Lachlan Brown on Wed, 27 Mar 2002 06:16:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] AIR - the Beserkr Saga becomes territorial |
----- Original Message ----- From: "Lachlan Brown" <lachlan@london.com> Date: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 00:04:42 -0500 To: <sjones@uic.edu> Subject: Re: Subscription to AoIR > Steve, > > Oh Brave New World. > > Thanks for hosting my intervention. Just > doing cultural studies. Let me know when > you dare to resubscribe me. I am > taking the issues elsewhere. > > I recognise the difficulties of freedom > to speak in America, I am in Toronto and things are hardly better here, but we obviously have different ideas about how to > respond to these difficulties. > > The purpose was to stress the need to > speak directly to areas of absense in > research despite a post-national emergency atmosphere. > > I illustrated just how easily these absenses > may (and probably will, if the reaction of > the list is representitive of an > intellectual community in the States) be > used opportunely and politically. > > Something quite ugly emerged in the AIR community and I am sure that I am not the > only one uncomfortable with it. > > My intervention was a necessary one and > and it was carried out across several lists > with responses from each. New networks > and affiliations as well as a new set of > questions have emerged. A clearer picture > of research gaps, as well as ways to > approach these questions more clearly > defined in critical as well as creative > approaches have appeared. > > I am drafting a brief proposal for two > initiatives: a revival of '@party' (the > people who built internet used to meet in exclusive social gatherings) with people > from education, industry and the arts to consider the broad diversity of people with email addresses (or @party), and 'A > Commonwealth and European Association of Internet Researchers' which, I would hope, > will have less difficulty than Americans presently have with social inclusion, the digital divide, and the place of the body > in Internet. > > The Nordic imaginary prevailed in a curious way. It was interesting to see how the > humour of the British/Norwegian conversation of the early 70s has been carried through > to the present, but somewhere along the way > the motives of those people to educate, enlighten and entertain, was lost to > ignorance and the reproduction of ignorance. > > > > Lachlan > > > > No. The decision will not be reversed. > > > > I would suggest that for purposes of your "interventions" that you > > start your own list. > > > > Best wishes, > > Sj > > > > At 5:35 PM -0500 3/18/02, Lachlan Brown wrote: > > >Steve, > > > > > > I disagree. It has become clear in this > > >list and with posts to parallel lists that > > >a pattern is being pieced together that > > >highlights a number of abuses in Internet > > >education and industry. > > > > > > My methods, sometimes blunt, are > > >appropriate given the nature of the > > >questions emerging. > > > > > > Please reverse your decision. > > > > > > Lachlan Brown > > > > > > > > >>personal, inappropriate and harassing in nature. > > >> > > >> Sj > > >> > > >> > > > > > >-- > > > > > > -- _______________________________________________ Sign-up for your own FREE Personalized E-mail at Mail.com http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup Win the Ultimate Hawaiian Experience from Travelocity. http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;4018363;6991039;n?http://svc.travelocity.com/promos/winhawaii/ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold