with lore from the
ancient past or one as new as today's poll numbers? How is it mediated:
who speaks on behalf of the "grass roots," "the American people," the "Arab
street"?


The concept can challenge authority, promoting populist
subversions of hierarchy (carnival, protest, revolution), yet it also feeds
an age-old temptation to construct a monologic Voice of a monolithic
People, silencing heterogeneous, dialogic voices. Whether sought in
man-on-the-street interviews, the "voices of the People in song" (for
Herder these included everyone from Homer, to Shakespeare, to Ossian), or
contemporary advertising trends, the consensus of popular sentiment remains
as elusive (and deceptive) an ideal as ever.


The "Vox Pop" conference will consider the multitudes of peoples and voices
that have come under the heading of vox populi, from the ancient populus or
hoi polloi to the various "Peoples" of modern nationalism (das Volk, le
peuple, narod), and from folksong to political discourse to "the writing on
the wall." The conference invites a wide-ranging interrogation of the idea
of the voice of the people by scholars from a range of fields.

Multiculturalism in the Arts

A Discussion with Jeffrey Collins-Harper

Jeffrey Collins-Harper is the Director of Off-Broadway’s “Sacrifice to Eros”, Co-Artistic Director, Luvchild Theatre Ensemble, and Director/Producer, Common Ground Productions, Inc.

Racism and discrimination is a hot topic in the media in an era where
allegedly we have equal access and equal opportunity in education,
employment, etc. But what about the arts? Is the establishment of a
black theatre a step forward or a step backwards? Is it opportunity or
segregation?

Anonymous Comrade submits:


On Saturday, August 30, the Canadian book Better to Have Loved: The Life of Judith Merril by Judith Merril and Emily Pohl-Weary scooped the only non-fiction category of the Hugo Awards at the World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon).


The award came as a complete surprise to co-author (and Merril's granddaughter) Pohl-Weary, who completed the book posthumously. "We re-write history when we tell the stories of women whose lives were important to us," said Pohl-Weary, when she accepted the award. "I encourage everyone to record the lives of women they admire."

jim submits: (From our Turkish comrades)

Autonomedia (Otonomedya)

www.otonomedya.org


Autonomedia is a news and communication network based on voluntary working
and organisation. Its purpose is to make people know the events that system's
media censors because of ideological reasons and to provide a basis for
the voices that are depressed.


Autonomedia, as it can be understood from the emphasis on "autonom", is
self-regulative, non-hierarchical, anti-authoritarian, and accepts horizontical
and voluntary organisation as a way of working. It is the site of anarchists
and will give priority to the news and announcements of anarchists, and
anarchism.

coco fusco writes:


"Dutch Fund Withholds Support for 8th Havana Biennial"

Coco Fusco


Increased suppression of cultural _expression in Cuba
leads the Prince Claus Fund to withhold support from
the 2003 Havana Biennial.


As a result of the arrest of 75 Cuban cultural and
social activists in recent months and their being
sentenced to harsh terms of imprisonment of up to 28
years, the Prince Claus Fund has decided not to
provide financial support to the 8th Havana Biennial,
which will be held in November 2003.

polo submits:

Cancún Calendar of Events

WTO Alternative Forums/ OMC Foros Alternativos

Draft Calendar of Events, August 31, 2003


please send corrections, edits or additions to: Lisa Hoyos at: lhoyos@citizen.org
Note: Please put “matrix edit” in the subject line


Continual Radio Coverage of Cancun movement events and WTO negoations: Real World Radio (see info at bottom of calendar)

www.radiomundoreal.fm in Spanish and Portuguese

www.realworldradio.fm in English


Pre-events (events taking place before September 7th)




  (Sept. 1-5) EVENT/EVENTO PLACE/LUGAR

1-7 Sept Media Convergence Training Margaritas 10

5 Sept Foro Global de Bioversidad

Who: Greenpeace and others To be determined


Sunday/ Domingo, 7 September/ Septiembre



TIME/TIEMPO EVENT/EVENTO PLACE/LUGAR


               

9:30 –6:00 PM Fishers Forum/ Foro de Pescadores

Who: World Forum of Fish Harvesters and Fish Workers/Foro Mundial de Pescadores y Trabajadores de La Pesca

What: Situation of artisanal fisheries, fish workers and communities relative to WTO Sala Cabildo, de Isla Mujeres)

Anonymous Comrade submits "CulturePoles:

City Spaces, Urban Politics & Metropolitan Theory



Canadian Association of Cultural Studies

February 13-15, 2004, Hamilton, Ontario



Cultural Studies has, as Colin Sparks remarked twenty-five years ago, been constituted out of a "veritable rag bag" of competing ideas. Yet the leitmotifs of the field (commodification, reproduction, hegemony, mass culture, popular culture, and the culture industry) are suggestive of a shared genealogy in the historical transition from the manufacturing centre to the suburbanized spatialities of consumer society. In this respect, North American and European cultural studies can be viewed as a project almost coterminous with the shifting structure of the first-world capitalist city.


In the era of mechanical reproduction, the linkage between capital,
population and cultural production seemed unproblematic: New York, London,Tokyo, Shanghai and Paris were calculated as the five largest cities in the world. The diffusion of cultural goods from metropolitan to the periphery was a secondary question most often answered in terms of infrastructural capacity. Current economic, technological and demographic tendencies undermine this perceived position of the city as supra/structural template for mapping the production and consumption of social meaning. The concept of the "culturepole" seeks to facilitate a rethinking of this oft naturalized relation between cultural studies and the first-world capitalist city.

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