announcer on Sat, 21 Nov 1998 17:04:03 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> announcer 061a |
. The Announcer ................................................... . a weekly digest of calls . actions . websites . campaigns . etc . . send your announcements and notes to [email protected] . . please don't be late ! delivered every friday . into your inbox . ................................................................... 00 . . about The Announcer 01 . Andreas Broeckmann . DEAF98 publication: The Art of the Accident 02 . Carey Young . Atomic 03 . nomadnet . Open Spaces/Linked Locations II: Sound Environments 04 . Gerald O'Connell . ArtVirus Alert 05 . Jebediah Brushwell . MEME - memeflurry '98 06 . Jon Stratton . Race Daze 07 . J. Blank HGB Leipzig . slashtemp 08 . Alessandro Ludovico . Neural, cyberculture magazine 09 . andreas hagenbach . Fwd: Anti-MAI-Kampagne 10 . dogfilm . Invitation-Einladung ................................................................... 00 The nettime announcer has transformed into two separate, independent mailing lists: . The Announcer: daily, unmoderated, undigested <[email protected]>, . The Weekender: weekly on fridays, moderated, digested <[email protected]>, in order to make the announcements available to those who are not subscribed to nettime-l as well. If you know of people who would be interested in the announcer and who are in this situation, please spread the news! Subscription info can be found at http://simsim.rug.ac.be/announcer/ What's the difference? . For nettime subscribers: nothing will change. The announcer is still being sent to nettime-l every friday. . For people who wish to post announcements: IMPORTANT: address update! Please send your announcements to <[email protected]> from now on - NOT to <[email protected]> or <[email protected]> cause this would generate double-postings and unnecessary work for the moderators. The Announcer and The Weekender are maintained by Fokky and Andreas Hagenbach <[email protected]>. Extra volunteers are warmly welcomed; comments, criticism, suggestions and questions are appreciated. ................................................................... 01 Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1998 18:27:56 +0100 From: Andreas Broeckmann <[email protected]> Subject: DEAF98 publication: The Art of the Accident Book Publication: The Art of the Accident On the occasion of DEAF98, V2_ Organisation and NAI Publisers are publishing a book that is more than a catalogue of the festival, its exhibition projects and participating artists. The fully illustrated book takes a synthesising approach towards the intersecting practices present in the festival, outlining the basics of an ars accidentalis. The Art of the Accident also includes essays and interviews by: N. Katherine Hayles (USA), Perry Hoberman (USA), Knowbotic Research+cF (D/A), Steve Mann (CDN), Brian Massumi (AUS), Humberto Maturana (CHI), Marcos Novak (USA), Dick Raaijmakers (NL), Lars Spuybroek (NL), Otto E. Roessler (D), and Paul Virilio (F). Articles about the projects of the DEAF98 exhibition and other programmes, including: Mark Bain (USA), Calin Dan (RO/NL), Masaki Fujihata (J), Perry Hoberman (USA), JODI (NL/B), KIT (GB), Knowbotic Research+cF (D/A), Gunter Krueger (D), Seiko Mikami (J/USA), Debra Solomon (NL), VinylVideo/Gebhard Sengm�ller (A), Tamas Waliczky (H), Herwig Weiser (A/D), Aaron Williamson (GB), Bureau of Inverse Technology (USA), Association of Strategic Accidents (D), John Bain (USA), programm 5 (D), Karoly Toth (HU/NL), Zoltan Szegedy-Maszak + Marton Fernezelyi (HU), and Timothy Druckrey (USA). Documentation of the transArchitectures 02 + 03 at the Netherlands Architecture Institute with works by: ABB/ TUD B. Franken (D), Arakawa/ M.Gins (USA), Asymptote (F), Maurice Benayoun (F), Objectile/Cache Beauce Hammoudi (F), Karl S. Chu (USA), CyberNetiK[A] (B), Decoi (F), degre zero (F), Neil Denari (USA), Dunne + Raby (GB), Ammar Eloueini (F), John & Julia Frazer (GB), Christian Girard (F), Gregoire Kligerman Petetin (F), LAB [au] (B), Greg Lynn (USA), F. Meadows/ F. Nantois (F), Ben + Laura Nicholson (USA), Marcos Novak (USA), NOX/ Lars Spuybroek (NL), Kas Oosterhuis (NL), Reiser + Umemoto (USA), ROCHE, DSV & Sie (F), Philippe Samyn (F), Nasrine Seraji (F), Adrien Sina (F), Neil Spiller (GB), Bernard Tschumi (F/USA). The book The Art of the Accident can be purchased or ordered at every bookstore in the Netherlands, at the Netherlands Architecture Institute Rotterdam, and at V2_Organisation, Rotterdam. During the DEAF98 festival, it is also available at all other festival locations. 