Pit Schultz on Mon, 29 Sep 1997 04:01:41 +0200 (MET DST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> announcer 2 |
Approved: super01 Message-Id: <3.0.1.32.19970928224020.00b5f2a0@pop3.contrib.de> X-Sender: pit@pop3.contrib.de X-Mailer: Windows Eudora Night Version 3.0.1 (32) Date: Sun, 28 Sep 1997 22:40:20 +0100 To: nettime-l@Desk.nl From: Pit Schultz <pit@icf.de> Subject: ! announcer 005 Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Jamie King : Thinking Online - Call for Papers Alex Galloway : Beeing in Cyberspace - Call for Material Gerard Greenway : Angelaki: Intellectuals and Global Culture Democracy.net : Hearing on Domain Names Andreas Broeckmann : Syndicate's guide to ongoing autumn conferences Vuk Cosic : lady dx died in an attitude accident Josephine Starrs : diagnostic tools for the next millenium Tina LaPorta : Net.Art: TRACES Tamas Banovich : MacClassic online43 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: "Jamie King" <jamie@jamie.com> Subject: Call for Papers : Thinking Online Date: Sun, 28 Sep 1997 14:46:35 +0100 T h i n k i n g O n l i n e (2nd) C A L L F O R P A P E R S 1. What is 'Thinking Online'? 'Thinking Online' is to be a compedium of Net criticism, positioning itself (as Geert Lovink has put it) 'within the Net, inside the software and wires'. Papers included in the collection will focus on a specific instance or instances of the Net's divergent protocols - MUDs, MOOs, the Web, IRC, VRML and so forth - and attempt to develop a theoretic, critical and/or aesthetic means of approach to those protocols. The purpose of the volume is twofold: to provide an exposition of new and seminal online technologies, and to outline a series of potent critical methodolgies for examining them. 'Thinking Online' is planned as an accessible but in-depth resource, primarily for the academic community. 2. What will a successful abstract look like? Papers appearing in this collection will share a series of distinct characteristics. They will - focus on one or two prevalent Net protocols - display an in-depth technical and critical understanding of those protocols, sufficient to inform and educate readers with an intermediate understanding of the Net - make clear their critical methodologies, to the extent that readers can begin to form some notion not only of the functionings of various technologies, but of means of approach to them - concentrate on providing a grounded, exhaustive account that helps to create a 'backbone' for the development of Net criticism. 3. Who is the editor? Jamie King, the editor of 'Thinking Online', is a researcher into the subject of information technology and contemporary culture at King Alfred's College, Winchester. He also writes journalistically in the same field, and has been the editor of a major UK national publication. Jamie's full CV is available upon request. 4. Is there payment for the project? Writers for this collection will receive a commission fee. Details of the likely fee are also available upon request. 5. How far is the project developed, and what are the deadlines? Continuing interest in this collection has been shown by a significant academic publisher, but the editorial team are still at the stage of submitting a formal proposal. For this we require ten or more solid abstracts, outlining plans for papers of approximately 5,000 - 7,000 words. Shorter papers will be considered where the requirements (see above) can be shown to be fulfilled. Abstracts emailed to the adress below before 31st November will be considered for inclusion within the proposal along with those already submitted. Successful applicants will be notified by email and will be comissioned to produce a complete paper. We hope this revised abstract has proved interesting and useful to you. Jamie King, Editor, Thinking Online. _________________________________________________________ T h i n k i n g O n l i n e thinking_online@jamie.com 'Net criticism... positions itself within the Net, inside the software and wires...[It] tries to formulate criteria about the politics, aesthetics, economics and architecture of multimedia and computer networks.' Geert Lovink, Lecture at ICC Tokyo, 19.12.96. