"Fluxus cannot save the world ..." - join our talk at 32c3 in Hamburg
Submitted by leo on Thu, 2015-12-24 10:07
From December 27th to 30th, 2015, ‘Gated Communities’ is the motto for the 32nd annual assembly:
The Congress gives us the space to do the things ourselves. To discuss for ourselves, to think for ourselves, to decide for ourselves and to tinker on our own. Our own gated community helps us against some of the bullshit bingo of the outside world.
It´s this time of year again and the Chaos Computer Club invites ‘all galactic life forms’ to Hamburg, Germany. Join our lecture about Fluxus cannot save the world on Day 3, December 29th, at 2pm at Saal 6.
The Fluxus movement came about in the early 1960ies and the talk will discuss its strenghts, dead-ends and promises for the creation of works and community in our digital environment. International, transdisciplinary, non-institutional, anti-art and playful. After several years of research and new art productions, Leo Findeisen and Markus Zimmermann will present their findings.
Announcement: Due to recent events in art & culture, we decide to extend our research period until 2022, the 60th birthday of a movement that cannot save the world.
From December 27th to 30th, 2015, ‘Gated Communities’ is the motto for the 32nd annual assembly:
The Congress gives us the space to do the things ourselves. To discuss for ourselves, to think for ourselves, to decide for ourselves and to tinker on our own. Our own gated community helps us against some of the bullshit bingo of the outside world.
To explain the motto, the ccc states: ‘it is 2015, a large part of the population has withdrawn to heavily guarded islands of comfort.’ Why be so harsh on your contemporaries? Here are some of the ccc-answers:
- Technological eco-systems created by single companies relieve us from the burden of choosing our own mobile phones, computers or fitness trackers and understanding how they work. We let their commercial interests decide, which media outlets, news bulletins and expressions of opinion we notice and which are accepted by the globally valid terms of service.
- Filter bubbles take the pain away of thinking for ourselves. Strongly opinionated agitators provide acceptable sources of information and handy concepts of an enemy.
- Communities of states, just recently lauded with a nobel peace prize, take the moral duty from us, having to think about the costs of our wealth: They erect walls, experiment with biometrics and discuss firing orders – finally easing the fear they monger every day.
- Every day politics are taking away the burden of social responsibility, participation or even scrutiny: By arranging treaties behind closed doors setting in stone for which there appears to be no alternative.
- Transnational surveillance systems help us to pre-emptively separate our fellow human beings into good and evil, beneficials and useless ones. In our cozy cherished sociosphere full of barely prevented terror attacks and career defining social networks we devotedly seize the opportunity never to cultivate a conscience of our own. Subversives, dissenters and outliers disturbing our harmony are automatically and systematically blocked, arrested, harrassed or placed in their very own filter bubble.
- The guardians of our networks and browsers take away the difficult decisions, which connections are expendable. We get to enjoy those providers that can afford us and are supplied with exactly the services and speed we are entitled to.
go to Chaos Computer Club: streaming of all lectures; our lecture is here