David Garcia on Wed, 14 Apr 2004 20:19:51 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> "A Global Sense of Place" |
"A Global Sense of Place" Report from Eterea 2 Meeting of Italian Tactical Television Makers March 25-28th, 2004 the second major gathering of the Telestreets took place in Sennegallia. Here are some notes from a short visit to the world of Telestreets. Background Telestreet, the latest wave in the rich history of Italian media activism, has been fairly widely reported on this list and elswhere but some of the basics are worth revisiting briefly. Telestreets are semie-legal micro-broadcasters, literally street TV makers using small transmitters to send programes that mostly reach no more than a few blocks. Telestreets range from making their own local items to capturing the programming (such as big football matches) from the commercial satellite operators and re-broadcasting them for free on Telestreet networks. Telestreets operate between the legal and technological cracks of the Italian mediascape, squatting the shadows or blank spots which terrestrial broadcasters cannot reach leaving a shadow on the broadcast spectrum which the Telestreet groups occupy. Telestreet reclaims the Œsocializing¹ power of television. As a medium video retains an immediate accessibility which does not even need to presume conventional literacy. The immediacy and expressive rewards of making TV has enabled Telestreet to appeal to a much wider constituency than just "the movement" or hacktivists. But despite the apparent return to the earlier tactics of the broadcast media pirates, Telestreet is a more complex and interesting hybrid. As their manifesto declared "Television must be considered a new prosthesis and an extension of the net: but to avoid another media alternative "ghetto", the horizontally of the net must meet the "socializing" power of television." Orfeo TV in Bologna is believed to have started the ball rolling when it began transmitting in 2002, just a few blocks away from the site of the legendary Radio Alice, and has since been described as her "bastard offspring". What began in Bologna with a few transmitters was soon "joined in a circulation of struggle through a network of websites; they are now connected through 'tactical television' to other Italian microbroadcasters like 'no-war TV', 'urban TV', and 'global TV'." In what Mark Coté describes "as an emerging network of infrapower". The Telestreet phenomenon is another splinter from the legacy of the Italian autonomy movement of the 1960s and 70s, a politics which brought down on itself the wrath of both right and Italian communist party by privileging desire and expression over either market forces or party discipline. It re-booted anarchist ideas for a post-industrial age, introducing notions of "immaterial labor", "post fordism" and "refusal to work". The influence of these ideas has fluctuated but grown steadily with fall of the eastern bloc and the rise of the virtual class. But perhaps only "refusal to work"and "class composition" have survived the co-option by "communicative capitalism" and "third way" social democrats. The first meeting of the Telestreets (Eterea 1) was held in Bologna in 2002 at a point when there were only two or three nodes in existence. But it was at this meeting when Telestreet was conceived and launched not just as a platform but as a political campaign. Two years later what began as a small network of interventions has become a catalyst for wider resistance. Today the network includes more than a hundred nodes (the number fluctuates daily) and stretches the length and breadth of Italy. The Gasparri law and the Counter Reformation The recent meeting of the Telestreets (Eterea2) was needed to address questions that had grown more urgent as Telestreet has expanded. With rapid growth has come diversity and questions about whether it is still possible to achieve a common strategy. This was given heightened significance by the passage of the Gasparri law (Gaspari is the minister of communication), allowing Berlusconi to consolidate his dominance of the Italian mediascape. The passing of this law leaves many in the Italy believing that they are facing an unparalleled political emergency. When I asked the well known autonomist and writer Franco Berardi (Bifo) how the Berlusconi administration sought to justify there actions, "what do you mean justify" he responded in mock amazement "We are a country of the Counter Reformation, there is no need for argumentation. If you win, you win." Given the fact that this is a defining moment both for Telestreet and Italian politics the choice to hold the meeting in Sennegallia, a small coastal resort was surprising. Indeed this choice along with the agenda of much of the meeting was resisted by a number of militants in Telestreet. The dissenting voices argued that the meeting be both attempting a higher profile and be focused exclusively on mobilizing resistance against the Berlosconi regime. There was however one good reason for holding the meeting in Sennegallia and that reason was the Sennegallia¹s own Telestreet: Disco Volante. Disco Volante Nothing about the Disco-Volante studio suggests radical media culture. It is located in the sleepy back streets of Sennegallia and is part of "Zelig" a local project in which the disabled and able bodied share a studio and make art together. The project is the long term initiative of artist/activist Enea, the buoyant host of the meeting. The front of the narrow studio space gives no clue that any electronic media are present or indeed welcome. The studio is an overflowing torrent of collages, maquetts, sculptures, paintings, decorated found objects and countless toy theaters. The atmosphere is a mixture of the controlled naiveté and