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<nettime-ann> MUTE VOL 2 #5 - Climate Change Issue |
. M | U | T | E | __ rrrrrread it!
______________________________________________ 10 May 2007_
MUTE VOL 2 #5 SPRING/SUMMER ISSUE MAY '07
It's Not Easy Being Green - The Climate Change Issue is out now online and in print:
This issue of Mute seeks to defuse the ideological bomb of climate change, expose the plundering and non-reproduction of global resources as a problem of capital not mankind per se, and investigate the ends to which the spectre of eco-catastrophe is being used
Articles include:
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Capital Climes
by Will Barnes
http://www.metamute.org/en/Capital-Climes
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Act Macro: Technological Alternatives to Green Austerity
By James Woudhuysen
The emerging capitalist War On Global Warming concentrates on adapting technology and behaviour – particularly other nation-states’ – to mitigate environmental damage. Transformative technological and social innovation is better than meddling micro-action, argues James Woudhuysen
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Climate Change CO2lonialism
By Tim Forsyth and Zoe Young
In their tango with grassroots green activists, inter-governmental policy makers are taking the lead. Tim Forsyth and Zoe Young analyse the ‘new green order’ and the carbon offset colonialism that accompanies it
http://www.metamute.org/en/Climate-Change-CO2lonialism
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Promised Lands
By Kate Rich
It’s not just the founders of hippy communes or artists like Amy Balkin who are looking for ‘a breathing space from the State’ in which to experiment with freedom and free-time. Big IT companies like Google apparently share their ideals. With a commitment to ‘me time’, the production of ‘universal access’, and (energy) sovereignty, corporates are leveraging the dream of the commons
http://www.metamute.org/en/Promised-Lands-Google-and-Morningstar
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Apocalypse and/or Business as Usual? The Energy Debate After the 2004 US Presidential Elections
By George Caffentzis
Since 2004 the rhetoric of Bush’s republican party has turned curiously green, integrating climate change as a legitimation for neoliberal imperialism. At the same time the unintended consequence of America’s unsuccessful adventures has been to enrich an ‘anti-neoliberal’ class of oil rentiers in Africa, Latin America and Asia. George Caffentzis plots the changes in the US energy policy as it turns from eco-naysayer to ecowarrior
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Heavy Opera
By Anthony Iles
John Jordan and James Marriott's operatic audio tour set in London’s Square Mile is intended to awaken city workers to the impact of financial systems on climate change. But not only does And While London Burns misgauge how much the suits already know, its hysterical tone also harmonises too easily with the coming new eco-order. Review by Anthony Iles
http://www.metamute.org/en/Heavy-Opera
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BPerkeley Inc.?
By Iain A. Boal
As a lead in to Mute’s climate change special issue, Iain Boal reports on BP’s recent biofuel deal with University of California, Berkeley. In the name of a planetary emergency, the oil behemoth has both managed to greenwash biotech research and further entrench campus capitalism
http://www.metamute.org/en/BPerkeley-Inc
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Also in this issue...
Zombie Nation
By Paul Helliwell
As the scarcity essential to the cultural commodity is undermined by digital abundance and social networking, social relations and the unique ‘live’ performance are all that's left to sell. Mass market music increasingly resembles relational art with its dream of waking the ‘zombies’ of consumer culture, but are the citizens of Web 2.0 society born again or undead? Paul Helliwell shuffles through the mall...
http://www.metamute.org/en/Zombie-Nation
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Expropriate, Accumulate, Financialise
By Chris Wright and Samantha Alvarez
David Harvey is an influential academic theorist of the spatial, cultural and economic forms of neoliberal capitalism. Chris Wright and Samantha Alvarez contrast his analysis with that of Michael Hudson, whose Super Imperialism exposed the fiscal foundations of neoliberalism some 30 years earlier
http://www.metamute.org/en/Expropriate-accumulate-financialise
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Further articles and reviews, already announced, are by Anthony Davies, Howard Slater and Peter Suchin
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