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Table of Contents: automatism m e t a <meta@meta.am> university teaching jobs (new media) in amsterdam geert lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> periodic notice, etc. - alan Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> Turning the Tide: New issue out now Vol 14 No. 4 Winter 2001-02 [a] Michael Novick <part2001@usa.net> NEW BOOK: politics of a digital present Ned Rossiter <Ned.Rossiter@arts.monash.edu.au> "Your Favourite London Sounds" David Mandl <dmandl@panix.com> ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2001 01:29:55 -0800 From: m e t a <meta@meta.am> Subject: automatism >there is no automatism in communication that creates sense 1 a : the quality or state of being automatic b : an automatic action 2 : the power or fact of moving or functioning without conscious control either independently of external stimuli (as in the beating of the heart) or under the influence of external stimuli (as in pupil dilation) 3 : a theory that views the body as a machine and consciousness as a noncontrolling adjunct of the body 4 : suspension of the conscious mind to release subconscious images <automatism --the surrealist trend toward spontaneity and intuition -- Elle> 2 much control gets in the way not automatic not reflexive consider a program or a patch or a complex 2 complex for reflex can't express or not outward or a true representation of inner not feeling not perhaps a state of mind or a state of being too much programmatic control far too many intermediate steps and menus and too many intermediaries inhibits a certain reaction too much voilition concious thought and control self analysis and second guessing the media the means of expression not immediate enough the software never became second nature always an upgrade or an update rendered obsolete before a true symbiotic quality emerges theory or emergent behavior a suspension of the concious mind is exactly what is needed in this over mediated environment these ultra-programmatic mindsets and environments for the creation of sound and image quite nice yet only engaging one aspect of ourselves and the power or fact of moving or functioning without concious control either independently of external stimuli (as in the beating of the heart) or under the influence of external stimuli (as in pupil dilation) remains elusive unknown forgotten not unlike yet another email archived forever via google so ciao. //m 127.0.0.1 http://meta.am/ 216.71.65.73 / ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Dec 2001 21:57:42 +1100 From: geert lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: university teaching jobs (new media) in amsterdam The Faculty of the Humanities at the UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM offers BA and MA programs in Media and Culture; starting September 2002, the three-year Bachelors curriculum will include a range of introductor courses in theory and practice of media, as well as more specialized courses in film, television, and new media. The MA program offers advanced degrees in one of three areas: Film and Visual Culture, Television and Popular Culture, and New Media and Digital Culture. In addition, the department offers a professional masters program in Journalism and Media, and plans another professional MA in Preservation and Presentation of Film. More than 300 students per year enroll in the BA Media and Culture program; we expect between 100-150 students to enter the various MA programs. The program in Media and Culture has the following openings for tenure track positions: Assistant Professor of Film Studies (f/m); full-time; vacancy-code 9122 Assistant Professor of Television Studies (f/m); full-time; vacancy-code 9123 Assistant Professor of New Media studies (f/m); full-time; vacancy-code 9121 Associate Professor of New Media Studies (f/m); full-time; vacancy-code 9120 APPOINTMENT The appointment will be for 2 years with the prospect of tenure. It will be a full-time (38 hours) appointment at the Faculty of Humanities of the Universiteit van Amsterdam. The gross full-time monthly salary for the Assistant Professor ranges from Dfl. 4.496,-- (EUR2.040,20) to Dfl. 9.456,- (EUR4.290,95) (pre-tax monthly salary for a full-time appointment). The gross full-time monthly salary for the Associate Professor ranges from Dfl. 8.420,-- (EUR3.820,83) to Dfl. 11.269,-- (EUR5.113,65) (pre-tax monthly salary for a full-time appointment). INFORMATION For more information, please contact Prof. Dr. Jose van Dijck, phone (31) 020-525 2980, e-mail j.van.dijck@hum.uva.nl APPLICATIONS Applications before January 4th 2002 (indicating the vacancy code and marked "strictly confidential" on envelope; including resume, list of publications) to the Universiteit van Amsterdam, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, afdeling Personeel & Organisatie, Spuistraat 210, 1012 VT Amsterdam. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Dec 2001 17:27:03 -0500 (EST) From: Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> Subject: periodic notice, etc. - alan (last one of these sent out in September) Internet Philosophy and Psychology - -05/01/02 My recent work has been dealing with sexuality, terror, death, windows onto worlds, the confluence of subtropical nature with subsumption neural architectures. In Miami, my job has been terminated, the new media line cancelled, the track itself eliminated. I contain my frustration, writing under the sign of the repressed. Below is the usual intro: This is a somewhat periodic notice describing my Internet Text, available on the Net, and sent in the form of texts to various lists. The URL is: http://www.anu.edu.au/english/internet_txt/ which is partially mirrored at http://lists.village.virginia.edu/~spoons/internet_txt.html. (The first site includes some graphics, dhtml, The Case of the Real, etc.) The changing nature of the email lists, Cybermind and Wryting, to which the texts are sent individually, hides the full body of the work; readers may not be aware of the continuity among them. The writing may appear fragmented, created piecemeal, splintered from a non-existent whole. On my end, the whole is evident, the texts extended into the lists, partial or transitional objects. So this (periodic) notice is an attempt to recuperate the work as total- ity, restrain its diaphanous existence. Below is an updated introduction. - ----- The "Internet Text" currently constitutes around 100 files, or 5000 print- ed pages. It began in 1994, and has continued as an extended meditation on cyberspace, expanding into 'wild theory' and literatures. Almost all of the text is in the form of short- or long-waves. The former are the individual sections, written in a variety of styles, at times referencing other writers/theorists. The sections are interrelated; on occasion emanations are used, avatars of philosophical or psychological import. These also create and problematize narrative substructures within the work as a whole. Such are Susan Graham, Julu, Alan, Jennifer, Azure, and Nikuko in particular. The long-waves are fuzzy thematics bearing on such issues as death, sex, virtual embodiment, the "granularity of the real," physical reality, com- puter languages, and protocols. The waves weave throughout the text; the resulting splits and convergences owe something to phenomenology, program- ming, deconstruction, linguistics, philosophy and prehistory, as well as the domains of online worlds in relation to everyday realities. Overall, I'm concerned with virtual-real subjectivity and its manifesta- tions. I continue working on a cdrom of the last eight years of my work (Archive); I also additional video materials, created with Azure Carter and Foofwa d'Imobilite, on two cdroms, Baal and Parables. I've worked on a series of codeworks and political pieces, as well as Asteroids, a group of videos based on 3d modeling of spatial objects and fly-byes. Finally, I've recently completed two cdrom collections of materials, Miami and Voyage. I have used MUDS, MOOS, talkers, perl, d/html, qbasic, linux, emacs, vi, CuSeeMe, etc., my work tending towards embodied writing, texts which act and engage beyond traditional reading practices. Some of these emerge out of performative language - soft-tech such as computer programs which _do_ things; some emerge out of interferences with these programs, or conversa- tions using internet applications that are activated one way or another. And some of the work stems from collaboration, particularly video, sound, and flash pieces. There is no binarism in the texts, no series of definitive statements. Virtuality is considered beyond the text- and web-scapes prevalent now. The various issues of embodiment that will arrive with full-real VR are already in embryonic existence, permitting the theorizing of present and future sites, "spaces," nodes, and modalities of body/speech/community. It may be difficult to enter the texts for the first time. The Case of the Real is a sustained work and possible introduction. It is also helpful to read the first file, Net1.txt, and/or to look at the latest files (lq, lr) as well. Skip around. The Index works only for the earlier files; you can look up topics and then do a search on the file listed. The texts may be distributed in any medium; please credit me. I would ap- preciate in return any comments you may have. For information on the availability of cdroms containing the text and other materials (graphics, video, sound, articles, books), see the appen- ded notice below. You can find my collaborative projects at