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 23 Sep 1997 11:48:49 -0800 From: agalloway@rhizome.com (alex galloway) + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + * * * C A L L F O R M A T E R I A L * * * ^^^ ^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ DIGITAL STUDIES: BEING IN CYBERSPACE an online event for new media art and theory at altx (www.altx.com) co-organized by mark amerika and alex galloway September 1st, 1997 For Immediate Release ALT-X ANNOUNCES CALL FOR MATERIAL FOR FEATURE ONLINE EXHIBITION TO LAUNCH THIS FALL. The exhibition "DIGITAL STUDIES," co-organized by mark amerika and alex galloway, will showcase leading theoretical and artistic work in the field of new media. SUBMISSIONS ARE ENCOURAGED IN THE FOLLOWING AREAS: > new media theory > digital studies > hyperfiction > web projects / net.art EXHIBITION GOALS: > cyborg-narrators > html conceptualism > navigational aesthetics > networked intelligentsia > self-transmission radio > open(BOMB, ">>$la_bombe"); > ARTificial life > typographical disembodiment (the layered-effect) > prophetic nerves IMPORTANT DATES: > soft deadline for submissions: October 1st, 1997 > exhibition goes public: November 1st, 1997 For information and submissions please contact alex galloway (arg2@duke.edu) or visit http://www.duke.edu/~arg2. ^^^ ^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^^ ^ DIGITAL STUDIES: BEING IN CYBERSPACE http://www.duke.edu/~arg2 http://www.altx.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sat, 20 Sep 1997 18:00:54 +0100 From: Gerard Greenway <angelaki@angelaki.demon.co.uk> Spoon-Announcements Please circulate Sept. 17, 1997 > From A N G E L A K I < An international journal of the theoretical humanities Winner: "Best New Journal" Council of Editors of Learned Journals (CELJ) Awards 1996 New issue just out... > INTELLECTUALS & GLOBAL CULTURE < _Angelaki_ 2.3 Editors Charlie Blake School of Cultural Studies, Nene College, UK Linnie Blake Dept. of English and History, The Manchester Metropolitan University, UK 17 pieces from international authors examining the role of the intellectual in a globalised world. Contributions from Jean Baudrillard, Tricia Rose and McKenzie Wark, and a fine philosophical farewell to Gilles Deleuze from his longtime Paris VIII colleague Rene Scherer... The figure of the intellectual has, for some years, been the object of anxious self-scrutiny. As intellectuals debate their changing role in the contemporary world, issues relating to intellectual genealogy, the loss of intellectual authority, the necessity of cultural specificity and the will to universal truth have been passionately argued. Examining these often inflammatory debates, and tracing consistencies of thought and action, _Intellectuals and Global Culture_ draws together contributions from both within and without the academy, from Africa, Latin America, Australasia and the United States, from Western Europe and the former Eastern bloc, to explore the identity, role, status and responsibilities of the intellectual, both historically and now. The collection will be of wide interest to students and researchers in the humanities and the arts, and to others concerned for the future of intellectual production and critical knowledge. > Contents < 1. Editorial Introduction - Charlie Blake and Linnie Blake 2. Antipodality - McKenzie Wark 3. Neohispanism: A Program for Tongue Dispossession - Alberto Moreiras 4. The Impertinence of Intellectuals: Democracy and Postmodernity in Latin America - Joanildo A. Burity 5. Postmodern or Post-Totalitarian: The Reality of the Crisis of the Bulgarian Intellectual - Yanna Popova 6. Stop Making Sense: Heiner Muller, Germany and Intellectuals - Angelica Michelis 7. Rainbow Fragments - David Hallowes 8. Falling Down: Intellectuals, Scholars and Popular Culture - Tim Shakesby 9. So Here Comes a Book That Makes Everything Easy: Towards a Theory of Intellectual History in the Field of Intellectual Production - Jon Beasley-Murray 10. Critical Mass: Intellectual Politics and the Mode of Complexity - Charlie Blake 11. The Terror of the Law: Judaism and International Institutions - Gary Banham 12. On Four Formulas That Might Sum Up the Deleuzian Philosophy - Rene Scherer 13. A Jew, a Red, a Whore, a Bomber: Becoming Emma Goldman, Rhizomatic Intellectual - Linnie Blake 14. Jean Baudrillard: Transintellectual? - Paul Sutton 15. Accelerated Aesthetics: Paul Virilio's _The Vision Machine_ - John Armitage 16. Ain't I an Intellectual Too? An Interview with Tricia Rose - Caroline Ukoumunne 17. Endangered Species? An Interview with Jean Baudrillard - Paul Sutton > Specifications and Price < _Intellectuals and Global Culture_ (_Angelaki_ 2.3). July 1997. 