chaos of an artist from the Cobra era and Geppetto¹s workshop in Pinocchio. A wall near the entrance is covered with numerous awards and photographs of ceremonies at which Zelig participants are being honored as well as images from trips and adventures. This is art and media activism with deep local roots. The technology of the TV studio in the back of the space sits easily alongside the paints and carpentry tools that could have been found in any artist¹s studio of the last 500 years. Enea, the director (this is not a collective) informs me that this is not art as therapy, neither is it some "art in the community" project it is simply a space which is open to those with disabilities to join him in concocting some version of the good life out of the process of making art together in pleasant surroundings. The fact that this also happens to be combined with a semi legal TV station that mixes a relaxed expressionism with militant campaigning for disability rights is both a fact and appropriately incidental. Its quite hard to find words to do justice to the atmosphere of energized generosity that pervades the Zelig studio. Astonishingly Disco Volante was the first Telestreet to have been forcibly shut down by the ministry of communication. The actual transmitter was not confiscated instead it was sealed by ministry officials, a seal it would be a criminal offence to break. Enea takes the sealed transmitter around with him displaying it as an emblem of repression. Of all the Telestreets to choose as a test case for a ministerial clamp down, why pick on a channel for disabled people? The explanation lies in the fact that it was not merely tolerated by Sennigallia¹s local government it was actively encouraged. This was not only a battle between Telestreets and the ministry but also between local and national government. These are the regional complexities of Italian politics, complexities go back a long way, think for example of the leading role played by the communist party in the crack down and destruction of Radio Alice in Bologna. Disco Volante¹s position as test case combined with a supportive local government willing to sponsor the event made Sennegallia the obvious choice. But more importantly it also provided the opportunity to mount a direct challenge to the law by resuming transmisions of the proceedings of the Telestreet gathering, on channel 52, the frequency from which Disco Volante had been expelled. Eterea TV: Channel 52 Transmissions from the meeting began almost immediately but by the end of the first afternoon there were rumours of the police trying to locate the source of the transmissions. By evening the rumours had been confirmed and an impromptu meeting was called to descide how to respond to the police pressure. We crowded into a small room at the "colony", where most people were staying and our host Enea, who was clearly enjoying himself, introduced a local radical lawyer who was present to advise on the risks and help us weigh up the options. Enea himself, informed us that he had actually visted the police himself that afternoon to ask what they intended to do. The officer in charge of policing the airwaves had declared himself no friend to this law but also said he was a familly man and not about to lose his job defending us. So what to do? Carry on transmitting and risk the event being shut down and equipment being confiscated or back down? Some militants from Naples even proposed going on the offensive by transmitting on a frequency that would push the populist commercial Rete 4 off the air. Although the meeting did not opt to go down this rout, they still decided to go ahead with the transmissions on channel 52 and indeed to increase their visibility by making their programs as publicly as possible, out in the market and surrounding streets and transmitting them the same day. Moreover a reporter from national broadcaster Rai 3 would be covering the actions to be transmitted on national television. The transmissions proceeded without interruption. Later that weekend, on Sunday night I was amazed to see that indeed this small action in Sennegallia as well as the Telestreet meeting itself did indeed warrant a five minute slot on the national news. Italian media militants may be correct in declaring that they live in a media dictatorship but their work has more effect and visibility than in most of the rest of Europe By contrast we in northern Europe inhabit the dictatorships of indifference. Militants: Activists: Expressevists The arguments and struggles which dominate Telestreet, can be seen as a dynamic triangulation between three categories or modalities of the tactical: militancy, activism and expressevism. Here are some rough working definitions. * Militancy: On the second day of the meeting Franco Berardi (Bifo) spoke up for militancy when he rounded off his "hair raising" speech by declaring that in the current political emergency the last thing we should be doing is "embracing our miserable marginality". In his talk he spoke for those who favor direct action, for the politics of maximum visibility and playing for high stakes. For the militants the emphasis on micro-media should not be translated into the irrelevance of micro-politics. * Activism: for activists micro-transmissions and micro-politics far from being ineffective have a viral power and ultimately can be more significant than engaging directly with the spectacle of national politics and big media. Micro media actions can multiply below the radar of the powerful and only be noticed when they have become to strong to crush. This notion of activism includes long term and highly situated commitments, like Disco-Volante (or for that matter Autolabs in Sao Paolo, or Sarai in New Delhi) whose reverberations go deep and produce