http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/writers/sondheim/index.htm and my conference activities at http://trace.ntu.ac.uk - both as a result of my virtual writer-in-residence with the Trace online writing community. See also: Being on Line, Net Subjectivity (anthology), Lusitania, 1997 New Observations Magazine #120 (anthology), Cultures of Cyberspace, 1998 The Case of the Real, Pote and Poets Press, 1998 Jennifer, Nominative Press Collective, 1997 Alan Sondheim - Miami cellphone (voicemail) 305-610-5620 Miami phone (no voicemail) 305-668-5303 email sondheim@panix.com Home address: 4600 SW 67th Avenue, Apartment 252, Miami, FL, 33155 (This address is good through 4/15/2002.) - -------------------------------------------------------------------------- CDROM Offering: Alan Sondheim : Collected and Newly-Released Work: All of the following include video/text/sound (except Asteroids - only video - and Turn/Cray - only sound); Archive 4.1 or later has the entire Internet Text to date - over 4500 pages! There are 7 cdroms for sale; price includes shipping costs. Any ONE cd-rom for $ 15; TWO for $ 25; THREE for $ 31. FOUR for $37, $5 each for any over FOUR. Special $53 for all eight! What's Available: Archive 4.1: This includes all the texts from 1994- present, a number of older articles, several books, a great number of images, some short video, etc. Archive is continuously updated. There is also sound-work and some programming. I think of this as the "basic" cd-rom; if you have an earlier copy, you might want to update. Et: This is the most recent cd-rom, with almost all of the video/sound/ imagework that has been described on the lists - plus more. r- if not x- rated. Much of this deals with the relation between sexuality and terror, as well as fascinated/fetishization - with Azure Carter. Some of the most intense pieces we've done. Voyage: Finished before Et, a number of video and image works, as well as sound/music pieces - with Azure Carter. Languor and exhibitionism on the way out of New York. Turn/Cray: Continuous/stringent machine soundwork, 56 minute .wav file. Miami: Finished before moving to Florida, a number of sound, image, and video pieces. Despair, existentialism, sex, power-land. With Azure Carter. Parables: Dance, Foofwa d'Imobilite, texts and sound by Alan Sondheim, Azure Carter, a series of short videos (plus text) taken from The Parables of Nikuko. Between conceptual dance and body work / mesmeric movement. Baal: Foofwa d'Imobilite, Azure Carter, Alan Sondheim, several videos of sexuality, the problematic of ballet, and signs. r- or x- rated. Asteroids: A number of short silent videoworks - camera moving through 3d "asteroids" - no sound. Special: All 8: $53. Please note there is some overlap (not much) among the disks. =================== Please send cash, money order, or check to: Alan Sondheim 4600 SW 67 Avenue, Apartment 252 Miami, Florida, 33155 ======================================== ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 29 Dec 2001 10:33:30 -0800 From: Michael Novick <part2001@usa.net> Subject: Turning the Tide: New issue out now Vol 14 No. 4 Winter 2001-02 [a] The new issue of "Turning the Tide: Journal of Anti-Racist Action, Research & Education" is now out. The quarterly tabloid is produced by Anti-Racist Action(ARA)/People Against Racist Terror(PART) and features PART's perspective on "Fighting the Next War, Not the Last One," as well as a piece on "The Homeland Theater of Operations," by Michael Novick of Anti-Racist Action. Two articles, "Combating White Supremacy in the Anti-Globalization Movement," by Sonja Sivesind, and "Report on a Forum on Racism in Progressive Movements," by Donna Lamb, take up the important and often-neglected issue of racism within "the left," a dynamic often forgotten by groups that focus exclusively on opposing right wing forces or naked white supremacists like the nazis and Klan. Further addressing issues raised by the on-going US "anti-terrorism" war, in Afghanistan and elsewhere, this issue includes an eye-opening review of Zbiegniew Brzezinski's "The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and Its Geostrategic Imperatives," by Michael Ruppert, one of the founders of LA's !Crack the CIA! Coalition, as well as an International Human Rights Day declaration by RAWA, the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan. A continuing focus of TTT and PART has been freedom for political prisoners, and this issue is no exception. "Human Rights During Wartime," by Ohio 7 anti-imperialist political prisoner Jaan Laaman, and "Imperial Foreign Policy," by Mumia Abu-Jamal, still on death row despite a federal court ruling overturning his death sentence, provide important insights from behind prison walls. Articles by Lorenzo Komboa Ervin, a former political prisoner and Black anti-authoritarian, and by Matt Meyer of "Resistance in Brooklyn," a supporter of the Jericho Amnesty Movement, focus attention on particular cases such as that of Ali Khalid Abdullah as well as the connection of political prisoners in general to the prison movement and struggle against imperialist war. This issue also has contact information for the important upcoming "Tear Down the Walls" international conference on U.S.