Hi Mark --
a few comments:
I was instantly intrigued when I saw this show was up at HKW, and I did make
the
show but had to depart Berlin right before the conference (after breakfast with
Barack and Michelle @ the Reichstag)...
If this was mentioned on nettime (considering that it was once the primary
topic of this list), I missed it -- did anyone from this collective
attend and do they wish to offer a report?
I spent an hour with Pit and Diana at HKW, and they did podcast the whole
thing,
worth listening to, as Fred et al gave a good talk.
(I downloaded the podcasts, but have misplaced the URLs -- maybe someone could
re-post them? Pit??) (thanks Nina!!)
This past spring I had my Meaning of Information Technology students consume
the last chapter of the Cyberculture to Counterculture book -- though it was
quite deep history to them, and quite abstract in that sense -- it was hard for
them to grasp.
From eco-psychedelia to Internet neoliberalism: The CONFERENCE will
revolve around questions of the legacy of the California counterculture. How
did
...snip...
of the Anthropocene, are being negotiated, updated, or ??? in some cases ???
forgotten.
Yeah, anyway, the show was quite good, imho, a bit hard to picture what it
looked like, if you had not been immersed in that cultural situation as we
were.
I came into possession of a Whole Earth Catalog via my brother who was, for a
time, the editor of a radical student paper out of UCSD, and a member of the
Weather Underground. He's 13 years older than I, and in 1968, when the first
Whole Earth Catalog came out, I was just 10. A few years later when the really
big one came out, 400 pages or so, I had a copy, and pored over it for many
many
hours. days... As a nascent foray into what became a deep involvement in the
mail art network, I recall sending to a majority of the addresses in the
catalog
for more information, brochures, etc... It all made a deep impression, though
one which was quite foreign to my family milieu (with my father there at MIT's
Lincoln Lab, @ the Pentagon, etc). It definitely was a counter to the culture
that I was a part of as far as my teenage mind could measure.
I'm thinking that the next step to this exhibition would be a wide creative
exploration of (open/living/general) systems theory from Bertalanffy to Church,
Miller, Odum, Simms, etc etc and all those who were outside the
cybernetics/cold
war systems context.
At any rate, the show was dense on textual and media content, well
choreographed, enjoyable, informative, and again left me wondering what it
'looked like' to a 20-30-something German academic media artist. SO, maybe
there
are some attendees near to that profile on nettime who would care to reflect on
it... I didn't take any notes, though I suspect that the catalog will give a
good account of the shows actual content. I was impressed by the show -- and
would be interested in hearing from the curators where the original idea to do
such a project came from!
Turner's somewhat radical connecting of Stewart Brand and the WEC/WELL, the
counterculture generally to Wiener's Cold War cybernetics seems very intuitive
and not as radical as it may appear on the surface. I especially appreciated
his
point how applied systems theory (taking the form of operations analysis,
systems analysis, etc), is one formative basis for the corporate development of
contemporary social computing (i.e., the corporate RD management structures
of Silicon Valley). This for me is a powerful conceptual step in decoding the
'effects' and the pervasiveness of the military-industrial structure within
Amurikan society. It is my belief that the US system is still, to a large
degree, dependent on that M-I-(Academic) Complex framework for its
socio-economic-political structural integrity. It's only less visible in these
recent years, but no less powerful a determinant. Unfortunately most Amurikans
do not make the connection with surveillance, drones-in-the-neighborhood,
security, paranoia, etc as symptoms of a defensive (and of course many times
offensive) imperial military state.
Another book which gives some useful threads with the development of the MIA
complex of which Silicon Valley is only one manifestation is:
Leslie, S.W., 1993. The Cold War and American Science: The
Military-Industrial-Academic Complex at MIT and Stanford, New York, NY:
Columbia
University Press.
Anyway, Mark, get the catalog and listen to the podcasts that Nina gave the
addresses of... it's well worth your time.
Cheers,
John
--
++
Dr. John Hopkins, BSc, MFA, PhD
ensconced on the Western Slope of Colorado
http://neoscenes.net/
http://tech-no-mad.net/blog/
++
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