MondaysNovember 03, 2006Continental Drift -- Chapter 2 -- Schedule -- November 3, 4, 5, 2006
========================== _________________________________________ We are pleased to invite you to our second chapter of Continental Drift. This is an event organized with Tangent University and Brian Holmes. The seminar was initiated last year, both to take ownership of and experiment with different modes of learning/pedagogy. Our subject matter is vast in that we attempt to collectively locate some of the huge political and economic shifts taking place under our own feet and in turn map out the micro-cartographies of resistance. This session will cover a tremendous amount of ground, from theoretical insights and discussions related to neoliberalism, cybernetics, oursourcing, uneven development, privatization of military, militarization, immigration, ghettoization, camp as paradigm & state of exception. We will then look at specific cases of cultural and political actions which attempt to resist or map out resistance to some of these alarming trends. To get a wider sense of the presentations, we have descriptions on the website. The events will begin this evening with two presentations, a discussion, and a dinner together at the space. Followed by two days of discussions, workshops, and presentations by various participating artists, cultural workers, and activists. All of the events this weekend will be taking place at 16 Beaver Street, 4th floor. There is a sliding fee of $25-50 we are asking to support the entire effort including our meals together. But this fee SHOULD NOT be a barrier for anyone who is interested and cannot afford to pay. We look forward to seeing you. _________________________________________ The idea for the schedule is that it should be subjected to change based on our needs and desires over the course ofthe event. It is more like an outline. ----------------------------------- [10 minute break] 8:30 - 9:30 -- Ayreen Anastas & René Gabri - States of Exception 10:00 - ....... -- Dinner & Drinks
[10 minute break] 1 :40pm - 2:40pm -- 2 X 30 minute slots (Radical Documentary Group & Pedro Lasch) [10 minute break] 3:10pm - 4:10pm -- 3 X 20 minute slots [10 minute break] 4:50pm - 5:35pm -- Workshop in smaller groups [5 minute break] 5:40pm - 6:20pm -- 2 X 20 minute slots ----------------------------------- [10 minute break] 1:10pm - 2:10pm -- 2 X 30 minute slots (Naeem Mohaiemen & Jesal Kapadia) [10 minute break] 2:40pm - 3:40pm -- 2 X 30 minute slots (Ava Bromberg & Camp Baltimore) [10 minute break] 4:10pm - 4:40pm -- 1 X 30 minute slot (16 Beaver Group) [10 minute break] 5:10pm - 6:10pm -- Workshop in smaller groups [1 hour 20 minute break for Dinner] 7:30pm - 8:15pm -- Concluding Remarks by Brian _________________________________________ We will be webcasting as many of the talks as we can. The schedule is in NYC time (EST) To access the live stream all you have to do is visit using Quicktime. Go to file and choose "Open URL ..." and paste the following: rtsp://darwin.montevideo.nl/cast/continentaldrift You will most likely require an updated version of quicktime to access the stream. Ideally Quicktime 7.0 or later. We would like to thank open-PLAYER (open-player.com) and Drazen Pantic for providing us with the streaming server and technical assistance.. _________________________________________
----------------------------------- “What about those little brown clusters, aren’t they villages?” “Don’t worry about those. Just show us your ideas.” – Some reflections of Master Planning Cities in China I recently returned from six weeks working in a large Chinese Urban Planning firm and think tank in Shenzhen, P.R.C. For this year’s continental drift, I will draw upon my experience working on two major master planning projects – a factory town and a new airport city - to present the context for planning in China. My aim is to give a sense of the scale and pace of planning there, what is being built and what is being overlooked. In addition to drawing from what I learned and gleaned on the job, I will share some images and reflections on the human and social environments of Shenzhen – a city that developed from a village of 20,000 to a city of 10 million in the last 20 years. I hope a my presentation on Chinese urbanization processes (and my sense of where the crack and the opportunities are) can set us up to think broadly and deeply about what the interpenetrating (and co-productive) relationship between microenvironments and macroprocesses offers us for “articulating the cracks” in existing systems. Question: I like this Friedmann quote because it acknowledges the need for vision-->on the way to-->action. Vision, in my opinion, is crucial to the radical reconstitution of existing social/spatial/economic/political structures - we have to know where we’re headed if we want to figure out how to get there. I feel an urgency to ask not only what kind of spaces for developing vision (and values outside of profit-maximization) are available *right now*, but also how are they opened up and extended to "ordinary" people? What are some concrete examples? And/or some concrete possibilities? What types of spaces (physical and discursive) do they occupy /create? How do these spaces ‘operate’ and what is their role in the production and diffusion of social forms outside of capitalism? Being personally, intellectually, and creatively (and in every other way) invested in each of these "phases" - vision, radical practice, theory, strategy, and action, we know that the critique is not enough. It is just the beginning. We draw from our micro-practices and experiments. And our critical analysis shows us *how* to (and that we must) move towards a vision of the world we want. But where (what sites) and by whom (which agents) will this vision - and the values it produces and is produced by - be developed? How might we more equitably distribute the opportunity for people to develop vision (and their potential) outside of capital markets? ----------------------------------- To help start the process we began with a simple question, which is "How is it that a camp* like Guantanamo Bay can exist in our time?" This question is in some respects naîve, simple, or even rhetorical - but what it operates as for us - is a kind of trigger - to connect the circumstances that the detainees are facing in Guantanamo Bay, particularly in relation to the law, with others that may be much closer to the everyday life of people, whether in the US or in other countries. Our research, our collaborations and discussions with specific individuals as well as our attempts to make some necessary connections landed us in the Middle East of Baltimore as well as Occupied Palestine and Israel. These became for us two particular cases in which the law applies by disapplying itself. Moreover, in each case, this exceptional relation to the law had specific spatial practices associated with it, which opened up our understanding of the