256 pages full colour, price: HFL 49,50 (during the festival, on location, HFL 45,00 with discount coupon) Published by NAi publishers and V2_Organisation ISBN 90-5662-090-8 Check the DEAF98 website for text excerpts: http://www.v2.nl/deaf (projects) Further information: DEAF98 V2_Organisatie Eendrachtsstraat 10 3012 XL Rotterdam T ++31 10 206 7275 F ++31 10 206 7271 [email protected] URL: http://www.v2.nl/deaf DEAF98 TUE 17- SUN 29 NOVEMBER 1998 ................................................................... 02 From: "Young, Carey SR" <[email protected]> Subject: Atomic Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1998 23:14:14 -0000 Why not sculpt with radioactive material? ATOMIC New Works by James Acord, Carey Young and Mark Waller Imperial College Gallery and the Queen's Tower, Imperial College, Exhibition Road, London SW7 until 26th November 1998 tours the UK in 1999 --- 'Atomic' - a controversial new exhibition, confronts our fears and assumptions about science and the nuclear industry. Featuring the work of American sculptor James Acord - the only private individual in the world licensed to own and handle radioactive materials - 'Atomic' deals with the tricky issue of the idealism behind the 'white heat of technology' of the fifties and sixties and attempts to break down the wall of secrecy which has shielded the nuclear industry since the cold war. Acord's deadly serious ambition to build a 'nuclear stonehenge' on a heavily contaminated site at Hanford - home of the Bomb - has led him into a tragi-comic dance with the US Department of Energy. Atomic leads us through his perilous 15-year journey to a site-specific display of his nuclear reliquaries - specially commissioned for his UK residency - and introduces the complementary work of two young British artists, Carey Young and Mark Waller. As a counterpoint, Young travelled to the former USSR to photograph the remnants of the Space Race. She portrays these technological crown jewels as they lie stranded in the present, like the scattering of an unruly time capsule. Removed from the familiar iconography of science fiction or Cold War paranoia, these little-seen giants of the Twentieth Century imagination appear small and vulnerable, like the shock of celebrity glimpsed in the flesh. Meanwhile, Waller gained access to some of Britain's nuclear power stations to film a short thriller, shown as an installation, about itinerant nuclear power workers who mysteriously develop superhuman qualities, featuring Mark E. Smith of the Fall. Post-shift in the early hours of the morning, the deranged jokes of the contractors lean over into belief as they talk of their superhuman prowess, metamorphosed by radiation. 'Atomic' is organised by the science-art agency The Arts Catalyst, who specialise in unusual collaborations between artists and scientists. Their next project will be with a dancer who works in zero gravity, courtesy of the French Space Agency. ------------ colour catalogue available, with an essay by James Flint, price ? 9.95 Press: for interviews and photos contact Anastasia Calder: tel +44 171 375 3690 fax +44 171 377 0298 email: [email protected] More information on the show and on The Arts Catalyst http://www.artscat.demon.co.uk/prog.htm ................................................................... 03 Subject: Exhibition Announcement Date: Fri, 13 Nov 1998 23:46:24 -0400 From: nomadnet <[email protected]> Open Spaces/Linked Locations II: Sound Environments "Sound Environments," the second in an on-going series of Open Spaces/Linked Locations exhibitions, is now on-view at http://www.nomadnet.org/nomadnet/spaces.html "Sound Environments" brings together three net.art projects which utilize sound to create a variety of circumstances for aural/visual encounters. Works featured include: The Keybored Lounge by Beth Carey One Night in Greenwich Village by Jeannette Lambert Man Ray Speaks by the New Analysts (Steve Bradley and John Hudak) Open Spaces/Linked Locations is organized by NOMADS. For more information contact NOMADS at [email protected] Laura McGough Co-Director NOMADS www.nomadnet.org ................................................................... 04 Date: Sun, 15 Nov 1998 23:33:37 +0000 From: "Gerald O'Connell" <[email protected]> Subject: ArtVirus Alert details at http://www.gacoc.demon.co.uk/artvirus1.htm please forward this to all Internet artists with whom you are in contact. Gerald O'Connell http://www.gacoc.demon.co.uk/ ................................................................... 