<< Constant Index

Archive for May, 2003

an interview with Margaret Atwood

Category: science/fiction

Privatisation and ownership are key issues in the book, too?

Yes. I also postulate what is already happening: public space has been more or less given up for lost. Security is now a matter of gated communities. Instead of having people living in one place and commuting, which has now become too unsafe, in the book they’ve got the mall within the walls, like castles. Corporations want to prevent knowledge theft and raiding, because everything is now completely commercialised. That means the profit motive is the only motive. There is no more pure science, but if you’ve looked at a university recently you know that the people who get the grants are the people that large corporations think might be doing something useful for them. What you have mostly is people thieving from graduate students, as it were. The students do the work, the guy puts his name on it and collects the rewards, but not in my book. Things are better in some respects: if the students invent something, they get to collect on it, which makes them very inventive.

read the interview

Violent song lyrics increase aggression

Category: Uncategorized

Or so they say here. Maybe after listening to the new M.Manson cd I’ll suddenly be tempted to go and kick somebody’s ass at Iowa State University.

Cyberpunk academics in Prague

Category: science/fiction

Next August in Prague, maybe we should visit this:
“Visions of Humanity in Cyberculture, Cyberspace and Science Fiction is a new project being launched in August 2003.

The aim of the project is to promote the inter- and multi-disciplinary study of all aspects relating to how cyberculture, cyberpunk and science fiction can bring significant perspectives to bear on the nature of what it is to be human and the understanding of what it means for human beings to live in communities.

The project will initially centre around an annual conference held each August in Eastern and Central Europe, and the United Kingdom. The work of the project is to be supported by an email discussion group, ISSN ejournal, ISBN publication series and an evolving research and resource centre.

The project will seek to identify, develop and explore a number of key themes;

* the relationship between cyberculture, cyberspace and science fiction
* science fiction and cyberpunk as a medium for exploring the nature of persons
* humans, cyborgs and the biotechnology
* human and post-human politics
* bodies in cyberculture
* gender and cyberspace
* electronic persons, community and identity
* nature, enhancing nature, and artificial intelligence
* Cyberpolitics, cyberdemocracy, cyberterror
* Cybercultures
* religion and spirituality
* technology vs. the natural; cyberculture and the green movement”