-held political prisoners and prisoners of war, to be convened in Havana, Cuba in March under the auspices of OSPAAL (the Cuban Organization of Solidarity with the People of Africa, Asia and Latin America). [For more information, see: www.thejerichomovement.com/teardownthewalls]. "The Executioners Blinked: The Struggle to Free Mumia" looks at the critical case of Abu-Jamal, a political prisoner still on death row and still facing the prospect of execution after more than 20 years of unyielding resistance. The issue also reports on a new generation of political prisoners such as L.A. anarchist Robert "Ruckus" Middaugh, sentenced to three years in prison after being the victim of a police riot on May Day in Long Beach, CA. News reports in this issue include accounts of the racist Jewish Defense League and fascist National Alliance making hay in the wake of the war and state racism, and the arrest of two Anti-Quarantine AIDS activists on one million dollars bail. The issue also provides detailed information on several major upcoming conferences and mobilizations, including "Unlocking Los Angeles: LA and the Prison Industrial Complex" in Pasadena CA, January 26; an Anti-Capitalist Convergence and National Student Mobilization against the World Economic Forum in NYC, January 31-February 4; and Barricada's "Festival del Pueblo" in Boston MA on May 1-5, 2002. Subscriptions to the quarterly publication are $15 a year in the US, $25 internationally, but people in the US can obtain a free sample copy of the latest issue by sending their name and street address to ARA/PART, PO Box 1055, Culver City CA 90232; 310-495-0299; or by email: part2001@usa.net. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is distributed without charge or profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. Join the "stop police abuse" list at <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/stop-polabuse> People Against Racist Terror (PART), PO Box 1055, Culver City, CA 90232 Tel.: 310-495-0299 E-mail: <part2001@usa.net> URL: <http://www.antiracist.org/issues.html> Send for a sample of our quarterly print publication: "Turning The Tide: Journal of Anti-Racist Action, Research & Education" Free Mumia! End the racist death penalty! Clemency for Leonard Peltier now! Free Marilyn Buck, Mutulu Shakur, Oscar Lopez and all political prisoners and P.O.W.'s in U.S. prisons! ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 20 Dec 2001 15:04:47 +1100 From: Ned Rossiter <Ned.Rossiter@arts.monash.edu.au> Subject: NEW BOOK: politics of a digital present [dear moderators - we'd appreciate it if this could be posted on nettime's publications (?) announcements..../best , ned] FIBRECULTURE READER - ORDERING INFORMATION Hugh Brown, Geert Lovink, Helen Merrick, Ned Rossiter, David Teh, Michele Willson (eds), Politics of a Digitial Present: An Inventory of Australian Net Culture, Criticism and Theory (Melbourne: Fibreculture Publications, 2001). Paperback 150 x 230mm 300pp ISBN 0-9579978-0-9 RRP $30AUS (includes GST) or $16US (for international orders) plus postage - payable by cheque or money order made out to Fibreculture. Please make international bank cheques or international money orders payable in US dollars to Fibreculture. Contact the administration address (below) to place an order and find out cost of postage. Mail to: Fibreculture c/-Ned Rossiter Lecturer, Communications School of Political and Social Inquiry Monash University Berwick Campus Clyde Rd Berwick VIC 3806 Australia tel. +61 3 9904 7023 fax. +61 3 9904 7037 email: Ned.Rossiter@arts.monash.edu.au WEBSITE WITH INFORMATION ON ORDERING THIS BOOK <www.fibreculture.org> EMAIL ADDRESS <admin@fibreculture.org> (for list administration and book ordering) BACK COVER BLURB Established in January 2001, fibreculture is a forum for Australian net culture and research, encouraging critical and speculative interventions in the debates concerning information technology, the policy that concerns it, the new media for(u)ms it supports and its sustainable deployment towards a more equitable Australia. Fibreculture is committed to fostering and promoting open, independent, critical, participatory and sustainable forums. The fibreculture network comprises theorists, critics, journalists, academics, artists, activists, policy developers and all sorts of media producers, designers