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Day of the dollar: a global connection OpenPublishing | News & Analysis
Submitted by unterschreber on Tuesday, 24 June, 2008 - 17:59
Jon Amsden / Jeffrey Fleishman / LA Times staff writers

Thanks to Meltdown III stalwart Jon Amsden for finding and introducing this impressionistic but telling survey of what a dollar free-falling towards worthlessness ('Monopoly money', anyone?) means in terms of everyday survival in some parts of the world.

 

For those who may wish to take a break from the lofty abstractions of financial skullduggery and dollar decline, here's how it looks on the fishmarket floor and in other places where the dollar was once the basic currency of international trade but is now losing its former luster.


Excerpt on the invasion OpenPublishing | News & Analysis
Submitted by unterschreber on Thursday, 16 August, 2007 - 02:32
Angela Mitropoulos

This extract from an unfinished text by Angela Mitropoulos, posted on archive : s0metim3s (http://archive.blogsome.com/2007/08/07/indigenous-land/#comments), gives part of the historical background (which some European readers may have overlooked) to the current military-medical invasion of Aboriginal land in Australia's Northern Territory.  Most importantly, the text explains the concrete connection between intervention in the name of 'health' and 'ed


The Dutch Are Weeping in Four Universal Pictorial Languages At Least Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 2 May, 2007 - 14:50
Marina Vishmidt

The recent research project and series of exhibitions After Neurath revisits the work of Otto Neurath, renaissance man of the Vienna Circle who had attempted to relate the puzzle of social change by pictorialising knowledge. Marina Vishmidt assesses Neurath's attempt to bridge the world between art and non-art in the terms of current debate and draws a materialist line under any positivistic expectations of the exhibition as research [1]


A conversation with Peter Linebaugh OpenPublishing | News & Analysis
Submitted by matthew hyland on Friday, 16 March, 2007 - 02:25
Tao Ruspoli / Peter Linebaugh

The Counterpunch video interview with Peter Linebaugh is at:
http://www.counterpunch.org/ruspoli03142007.html


Desert Crossroads (Rising Resistance to Corporate Globalisation and Deadly Borders) Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 8 November, 2005 - 00:00
o.r.g.a.n.i.c.

As xenophobic border regimes around the world rigidify, activist groups
are joining forces to denounce them and the neoliberal economics on
which they stand. Amidst a worsening climate of vigilantism, San Diego
based anarchist collective o.r.g.a.n.i.c. report on recent antiborder
actions in the towns, desert wastelands and graveyards along the
US/Mexico border


PROJECT SPACE: Migrasophia Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 8 February, 2005 - 00:00
Zeigam Azizov

Zeigam Azizov's specially comissioned art project

Migrasophia:

Unusual phrases for the usual phrase book (extracts)

subject: Art | Books | Immigration | Mapping

The Crowd Compiled Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Sunday, 5 September, 2004 - 23:00
Anthony Iles

What would a non-representational crowd look like? Anthony Iles examines some contemporary crowd phenomena and zooms in on two art projects which open up discussion of crowd politics in an era of criminalised and aestheticised protest


Minima Cartographia or The Patient Becomes the Agent Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 15 July, 2003 - 23:00
Marina Vishmidt

After her active involvement in the recent Cartographic Congress at London’s Limehouse Town Hall, Marina Vishmidt was prompted to consider the problematics of contemporary cartography. With the emergence of collaborative mapping, open data systems, semantic webs and meta-mapping, the function of ‘the map’ in the information age has become as complex as the informatic topographies it rests upon.


No Place Like Home Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 3 July, 2003 - 23:00
Peter Carty

Peter Carty examines two conflicting strategies in contemporary psychogeography and asks whether rules and regulations or radical subjectivity is the way forward


Dividers and Rulers Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 3 July, 2003 - 23:00
Joyce Song

Joyce Song investigates strategies of land representation and administration in the occupied territories of Palestine, where strategies such as the non-recognition of villages, and the placement and building of settlements, roads, and walls, she argues, advance political decisions under the guise of ‘innocent’ urban planning


The Cartographic Congress Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 3 July, 2003 - 23:00
Mute editors

Over a six week period in May and June coders, artists, writers, activists, economists, cartographers, tapissiers and film-makers indulged their shared passion for map-making. A re-occurring thread at the CC could be called ‘Open Data’, a sister phenomenon of the Open Source software movement.


Cartography of Excess (Bureau d'études, Multiplicity) Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Friday, 7 February, 2003 - 00:00
Brian Holmes

The Paris-based conceptual group, Bureau d'études, works intensively in two dimensions. For a recent exhibition called 'Planet of the Apes' they have created integrated wall charts of the ownership ties between transnational organizations, a synoptic view of the world monetary game.


Flash! ah ah... Saviour of the Universe Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 19 December, 2002 - 00:00
Kate Rich and Josh On

Two years after its launch, They Rule – a map of corporate America – is a web project with a large following. Its popularity even extends to the rarefied echelons of the art world, as demonstrated by its inclusion in this year’s Whitney Biennial.


Real Politik versus Real Fantasy (Review of the Tate Modern's Border Crossing seminar) Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 8 October, 2002 - 23:00
Benedict Seymour

At the Tate Modern's Border Crossing seminar, the artist/activist approaches of panelists Heath Bunting and Florian Schneider threw divergent light on the politics of migration.


Hypertext Journal: A journey to the Western Isles Editorial content | Magazine
Submitted by mute on Sunday, 10 March, 1996 - 00:00
Peter Ride

A review of Nina Pope and Karen Guthrie's hypertext journal of a tour around Scotland

A journey can be many things and the form in which it is recorded reveals the intentions of those who undertake it and their anticipation of the role of their audience.


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