17 pieces. 240pp (c. 110,000 wds). Illus. Size: 21cm x 14.8cm. ISBN: 1-899567-05-4. The issue (for individuals) is US$10/5 pounds including air p+p. An individual sub to Volume 2 (3 issues; 600+ pages) is US$24/12 pounds including air p+p. The other two issues in the volume are _Home and Family_ (2.1; 200pp) and _Authorizing Culture_ (2.2; 168pp). Or *any three issues* of _Angelaki_ at the cost of a volume subscription (US$24/12 pounds). See website for contents of back issues, or e-mail a contents list request (addresses just below). Please send your cheque (payable to Angelaki) to: Angelaki 44 Abbey Road Oxford OX2 0AE United Kingdom Orders are dispatched immediately on receipt. E-mail confirmation of receipt/dispatch if required. Further information: E-mail <greenway@angelaki.demon.co.uk> Web <http://www.bookshop.co.uk/angelaki/> (please ignore discrepant prices at website, prices are as given here). > About A N G E L A K I < Established in September of 1993, _Angelaki_ is an independent international journal of the theoretical humanities. The journal publishes two thematic collections and one general or open issue per volume. _Angelaki_ is a peer-reviewed serial. The journal is currently indexed in the _MLA International Bibliography_, _MHRA Annual Bibliography_, _The Year's Work in English Studies_, _The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory_ and _The Literary Criticism Register_. ISSN: 0969-725X. _Angelaki_ was the 1996 recipient of the Council of Editors of Learned Journals' "Best New Journal" award. Please consider recommending a subscription to your library (committee) -- "Worthy of all but the smallest college libraries," _Library Journal_. Please forward. Thank you. Full contact details: Gerard Greenway managing editor A N G E L A K I E-mail: greenway@angelaki.demon.co.uk 44 Abbey Road Tel: +44 (0)1865 793 891 Oxford OX2 0AE Fax: +44 (0)1865 791 372 United Kingdom Web: http://www.bookshop.co.uk/angelaki/ -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ========================================================================= _ _ __| | ___ _ __ ___ ___ ___ _ __ __ _ ___ _ _ _ __ ___| |_ / _` |/ _ \ '_ ` _ \ / _ \ / __| '__/ _` |/ __| | | | | '_ \ / _ \ __| | (_| | __/ | | | | | (_) | (__| | | (_| | (__| |_| |_| | | | __/ |_ \__,_|\___|_| |_| |_|\___/ \___|_| \__,_|\___|\__, (_)_| |_|\___|\__| |___/ Government Without Walls _________________________________________________________________________ Update No.13 http://www.democracy.net/ Sep 21 1997 _________________________________________________________________________ Table of Contents - Hearings on the domain name system in the House Science committee scheduled for September 25th and 30th. - About democracy.net _________________________________________________________________________ TWO HEARINGS ON DOMAIN NAMES IN THE HOUSE SCIENCE COMMITTEE COMING THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 25 AND TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 30 Domain names, like "democracy.net", "netscape.com", and "feedmag.com" are the virtual front porches, store fronts, and signposts of cyberspace. They are also the most visible part of a complex Internet infrastructure that most users never come in contact with, but none the less vital to the functioning of the network. As a result, issues surrounding the future of the domain name infrastructure are inextricably linked to the future of the medium. As the Internet enters its final stages in the transition between a government supported research tool to a privatized commercially driven medium, important questions are being raised about how the infrastructure will be governed. At its core is the controversy