05 > From: "Jebediah Brushwell" <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > Subject: MEME - memeflurry '98 > Date: Fri, 13 Nov 1998 08:41:05 PST > > What follows is a little project I'm working on that I thought you > might like to help out with... pass it on. > > JPB > > [ mod's note: we've worked with JPB on another matter recently, > and recommend this action too... btw, the time for this event > corresponds to the exactl moment when Robert Anton Wilson will > begin his booksigning at FringeWare. > ] > > ****************************************************************** > > Hello. > > You are receiving this message because you are linked to an > information network that a whole lot of other people are linked to, > including me, the author of the lines you are now reading. Within > this network exists a (probably quite convoluted) chain of other > individuals and other networks that have indirectly connected each of > us to the other. > > One thing that you've probably noticed about being attached to this > network is that it has the tendency to transmit a lot of junk. > messages that have no relevance to you, chain letters, jokes you've > seen forwarded a half-dozen times, spurious rumors, petitions on > issues that you may or may not care about. Spam. Data noise. > > I'm interested in the way that information like that survives in the > Net, and I'm working on a project that will investigate the ability of > a single piece of information (namely, this message) to survive and > spread. This message is going to ask for your participation in this > project. If the project doesn't interest you, I apologize for adding > to the volume of unsolicited e-mails you receive in a given day. My > intent is not to burden people with more information, but rather to > explore how information works in a network, and, ultimately, to use > the Net's information-spreading ability to *transform* an ordinary > public space into an art-site, and to *produce* a collective, > Net-authored artwork. Each participant will receive a copy of the > completed work. If this sounds interesting, keep reading: if not, I > apologize for taking up your time. > > Without further ado, the project: > > *****************************MEMEFLURRY 98************************* > > One model of information theory is the *meme* model. I don't have > room here for more than a brief simplification of meme theory, but it > basically thinks about units of information (or "memes") as though > they were simple organisms--some survive and reproduce, and others > die. The goal of MemeFlurry 98 is to keep the meme outlined below > alive and reproducing for three weeks, at which time there will be a > sort of "family reunion." > > On Saturday, December 5th, at 3 pm, Eastern Standard Time, call one of > the following phone numbers. These numbers will connect you to a bank > of public phones in the University of Arizona Student Union Building. > > * 520-791-0126 * > * 520-791-0181 * > * 520-791-0152 * > * 520-622-9605 * > * 520-622-9104 * > > I will answer calls for approximately 3 hours. Of course, since these > calls are being directed to a public site, and since I will not be > able to answer all the phones simultaneously, other people not > associated with the MemeFlurry 98 project might also answer these > calls. I think this interjects a necessary dose of chaos into the > project. > > If I answer the call, I'll ask you where you are from (I want to see > how far the meme has spread) and I will ask you to provide me with > *one sentence* from something that you ve read that day--any sentence, > from any source--cereal box, morning paper, novel, personal letter, > whatever. In short, I want you to call up Tucson and provide me with > a meme you've been exposed to that day. The memes collected in this > fashion will be arranged into one piece of text, a collectively- > authored meme-poem, a portrait of the world of December 5, 1998. If > you wish, I will take down your e-mail or snail-mail address so I can > provide you with a copy of the completed "poem." > > This project has the potential to transform an ordinary bank of pay > phones into a temporary gathering point for people all around the > globe, to make an everyday hallway in a University building into a > zone that will perplex and intruige passers-by in the way that art > should, to take the ordinary elements of our lives (the phone, the > computer, the thousands of bits of text that surround us wherever we > are) and use them as the raw materials for the creation of something > extraordinary. > > It can only do those things if the message survives. So, even if you > can't or don't want to participate, please consider passing this > message on to someone who might be interested. > > Thanks for your time and attention, > Jebediah Brushwell > > ******************************************************* > > (For more information, write [email protected].) > (This project is an expansion of a similar project by UK artist Heath > Bunting. My intentions are not to copy him or take the credit he > deserves, but rather to perform a variation on his experiment, somewhat > in the spirit of the scientific method.) > (For more on memes, check out www.lucifer.com/virus/memlex.html, or > Richard Dawkins' book The Selfish Gene.) > > ******************************************************* > > "...all play is a voluntary activity...it is free, it is in fact > *freedom*. A second characteristic: play is not 'ordinary' or 'real' > life. It is rather a stepping out of 'real' life into a temporary > sphere of activity with a disposition all of its own...Another, very > positive, feature of play: it creates order, is order. Into an > imperfect world and the confusion of life it brings a temporary, > limited perfection." > --J. Huizinga > > "Theatre takes place all the time, wherever one is. And art simply > facilitates persuading one this is the case." > --John Cage ................................................................... 06 Date: Sat, 14 Nov 1998 00:14:28 +0800 From: Jon Stratton <[email protected]> Reply-To: [email protected] To: [email protected] Subject: Race Daze Hi All, This is a piece of self-promotion. Pluto Australia have just published my latest book. It is on race, multiculturalism and national identity in Australia in the 1990s. The book is called _Race Daze: Australia in Identity Crisis_. As many of you will know multiculturalism is official government policy in Australia. This book takes a critical look at what kind of multiculturalism is being promoted. I discuss the construction of whiteness in Australia, and argue that Australian multiculturalism was developed to deal with the problems caused by the non-assimilation of southern European migrants who came to Australia in the 1950s and 1960s. I examine the implications for 'Asians' in Australia. The contents range from a discussion of the political rhetoric that is used, including a lengthy consideration of that of the right-wing populist Pauline Hanson, through to a chapter that examines a variety of Australian films, including Crocodile Dundee, Strictly Ballroom, and The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Other chapters include one on multiculturalism and national identity, and one on multiculturalism and the issue of Australia becoming a republic. _Race Daze_ is published by Pluto Australia. Unfortunately, Pluto does not have a distribution deal outside of Australia, therefore for those of you outside of Australia, copies must be purchased direct from Pluto Australia. The ISBN is ISBN 1 8640 3053 4. The cost is RRP $24.95. These are *Australian* dollars, so that's pretty cheap when converted into American dollars or sterling! You can email Amanda Perram for further details on: [email protected] Amanda will also be happy to take your orders. Pluto Australia's website can be found at: http://www.socialchange.net.au/pluto _Race Daze_ will be advertised on the Pluto website by Monday 16th November. (If you don't want to buy one -- or even if you do -- perhaps your institution's library should have one!) thank you for your time, Jon (Stratton) ................................................................... 07 Von: [email protected] (J. Blank HGB Leipzig) Datum: 16.11.98, 13:47:54 Betreff: slashtemp Einladung zur Ausstellungseroeffnung: "slashtemp" Ein Ausstellungsprojekt der Hochschule fuer Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig. Eroeffnung: Freitag, 20.11.98 um 20.00 Uhr Ort: Kontorhaus Berlin-Mitte, Friedrichstr. 185-190, Ecke Kronenstr., U-Bahn Stadtmitte Ausstellung: 21.11.98 - 18.12.98, Oeffnungszeiten: 14.00 Uhr - 20.00 Uhr -- Die Ausstellung mit dem Titel "slashtemp", an der 13 Studenten und Studentinnen der Fachbereiche Fotografie und Medienkunst beteiligt sind, wird vom 21.11 bis 18.12.1998 im Kontorhaus Berlin-Mitte in Kooperation mit der Galerie Matthias Kampl gezeigt. "slashtemp" versucht auf kuenstlerische Weise eine Verknuepfung der, den "Neuen Medien" eigenen Problematiken und Anliegen, mit Kultur- und Konsumerscheinungen der Umgebung Friedrichstrasse und Berlin. Die praesentierten, studentischen Arbeiten thematisieren die Spannung zwischen Kunst und Nicht-Kunst, Funktion und Nicht-Funktion, indem die dort ansaessigen Geschaefte sowie die architektonischen Eigenheiten des Gebaeudes in die Ausstellung einbezogen werden. Auf einer Flaeche von ca. 1000 qm werden Skulpturen, Installationen sowie Foto-, Video- und Audioarbeiten den Lichthof des Kontorhauses und einen daran angegliederten Raum bespielen. Weitere Infos ueber [email protected] / [email protected] Hochschule fuer Grafik und Buchkunst Oeffentlichkeitsarbeit Frau Schuck Waechterstr. 11 04107 Leipzig [email protected] ................................................................... 08 Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1998 01:35:58 +0100 From: Alessandro Ludovico <[email protected]> To: Multiple recipients of <[email protected]> Subject: ann! ... Neural, cyberculture magazine Status: RO X-Status: NEURAL is an indipendent quarterly printed magazine, in Italian, about the digital culture at large. ----------------------------------------------------------- Neural Online http://www.pandora.it/neural/ biweekly online supplement to the magazine: news and shareware ----------------------------------------------------------- Neural Station Every wednesday from 22:30 to 23:30 Electronic music and digital culture news bits aired on Controradio Bari (Popolare Network) 97.3 Mhz ----------------------------------------------------------- Brain Machine, light&sound for your mind exploration: Mind Gear and Xcelr8r II. Info: http://www.pandora.it/neural/brain/iindex.html ----------------------------------------------------------- Issue #13 . > Exclusive Dead Media: Bruce Sterling interview. . > > Free OPTICAL poster. . > DATA.FLOW Mail/Classifieds, News (Webloc, Vatican and China, Fragapalooza, DefCon 6, Autocloning...), Fetish (Blade Runner T-shirt, Budvase, Document Clip), Quotes, . > MULTI.MEDIA Psychoactive vegetables and Playstation Techno culture: reviews: CD-ROM: Choonz and Wares, ZINE: Crash, In-form-z, Mediamatic, BOOKS: Apple T-shirts, Hard Soft and Wet, Gens Electrica, VIDEO: Landlock, . > INTER.RETE Inter.Libri reviews: BOOKS: Kriptonite, Computer in Rete, Internet Explorer 4, CD-ROM: Zone Digitali, Cyber.Sex: Cleo Odzer interview, News, recensioni: CD-ROM: Rachel, CD: Suck It And See Hackit98, Founded Electronic Frontiers, Telematic Repression, . > SUONI.FUTURI Music.Bits reviews: CD-ROM: Interglobal Alien Mar, Shift Control, Launch, ZINE: Self, Audio signals music reviews (Fila Brazillia, Fantastic Plastic Machine, Clifford Gilberto, Pizzicato Five, It, Vasilisk, Front Line Assembly, Vidna Obmana, Freezone 5, Future Sound of Budapest, Endlessnessism, Aliens in Roma...), Sonar 98, Front 242 interview, Boards of Canada interview, Theatrum Chemicum interview, Singles (The Irresistible Force, Headrillaz, Minox/Lydia Lunch Aikido...), . > CO.SCIENZA Art.Design.Fashion reviews BOOKS: Mondo Underground, ZINE: Neo2, Welcomex, CD: Word Up Baltimore, No Copyright Warriors, Digitized rage, Virgo consortium, Art.Presence, . > FANTA.SCIENZA Orion news (Star Trek, X-Files, Steampunk, Carmilla, Lost in Space...) When worlds collide, Dottor Ware, comic by Alberto Corradi, U.F.O.: Men In Black. On sale directly, via mail-order, and in Italian alternative bookstores. ------------------------------------------------------- Info: NEURAL - via Palmieri 31 - 70125 Bari Tel. - Fax 080/5010950 * e-mail [email protected] ------------------------------------------------------- ................................................................... 09 Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1998 12:18:15 +0100 To: [email protected] From: andreas hagenbach <[email protected]> Subject: Fwd: Anti-MAI-Kampagne [silence around the MAI - german/french readers may get semi-official papers/andreas] <excerpt> Subject: Anti-MAI-Kampagne gazette.de ist von Haus aus eine literarisch-kulturpolitische Monatszeitschrift, aber au=DFerdem ist sie erstens kritisch und respektlos und zweitens enth=E4lt jede Nummer ein MAI-Special. Hier finden Sie monatlich Nachrichten zum wechselnden Schicksal des Multilateralen Abkommens =FCber Investitionen sowie l=E4ngere Text-Dokumentationen. In der November-Nummer zum Beispiel steht der Original-Bericht von Catherine und Jean-Pierre Landau, den der franz=F6sische Premierminister angefordert hat, um damit am 14. Oktober seinen Boykott der OECD-Sitzung vom 20. Oktober zu begr=FCnden. Der Bericht **in franz=F6sischer Sprache** enth=E4lt - eine Untersuchung der Gr=FCnde f=FCr die Ablehnung des Vertragsentwurfs, - eine Analyse des Verhandlunsmodus, - Vorschl=E4ge f=FCr weitere Verhandlungen, - eine Liste der interviewten Personen und Organisationen sowie - ausf=FChrliche Statistiken der Auslandsinvestitionen der gr=F6=DFten OECD-L=E4nder 1997. http://www.gazette.de </excerpt> ................................................................... 10 Date: Fri, 13 Nov 1998 15:05:58 +0100 From: dogfilm <[email protected]> Subject: Invitation-Einladung The Association for Strategic Accidents presents lecture: Access All Accidents Sun. 11/22/98 2 PM at Bonheur in Rotterdam Eendrachtsstraat 79/81, 3012 XH, Rotterdam, tel: ++31 (0)10 413 2536 this lecture is/was brought to you with the kind support of dogfilm DEAF98 "The Art of the Accident" org by V2 Rotterdam NL check it out: http://www.v2.nl/deaf --------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Access All Accidents" A lecture @ DEAF98 by Ed van Megen from the Association for Strategic Accidents (ASA) Abstract: In 1990 The Association for Strategic Accidents was founded by its current president William E. Kurz. Shortly after the breakdown of the communist systems in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, people from western societies showed a dramatic change in lifestyle. A change that was motivated by a hunger for adventure. People were ready for a new standard and they showed an increasing tendency towards risk-taking behavior. Especially the hype of extreme sports such as bunge-jumping were supporting this trend. Science however (confirmed by the publications of the Society of Risk Analysis) ignored this phenomenon and kept focusing on modernization risks, those risks that are undergone by individuals on an involuntary basis and mainly caused by industry. The foundation of the ASA was an attempt to make the concept of "voluntarily sought risk" popular. The motivation to proclaim this was, and again still is, very simple. If risk-taking behavior is an essential part of human conduct, then we have to shift this away from exploiting nature and transpose this into culture. The ASA claims that if we want to be progressive in a social as well as technological sense, we have to deal with the construction of risk. In our so called free market economy the social production of wealth is inevitably bound to the social production of risk and the accident is the manifestation of this axiom. The accident reveals the true identity of an object. So therefore we have to stop rationalizing the concept of "the accident" out of the way and start dealing with this concept in a much more productive way. The paradox we all struggle with is that security can only be gained by experiencing risky situations or accidents. In order to progress, the more sincere motivation would be to experience risky situations and accidents rather than the existing hypocrite attitude of gaining security. We have to realize that if we choose for technological progress, the accident is a constructive instead of a destructive moment in the process of improvement. The accident carries a truly creative moment, the moment where expectations are being shattered. And after all, it would only be fair to expose the consumer to those possibilities that are until now the stowaways of technological development. Paul Virilio wrote 1979, that the foundation of a "Museum of Accidents" was long overdue. In this museum; "every technology and every scientific discipline should choose their own specific accident and show it as a product. Not in a moral way, out of prevention (as a security measure), no, as a product that should be questioned epistimotechnically" (from: "Der Urfall (Accidens Orginale)"; Tumult, magazine for the science of traffic, 1979). This thought of Virillo stood at the cradle of the Association for Strategic Accidents. In the beginning, the anthology of ASA projects dealt with such topics as advertisement, the non-helping-bystander effect or risk tourism. In recent years the focus of interest within the ASA has developed from exploring the role "fear" plays within the construction of risk towards the close encounter of the physical and electronic accident. A special research issue in the last years has been the phenomenon of the "Diamond Experience". People who take a voluntary risk and people who are involved in an accident, talk in a similar way about their experiences. It seems as if the recall causes a kind of euphoria or a feeling of victory. In the "Fear Edition" (see also url) William E. Kurz named these paradox states of emotions, "Diamond Experience". What all ASA projects have in common is that they use a strategy of transparency, they articulate a techno criticism that is part of the technology itself. We cannot deny that we are using specific technologies for the realization of our social and political ideas. We cannot deny that there is a field of tension between acquiring those technologies and simultaneously analyzing them. We cannot deny that there is a conflict between seeing the opportunities, especially for individuals, and hazards especially for society, of accidents. Out of this conflictcomes the need for transparency and if the accident is already coproduced when a new technology prospers then we have to proclaim access to all accidents. url: http://www.icf.de/asa http://www.bln.de/dogfilm --- # 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: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]