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magazine

Mute Vol 2, No. 9 − Your Five A Day

The ubiquitous injunction to consume 'Your 5 a day' quota of fruit and vegetables seems to stand in for a whole governmental ideology of population management in contemporary Britain and beyond. Where once welfare was handed out in a relatively standardised form, it is now highly individualised, with far more intrusive assessments, data gathering and heavy conditions on the recipient than ever before. It is to be hoped that these universal injunctions and 'cures' can be turned on their heads, transforming the insistence on 'Your 5 a day' into the radical demand to be freely fed.

2008-07, ISSN 1356-7748-209 & ISBN 9781906496173

FURTHER DESCRIPTION

Falling for the Future

Iain Boal brings modernity's futuramas back down to earth

 

Citizens Banned?

Josephine Berry Slater and Anthony Iles review the AV Media Arts festival held in Newcastle

 

Crisis in the Visual System

Paul Helliwell argues the art world's favourite philosopher, Jacques Rancière, does have something to hide

 

Borders 2.0: Future, Tense

Bryan Finoki and Angela Mitropoulos present an incursion, in text and image, into the contemporary borderlands

 

Manufactured Scarcity

James Heartfield on Enron's pioneering of green capitalism through cutting production

 

Battle of All Mothers

Madame Tlank on welfare, surveillance and working class women

 

When Travesty Becomes Form

Alberto Duman contemplates the cyclical self-affirmation of the curator

 

llustrations

Dominik from WeLikeNiceThings, Nick Brooks, Adam Vass

 

 

 

ISSN 1356-7748-29

ISBN 978-1-906496-17-3

 

Dimensions: 22.4 x 15.2 x 1.3 cm

104 pages

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Falling for the Future

By Iain A. Boal

Citizens Banned?

By Anthony Iles and Josephine Berry Slater

Crisis in the Visual System

By Paul Helliwell

Borders 2.0: Future, Tense

By Angela Mitropoulos and Bryan Finoki

Manufactured Scarcity - The Profits of Deindustrialisation

By James Heartfield

The Battle of all* Mothers (or: No Unauthorised Reproduction)

By Madame Tlank

When Travesty Becomes Form

By Alberto Duman
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