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(midweek extra due to some urgent stuff) NETTIME'S WEEKLY ANNOUNCER - every friday into your inbox calls-symposia-websites-campaigns-books-lectures-meetings send your PR to sandra.fauconnier@rug.ac.be in time! 0.......1........2........3........4........5........6 1...murph the surf........Information Systems for the Visual Arts 2...anat.org.au...........Australian writers win First Prize in International Hypertext Award 3...John Horvath..........war crimes tribunal 4...Josephine Berry.......Exploding Media Symposium 5...Damsel Plum...........Bastard Nation Conference - This week in SF 6...S. Kritikos...........Workshop: The Emotional Design of Online Communities [Thursday!] ........1.............................................. Date: Sun, 12 Jul 1998 00:26:20 -0400 (EDT) From: murph the surf <murph@interport.net> Subject: Information Systems for the Visual Arts I will be teaching a class this fall in the department of art and arts professions at New York University called "Information Systems for the Visuals Arts." It is a required, graduate-level class for students in the arts administration program. I'm planning to use "Interface Culture" by Steven Johnson and "Internet in a Nutshell" by Valerie Quercia as the texts. I'm in the process of writing the syllabus now and would appreciate any suggestions as to texts or projects that would be of particular use to students who will, in the future, be managers of the art world. .................2..................................... Date: Sun, 12 Jul 1998 16:21:06 +0800 From: Australian Network for Art and Technology <anat@anat.org.au> Subject: Australian writers win First Prize in International Hypertext Award The Australian Network for Art and Technology announces Australian writers win First Prize in inaugural International Hypertext Award for *water always writes in *plural <http://va.com.au/ensemble/water>. Brisbane based LINDA CARROLI and Perth based JOSEPHINE WILSON are the recipients of the First Prize in the Inaugural SALT HILL JOURNAL HYPERTEXT CONTEST. Judged by Professor ED FALCO - author of the novel Winter in Florida (Soho, 1990), and the hypertext novel, A Dream with Demons (Eastgate Systems, 1997) and editor of the online journal of hypertext, The New River - the first annual Salt Hill Hypertext competition sought out the best new literature created for the Web, internationally. Their intention was to source "solid literary hypertext fiction, poetry, and design that pushes the boundaries of this as-of-yet undefined space in which to create art. Work incorporating multimedia were preferred, but solely textual submissions were also considered" according to JEFF PARKER, Web Editor, Salt Hill Journal. *water always writes in *plural can be accesssed at the hypertext showcase of Salt Hill Journal online and Syracuse Creative Writing, Syracuse University: http://www.hypertxt.com/sh or directly at http://www.hypertxt.com/sh/hyper98. The work will also be excerpted in the print issue #6 of Salt Hill Journal. In 1997 ANAT http://www.anat.org.au, as a joint initiative with the Adelaide based Electronic Writing Research Ensemble http://va.com.au/ensemble (EWRE), and with support from the Australia Council's New Media Arts Fund http://www.ozco.gov.au, commissioned Wilson and Carroli to undertake 'virtual' residencies simultaneously. The intention was that the writers work collaboratively via the internet to produce work hypertextually. The writers/ artists worked at their own location and were therefore in-residence virtually. The Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts http://www.imago.com.au/pica and the Institute of Modern Art http://www.ima.org.au in Brisbane provided the writers with computer and internet access and the environment from which to work. Carroli is a freelance journalist, arts writer, essayist, researcher and curator. During the residency, Carroli was keen to explore writing and its texture, by exploring not only the potentials of working online and the terrain of electronic media, but also of the writing itself. "My intention was to extend my writing practice by addressing, in the context of writing and virtuality, contingent ideas about process, participation and performance. This project provided me with a space in which to make connections between the theory and the practice, blurring a few boundaries in the process." Wilson's recent work has been in two fields: narrative fiction and writing for performance. Her recent performance work, The Geography of Haunted Places, which drew on post-colonial and feminist theory in dialogue with contemporary political issues received high acclaim when it toured recently throughout Australia and in London. "I am very excited by the potential of online writing and hypertextual narratives, which, if I may hazard an analogy, seems to have more in common with