Raqs Media Collective on Mon, 24 May 1999 22:55:48 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> About SARAI: THE NEW MEDIA INITIATIVE, INDIA |
To : nettime@desk.nl please circulate to all nettime subscribers -------------------------------------------------------------------------- We have launched SARAI, a website on a modest server that outlines our proposal for a new media space looking at contemporary urban culture & politics. We invite you to visit the site and send us your comments. The url is www.sarai.net. We are giving a overview of the SARAI project below. Send your feedback to dak@sarai.net and/or to raqs@vsnl.com & rsundar@del2.vsnl.net.in Looking forward to lots of responses to our ideas Shuddhabrata Sengupta, Jeebesh Bagchi & Monica Naurla (Raqs Media Collective, New Delhi, India) Ravi Sundaram & Ravi Vasudevan (Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SARAI THE NEW MEDIA INITIATIVE Of the Urban Cultures & Politics Programme Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi in Collaboration with Raqs Media Collective, Delhi Sarai : (sary, sho-rai) n. (Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi, Bengali, Persian, Turkish) an enclosed space in a city, or, beside a highway, where travellers and caravans can find shelter, sustenance and companionship; a tavern, a public house, a meeting place; a destination and a point of departure; a place to rest in the middle of a journey. - ABOUT Sarai Sarai, the new media initiative is an attempt to create an open and lively space for a bold and imaginative re-constitution of urban public culture, especially in a South Asian/Asian context, with strong global links. As a space and a network, it will connect different forms of new as well as established media practices, theoretical interventions, research, education, and activism. Sarai sketches out a wide-ranging series of activities, starting from next year. Given that our effort is to put into place what we think will be one of the first non-commercial new media cultural ventures in India. The idea is to design a cluster of activities that offer the possibilities of innovation, dynamism, and cross-fertilisation. We are partial to a constellation of activities, that can account for the diversity and specific conditions of South Asia, and also its complexity. There will be a place for both solid academic research into new areas as well as new creative outputs by media practitioners; workshops and seminars, regular activity at our publics space, building links to the local community in the city of Delhi, in India and South Asia as a whole. There will be a regular print output of our work as well as an innovative education programme and outreach activities. In order to ensure that new media activity is not ghettoized into an elite space, we have had to imagine a variety of diffuse public strategies. Sarai reflects in its scope and ambition, the open, international and hybrid form of the new media themselves and yet at the same time, challenges the inequitable distribution of information and communication technologies within and between cultures in the world today. We see the Sarai initiative as a catalyst that will necessarily lead to a multiplication of many smaller new media initiatives at various regional and local levels all over South Asia. AIMS - 1. To become an alive and integral part of the new urban culture and emerging civic consciousness of the city of Delhi/New Delhi. Sarai is meant to become a major player in the shaping of the urban culture and political imagination of the city of Delhi/New Delhi in the future. 2. To create a place where people can interact across geographical, cultural, disciplinary and professional boundaries through a variety of programmes. 3. To collect, store and make accessible images, sounds and textual material that reflect contemporary urban culture and politics. 4. To demonstrate the validity of low-cost & low tech methods and strategies in media and communication practices, with a commitment to public participation and access. 5. To establish a hub of networking amongst new/old media activists, a centre for creating and exhibiting original work and a clearing house for innovative ideas in the South Asian/Asian region. 6. To become an equal partner of new media initiatives at an international level, and a contributor to the content of emerging/new media cultures across the world. PROGRAMMES AND ACTIVITIES - Concretely, the Sarai initiative will - 1) Host websites, on-line discussion forums and news groups 2) Provide free and public access internet facilities and off-line/dial-up connectivity, aim to create & maintain a non-commercial server and encourage the generation & dissemination of alternative software & shareware. 3) Host visiting media practitioners and scholars through a fellowship programme. Provide supports to students and young media practitioners & researchers with stipends and seed grants. 4) Conduct exchange programmes for scholars, artists and media activists on an international scale 5) Provide impetus for new forms of critical and engaged reportage of urban and industrial spaces and experiences. 6) Hold seminars. 7) Conduct workshops and short term courses. 8) Generate regular, inexpensive print versions of on-line discussions and debates as well as seminar proceedings. To edit a journal with a focus on new media and contemporary urban culture. 9) Curate exhibitions, support the creation & exhibition of new multi-media works, films and performances, and work towards the creation of community radio broadcasting culture in the near future. 10) Design and develop an accessible archive of the materials generated through this programme. New Media in South Asia The term 'new media' is a product of the 1990's, and refers to the various practices that emerged from the various interfaces of data, image, and sound that travel through new, high-speed electronic networks and the new computer technology. While the creative mixing of various media was also true of older forms like the cinema, the 'new media' is informed by speed, the cheap and easy access of creative tools (computers, networks) by a larger public, and most important, dynamic possibilities of public and private interaction. Electronic mail has spread world-wide, the world-wide web and the internet have been held out as examples of phenomena that will change the next century. Outside the space of the electronic networks, new forms like multi-media, electronic music and cheaper forms of electronic transmission have a more ubiquitous presence. New Media practices in the West have taken as a given the existence of large, high-speed electronic networks, private ownership of computers, and an increasing body of work being done, 'virtually', i.e. on the World -Wide Web itself. There is, in fact a large new media public space quite distinct from the large commercial map of the internet. This public space includes artists, web-page designers, activists, NGO's, on-line journals, art-installations, and millions of users, who lend their energies to dynamise these publics. In many parts of Europe and the US, local town councils and foundations help fund non-commercial new media projects which will generate a critical body of work and improve the quality of urban life. The scenario here in India is very different. Public discourses in the media and state have in recent times drawn attention to this region's large software and info-tech potential. In reality, the networks are limited in reach with low band-width, computer ownership, is limited to a small part of the population. In this scenario the new media public space that has emerged in the West is non-existent here. However if access to virtual electronic space is not the only defining feature of new media practices, we begin to see a very different situation here. <<One can say that the 'new' in South Asia refers to dynamic efforts to put together an interface of various old media's like radio, music, cinema, television with new computer and phone technologies, which have transformed the face of everyday life in urban South Asia for millions of ordinary people.>> It is this specific historical character of the contemporary India that gives new media here such an interesting and dynamic character, which is not limited to the web and electronic networks alone. Consider for example the spread of hundreds of thousands of Public Call Offices (P.C.O's) or human-operated phone booths all over India that have put into motion a new experience of space, time and communication for millions of people. Many of these public spaces also function as computer shops which provide a number if facilities to customers which include multi-media, and increasingly, e-mail and the internet. This is an emerging electronic public culture, which is slowly finding the terms of its reference. In addition the `contemporary' in South Asia is a highly media-tised space, where television, music, cinema a re constantly speaking to each other in ways that were never done before. Both the speed of the transformation of the old medias, as well as the new modes of transmission (pirate, semi-legal and legal cable) is significant. <<It is this cluster of cultural practices that establishes the terms of the 'new media' here, not simply access to the web.>> However, the development of the space created by new media technologies here has been rigidly circumscribed from the very beginning by the state and by market forces. The internet, for example is already seen as a resource to be harnessed for commerce, and a territory to be policed by the state, not as a public space for information, education and self expression The notion of an on-line community arising from a free exchange of ideas, images, information and expression is something that has to be struggled for and protected in the Indian/South Asian context. support, suggestions, questions, comments & criticism are welcome! website : www.sarai.net e mails : dak@sarai.net rsundar@del2.vsnl.net.in raqs@vsnl.com --- # 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@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl