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Carta1-Centres:Espaces Dans DR Nolayers
Mémoire de Master de Géographie sous la direction de Rachele Borghi et Hadrien Dubucs Octobre 2016 De l’autogestion d’un espace à l’autogouvernement de la ville étude de la mobilisation Decide Roma, decide la città Simone Ranocchiari Université Paris-Sorbonne Master Culture Politique Patrimoine UFR de Géographie et Aménagement 1 Sommaire Sommaire ................................................................................................................................... 2 Introduction générale .................................................................................................................. 4 1 – Les sciences sociales, l’espace et les mouvements sociaux : un état des savoirs................ 8 1.1 – La théorie des mouvements sociaux .............................................................................. 8 1.2 – Les mouvements (sociaux) urbains et le « droit à la ville » ........................................ 13 1.3 – La dimension spatiale des mouvements sociaux ......................................................... 15 2 – Un terrain « militant » : méthodologie et réflexivité .......................................................... 20 2.1 – Spécificités du terrain .................................................................................................. 20 2.2 – Techniques d’enquête .................................................................................................. 23 2.3 - Posture et positionnement : une recherche (géographique) « engagée » ..................... 27 3 - L’espace -
Immersion Into Noise
Immersion Into Noise Critical Climate Change Series Editors: Tom Cohen and Claire Colebrook The era of climate change involves the mutation of systems beyond 20th century anthropomorphic models and has stood, until recent- ly, outside representation or address. Understood in a broad and critical sense, climate change concerns material agencies that im- pact on biomass and energy, erased borders and microbial inven- tion, geological and nanographic time, and extinction events. The possibility of extinction has always been a latent figure in textual production and archives; but the current sense of depletion, decay, mutation and exhaustion calls for new modes of address, new styles of publishing and authoring, and new formats and speeds of distri- bution. As the pressures and re-alignments of this re-arrangement occur, so must the critical languages and conceptual templates, po- litical premises and definitions of ‘life.’ There is a particular need to publish in timely fashion experimental monographs that redefine the boundaries of disciplinary fields, rhetorical invasions, the in- terface of conceptual and scientific languages, and geomorphic and geopolitical interventions. Critical Climate Change is oriented, in this general manner, toward the epistemo-political mutations that correspond to the temporalities of terrestrial mutation. Immersion Into Noise Joseph Nechvatal OPEN HUMANITIES PRESS An imprint of MPublishing – University of Michigan Library, Ann Arbor, 2011 First edition published by Open Humanities Press 2011 Freely available online at http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.9618970.0001.001 Copyright © 2011 Joseph Nechvatal This is an open access book, licensed under the Creative Commons By Attribution Share Alike license. Under this license, authors allow anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute, and/or copy this book so long as the authors and source are cited and resulting derivative works are licensed under the same or similar license. -
DEAD CHANNEL SURFING: Cyberpunk and Industrial Music
DEAD CHANNEL SURFING: Cyberpunk and industrial music In the early 1980s from out of Vancouver, home of cyberpunk writer William Gibson and science fiction film-maker David Cronenberg, came a series of pioneering bands with a similar style and outlook. The popular synth-pop band Images in Vogue, after touring with Duran Duran and Roxy Music, split into several influential factions. Don Gordon went on to found Numb, Kevin Crompton to found Skinny Puppy, and Ric Arboit to form Nettwerk Records, which would later release Skinny Puppy, Severed Heads, Moev, Delerium and more. Controversial band Numb ended up receiving less attention than the seminal Skinny Puppy. Kevin Crompton (now called Cevin Key) joined forces with Kevin Ogilvie (Nivek Ogre) and began their career by playing in art galleries. After their friend Bill Leeb quit citing ‘creative freedom’ disputes, they embarked on a new style along with the help of newly recruited Dwayne Goettel. Leeb would go on to found Front Line Assembly with Rhys Fulber in 1986. The style of music created by these bands, as well as many similar others, has since been dubbed ‘cyberpunk’ by some journalists. Cyberpunk represents an interesting coupling of concepts. It can be dissected, as Istvan Csiscery-Ronay has shown, into its two distinct parts, ‘cyber’ and ‘punk’. Cyber refers to cybernet- ics, the study of information and control in man and machine, which was created by U.S. American mathematician Norbert Wiener fifty years ago. Wiener fabricated the word from the Greek kyber- netes, meaning ‘governor’, ‘steersman’ or ‘pilot’ (Leary, 1994: 66). The second concept, punk, in the sense commonly used since 1976, is a style of music incorporating do-it-yourself (d.i.y) techniques, centred on independence and touting anarchist attitudes. -
The Blank Generation
The History of Rock Music: 1976-1989 New Wave, Punk-rock, Hardcore History of Rock Music | 1955-66 | 1967-69 | 1970-75 | 1976-89 | The early 1990s | The late 1990s | The 2000s | Alpha index Musicians of 1955-66 | 1967-69 | 1970-76 | 1977-89 | 1990s in the US | 1990s outside the US | 2000s Back to the main Music page (Copyright © 2009 Piero Scaruffi) The Blank Generation (These are excerpts from my book "A History of Rock and Dance Music") Akron 1976-80 TM, ®, Copyright © 2005 Piero Scaruffi All rights reserved. The "blank generation" came out of a moral vacuum. While punks roamed the suburban landscape, blue-collar workers were feeling the pinch of an economic revolution: human society had left the industrial age and entered the post-industrial age, the age in which services (such as software) prevail over manufacturing. Computers now rule the world, from Wall Street to Boeing. The assembly line took away a bit of the personality of the worker, but that was nothing: the new service- based economy takes away the worker completely, physically. In the post-industrial society the individual is even less of a "person". The individual is merely a cog in a huge organism of interconnected parts that works at the beat of a gigantic network of computers. This highly sophisticated economy treats the individual as a number, as a statistic. The goal is no longer to create a robot that behaves like a human being, but to create a human being that behaves like a robot: robots are efficient and lead to manageable and profitable businesses, whereas humans are inefficient and difficult to manage. -
Re Think Conference Proceedi
New identity and new paradigm Re-thinking Local Cultural Policy: new identity and new paradigm a00a_first pages.indd 1 14.01.2012 17:41:33 Uhr Re-thinking Local Cultural Policy: a00a_first pages.indd 2 14.01.2012 17:41:34 Uhr New identity and new paradigm Re-thinking Local Cultural Policy: new identity and new paradigm edited by Violeta Simjanovska PAC Multimedia Skopje, 2011 a00a_first pages.indd 3 14.01.2012 17:41:34 Uhr Re-thinking Local Cultural Policy: a00a_first pages.indd 4 14.01.2012 17:41:34 Uhr New identity and new paradigm Contents Foreward i About the Programme Culture From/For All v Concepts and Models of Cultural Policy: State versus City Violeta Simjanovska 1 Recycling as a Model for Participatory Local Culture: Re-thinking the Skopje Cultural Brand in the Context of Primitivism Vangel Nonevski 25 Re-thinking the Cities: Creativity and Politics. Architecture – designing politics of cultural permanence Dimitar Samardjiev 49 Representation of Diversity in the Public Space of Societies in Transition: Case Study of the City of Skopje Katerina Mojanchevska 75 Professionalising Culture: The Role of Producer and Manager Janko Ljumović 99 Culture, Economy and the City Development. Cultural Policy of Novi Sad between the branding-profitability demands and heritage-institutional protection Slavica Vučetić 105 a00b_content.indd 5 14.01.2012 17:42:10 Uhr Re-thinking Local Cultural Policy: Re-defining the Fine Artist Profession. Educating new professionals to carry out policy changes Jelena Glišić 131 To Harmonize European Curricula -