and other information-workers. Fibreculture is working towards productive dialogues around our distinctive engagements with/in new media & internet theory and practice. The inaugural fibreculture reader is an encounter with some of these dialogues in process: offering not conclusions or closures but rather an invitation to further reflection, debate, and action. CONTENTS Acknowledgements Preface Listing Media in Transition: An Introduction to Fibreculture Theory Abstraction McKenzie Wark Net Affects: Responding to Shock on Internet Time Anna Munster (S)end David Teh 'Don't send me your saliva': Fantasies of Disembodiment in Email and Epistolary Technologies Esther Milne How to Launder Money: Finance Capital, Value, and Biopower Brett Neilson Networks, Postnationalism and Agonistic Democracy Ned Rossiter Politics Grassroots and Digital Branches in the Age of Transversal Politics Guy Redden Strengthening Cohesion, Networking Cells: Environmental Activists On-line Jenny Pickerill The Lens of Images: Desire, Commodities, Media and Hacking David Cox KNOBS and NERDS: What's So Good About Being Networked? Ann Willis Hack McKenzie Wark Policy The 'New Empirics' in Internet Studies and Comparative Internet Policy Terry Flew New Threats, New Walls: The Internet in China Kay Hearn and Brian Shoesmith 'Until there's evidence there's no comment': Risk, Fear and the Mobile Phone Sean Aylward Smith Intellectual Property: A Balance of Rights Terry Laidler The Knowledge Economy as Alienation: Outlines of a Digital Dark Age Phil Graham Arts To Ephemeral Peace Sean Cubitt Ephemeral Pieces: An Interview with Sean Cubitt David Teh The Human Phenome Project Kevin Murray Interview with Kevin Murray Geert Lovink Empyrean| soft_skinned_scape Melinda Rackham Theatre as Suspended Space Andrew Garton Diagramming Innovation-scapes Pia Ednie-Brown When is Art IT? Scott McQuire The Art of Real Time Daniel Palmer Education What is New Media Research? Chris Chesher Locating Community in the Social: Reorienting Internet Research Tania Lewis All Wired Up: Reflections on Teaching and Learning Online Helen Merrick and Michele Willson Cultural Functionality: Media Research and Error Stephi Hemelryk Donald and Ingrid Richardson Fibrous Amigos: The Critical Pursuit of Difference Molly Hankwitz with Danny Butt Appendix: program of events List of Contributors INTRODUCTION Listing Media in Transition: An Introduction to Fibreculture Internet mailing list dynamics are hard to predict. As tiny living entities these online communities in the making can be pretty stubborn. Their growth and direction is pretty much unknown for the founders, moderators and participants. Unlike the (web) magazine format, the "editorial" policy of those who would like to build up and maintain the list are rather limited. However, fibreculture has had an interesting first year of its existence and the aims set in early 2001 were by and large fulfilled. One of the central challenges for fibreculture so far has been to at once determine and invent the "location" of a critical Net practice in Australia. Where is such work happening, and who is undertaking it? Academia? The independent "tactical" media groups? The "new media arts" as defined and sanctioned by the funding bodies; user cultures; open source software communities; IT-experts; official entities such as ISOC?[1] The fibreculture facilitators' group felt that what was particularly lacking in Australia was not so much Net practice or new media theory in general but a critical, theoretical reflection on what was actually happening at the crossroad of arts, culture, policy, education and new media. How might we give the Net a sense of place within our national frame? The third wave or "generation" of Net studies on "virtual communities" seeks to redress this search for heimat (or public home) with its empirical work on ethnographic uses of networked media and its attention to policy and regulation issues.[2] Even so, we felt that the range of work going on in Australia didn't fit neatly into cultural or critical theory agendas, and that the field of Net studies and practice was still very much up for grabs. This isn't to say that it was any less "mature" than its international counterparts - such a distinction in itself demands qualification - but that a cartography of differences was yet to be assembled in Australia that registered and gave a platform to the variety of work being undertaken on and using the Net. After a few quiet months in which the list reached the two hundred subscribers range the list took off. Fibreculture debated across an extensive and diverse range of topics, including government involvement in (Net) culture; the political economy of broadband scarcity ("ba[n]dwidth"); the imminent end of DNS, ICANN and global domain name