surrounding the domain name system. Will it become harder to acquire your own domain? Who will own the ongoing domain name fees that the current domain name owners pay? Will the method of arbitrating disputes over domain name ownership change? Will a competitive market create a more stable infrastructure or one even less stable than we depend upon now? The Subcommittee on Basic Research in the House Science Committee will explore these and other issues during a two part hearing on September 25 and 30th. The Committee has arranged for the hearings to be cybercast live via democracy.net -- a joint project of the Center for Democracy and Technology and the Voters Telecommunications watch to encourage citizen participation in the democratic process. The purpose of these hearings is to review the history and current status of the domain name system, the relationship between the National Science Foundation (NSF) and Network Solutions Incorporated (NSI), NSF's role in the transition of the domain name system to private sector control at the termination of the cooperative agreement with NSI in March 1998, alternative proposals from within the Internet Community, and the role of the Federal government in the future of the Domain Name System. We urge you to be a part of this debate by reading up on the issues surrounding the domain name system, and then participating in the two hearings in the House Science Committee on September 25th and 30th. As usual, you'll be able to watch and listen to these events in real time with RealAudio and still video, chat with other Internet users, and submit your own input to the committee for consideration. WHEN: 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, September 25, 1997 (7:00am Pacific) WHERE: 2318 Rayburn House Office Building or http://www.democracy.net/ WHO: Witness List: -Dr. Joseph Bordogna, Acting Deputy Director, National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA -The Honorable Larry Irving, Assistant Secretary for Communication and Information, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC -Dr. Jonathan B. Postel, Director, Computer Networks Division, Marina del Rey, CA -Mr. Gabriel A. Battista, Chief Executive Office, Network Solutions Incorporated, Herndon, VA The second hearing will take place on Tuesday Sep 30, 1997 at 10:00am (Eastern). Watch http://www.democracy.net for details. You will need RealAudio and a telnet application to access this event. Although we will not have a live audio-to-text transcription service available for deaf participants, we will endeavor to have one made after the hearing. If you know of any pro-bono stenographers, please let contact us at webmaster@democracy.net. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Andreas Broeckmann <abroeck@v2.nl> ( cut from the formidable Syndicate Newsletter ) * Dates of (some) upcoming events and exhibitions * (check the archive at http://www.v2.nl/mail/v2east for postings about these events) - 30 August - 1 October: near the beginning, Plasy/Cz - 28 August - 9 October: Parallelen, Berlin/D - 6 - 12 September: Just Watch, Zurich/CH - 8 -13 September 1997: Ars Electronica Festival, Linz/A - 12 - 18 September 1997: World Wide Video Festival, Amsterdam/NL - 15 September - 15 October 1997: Messages/REflections, Chisinau/Md - 22 - 27 September 1997: ISEA 97, Chicago/USA - 26 September - 4 October 1997: l'immagine leggera, Palermo/IT - 1 - 3 October 1997: Digitale, Cologne/D - 3 - 23 October 1997: Hi-Tech/Art '97, Brno/CZ - 4 - 11 October 1997: 3rd Festival of Computer Arts, Maribor/SI - 5 October - 2 November 1997: Screens, Trondheim/NO - 7 - 19 October 1997: Interstanding 2, Tallinn/EE - 10 - 12 October 1997: ROOTless '97, Hull/UK - 16 - 26 October 1997: VIPER 97, Lucerne/CH - 17 - 24 October: CITY OF WOMEN, Ljubljana/Si - 18 October 1997: opening ZKM, Karlsruhe/D - 21 October 1997: SeaFair: Interactive Narration/Int. CD ROM exhibition, Skopje/MK - 24 October 1997: opening Multimediale 5, Karlsruhe/D - Nov - December: Da-Da-Net, Moscow/Ru - 3 - 9 November 1997: LADA 97, Rimini/It + San Marino/SM - 5 - 9 November 1997: OSTranenie, Dessau/D - 8 - 16 November 1997: Art & Communication, Valencia/ES - 10 - 16 November 1997: Video and Electronic Art Festival, Riga/LV - 4 -7 December 1997: Recycling the Future, Vienna/A - 5 - 7 December 1997: VideoMedeja, Novi Sad/YU - September 1998: Videonale 8 , Bonn/D - September 1998: ISEA98, Liverpool&Manchester/UK - November 1998: DEAF98, Rotterdam/NL -------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: "Vuk Cosic" <vuk@kud-fp.si> To: nettime-l@Desk.nl Date: Sun, 28 Sep 1997 21:55:53 CET Subject: lady dx died in an attitude accident ho, It is with tears in my eyes that I am informing all subscribers that the legendary web site of the Documenta X is not longer among us, at least it is not there where they've put it. While I was just downloading the last details of the Mullican project the following message appeared: ############################################# Sorry, after documenta X this website has totally changed and most pages doesn't exist any more. Please start at the homepage ############################################# http://www.ljudmila.org/~vuk/dx/ is the place to look, you know that allready. bingo v ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 20:57:47 +0200 From: j.starrs@berlin.snafu.de (JosephineStarrs & LeonCmielewski) Subject: [7-11] diagnostic tools Reply-To: 7-11@mail.ljudmila.org Diagnostic Tools For The New Millennium a vapourware project by Josephine Starrs and Leon Cmielewski Life in the new millennium will require complex and precise tools. When this post-human, post-optimist, post-feminist, post-ideological decade crashes, these 'diagnostic tools' will be needed to verify our corrupted psyche. "We're becoming the objects of our own technology and we better get used to it" Gregory Stock (biophysicist) on cloning humans. "I want them and so do you" Nicholas Negroponte on digital intermediaries. ."....i cant fuck anyone unless i've had 6 months of email foreplay beforehand" Gashgirl. We are interested in the fact that our experiences are increasingly mediated by new technologies. In the rush to leave the meat behind, the disembodied self is relishing its new found flexibility and mobility while conversely, the boundaries between nature and technology are blurring further and the desire for and obsession with information seems to be reaching fetishistic proportions. http://www.icf.de/starrs/toolcorphome.html Visit our website and send us your data so we can abuse it! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sun, 28 Sep 1997 18:33:02 -0500 From: laporta@interport.net (Tina LaPorta) Subject: Net.Art: TRACES ***Announcement*** Net.Art: TRACES Tina LaPorta, Artist-in-Resident on the Ars Electronica Web Site http://wintermute.aec.at/traces TRACES is a web-based video installation which explores concepts of presence and absence within a digital environment. This project is the first installment in a series of Web pieces which will continue to explore, in a variety of media, the dispersed presence of an artistic vision within a networked environment. TRACES runs best with QuickTime installed, using Netscape. Plans are underway to develop a CD-Rom version of the work. Please send comments to: Tina LaPorta laporta@interport.net http://wintermute.aec.at/traces ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 29 Sep 1997 02:37:45 +0100 (MET) To: Tamas Banovich <postmasters@thing.net> Subject: MacClassic online43 There is information, photos, video available of our current exhibition "MacClassics" at: http://www.thing.net/~pomaga . Participants: Nam Szeto and Steven Cannon (i/o 360), Ervin Redl, Eric Adigard & Patricia McShane (M.A.D.), Kevin SawadBrooks, John F. Simon Jr., Perry Hoberman, Terbo Ted (TerboLizard), DavidKaram (post tool), Joan Heemskerk and Dirk Paesmans (jodi.org), Andy Deck, Erik Rosewear, David Oppenheim, Tom Flemming. Some of the artists made special sites relating to their work in the exhibition, those links are active in the "MacClassics list of work" window.(click on the title to call it up). Regards, Tamas Banovich Postmasters Gallery postmasters@thing.net 80 Greene Street http://www.thing.net/~pomaga New York, NY 10012 fax: 212 431 4679 voice: 212 941 5711 no e-mail larger than 1.6mb, please --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de