Wednesday, June 13, 2007

CCS Summer Party 27 June 07


The CCS summer party will take place on Wednesday 27th June, at
Blackfriars Wine Bar. It's under a railway arch very near to Southwark
tube station or a few minutes' walk from Waterloo.

Time: 6.30pm onwards
Address: 80 Scoresby Street, Blackfriars Road, London. SE1 0XN
Map: http://www.blackfriarswinebar.co.uk/map.htm

Monday, June 11, 2007

27 June & 2 July 2007 - Centre for Cultural Studies - PhD AHRC Training Workshops.

BIOPOWER and the GENEOLOGY of MODERN ARCHITECTURE.

June 27th, 2007
15.00-18.00 v.tba

Sven-Olov Wallenstein

is a Swedish philosopher who has written several books on philosophy, aesthetics and architecture and is the translator of Deleuze, Derrida, Agamben, Hegel, Kant, Ranciere and others. He is a professor at Södertörns University and a researcher at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, as well as the head editor of Site Magazine. A collection of his writings, essays and lectures has just been published by Axl Books.

Eyal Weizman
is the head of Research Architecture at Goldsmiths. His current research is into the relationship between war and architecture in Palestine/Israel and his latest book, Hollow Land, will be published by Verso in June.

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PLUS, the following week, a day long event:

URBAN AUDIOLOGIES

July 2nd, 2007
11am- 6.30 with lunch break and drinks and ents after. v.tba

Julian Henriques
from Goldsmiths College will be speaking about sonics and movement. He is author of 'Sonic Dominance and Reggae Sound System Sessions’, in M. Bull and L. Back (eds.), Auditory Culture, as well as various other essays and articles and has also made numerous TV and film documentaries, including Babymother for Film Four.

Michael Bull

from Sussex University is the author of Sounding out the City: Personal Stereos and the Management of Everyday Life, The Auditory Culture Reader and most recently Mobilizing the Social: Sound Technology in Urban Experience. He has studied the mobile music revolution since the arrival of the Sony Walkman in the late 1970s and will be speaking about his latest research into ipod culture and the fashioning of sound.

Vivek Bald
is a New York based filmmaker and music producer. His documentary Taxi-Vala chronicled the lives, experiences and political activism of South Asian immigrant taxi drivers in New York City. He also produces and performs music under the name Siraiki and is co-founder of the groundbreaking Mutiny club night. He will be showing his latest film Mutiny: Asians Storm British Music followed by a Q and A session, as well as talking about his forthcoming audio/visual projects.

Steve 'Kode 9' Goodman

is Lecturer in Media Production at the University of East London and member of the autonomous research collective, the Ccru (Cybernetic Culture Research Unit). He also dj's on London pirate radio and internationally under a number of guises. His research interests include Cybernetic Culture, Sonic Culture, Diasporic futurisms, and he will be presenting from his new book Sonic Warfare.

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Please Note that both workshops are CCS AHRC funded training days put on for CCS PhD students. Attendance will be strictly limited. For further information or to book a place please contact Jeff Kinkle (e-mail CCS) for Biopower and the Genealogy of Architecture or Alison Hulme (e-mail CCS) for Urban Audiologies. Please bare in mind that early registration is advised as in order to make these events as intensive and engaging as possible there will be specific readings sent out which workshop participants will be expected to have read in advance.

Hutnyk - 22nd June 07 Revolution Books, New York


7pm - 9pm on Friday 22nd June Revolution Books, New York

John Hutnyk:

"Rumour and fear breeds violence and death: the limits of hybridity-talk and the chapati fetish of 1857
(or, the appearance and eclipse of politics in cultural studies)"
.

A discussion of the influence of the early work of the subaltern school of history, considering the waning career of the term hybridity in postcolonial and cultural studies, assessed on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the first war of independence in India. From Marx on colonialism, to Mao on organisation, the take up of actually existing struggles is subsequently filtered through theory and needs to be evaluated in the context of the present.

Revolution Books
9 West 19th Street
(Between 5th and 6th Ave)
New York, NY 10011
www.revolutionbooksnyc.org

John Hutnyk is Academic Director of the Centre for Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London and is author of several books including "The Rumour of Calcutta" (1996), "Critique of Exotica" (2000), "Bad Marxism: Capitalism and Cultural Studies" (2004). He recently published "Diaspora and Hybridity", co-authored with Virinder Kalra and Raminder Kaur (Sage 2006). Weblog: http://hutnyk.blogspot.com

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

21 July 2007 Manchester




21 July 2007, 1.30pm
Workers Film Association
9 Lucy Street, M15 4BX

2007 marks 150 years since the events of 1857: the first war of independence by the peoples of the sub-continent, which the British refer to as the Indian mutiny. Millions of people were ruled by the East India Company. The company’s rule was characterised by brutality and repression. Their practices led to the death of 10 million in the first Bengal famine of 1770. 1857 saw the unity of South Asians across religious and ethnic divides in a struggle against the rule of foreign occupiers.




Revenge: the execution
of rebels by cannon
fire in 1857





1.30 – 3.30pm: Understanding 1857
The Historical Significance of 1857: Kalpana Wilson (South Asia Solidarity Group)
East India Company – a History of Loot:
Nick Robins (author of The Corporation that Changed the World)
3.30 - 4:00 pm Tea

4.00 - 6.00pm East India Co. to Halliburton
‘Terrorists’ then and now: Naeem Malik - (1857 Committee)
Iraq – East India Co. (1763 – Factory established in Basra) to Halliburton:
Hani Lazim - (Iraqi Democrats Against Occupation)
The Folksongs of 1857: D Aijaz, (author of Kaal Bolaindi - folksongs sung today from the 1857 uprising)