policies; globalisation and the nation state; Microsoft and the virtual classroom; "the hoax is the virus..."; the post-information age; syndicated content and the future of Australian writing; intellectual property versus digital technology; media tactics and ethics; free code and the divisions within; Internet culture and advertising; migration, the Tampa crisis and the Net; visualising the WWW; telepresence; online petitions. And then there were a host of discussions about the papers collected in this reader. These issues constitute part of an inventory we call *a politics of the digital present*. Not because they are special or noteworthy per se, but because their crisis is articulated in one way or another with a *digital mediology*. For Régis Debray, 'mediology' involves 'not media nor medium but mediations, namely the dynamic combination of intermediary procedures and bodies that interpose themselves between a producing of signs and a producing of events'.[3] Digital mediology for us, then, is a politics that consists of writing within the media architectonics of an Internet listserve, in the time of the present, in the space of the social. It is a politics of writing the social in the abstraction of a code, and of contesting the codes in which the social is read. If we can assume, momentarily, to represent a geo-culturally differentiated network of list subscribers, then one of our aims is to very quickly articulate the body social of fibreculture with other political actors. (Or perhaps, if at odds with those actors, to tackle them side on.) Here, we are speaking of articulations with a variety of entities whose spatial scale ranges from State and Federal parliaments and their auxiliary departments, to entities such as the anti-corporation networks and IndyMedia activists; from educational and contemporary arts institutions, to community organisations dealing with local issues. Perhaps this sounds terribly like empire building. Perhaps it's overly ambitious. And perhaps it reads as yet another deluded installment of Third Way ideology. Let's hope not! Certainly it's naïve to assume to overcome in any multi-lateral sense what Jean-François Lyotard astutely termed the problematic of the différend - those phrases in dispute, those cosmologies of incommensurability, that condition the possibility of the social. More pragmatically, such speculation on political arrangements to come speaks of a difficult or agonistic universality, but one which nonetheless enables (to some degree) the very iterations of fibreculture - both online and off. In the history of fibreculture, there have also been politics of another kind to negotiate. There are the politics of definition and identity that are peculiar to any mailing list: what voices dominate, what modes of expression are considered (il)legitimate, what and whose interests are advocated? People have joined, people have unsubscribed. Going beyond the list's ever shifting phases of enculturation, there are other political ideologies and practices that fibreculture seeks to address and intervene. From the beginning fibreculture primarily focussed on Australian Net culture. Within a global medium such as the Internet, it would be logical to question the boundaries of the nation state. Many of us are very well connected overseas. What was missing was a critical forum closer to home. Whilst a neoliberal paradigm apparently remains unassailable, challenges to its irrational logic of instrumentality, to its violent assertion of absolute sovereignty, are too often assumed to be illegitimate and are deemed anachronistic or hysterical. The techne of neoliberalism is reproduced across institutions many of us are affiliated with in one way or another. After a decade of evisceration, and effectively without representation, most academics have devolved into bureaucrats, modelling their institutional subjectivities or habitus according to the dictates of DETYA,[4] who determine what constitutes intellectual labour and its value. Contemporary cultural institutions across the country are run by boards and managers who have usurped the authority of curators. Cultural critics play the emasculated game of mutual affirmation, and artists, like all good careerists, display an obsessive preoccupation with enhancing their CV's. Even the culture industries are driven by a corporate institutional complex (including States) for which the integrity and wisdom of markets is paramount; this compounds the dislocation of their unwitting public which, long since removed from most political processes, now finds itself even culturally disenfranchised. The ideology of managerialism has all but triumphed over the administration of the arts. These are just some of the indices that register not so much the abolition as the