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Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 18 November, 2008 - 08:15
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 8 January, 2009 - 16:48
Ben Watson With Mastaneh Shah-Shuja's recent book Zones of Proletarian Development, the anti-capitalist movement has finally found its political theorist. But, asks Ben Watson, can the lessons she gleans from the movement of movement's successes compete with the organisational and motivational power of the party? subject: Activism | AntiCapitalist | Class | Psychology
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Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 6 January, 2009 - 17:03
Sander How can the economy's need to wipe out a mountain of fictitious value be squared with its need to maintain social control? Sander considers the prospect of deflation, reflation and/or stagflation
subject: Fictitious Capital | Financial Crisis
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Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 16 December, 2008 - 17:36
Maija Timonen
The films of Stephan Dillemuth trace the changing habitat of artists from modernist bohemia to the culture industry. Through role-play and reflexivity, the film-maker's attraction-repulsion to romantic, modernist ideals of art and society is given compelling form. By Maija Timonen
subject: Film
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Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 16 December, 2008 - 13:06
John Barker
Capital needs to sustain the fantasy of its health, efficiency and inevitability at all costs. As the crisis broadsides this fantasy, the spin-doctors are scrambling to reconstruct it. Now is our chance to stop them – writes John Barker subject: Fictitious Capital | Financial Crisis
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Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 9 December, 2008 - 17:37
Kate Rich What lies beyond the failed utopias of the modernist welfare state and the free market? Gail Pickering's recent film/performance, despite its strictly internal focus on life inside a Brutalist housing estate, opens up scope for speculation. Review by Kate Rich subject: Art | Class | Film | Identity | Independent Media | Politics | Socially Engaged | Society | Urbanism
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Submitted by lois on Friday, 5 December, 2008 - 12:50
Forever Blowing Bubbles? Video footage of the recent Mute event held on the 12th November 2008. The full set of video files can be found on archive.org Original Flyer text subject: Artivism | Credit | Debt | Financial Crisis | History
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 3 December, 2008 - 18:35
Peter Linebaugh
The British Library's show Taking Liberties – on the struggle for freedom and rights throughout 900 years of British history – is a welcome event, writes Peter Linebaugh. But, he wonders, is it possible to discuss liberty while excluding the crucial question of equality?
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Submitted by mute on Friday, 28 November, 2008 - 11:12
Erik Empson The English translation of Roberto Esposito's Bios appears to be an important contribution to the critical analysis of a politics of life, but can the book's claim to 'revitalise' politics really be thought from within the exclusive bounds of academic philosophy? Review by Erik Empson
subject: Europe | Government | History | Identity | Literature | Nationalism | Policy | Politics | Society
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Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 18 November, 2008 - 17:40
Mute
A talk by Hillel Ticktin - organised by Mute
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 11 November, 2008 - 16:31
Neil Gray David Panos & Anja Kirschner's film, Trail of the Spider, allegorises the public-private land-grab known as ‘urban regeneration’ using the form of the Spaghetti Western. This is no shallow postmodern genre surfing, writes Neil Gray, but a passionate re-engagement with history for the sake of the present
subject: Film | Gentrification | Regeneration
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Submitted by mute on Thursday, 6 November, 2008 - 11:17
Simon Ford Having been studiously ignored for decades, computer art's early history is finally receiving the attention it deserves. Catherine Mason's book on its British variant uncovers how mainframe computing and arts education came gloriously, if briefly, together. Review by Simon Ford
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Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 5 November, 2008 - 14:36
Andy Moor et al The recent resurgence of interest in African music arguably breaks with existing stereotypes only to replace them with new ones. But who is benefiting from African music's soaring popularity?
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 29 October, 2008 - 18:18
Institute for the Art and Practice of Dissent at Home The Liverpool Biennial '08's strand of site-specific installations, MADE UP, promoted an engagement with fantasy and beauty over criticality. But, in the context of Liverpool's current City of Culture status and the epic regeneration this entails, we should wake up, not be put to sleep – write the Institute for the Art and Practice of Dissent at Home
subject: Art | Cultural Industries | Site-Specific
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Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 29 October, 2008 - 18:15
Peter Carty Margarita Gluzberg's fascination with the fictions that sustain capitalism seems increasingly relevant as they start to unravel in the face of the financial crisis. Here the artist talks to Peter Carty about her recent show The Money Plot subject: Art | Fictitious Capital | Financial Crisis | Surrealist
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