| Sisters of Mute | Openmute - Linkme2 - More is More - independent media distribution | |||
|
|||
|
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Friday, 23 May, 2008 - 15:07
Mute Vol 2 #8 features Stewart Martin on aesthetic education in post-Fordism, a prizewinning essay on music and code by Simon Yuill (Vilém Flusser theory award, Transmediale 2008), comic-strip satire from Plastique Fantastique, Tom Campbell and Dmitry Vorobyev on carcino-regen in St Petersburg, and by Benedict Seymour on art-sport implosion and the 2012 Olympics. Plus hi-saccharine, zero % relational cover art from John Russell. Miaow! subject: Art | Arts funding | Comics | Cultural Industries | Education | Free Software | Hacking | Politics | Theory & Philosophy
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 7 August, 2008 - 15:49
Daniel Berchenko Sociologist Giovanni Arrighi invokes the political economy of Adam Smith to claim that China's 'labour intensive' mode of production is the future of capitalism. It's also the past, argues Daniel Berchenko
subject: Asia | Economics | Environment | Finance & Trade | History
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 30 July, 2008 - 18:22
Neil Gray Is Indianness just a German ideology? In the first of a two-part analysis of neoliberalism in the sub-continent, Neil Gray traces the history of Hindu cultural nationalism, from a colonialist mystique of pure spirituality to today's fascist pogroms and economic polarisation
subject: Asia | Neoliberal | Postcolonial | Race | State
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 30 July, 2008 - 16:16
Mute 3-5pm, Sunday 3 August 2008. Upstairs at Publish And Be Damned self-publishing fair, Rochelle School, Arnold Circus, London E2. Free, no booking required. Does private-public funding and management of culture mark the death of institutional and critical autonomy? And is direct censorship an anomaly, the most visible form of a wider constriction of cultural freedom, or the shape of cultural policy to come? subject: Art | Cultural Industries | Institutional Critique | Neoliberal
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 30 July, 2008 - 11:02
Leo Singer and Clara Paillard
subject: Conferences | Gentrification | Neoliberal | Regeneration | Urbanism
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Monday, 28 July, 2008 - 11:47
Felix Stalder Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody is reputed to be the best book ever written on Web 2.0. By why the strange silence on questions of copyright, privacy and ownership? subject: Blogging | Cyberspace | Internet | New Media | Technology | Web 2.0
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 24 July, 2008 - 12:08
Paula Cerni The fate of Tibet and its unelected superstar figurehead has captured the attention of western liberals, not to mention the US government. But the real fascination of Tibet is not its exoticism but its similarity to the rest of an undemocratic global system, argues Paula Cerni
subject: Activism | Asia | Democracy | Globalisation | N. America | Olympics
Editorial content |
Submitted by anthony on Tuesday, 22 July, 2008 - 13:38
Variant Magazine Variant magazine have produced a press release addressing the response of James Doherty, Media Manager of Culture and Sport Glasgow and President of the National Union of Journalists, to a text published in Variant by Rebecca Gordon Nesbitt. 'The main thrust of the article is to expose the connections between the various board members of CSG and its trading arm and their multifarious business interests and strategies for culture, which point to the privatisation of a valuable public service and the erosion of the common good.' subject: Independent Media | Media | Politics | Regeneration
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 15 July, 2008 - 16:24
Emilio Quadrelli In this series of interviews with young migrants living in different European cities, Emilio Quadrelli tracks the elusive subject of 'political Islam' as well as the intensive police actions which together shape the boundaries of a 'refugee subjectivity'. Translation from the Italian by Stefano di Cicco
subject: Class | Europe | Immigration | Media | Middle East | Politics | War on Terror
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 8 July, 2008 - 16:01
Graham Burnett, Gareth Dale, James Heartfield, et al Last week Mute hosted an open discussion entitled 'Feeding Frenzy: Food, Fuel and Finance' in which we tried to connect the recent food crisis to a chain of 'crises' – first the credit crunch and, following hard on its heals, the unprecedented hike in fuel prices. We would like to continue this debate here with your help! subject: Agriculture | Biodiversity | Biotechnology | Environment
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 3 July, 2008 - 14:20
Mihalis Mentinis Since the 2006 Oaxaca revolt state repression in Mexico has contributed to popular feeling that peaceful protest has failed. Today, the country is on the threshold of a cycle of armed anti-capitalist struggle, argues Mihalis Mentinis
subject: AntiCapitalist | Latin America | Politics
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by anthony on Wednesday, 2 July, 2008 - 15:14
Richard Pithouse Richard Pithouse analyses the politics of “xenophobia and authoritarianism” in South Africa
subject: Africa | Nationalism | Race
Editorial content |
Submitted by admin on Thursday, 26 June, 2008 - 12:20
Ana Balona de Oliveira Pedro Costa's films belie both the cinematic exploitation of suffering and the documentary urge to record truth and fix recognition. Ana Balona de Oliveira sifts through the bones and ruins of Costa's Fontaínha trilogy, set in a disappearing Lisbon slum
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 12 June, 2008 - 14:47
Randy Martin As the US subprime mortgage crisis plays out, the ‘dual morality’ of its victims' treatment becomes stark. But, Randy Martin explains, bailing-out the banks while leaving defaulters to rot is just the latest in a 30 year campaign of ripping off the American working class
subject: Banking | Class | Debt | Financial Crisis | N. America | New Enclosures
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 3 June, 2008 - 18:19
Stefan Meretz In July last year Mute published Dmytri Kleiner's critique of copyright and its 'radical' copyleft alternative, presenting a reformist programme based on Ricardo's 'iron law of wages'. But Marx demolished this analysis 140 years ago, argues Stefan Meretz. Time for FLOSS to catch up?
subject: Economics | Free Software | Marxist | Money | Theory & Philosophy
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mute publishing Ltd - legal information (under construction) | Site by OpenMute |