camp as a paradigm of modern governance. In these specific cases, a group of individuals is "targetted" as dangerous or threatening to a particular program or posited way of life. These targetted groups are then subsequently limited in their movement, their way of life, and to greater or lesser degree imprisoned, stripped of the basic rights afforded by the state or even international law. Building further from these specific inquiries, this summer we embarked on a trip through the United States attempting to connect these three brutal instances (guantanamo, baltimore, palestine/israel) to recent and not so recent events in the US (e.g., Kent State massacres, former POW camps, internment camps for Japanese, Germans, and Italians, boot camps for youth, pre and post Katrian New Orleans, Native American reservations, high security prisons, ... ). Our trip had elements of a research project and a campaign, but contained within it gestures, contacts, aesthetic moves, public interfaces and interventions, which unsettled even our notions of a so-called "artistic project" or "political project." We hope to give a short presentation and to talk about where to locate our inquiries in relation to the paradigm of camp and the state of exception within our larger inquiries under the heading of Continental Drift. Question: *internment, concentration, torture, death, political prisoners, pow, ... ----------------------------------- Duos mensis abhinc lectulus urbs obduco plurrimi infestus anti immigration legislation in Iunctus Civitas instituting severus poena pro ullus utor vel landlord having res dealings per undocumented opus , pariter ut declaring English persona lingua of urbs quod prohibitio reddo of ullus persona tabellae in alius lingua. In a prolixus voluntas , is pertains ut immigration reform in Nos immigration exemplum in minor civis exurbs , quod rusticus areas , quod ut exertus questio uber possibilities pro locus nixor in vultus of vox - pennae populisms. Potential Lectio : Illa es fio praeter theoretical neque nec directus super urbs legislation , tamen potentially notitia ut nostrum sermo si angustus per suum. From Monthly Review: From Dollars&Sense: Question: How can we conceive of local struggles in a productive manner within the context of what we are calling Continental Drift? What strategies can be used to communicate or translate this to populations where the immediacy or urgency of these struggles on a local level may initially be disruptive to understandings of larger patterns and shifts. The underlying question is not so much one which seeks to maintain a notion of the local in the global, but really a pragmatic one involving how a field of action or involvement
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AREA Chicago is a biannual publication dedicated to researching and networking the art, education, and activist practices within the city of Chicago. A stated project goal is "to be a shared space to fuel, debate, refine, express and implement our collective goals for a more desirable and livable Chicago and world". Always addressing complex topics through the lens of local grassroots work, AREA Chicago has explored the themes of Privatization/Welfare Cuts, Local Food Systems, and social movement Solidarity History that connects local practice with the rest of the globe. Additionally, AREA Chicago sponsors three related projects: "Infrastructure Lecture Series" dealing with organizational/sustainability issues of activist and cultural groups and the "Peoples Atlas of Chicago: Sites of Relevance" mapping project which takes the form of workshops designed to create subjective and nontraditional maps of the city about different topics, and "AREA Books Imprint" - our most recent side project launching next year.AREA Regularly hosts and co-sponsors public events related to our contributors practices throughout Chicago.
http://www.counterrecruitmentguide.org As a counter argument to the grinding machine of military recruitment during the Iraq War, fighting in Afghanistan, and elsewhere, a small collective of artists, writers, activists (The Friends of William Blake) have created The New Yorkers’ Guide to Military Recruitment in the 5 Boroughs. This pocket-sized, sixty page book is a comprehensive guide to local military recruitment and resources for counter recruitment in NYC. Made in the spirit of The People's Guide to the RNC which we published in ‘04, this book is a small part in the worldwide effort for peace & justice and is opposed to the growing climate of fear & increased militarism in the USA.
Image caption: Fake Dead People with Car Which Was Not Blown Up By Terrorists. The car was blown up in the desert and shipped to Kennedy Plaza in Providence to simulate a terrorist car bomb. Pieces of the car were placed throughout the plaza to mirror where they would have gone had the car really been blown up in the plaza by terrorists and not in the desert by Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents Question: Stand Up Stand Still
The Miss Rockaway Armada is a group of approximately 25 performers and artists from all over the country including members of the Toyshop Collective, Visual Resistance, The Amateurs, The Floating Neutrinos, The Infernal Noise Brigade, The Madagascar Institute and the Rude Mechanical Orchestra. This July we converged in Minneapolis to construct a flotilla of rafts that will journey down the Mississippi River. We’re stopping in towns along the way, hosting musical performances and vaudeville variety-theater in the evenings, along with workshops and skill-shares centered around arts and environmental issues during the day. In our travels we intend to share stories and to solicit dialogue around subversive and constructive ways of living. We are a group of intrepids who believe in a hands-on, live-by-example approach to creating change within our culture. We are taking cues from Johnny Appleseed, traveling medicine shows, nomadic jewel box theater, and of course that old radical Mark Twain. -----------------------------------
When part of an audience that refuse directed activism ("this is what you should care about") and limited spheres of influence, the viewer becomes hyper-aware of other, future audiences. The unfortunate coincidence of screening this film at the same time as a global media flap over the Abu Ghraib images turned each screening into a referendum on US foreign policy. A Dhaka audience refused to give an "authenticity" blessing. Instead, their articulated counter-argument was that issues internal to Bangladesh, specific to a rightist Islamist agenda, could not be debated until US human rights abuses were addressed and remedied. Naeem Mohaiemen's other work can be seen at http://disappearedinamerica.org ----------------------------------- A presentation of work done by various groups, individuals and organizations that connect to both of these movements and with whom there is already a common experience of drifting. |