meta-fiction and with the metaphoric - if metaphor is about transport, about taking you somewhere else." Says Wilson Linda Marie Walker, cofounder with Jyanni Steffensen of the EWRE and current Director of the Contemporary Art Centre of South Australian says: "The Ensemble is a project which was established to explore notions of writing as invention. On the internet language is subject to hybridisation and experimentation. These residencies provided an ideal opportunity for two highly skilled writers to explore the practices of writing by embracing the new technologies of networking which link disciplines and geographies. This is a hypertextual form which forges links between the literary, the artistic, the scholarly, the community, and industry. We are delighed that their work has been so well received." For further information or interviews, please contact: Amanda McDonald Crowley or Honor Harger For further information on the 1998 Salt Hill competition or on the Second Annual Hypertext Competition 1999 email Managing/Web Editor Jeff Parker at jsparker@mailbox.syr.edu They are already accepting entries for the 1999 competition. The deadline is January 31, 1999. ..........................3............................ Date: Sun, 12 Jul 1998 02:50:38 +0200 (MET DST) From: John Horvath <h8801joh@ella.hu> Subject: war crimes tribunal I thought this might be useful to some nettimers. John ------------------------------------------------------------------------ from: NUA Internet Surveys Volume 3 No. 20 June 29th 1998 Computerworld: War Crimes on Net The International War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague is to have real-time audio feeds, hosted on Domovina Net, the non-profit website for Balkan refugees and largely maintained by refugees. The 10G byte site brings together real-time broadcasts, multilingual renditions of both the local and international press, reports from war torn Kosovo and video and audio streams from around the world. The project began as "ethnic cleansing" claimed the lives of tens of thousands in early 1995. Those who fled were desperate for news of relatives caught in the war. The website has met that need since its launch in May 1995 and now has servers in four countries. Domovina Net attracts 25,000 to 50,000 visitors per week. They download about 8G to 9G bytes of data weekly. "Domovina" translates as homeland and the site takes a multiethnic stance. The International War Crimes broadcasts are tentatively scheduled to go live on Domovina Net July 14. Observers believe this information source will be especially important for those inside Bosnia and Crotia. Local nationalist media in these areas are unlikely to broadcast the trials or take an unbiased view. http://www.computerworld.com/home/news.nsf/all/9806265balk ...................................4................... Date: Mon, 13 Jul 1998 08:26:44 +0100 From: Josephine Berry <josie@metamute.com> Subject: Exploding Media Symposium ###################################################### E X P L O D I N G M E D I A 29/08/98 - Salford University http://www.yourserver.co.uk/em ###################################################### CONTENT: > EXPLODING MEDIA > PROGRAMME & PARTICIPANTS > PAYMENT / ENTRY / INFORMATION > BURSARIES ###################################################### ----===> EXPLODING MEDIA <===---- There is an explosion of media; desktop and on-line publishing have become a common place, digital media production and broadcasting have lead to a multiplication of 'channels' and the quality of consumer electronics rival high-tech equipment. The increase of independent, subcultural and grassroots media as well as multi-media cross-fertilisation has recently been formulated as a hybridisation of the mediascape. Coincidentally, the term hybridity has gained currency within post-colonial cultural and political debates. When talking about hybridity, a deviation from a pure origin is implied. And hybridity always points back to its points of origin. Does the explosion of media really just come down to an extension of a media mono-culture or does this fresh harvest challenge its domination? The issues at stake in an expanding mediascape are inevitably multiple. Does such a diversification destabilise or add to the culture of simulation? Does representation become more or less diverse? Is there a font for everything? By taking hold of media, do marginal groups develop complicity with mainstream power, or tools for social and political leverage? Do the moguls remain unshaken when assimilating the shaky cameras of subculture? Are alliances between marginalised groups developed or dissolved? Does a multiplicity of media promote direct democracy or develop into a structurless chaos, or even organise a new culture of conformity? exploding media will dismantle the oldest stencil for communication. Organised into three corresponding panels, the symposium