Immersion Into Noise
Immersion Into Noise Critical Climate Change Series Editors: Tom Cohen and Claire Colbrook The era of climate change involves the mutation of systems beyond 20th century anthropomorphic models and has stood, until recent- ly, outside representation or address. Understood in a broad and critical sense, climate change concerns material agencies that im- pact on biomass and energy, erased borders and microbial inven- tion, geological and nanographic time, and extinction events. The possibility of extinction has always been a latent figure in textual production and archives; but the current sense of depletion, decay, mutation and exhaustion calls for new modes of address, new styles of publishing and authoring, and new formats and speeds of distri- bution. As the pressures and re-alignments of this re-arrangement occur, so must the critical languages and conceptual templates, po- litical premises and definitions of ‘life.’ There is a particular need to publish in timely fashion experimental monographs that redefine the boundaries of disciplinary fields, rhetorical invasions, the in- terface of conceptual and scientific languages, and geomorphic and geopolitical interventions. Critical Climate Change is oriented, in this general manner, toward the epistemo-political mutations that correspond to the temporalities of terrestrial mutation. Immersion Into Noise Joseph Nechvatal OPEN HUMANITIES PRESS An imprint of MPublishing – University of Michigan Library, Ann Arbor, 2011 First edition published by Open Humanities Press 2011 Freely available online at http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.9618970.0001.001 Copyright © 2011 Joseph Nechvatal This is an open access book, licensed under the Creative Commons By Attribution Share Alike license. Under this license, authors allow anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute, and/or copy this book so long as the authors and source are cited and resulting derivative works are licensed under the same or similar license. -
Kathleen M. Campos Punk Poster Collection M2363
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c87m0fjf No online items Guide to the Kathleen M. Campos Punk Poster Collection M2363 Department of Special Collections and University Archives 2018 Green Library 557 Escondido Mall Stanford 94305-6064 [email protected] URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc Guide to the Kathleen M. Campos M2363 1 Punk Poster Collection M2363 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: Department of Special Collections and University Archives Title: Kathleen M. Campos punk poster collection source: Campos, Kathleen Identifier/Call Number: M2363 Physical Description: .75 Linear Feet(one box, one flat box) Date (inclusive): 1978-1981 Date (bulk): 1979-1980 Abstract: Collection of music posters advertising performances by various punk and new wave bands of the San Francisco Bay Area, 1978-1981. Scope and Contents Collection of music posters advertising performances by various punk and new wave bands in the San Francisco Bay Area from 1978 through 1981. These fliers were presumably collected by Campos. Although pinholes are present, they are in very good condition overall, with little sign of weathering or prior display. The majority of the fliers are for local bands, and especially for bands from the East Bay such as the Jars, Mondellos, Young Adults, and Psycotic Pineapple. Many bands are not believed to have recorded, but familiar names such as the Avengers, Dils, Mutants, Tuxedomoon, Offs, Units, and many others are present. In general there are fewer fliers from the Mabuhay Gardens scene in San Francisco than is typically seen in collections, with posters for Berkeley venues such as the International Café, Barrington Hall, and Silver Ball Gardens (an arcade located above Leopold’s record store) predominating. -
ISEA~.Il Th International Symposium On
ISEA~.Ilth International Symposium on Electronic Art. NAGOYA [Oral] 0304~27 - 2 1,2002. NAGOYA, JAPAN JSEhaom NAGOYA [w] ISEA2002, 1 I th International Symposium on Electronic Art, Nagoya [Oral] Oaob~27 - 31,2002 NAGOYA, JAPAN Exhitibions Electronic Theater Performances Concerts Warehouses, Garden Pier in port of Nagoya Nagoya Port Building NAGOYA CITY HIGASHI PLAYHOUSE Aichi Arts Center Preface Welcome to ISEA2002 NAGOYA! and expression, new media art is expected to yield communication and merge science and art, some of which we have already glimpsed. Thank you for your paper presentation from various fields and for your participation in the panel discussions. We welcome you to this event Pythagoras, a backbone of Western culture, defined the music of the with much enthusiasm and excitement. We hope that the ISEA2002 spheres as follows. 'In the sole universe containing all things, an object Nagoya will produce fruitful discussion and broaden the way of think- moves in accordance with mathematical law, so that this movement ing for electronic art. brings about the harmony. Individual spheres form in line at the inter- val corresponding to the length of strings originating chords. From ISEA2002 NAGOYA with the theme of [Orai] has the following goals. the movement of spheres, the music, in other words, the harmony of To provide a forum where various opinions spheres will be born.' This is his principle. We already have the technol- "come and go (i.e. [Orai])" relating to electronic art and ogy and media which provide us with heavenly music. media art. To provide a chance for electronic art to mutually The Chinese have a word "XR""tian wen": Characters (Letters) in the stimulate and corroborate on a "street (i.e. -
Industrial Introduction
Copyright © 2011 A.SE.FI. Editoriale Srl - Via dell’Aprica, 8 - Milano www.tsunamiedizioni.com Prima edizione Tsunami Edizioni, aprile 2011 - Le Tempeste 5 Tsunami Edizioni è un marchio registrato di A.SE.FI. Editoriale Srl La foto sulla copertina è di Thomas Boll Progetto copertina: Marco Fantin Finito di stampare nell’aprile 2011 dalla Gesp - Città di Castello (PG) ISBN: 978-88-96131-28-2 Tutti i diritti riservati. È vietata la riproduzione, anche parziale, in qualsiasi formato senza l’autorizzazione scritta dell’Editore. Per le foto nel testo l’autore e l’editore ringraziano: Pagina 112 - Jean Marmeisse Pagina 131 - Betty Cobb, Los Angeles Pagina 161 - Tracey Roberts Pagina 180 - Red Leather Heather Pagina 244 - Sirius Pagina 289 - Francesca Cerri Pagina 305 - Gili Shani La presente opera di saggistica è pubblicata con lo scopo di rappresentare un’analisi critica, rivolta alla pro- mozione di autori ed opere di ingegno, che si avvale del diritto di citazione. Pertanto tutte le immagini e i testi sono riprodotti con finalità scientifiche, ovvero di illustrazione, argomentazione e supporto delle tesi sostenute dall’autore. Nell’impossibilità di risalire agli aventi diritto delle fotografie pubblicate, l’Editore si dichiara disponibile a sanare ogni eventuale controversia. GIOVANNI ROSSI STORIA ED EVOLUZIONE DELLA MUSICA INDUSTRIALE 5 INDICE UNA NOTA PRIMA DI COMINCIARE... [7] PREFAZIONE di LUSTMORD [9] GENESI[S] [11] INDUSTRIAL INTRODUCTION [15] ELEMENTAL MUSIC [29] LA STANZA DELLE TORTURE [41] [S]CULTURA INDUSTRIALE [51] GUERRA TOTALE -
John Duncan Exhibitions
1 October JOHN DUNCAN MANTRA solo concert Fylkingen, Stockholm Curated by Joachim Nordwall EXHIBITIONS and CONCERTS 2017 19 – 20 January 12 - 16 October MANTRA solo concert + workshop WORDS BROKEN VOICE MISSING MESSAGE KHM Köln FAILED workshop + concert Curated by Hans W. Koch + Dirk Specht Cirkulacija2, Ljubljana Curated by Stefan Doepner 25 January – 15 February JOHN DUNCAN: HEAVY, USELESS, NO SENSE OF 24 October HUMOR Concert with Eiko Ishibashi Trio + G. di Domenico Solo exhibition Il Torrione, Ferrara Narkissos Gallery, Bologna Curated by Eiko Ishibashi Curated by Yelena Mitrjushkina 11 November 17 June – 10 October John Duncan Films The Nazca Transmissions included in Alienation: First Street Studio, Austin Momentum 9 Biennial Curated by Tara Battacharya Reed for Antumbrae Moss, Norway Intermedia Curated by Jacob Lillemose 12 November 2016 MANTRA solo concert 5 - 8 May First Street Studio, Austin AngelicA 2016 Curated by Tara Battacharya Reed for Antumbrae Ellen Fullman solo + Konrad Spengler duet Intermedia James Hamilton, France Jobin, Carine Masutti Sons of God + TERRA AMARA: John Duncan with 2015 Coro Arcanto 15 January - 28 February Teatro San Leonardo, Bologna The NAZCA TRANSMISSIONS LP included in Fühlst Curated by John Duncan du Nicht an Meinen Liedern dass Ich Eins und Doppelt Bin 13 May Gallery Peter Kilchmann, Zurich RED SKY included in KREV events Curated by Mateo Chacon-pino and Adriana Dada 100 Years Dominguez Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich Other artists include Michael Najjar, Maria Garcia Curated by Adrian Notz Ibañez, -
“I Was in a Position to Dismantle It”: Industrial Music
“I WAS IN A POSITION TO DISMANTLE IT”: INDUSTRIAL MUSIC APPROPRIATIONS OF WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS by Joseph Vecchio, A.A., B.A. A thesis submitted to the Graduate Council of Texas State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music with a major in Music May 2014 Committee Members: Kevin Mooney, Chair Ludim Pedroza Charles Ditto COPYRIGHT by Joseph Vecchio 2014 FAIR USE AND AUTHOR’S PERMISSION STATEMENT Fair Use This work is protected by the Copyright Laws of the United States (Public Law 94-553, section 107). Consistent with fair use as defined in the Copyright Laws, brief quotations from this material are allowed with proper acknowledgment. Use of this material for financial gain without the author’s express written permission is not allowed. Duplication Permission As the copyright holder of this work I, Joseph Vecchio, authorize duplication of this work, in whole or in part, for educational or scholarly purposes only. DEDICATION To Ruth, with all of my love. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank Dr. Kevin Mooney for his unwavering support for this project, enthusiasm about the material, and wonderful editorial remarks. Thank you to Dr. Ludim Pedroza for being a true inspiration for a multidisciplinary approach to musicology. Thank you to Dr. Charles Ditto for his membership on my committee and eagerness to see this project carried to fruition. Ruth Vecchio, your knowledge of industrial music is encyclopedic and has been an extremely valuable tool in aiding the completion of this project, and your help with editing has been invaluable. -
Occupation Culture Art & Squatting in the City from Below
Minor Compositions Open Access Statement – Please Read This book is open access. This work is not simply an electronic book; it is the open access version of a work that exists in a number of forms, the traditional printed form being one of them. All Minor Compositions publications are placed for free, in their entirety, on the web. This is because the free and autonomous sharing of knowledges and experiences is important, especially at a time when the restructuring and increased centralization of book distribution makes it difficult (and expensive) to distribute radical texts effectively. The free posting of these texts does not mean that the necessary energy and labor to produce them is no longer there. One can think of buying physical copies not as the purchase of commodities, but as a form of support or solidarity for an approach to knowledge production and engaged research (particularly when purchasing directly from the publisher). The open access nature of this publication means that you can: • read and store this document free of charge • distribute it for personal use free of charge • print sections of the work for personal use • read or perform parts of the work in a context where no financial transactions take place However, it is against the purposes of Minor Compositions open access approach to: • gain financially from the work • sell the work or seek monies in relation to the distribution of the work • use the work in any commercial activity of any kind • profit a third party indirectly via use or distribution of the work • distribute in or through a commercial body (with the exception of academic usage within educational institutions) The intent of Minor Compositions as a project is that any surpluses generated from the use of collectively produced literature are intended to return to further the development and production of further publications and writing: that which comes from the commons will be used to keep cultivating those commons.