politics

Imaginal Machines: Autonomy and Self-Organization in the Revolutions of Everyday Life

Publication Type  Book
Citation Key  1216
Year of Publication  2009
Authors  Shukaitis, S.
City  New York
Publisher  Autonomedia
Publication Language  English
Notes  

Review: More Lennon than Lenin, Imaginal Machines by Stevphen Shukaitis
http://www.thenextlayer.org/node/1215

More Lennon than Lenin: Imaginal Machines by Stevphen Shukaitis

It is not often that left-wing politics is associated with attributes such as humour and wit. Stevphen Shukaitis' book Imaginal Machines (2009) is not only abundant with it but shows that certain strands of imaginative revolutionary politics in the 20th century were also endowed with those precious qualities. This journey through the radical imagination of the left, written in a compelling and entertaining style, is definitely worth a read for everybody interested in radical and antagonistic politics.

An Email from Variant

THE FUTURE OF THE ARTS IN SCOTLAND

CREATIVE SCOTLAND : An artists' briefing paper

There is much confusion over the formation of Creative Scotland and its remit, responsibilities and functions. What the proposed changes will mean for artists is being still further confused in what appears to be inter-agency horse trading. In the absence of transparency, the need for "confidence" in the "process" is much invoked. Here is what we think is actually going on...

Interview: Formalist Cinema and Politics

Publication Type  Journal Article
Citation Key  McCall 1977
Year of Publication  1977
Authors  McCall, A.; Dasgupta, G.
Journal Title  Performing Arts Journal
Volume  1
Pages  51--61
Number  3
Publisher  The MIT Press on behalf of the Performing Arts Journal, Inc.
Publication Language  eng
URL  http://www.jstor.org/stable/3245249

Interview: Formalist Cinema and Politics

Publication Type  Journal Article
Citation Key  581
Year of Publication  1977
Authors  McCall, A.; Dasgupta, G.
Journal Title  Performing Arts Journal
Volume  1
Pages  51--61
Number  3
Publisher  The MIT Press on behalf of the Performing Arts Journal, Inc.
Publication Language  eng
URL  http://www.jstor.org/stable/3245249
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