Content repo for PLU Special Issue #3 - Urgent Publishing
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Authorship/Makers
Speed
This is something that populists take advantage of readily by short-circuiting social media speediness and academic slowness: while Jordan Peterson is trending on Twitter, surely the countering academic articles are in the making, but these refutations of Peterson’s take on Foucault or Derrida simply come too slowly to have any useful effect.
she says that the history of publishing was always also about speed. Think back to the 16th-18th century chapbooks: street literature that was cheaply produced and meant to spread popular cultures widely.
Being invited to speak at a conference with the word 'urgent' in the title seems odd: since arriving in the Netherlands, Clara in fact has been feeling a general lack of urgency.
authoritarian authorship, single-voiced narratives, hero perspectives
Where should we cut them? Who is making decisions? Who moderates the decisions? What’s kept/ what’s preserved in the process?
A funded experiment, an online book fair where online users get to publish, amateurization of critique
There are also questions of authorship and ownership. Crediting meme-makers becomes more widespread on the left flank of the political spectrum.
We need good, strong, and wide networks of digital rights organizations and journalists.
a history of exodus, in which meme communities migrate from one medium to another.
an on-going effort to make a memers’ union, to start protecting the authorial rights of meme-makers
We should not give in to the instantism we’re being pushed into by dominant modes of knowledge-producers, but start taking back initiative, and: start to troll.
The user will be able to organize resources to create narratives and print a pdf out of it.
The collective ‘research through making’ approach mixes speed and visual and textual assignments with performative elements that require quick responses.
Furthermore, not all labour that goes in the project is acknowledged: work that is not code is often rendered invisible.
One of the most interesting spaces to understand where Mastodon is going is the issue tracker9: this is where plenty of users, not necessarily developers, request, discuss, and criticize features.