new kinds of connective locality. This practice is less obviously heroic than militancy, it engages in fresh ways with every day struggles and affirms ordinary life. * Expressionism: the final essential modality of the tactical, expressivism, is sometimes referred to rather anemically as "cultural politics" and sometimes as art. In fact it can be art, but it is also *more* than art and its specific claim on loyalty is in urgent need of recuperation. Expressevism is a politics not just of power (i.e. sovereignty) but of language. The power of language to make and rehearse worlds, worlds whose forms resist pre-determination. This usage refers to language in the broadest sense of the word. It includes all experimental arts and invention, including the technological. Expressevist politics are based on our awareness that in a world of contingent horizons, our sense of meaning depends, critically, on our powers of expression. "And that discovering a framework of meaning is interwoven with invention" [1]. Whether or not this generation of utopian political movements can avoid new forms of authoritarianism will depend on the vigilant defense of the expressevist dimension and its subversive freedoms. History shows artists are like the canaries that used to be carried by miners, they give early warning of toxins in the ether. The greatest danger for Telestreet is to split along the faultlines of any of the modalities. If Telestreets (indeed all tactical media) are to retain their characteristic bite; militancy, activism and expressevism must all be present or all will be lost. In each of the particular cases of a Telestreet, one or two of these modalities will always predominate, but it is only by retaining all three, in variable orchestrations, that we will see the formation of real difference, effectiveness and freedom. Global Telestreet Whatever the differences within the Telestreet movement there is consensus on the need to scale up. Some voices would like to see it gain its own national frequency others would prefer local autonomy to prevail with each Telestreet extending and intensifying the process of expansion through networking and the sharing of content. Making the dream of effectively hybridizing Telestreet through networking and content sharing was explored in different ways throughout the days of the meeting. From Alan Toner¹s (Autonomedia) [1] detailed and knowledgeable exposition of the ways in which the approaches of "the creative commons" movement were being and could be further applied to Telestreets through to the technical solutions being offered by New Global Vision [3]. The remarkable NGVision project was founded in the wake of the Genoa G8 protests. It set out to make the hundreds of hours of activist material freely accessible in a single location as common resouce. They currently have the space of 5 servers, stocked with around 300 videos, with a new tape being added at least once a week. NGVision uses bit-torrent to make the download times relatively fast, an hour of video can be downloaded in approximately fifteen minutes. NGVision is already in extensive use with approximately 10.000 videos being downloaded per month. NGVision has offered its system for use by all Telestreets in Italy and beyond. Although the local roots and Italian political theater help to make Telestreet strong the atmosphere can also be rather self referential and inward looking. But there is a growing realization that to survive Telestreet needs to reach beyond the conceptual boundaries of national politics. Slowly a translocal awareness is occurring in part through the work of writers like Agnese Trocchi and Mateo, Pasquinelli and Mark Coté whose work is helping to spread the Telestreet virus. Versions of Telestreet are already beginning to spring up in Holland, Switzerland (Proxyvision) and most recently as Telesione Piquetera the first Telestreet in Argentina [4]. Cecelia Landsman and myself were attending the meeting on behalf of Amsterdam¹s version of Telestreet: Proxyvision. In our presentation we emphasized the translocal dimension of Telestreet [5]. Italian Telestreet works in part because it is embedded in local histories but is also through inspiring similar initiatives elsewhere. Our point is that once these initiatives take hold active connections and support from the more developed Italian Telestreets will take the project down pathways unconstrained by the puppet show of national party politics. The ways in which this process is already occurring are helping to a relatively new kind of *situated metropolitan tactics*. From this perspective, rather than imagining that the networks have made boarders disappear, we see the emergence of new ways of organizing locally that (by the very act of connecting across and through our differences) lead us towards something like a "global sense of place". David Garcia http://www.telestreet.it/ [1] Sources of the Self. Charles Taylor 1993 [2] <http://amsterdam.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0302/msg00116.html> I later found a quote of Alan Toner from an essay he wrote about the anti-Iraq war demo in Rome which could equally be applied in the Telestreet context. "Challenges on this scale put into perspective the sniping between different radical factions and pose once again the problems of representation. How can practices of self-organisation, democracy and direct action proliferate?" [3] http://www.ngvision.org/index.en.html [4] http://www.metamute.com/look/article.tpl?IdLanguage=1&IdPublication=1&NrIssu e=24&NrSection=5&NrArticle=1368&ST_max=0 [5] Proxyvision Presentation http://www.radioalice.org/nuovatelestreet/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&f ile=article&sid=59&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net