Gita Hashemi on Mon, 12 Jun 2006 19:04:07 +0200 (CEST) |
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mini CPR, Was Re: <nettime> nettime as idea |
At 10:39 AM +0200 6/12/06, David Garcia wrote: >I would argue that any movement for radical change should be carried >out in close collaboration with the moderators and should take a very >different approach and tone from some of the peremptory notifications >we have seen on this thread. And above all they should seek to >work imaginatively with the fact that nettime has found a powerful >way of addressing our most pressing issue; sustainability without >institutionalisation. i agree that the tone of *some* of the exchanges [please, let's not homogenize] has been more self-serving than visionary and imaginative - on this thread and others prompted by the NNA - and that the pronunciations of the "death of nettime" too have been self-perpetuating in the way that the "the death of the author" ultimately has been for its author! respectfully, i would add that the moderators - present and past - have not been outside this dynamic but have directly contributed to it. i'd also contend that nettime itself is currently understood as an institution - otherwise, why question whether NNA had much to do with nettime rather than acknowledge the model of sustainability it put forth through engaging others outside the nettime proper? and why such struggle over nettime's history? - and that institutionalization is not necessarily bad - neither is it entirely avoidable; show me a tactical intervention grouping and/or a public space that is not already institutionalized in one way or another - so long as the institution is open to conflict, re-definition, re-organization and rejuvenation [by which i mean reflective of a refreshed demographic, landscape, vision]. in all recent exchanges presumably triggered by the CPR gathering [*I'd like to now propose a change of identity from NNA to CPR to signal that some of the people who attended the gathering including some of the organizers, presenters and attendees came from other milieus*], we have been focusing too much on the internal dynamics and rivalries of nettime (however we might define that interiority), but haven't given nearly as much air-time to the substance of discussions that took place, most of which were less packaged and more performative and dialogic than could be easily forwarded to the list in written text as an essay. this too was a rewarding aspect of the gathering that directly points to an inherent limitation of lists and the necessity for more real-space encounters where written communication isn't the only modus operandi. talking about sustainability, many of the presenters proposed or illustrated diverse models for sustaining critical practice through local and tactical economies (e.g. ilesansfil.org and koumbit.org), collaboration across disciplinary and geographic boundaries (e.g. ckut.ca and memefest.org), and practice/action-oriented organizing (e.g. act-mtl, viral knitting collective and Magnetic Identity Liberation Front). to me, these pointed to a qualitative move away from imagining the internet as a permanent address - prime intellectual real estate of the 80s and 90s - and toward seeing it as a tool of communication and organization - without as much utopian overtures that also were the dominant discourse of the previous moments. outside the presentations, one of the most interesting conversations i had (that went on over the course of two days and a few inevitable and chance encounters) was with roberta and alessandra about precarity movement and their work ("action") that they are planning for toronto. (see Alessandra Renzi, 11 Jun 2006, Subject: <nettime> Fwd: [RK] No struggle against the void. Report from Barcelona.) it's interesting to observe that vocal nettimers have paid so little attention, at least on the list, to the "new, immanently flexible yet radical social subject - the precariat" (Kernow Craig, 6 Oct 2004, Subject: <nettime> Precarity and n/european Identity) since it was brought up on the list (19 posts in total since 2004, most of them one-offs), thus clearly exhibiting an institutional reticence (for example, see Keith Hart, 19 May 2006, Subject: Re: <nettime> Mona Cholet/ le Monde Diplolmatique: France's precarious graduate) to respond meaningfully to calls coming from a "younger" generation of intellectuals and critical practitioners whose ambitions are not entirely defined by their academic orientation and status but are neither anti-intellectual nor anti-academic (is anybody else sick of how simplistically these charges have been deployed and implied recently?) i agree with david garcia that sustainability is a pressing issue, but i'm not entirely sure about the nature of whatever it is we are sustaining. i repeat myself: there has been too much emphasis on personal(ized) histories and dynamics (mostly issued from a tiny, tiny minority of nettime subscribers) and not enough on the substance of what we might call critical (net) culture. at the very least, CPR (and the follow-up list exchanges) opened a fissure in seemingly monolithic nettime culture and exposed some of the underlying conflicts. this is a productive moment. it'll be interesting to see how it gets used. be well. gita -- -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> It is not at all our job to renovate ideological institutions on the basis of the existing social order by means of innovations. Instead our innovations must force them to surrender that basis. So: For innovations, against renovation! [Bertolt Brecht, 1932] <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- <- # 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