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Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 7 October, 2008 - 16:27
Mute A Mute Magazine talk As the global ruling class finally admits that the 'financial' crisis has spilt over into the real economy, the fiction that the credit crunch is containable has been dispelled. Will resistance to capital's genocidal expansion now become equally uncontainable? Can anti-capitalists take advantage of the global system's instability, or will austerity measures and gloves-off geopolitics triumph? subject: Activism | AntiCapitalist | Banking | Credit | Finance & Trade
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 1 October, 2008 - 11:28
Mark Crinson Was modernism complicit with colonialism, and did the struggle for decolonisation also entail a targeting of imperial modernist architecture? Mark Crinson visits the exhibition In the Desert of Modernity to see if the charge will stick
subject: Africa | Architecture | Immigration | Multiculturalism | Postcolonial
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 30 September, 2008 - 14:24
Andrew Fisher Giving a critical survey of the documentaries of Adam Curtis, Andrew Fisher evaluates the claims to 'realism' and political neutrality made for his work against the critical methodologies of Guy Debord and Georg Lukács
My job is not to try to change the world, but to describe it.1 subject: Broadcast Media | Film | Neoliberal | Politics | State | Theory & Philosophy | War on Terror
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Submitted by mute on Thursday, 25 September, 2008 - 11:17
J.J. Charlesworth Contemporary curators are loving the alien, the sacred and the cultic. But far from challenging contemporary social mores, this Other-worship is just an orthodox postmodern denigration of human agency, argues J.J. Charlesworth
subject: Art | Avant-Garde | Climate Change | Identity | Mute Vol 2 #10 | Postcolonial | Postmodernist | Science Fiction
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Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 24 September, 2008 - 14:40
Neil Gray
In the second of a two-part analysis of neoliberalism Indian style, Neil Gray looks at the economic impact of policies legitimat subject: Asia | Class | Globalisation | Labour Struggles | Marxist | New Enclosures | Politics
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Submitted by mute on Thursday, 18 September, 2008 - 10:40
Howard Slater Marx's concept of 'species being' is for some a way of re-connecting with fertile currents in the communist left. Howard Slater explores Frére Dupont's recent book Species Being and Other Stories as a vehicle of exodus from left orthodoxies But this negation carries within it a yes which is greater than itself – Octavio Paz subject: AntiCapitalist | Class | Identity | Precarity | Psychoanalytic | Social Movements
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 17 September, 2008 - 14:00
Jon Amsden The collapse of Lehman Brothers has got the mainstream media hitting the panic button and talking of systemic crisis. But the crisis isn't just spreading to the real economy, it began there, argues Jon Amsden
In May of this year, Brian Marks made a valiant attempt to tie together inflation, the current crisis in financial markets, and struggles of the world working class. Marks wrote:
subject: AntiCapitalist | Banking | Credit | Economics | Fictitious Capital | Finance & Trade | Financial Crisis
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Submitted by mute on Thursday, 4 September, 2008 - 14:10
Ulrich Gutmair When rivalry still openly reigned between the Obama and Clinton camps of the Democratic Party, Ulrich Gutmair spoke to Sci-Fi writer and pioneer of cyberpunk, William Gibson, about American politics, the online age and Voodoo
UG: You invented the term cyberspace when only a few people were online, on an early version of the Internet. What is the most fascinating thing for you on the net today? subject: Cyberspace | Internet | Politics | Science Fiction | Web 2.0
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 26 August, 2008 - 11:10
George Caffentzis Countering media representations of the food crisis as unexpected, George Caffentzis argues that its essential role in thwarting resistance to neoliberalism's enclosures and austerity measures was thoroughly predictable
subject: Economics | Financial Crisis
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Submitted by mute on Friday, 15 August, 2008 - 12:28
Imogen O’Rorke As western audiences increasingly switch off from generic reporting of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Imogen O'Rorke finds the news-unworthy testimonies at Tate Modern a much needed corrective
subject: Art | Iraq | New Media Art | War | War on Terror
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Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 13 August, 2008 - 08:48
The new print issue of Mute magazine is out now. Vol2 #9 takes on the UK's services-for-surveillance State, technological utopias, green capitalism and much more! Borders 2.0: Future, Tense – Bryan Finoki and Angela Mitropoulos explore contemporary borderlands though text and image The Battle of All Mothers – Madame Tlank on welfare, surveillance and working class women Falling for the Future – Iain Boal brings modernity's futuramas back down to earth subject: Class | Climate Change | Economics | Feminist | Internet | New Media Art | Surveillance
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 12 August, 2008 - 16:40
Angela Mitropoulos and Bryan Finoki
Angela Mitropoulos and Bryan Finoki present an incursion, in text and image, into the contemporary borderlands
subject: Border Activism | Mute Vol 2 #9 | New Enclosures | Social Movements
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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 subcontinent, 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
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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
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