Hi Marc (and all), I guess I came late to the discussion and missed the reading list, but I just found it in the archives.
It seems like this class is related: http://lab404.com/179/ I teach at a public liberal arts university ( http://unca.edu ) , and we all take turns (from every department) teaching a freshman introductory colloquim course. Teachers can choose their own topic, as long as it involves reading, writing, and thinking. It was fun teaching this course to non-new media art majors. Best, Curt >Congrats Marc >I'm a it late coming to the conversation >I got as far as the reading list >and just wanted to say >what great books these are >> >> The Revolution of Everyday Life. Raoul Vaneigem. PM Press; Second >> edition edition (November 1, 2010). ISBN-10: 1604862130 >> >> Electronic Disturbance, The (New Autonomy Series). Critical Art >> Ensemble. Autonomedia (May 1, 1994). ISBN-10: 1570270066 >> >I particularly love the Chapter 20 of the The Revolution of Everyday >Life "Creativity, Spontaneity, and Poetry" >http://library.nothingness.org/articles/SI/en/display/66 >Really one of my all time favourite texts > >I wrote my college thesis on new media art and activism in 2004 >It wasnt a great piece of writing or anything but I enjoyed the research >I wrote about Floodnet the distributed denial of service attacks by >the Electronic Disturbance Theatre in support of the Zapatistas. >http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/EDTECD.html >Some great essays in that little book too > >Best of luck > >Kevin >_______________________________________________ >NetBehaviour mailing list >[email protected] >http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour _______________________________________________ NetBehaviour mailing list [email protected] http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
