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Mute Music
pil and galia portrait

Introducing –
Pil and Galia Kollectiv,
one sixth of Mute's
ensemble music column

covering sonic adventures
across genres and time.
Email: info AT kollectiv.co.uk

Mute music column


No Room to Move
nils norman

No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City
A fistful of research on the state of critical public art in the maelstrom of New Labour's regeneration programmes.
By Josephine Berry Slater and Anthony Iles


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Mute Vol 2 #14 Editorial content | Vol II
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 8 December, 2009 - 10:56

Whether seen as the ultimate capitalists, Buddhists or communards, bees elicit fantasies and fears of social productivity and crisis by turns. This issue is not really about bees of course, but the ‘colony collapse disorder' which is currently threatening the global bee population works as a stark metaphor for the crisis of reproduction that is currently afflicting human society as it is currently configured.

Struggle as a Second Language Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 17 March, 2010 - 17:26
B&R

While last summer's strike at Tower Hamlets College is often portrayed as a victory by unions, two of its organisers, B&R, remain critical, and place ESOL at the butt end of the government's chauvinist austerity

 

 


Grim Down South: Managing (in) London South Bank University Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 17 March, 2010 - 13:17
Raoul Paled

While education budgets are cut and university leaders have 'visions' for keeping competitive, Raoul Paled reports from Britain's 'worst performing' university, London South Bank, on staff's muted response to savage budgetary pruning

 

subject: Education

The Future Isn’t What it Used to Be Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 10 March, 2010 - 13:18
M. Beatrice Fazi

Tackling the conundrum of the future's relationship to the present through the prism of digital culture, this year's Transmediale festival strayed into some chaotic philosophical territory. In her review, M. Beatrice Fazi dismisses conceptions of the future as linear effect of the present, instead embracing models of ‘atemporality' and untimeliness

 

 


We Don’t Need No Education? The Case of the London Met Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 4 March, 2010 - 15:01
Mute

In the wake of a cash crisis and resulting round of savage job cuts, London Metropolitan University has been left reeling, but still standing.


An End Without End: Catastrophe Cinema in the Age of Crisis Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 25 February, 2010 - 11:18
Evan Calder Williams

Dusting off the tedium and ash deposited by Hollywood's recent spate of catastrophe movies, Evan Calder Williams takes aim at their world-affirming pessimism and calls for some real apocalypse

 

 

subject: Communism | Film

Hopenhagen against Hope Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 17 February, 2010 - 14:29
Ilya Lipkin

Amidst the general panic and its commodification, Ilya Lipkin travelled to the Copenhagen Summit to witness capitalism's first last chance at preserving a climate conducive to its growth

 

 

Situating COP15: Capitalist Logic and Subjectivity

 


Crisis at the ICA: Ekow Eshun’s Experiment in Deinstitutionalisation Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 10 February, 2010 - 13:28
JJ Charlesworth

Amidst a general acceptance of the cash crisis afflicting the ICA as an accident of recession, and a headlong rush into ‘hairshirt' institutional self-critique as a way to deflect real scrutiny, JJ Charlesworth uncovers a catalogue of avoidable mistakes and the free-market, lifestyle thinking behind them

 

 


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Recomposing the University -
By Tiziana Terranova & Marc Bousquet
July 2004

Far removed from the clichéd image of the ‘ivory tower’, today’s universities have been opened to the harsh realities of neoliberal economics. In the name of democratisation and equality, the university has become a cross between a supermarket and a factory whose consumers are also its hyper-exploited labour force. But the conditions of mass intellectuality also create new potentials and alliances

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