will explode the sender, explode the signal, and explode the receiver. EXPLODING SENDER: The manufacture of content is undergoing a parallel expansion - across previously untapped territories and into nooks and niches of minute market segments. In an environment of merging multi-nationals, does niche specialisation create the illusion of choice within the themed mega-mall of mainstream culture? EXPLODING SIGNAL: We have a new set of axioms: There is no pure signal, no objective truth, no neutral context, and communication is always an interactive activity. What has become of the relationship between medium and message in a many-too-many media environment? EXPLODING RECEIVER: In a culture of hobbyists and 'independent' media practitioners, not to mention a highly developed media literacy, is it possible (if it ever were) to talk of the category 'media receivers'? Do networked and community media create a shift in the understanding of the 'audience'? exploding media has been organised by: Josephine Berry [josie@metamute.com] Micz Flor [micz@yourserver.co.uk] Robin Hamman [robin@hrc.wmin.ac.uk] ----===> PROGRAMME & PARTICIPANTS <===---- Saturday. 29.08.98 Salford University (address see below) 09:15. registration/refreshments 09:45. introduction ###################################################### 10:00. exploding SENDER brief introductions by speakers, followed by panel debate. (chair:Robin Hamman) Ricardo Dominguez is senior editor of The Thing, New York (a critical community server) and a member of the Digital Zapatismo Network. <www.thing.net/~rdom> Kodow Eshun is a music critic, writer and print editor of i-D magazine, He has recently published his first book More Brilliant Than The Sun. Armin Medosch is editor of the net culture magazine Telepolis and co-organiser of the symposium Art Servers Unlimited. <www.heise.de/tp> Terry Ventham is a director of Lakeside Distribution, a company specialised in the distribution of independent and niche market magazines. ###################################################### 12:00. break/lunch opportunity to view a selection of related websites and publications. ###################################################### 13.00. exploding SIGNAL brief introductions by speakers, followed by panel debate. (chair:Micz Flor) Shirin Housee is the lecturer in Sociology and Applied Social Studies at the University of Wolverhampton, and has published extensively on Media Imperialism. <www.wlv.ac.uk/shass/housee.html> Geert Lovink is a media theorist and member of Adilkno, the Foundation for Advancement of Illegal Knowledge, co-founder of the Digital City Amsterdam and the mailing list nettime. <www.desk.nl/nettime> Angela McRobbie is head of the Media Communications Department at Goldsmiths University. Sanjay Sharma is lecturer of Media Studies at Staffordshire University. ###################################################### 15.00. break/tea ###################################################### 15.30. exploding RECEIVER brief introductions by speakers, followed by panel debate. (chair:Josephine Berry) Backspace (Gio D'Angelo) is a London based organisation offering web access and support, both commercially and independently to members of the local community. <www.backspace.org> Pauline van Mourik Broekman and Simon Worthington are editors of the independent technology and culture magazine mute. <www.metamute.com> Tim Read is part of the team operating the net.radio project Gaialive. <www.gaialive.co.uk> DeeDee Halleck is a lecturer and co-founder of DeepDish TV. <www.igc.apc.org/deepdish> ###################################################### 17.30. finish In the evening, Revolting will give guests and participants the chance to continue the debate whilst chilling out at the temporary media lab, 135 Grosvenor Street, M1 7HE, <www.yourserver.co.uk/revolting> ----===> PAYMENT / ENTRY / INFORMATION <===---- To either book your place at exploding media or to receive the conference programme please complete and return the form below. Alternatively you can email: J.Charlton@time.salford.ac.uk (Jo Charlton) [Due to the impossibility for many community initiatives to afford entry fee for the ISEA98 symposium in Manchester / Liverpool, we maintain the right to reserve a number of places for local media activists, artists, community workers] If you pay by cheque, please make the cheque payable to "University of Salford" - and send the the below address. Please invoice Company...................... ............................. Address ............................. ............................. ............................. Your official order number ............................. Symposium Fee £ 15 Concessions £ 10 Postal address: exploding media Department of Design and Creative Technology, University of Salford, Centenary Building, Peru Street, Salford, M3 6EQ Tel : +44.161.295.6157 Fax : +44.161.295.6180 Email : J.Charlton@time.salford.ac.uk (Jo Charlton) URL : http://www..yourserver.co.uk/em ----===> BURSARIES <===---- Community artists and initiatives based in the North-West region can apply for a limited number of bursaries from the North West Arts Board. Please send this Entry Form completed with an accompanying letter to: North West Arts Board Visual Arts & Media Officer: Access and Education Manchester House 22 Bridge Street Manchester M3 3AB ............................................5.......... From: announce@bastards.org (Damsel Plum) Subject: Bastard Nation Conference - This week in SF Date: 12 Jul 1998 18:57:06 GMT Bastards by the Bay: The Convergence Come join the fun, education and empowerment at Bastard Nation's Second Annual Conference! July 17 - 19, 1998 Radisson Miyako Hotel San Francisco, California Our keynote speakers include Christina Crawford (author of "Mommie Dearest"), Ricki Solinger (author of "Wake Up, Little Susie") and L. Anne Babb (author of "Advocating for the Special Needs Child") There will be a Sealed Records Protest on Friday 1 - 2 pm at the Vital Records Office (101 Grove Street), and workshops on activism, grant-writing, adoption issues and much more throughout the conference. Entertainment includes a Picket-making Party Thursday evening, a Bastards on the Barbary tour and dinner Friday, and an Awards Dinner and Dance on Saturday. Registration fees are as follows: BN Members Non-members Full Conference $ 125.00 $ 135.00 One Day $ 60.00 $ 75.00 Awards Dinner & Dance $ 50.00 $ 50.00 Saturday (extra for 1-day registrants) You can register with your credit card via fax or phone at 415-680-2420 or on site. To learn more about the workshops, events and entertainment, visit our website at http://www.bastards.org/bay.htm Damsel Plum Co-Founder & Publications Chair BASTARD NATION http://www.bastards.org/ Ring Mistress, The Adoption Ring Over 320 linked sites devoted to adoption issues http://www.plumsite.com/adoptionring/ ......................................................6 Date: Mon, 13 Jul 1998 11:23:39 -0500 (CDT) From: "S. Kritikos" <napoli@wwa.com> Subject: Workshop: The Emotional Design of Online Communities Hi I would like to take this opportunity to invite everybody this Thursday to an online meeting at the GNA Forum room for a presentation by Barbara Steinberg <barbara@panix.com>, Founder and Moderator, The Web Sociology List, with subject: Souls Touching Across Wires: The Emotional Design of Online Communities The Web Sociology List Subscription information: http://www.webmonster.net/lists Frequently asked questions: http://www.panix.com/~barbara/faq.html TIME: Thursday, July 16, at 1500 PM NY Time, 1900 GMT PLACE: The GNA Forum is a virtual room accessible from 20 MOOs from around the world. Informations about access is available at: http://admin.gnacademy.org:8001/uu-gna/text/moo/forum.htm ABSTRACT: This presentation is the result of three years' life experience on the internet. I don't see my online life as an essay, but rather a maze of stories and thought-conclusions leading into the unknown. Who will I meet whose world view will change my life? Souls touching across wires isn't about conversation. It occurs when someone expresses their inner power online and gives you a philosophical, emotional, or intellectual tool that changes you forever. You can no longer see the world the same way for having known them, and you would have never met them if the internet had not allowed you to meet, souls first. Even though communication takes place with words, the other person leaves a spiritual imprint with you, which goes beyond words. This is the gift, and sometimes the danger of the internet. But this emotional exchange takes place, many times, in online communities. And so when you are creating one, you have to think about what part of people's humanity you want to reach and what you want to do with it when you get there. This is what I mean when I talk about emotional design. This presentation is going to cover such topics as * the power relationship between moderator and community member * how to tap into people's true humanity * the balance between revelation and privacy * the trust balance: case in point: the reactions of the community of problem drinkers to the man who confessed to murdering his daughter * the balance between debate and going too far--when to let go of an argument and why * the balance between innovation and social stability. ~~~~~~~ More information about the workshop is available at: http://tako.wwa.com/~napoli/workshop/index.html Please forward this message if appropriate. Hope to see you there! Regards S. Kritikos __________________________________________________________ The Virtual Community Mailing List http://admin.gnacademy.org:8001/uu-gna/text/vc/gna-vc.html __________________________________________________________ --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl