Miguel Afonso Caetano on Thu, 27 Nov 2003 07:13:17 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Master's thesis about tactical media |
Hello, dear nettimers: My name is Miguel Caetano and I'm a Portuguese studying for a Master of Science in Communication, Culture and Technology at the Higher Institute of Business and Labor Studies (ISCTE - www.iscte.pt), in Lisbon. Until September of 2005, I got to finish writing a thesis about Tactical Media. That's why I need your help. The main issue that I want to address is this one: Does tactical media projects always demand the pre-existence of an adversary, a enemy or a oponent to whom they focus all their efforts? Is this condition necessary for their formation and survival? This doubt has emerged in my mind after reading "The Language of Tactical Media" by Joanne Richardson (http://subsol.c3.hu/subsol_2/contributors2/richardsontext2.html). In this essay, she writes: "The idea of tactical media is the harbinger of a question both necessary and timely: how is it possible to make media otherwise, media that expresses its solidarity with the humiliated thoughts and incomprehensible desires of those who seem doomed to silence, media that does not mirror the strategic power of the mainstream by lapsing into a self-certain propaganda identical to itself and blind to its own history". In a effort to answer this question, I shall use the example of the Metafora Project (www.projetometafora.org), a brazilian initiative that was at this year's edition of the Next Five Minutes Festival, represented by Felipe Fonseca. Unfortunately, Metafora has ceased operations October, but its members intend that the projects thar were developed under its umbrella will remain in action. Metafora has its roots in the philosophy of Pierre Levy and its concepts of Collective Intelligence and of universal without totality. Its mode of operation was based in auto-organization, emergence, network theory and in the hacker's ethics and culture. I also want to answer some other questions: - In what ways tactical media differ from the traditional alternative and radical media? Can we label this ones as strategic, to employ the dichotomy of Michel De Certeau? - When we talk about tactical media, are we talking about something that only makes sense in the 90s, or of a concept with its own history? Can we make a relation with Hakim Bey's TAZ? - What's the relation between social movements and tactical media? - Does the Internet fosters the development of tactical media practices? In what ways? - What's the genealogy of the concept "tactics"? It would be very helpful to me if you emailed me telling your opinion or experience about these issues, specially if you are a theorist, an activist or a tactical media practitioner. I would also like to exchange ideas and bibliography with people that are also actually researching this area. I'm aware of some of the manifestos published here in Nettime by Geert Lovink and David Garcia. I have also accessed Geert's "Dark Fiber", "The Practice Of Everyday Life" by De Certeau, "Digital Resistance" by CAE, "Future Active" by Graham Meikle and "Cyberactivism", a collection of essays published by Routledge. Thank you very much, Miguel Caetano # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net