transformation of the nation state. It is within these prevailing conditions that fibreculture emerges. Fibreculture wants to be more than social noise (or digital cosiness). An independent critical Net discourse has to fight to be taken seriously. Now that new media are no longer that new, the Net is in immediate danger of being reduced to a vulgar e-commerce platform plus push-media for second grade content of the old media. But the potential of digital media has yet to be fully realised. New and innovative techniques and applications are still being sought. It is too early to foreclose discussion - rather, fibreculture wants to initiate/instigate a vigorous and critical debate about where to go now, in the past-future of the present. Given fibreculture's broad and for the most part unknown constituency (since many subscribers do their fibrework as lurkers), it would be an instance of utter delusion to claim autonomy in any absolute sense. However, fibreculture has been, and can continue to be, a partially autonomous zone, a space peculiar to the dynamics of listserves and the parallel forums it spawns, such as meetings, books, newspapers, policy debates, consultations on communications and culture, and so on. This first fibreculture publication may seem a bit academic. So be it. There will be more Gutenberg projects to come. The academic discourse is just one of many discourses and ways of telling the story. The format of the academic paper which dominates this first fibreculture reader could be seen as a response to the all-too-Australian tendency to chat, thereby reducing online debates to the level of casual conversation. While the papers are necessarily presented in the order you find them in, this says as much about the medium of the book, and the particular constraints it places on sequencing, as it does about the content of the reader as a whole and the editorial decisions made. Another mix would have been possible, and it is up to you, the reader, to finally determine how this book is used. Perhaps, too, you might be inclined to join fibreculture and contribute to the ever expanding inventory of writings on Net culture, to a forum whose limits and possibilities will reflect those of this digital present, and the next. Notes: 1 ISOC is the Internet Society and represented in Australia by the the Internet Society of Australia. See http://www.isoc-au.org.au/ 2 See Terry Flew's contribution to this reader for a summary of these three phases of Net studies. 3 Régis Debray, Media Manifestos: On the Technological Transmission of Cultural Forms, trans. Eric Rauth (London and New York: Verso, 1996; 1994), 17. 4 DETYA - the Commonwealth Department of Education, Training and Youth Affairs - is the key administrative body for funding universities and academic research in Australia. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Dec 2001 22:30:50 -0500 (EST) From: David Mandl <dmandl@panix.com> Subject: "Your Favourite London Sounds" Announcing YOUR FAVOURITE LONDON SOUNDS compiled by Peter Cusack with photographs by Dave Mandl catalogue number: RESFLS1CD What is your favourite London sound and why? The responses of Londoners to this simple question are as varied and extraordinary as the city itself. This fascinating CD reveals the London of the ear, rather than that of the eye. A myriad of places and experiences, familiar and obscure, are brought to life in this striking collection--from Big Ben to bagel bars, from songbirds to slamming doors, from thunder cutting through the sky to the eternal uproar of the city's soundscape. Since 1998 the London Musicians' Collective has asked many Londoners--including all 74 of London's Members of Parliament--the question, "What is your favourite London sound--and why?" The response has been overwhelming (the MPs returned nine!), with a lot of interest in the question and plenty of discussion on how to answer it. Hundreds of favourite sounds have been proposed, often in considerable detail. Many have since been recorded by sound-artist Peter Cusack, taking care to be as faithful as possible to the original suggestions. The 40 tracks on this audio-postcard are a selection from the hours so far collected. YOUR FAVOURITE LONDON SOUNDS contains over an hour of audio material, plus a full-color 24-page booklet of photographs and information. For all media and distribution information, please contact the LMC. (Distributed in the U.S. by Forced Exposure.) - --------------------------------------------- London Musicians' Collective Limited 3.6 Lafone House, 11-13 Leathermarket Street, London SE1 3HN Tel: 020 7403 1922 Fax: 020 7403 1880 http://www.l-m-c.org.uk Registered charity number 290236 - --------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ # 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