ricardo dominguez on Fri, 21 Feb 2003 14:12:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] "My Daily Constitution" in NYC - FEBRUARY 22 - 28 '03 |
* * * * * * ======== FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE * * * * * * ========= * * * * * * ========= * * * * * * ========= ===================== ===================== ===================== CONTACT: Linda Pollack Phone: 212-946-1849 or 310-699-8047 Email: mydailyconstitution@hotmail.com "My Daily Constitution" in NYC FEBRUARY 22 - 28 '03 Seven days Seven locations around NYC Seven discussions about the US Constitution * free and open to the public * Information Line: 212-946-1849 >From 22 - 28 February, Linda Pollack will hold "My Daily Constitution", a series of discussions about the US Constitution led by lawyers, academics, activists and others. Discussions take place at various locations (a bar, a lounge, a theatre, a museum, an art studio, a bookstore) around NYC. Free copies of the U.S. Constitution, printed by Pollack in an edition of 5,000, will be available at discussion locations and at: Printed Matter, Inc., 535 West 22nd Street, NYC, NY. 212-925-0325 "The project is an attempt to create a space for dialogue, inquiry and reflection about this document in these times," says Pollack, an LA based artist. "It stems from my own realization that I had in fact never read the Constitution, didn't know what it was, and wouldn't know what was at risk of being lost. I do know that democracy (and its close approximations) is a fragile thing." Pollack experienced just how fragile democracy could be while working for an Amsterdam based cultural foundation during the war in the former Yugoslavia, where she initiated programs that promoted reconciliation and dialogue, including a benefit Balkan rock concert and a mobility scheme for East European artists. In her own art practice Pollack has documented the formal qualities of plenary halls in a united Germany ("German Parliaments"), and she just completed a collaborative public art commission (w/Claudia Reisenberger + Christina Ulke)that turned the space of a seven story Pasadena parking structure on its head ("Madison Mansion"). "My Daily Constitution" was first held in Hollywood at Les Deux Cafés as part of the art show "Democracy When?" at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions in May of last year. A detailed program listing follows. * * * * * * * * * * * My Daily Constitution February Schedule 22 Saturday 12 - 2 PM "The Patriot Act and its Impact on the People of the United States" Discussion led by Arshad Majid, Former New York Prosecutor; President of Majid & Associates, New York. at: OPEN BAR, 559 West 22nd St. (corner of 11th Ave.), NYC, NY. 212-243-1851 * * *Arshad Majid will discuss the impact the Patriot Act has had on certain aspects of the US Constitution such as the 1st, 4th, 5th and 6th Amendments as well as its impact on several long standing traditions in criminal law and procedure. 23 Sunday 4 - 6 PM "Imagination and My Daily Constitution" Discussion led by Barbara Handman, Senior Vice President, People for the American Way; Recipient, National Medal of the Arts awarded by President Clinton, 1998. at: LARK THEATRE, 939 8th Ave. (btw. 55th & 56th St.), NYC, NY. 212-246-2676 * * *For years PFAW has been engaged in initiatives that bring constitutional issues to a broader audience outside of the legal sector, often interfacing with the art world. Barbara (Bobbie) Handman will discuss her free wheeling approach to activism, and the evening will focus on how individuals can engage in civic dialogue today's political climate. 24 Monday 7 - 9 PM "Silencing Political Dissent" (in conjunction with Nomads + Residents) Discussion led by Nancy Chang, Senior Litigation Attorney, Center for Constitutional Rights; Author of "Silencing Political Dissent: How Post-September 11 Anti-Terrorism Measures Threaten Our Civil Liberties" (Seven Stories Press, 2002). at: 16 BEAVER GROUP, 16 Beaver St. fifth floor (btw. Broad St. & Whitehall), NYC, NY. 212-480-2093 * * * "This analysis by Nancy Chang of the Center for Constitutional Rights should be read by everyone concerned with a free society. It reports a chilling set of rules, now the law, which directly affect millions of Americans who are not citizens, but also the rest of the population, who must live in an atmosphere of fear. Furthurmore, this draconian law, worthy of a police state, is extremely unlikely to be overthrown by the courts, given the historic subservience of the courts to executive authority in time of war." - Howard Zinn, in his forward for "Silencing Politacal Dissent". 25 Tuesday 7 - 9 PM "Privacy, Free Speech, and the Patriot Act" Discussion led by Christopher M. Finan, President, American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, and Jameel Jaffer, Staff Attorney, American Civil Liberties Union. at: HOUSING WORKS USED BOOK CAFE, 126 Crosby St. (1/2 Block south of Houston), NYC, NY. 212-334-3324 * * *Chris Finan and Jameel Jaffer will talk about the growing battle fought by booksellers and librarians to protect the privacy of their records in order to guarantee customers complete freedom in their choice of books, a freedom very much threatened by the USA Patriot Act. 26 Wednesday 7 - 9 PM "Who are 'We the People' Anyway?; Personhood, Citizenship and The U.S. Constitution" Discussion led by Chaumtoli Huq, Staff Attorney, New York Taxi Workers' Alliance. at: REMOTE LOUNGE, 327 Bowery (btw. 2nd & 3rd St.) NYC, NY. 212-228-0228 * * *The US Constitution confers rights on persons. Slavery and racism was justified by denying people of African ancestry personhood. Xenophobic lawsare passed that create two tiers of persons: citizens and non-citizens. Chaumtoli Huq and colleagues will look at how the US Constitution was interpreted to deny individuals rights based on race and immigration status. 27 Thursday "The U.S. Constitution and Religious Pluralism" Discussion led by Patrice Brodeur, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies; Director of the Pluralism Project, Connecticut College. 6 - 7 PM - Tour the Museum (space limited to first 15 persons) 7 - 9 PM - Discussion (space limited to first 30 person) at: LOWER EAST SIDE TENEMENT MUSEUM, 90 Orchard St. (corner of Broome St.) NYC, NY, 212-431-0233 ext. 232 28 Friday 6:30 - 8:30 PM "Blocked: Self Censorship and the Limits of the First Amendment" Discussion led by Svetlana Mintcheva, Arts Advocacy Project Coordinator, National Coalition Against Censorship. at: PETE'S CANDY STORE, 709 Lorimer St. (btw. Richardson & Frost St.), Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY, 718-302-3770 * * *Svetlana Mintcheva will talk about how self-censorship - be it on the part of an institution, which is afraid of alienating its funders,the media, anxious that their access to information would be cut, or an individual worried that if a work is too provocative it would never see the light of day - is far more efficient and harder to oppose than direct governmental action. In the words of Hans Magnus Enzensberger, "self-censorship outruns in elegance and shrewdness everything the most vicious [censor] could imagine. Its target (often met) is the prohibition to think. Whoever believes they are immune, is the first victim." For further information and directions, call the 'My Daily Constitution' Information Line: 212-946-1849 _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold