Cine Qua Non #7. Ana Luísa Valdeira (Director). University of Lisbon Centre for English Studies.

Posted in Film, photography, poetry, theatre, writing on November 12th, 2013
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Cine Qua Non #7. Ana Luísa Valdeira da Silva (Director). University of Lisbon Centre for English Studies.

Contents:

Occupy your museum
Crisis theatre enjoys a boom
of golden hills, off the golden hill
The Elephant Man (1980) by David Lynch: from ‘freak’ and clinical case to allegory
Between Light and Shadow – Iberian Intermittences
Liquid Landscapes or Not
Poetry is the Net Result of a Perfect Economy of Words
Black Mirror and the singers of Grandola

Portugese / English
128 pages + two inserts

Price: €8.00

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Wer braucht eine freundin, wenn er einen todesstrahl haben kann? Juliane Liebert. POPUP PRESS.

Posted in photography, writing on November 9th, 2013
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Wer braucht eine freundin, wenn er einen todesstrahl haben kann? Juliane Liebert. POPUP PRESS.

Monologues, photos and snapshots of Berlin.
Softcover.
A6, 96 pages.
Language: German

Price: €8.00

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The White Review @ Motto Berlin. 14.11.2013.

Posted in literature, Motto Berlin event, writing on November 9th, 2013

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The White Review @ Motto Berlin. 14.11.2013.

The White Review will be returning to Motto Books, Berlin for an evening of performance poetry and prose on Thursday 14 November, beginning promptly at 7:30 p.m.

In line with The White Review’s principles we’ll be presenting an established talent alongside a new voice, both of them performing works that blur the boundaries of performance, art and poetry.

A short introduction by the editors will be followed by readings from Eugene Ostashevsky, Greg Baxter and Matt Lomas, about whom more below. There will be drinks before, during and after the performances.

The Russian-American poet EUGENE OSTASHEVSKY, who contributed an excerpt from ‘The Pirate Who Does Not Know the Value of Pi’ (about the relationship between a pirate and his parrot) to The White Review 8. Famous for his physically animated, ventriloquistic performances, Ostashevksy’s books of poetry include ‘The Life and Opinions of DJ Spinoza’, published by Ugly Duckling Presse.

GREG BAXTER was born in Texas in 1974. He is the author of two books, A Preparation for Death and The Apartment. A third book, Munich Airport, will be published in 2014. He lives in Berlin.

MATT LOMAS, whose ‘A Letter That Never Reached England’ featured in The White Review 4, will read a new piece that ‘oscillates between English and German’, appropriately for an event organised by an English-language journal in Berlin.

The State Vol IV: Dubai. Rahel Aima, Ahmad Makia (Eds.). The State.

Posted in history, politics, writing on November 8th, 2013
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The State Vol IV: Dubai. Rahel Aima, Ahmad Makia (Eds.). The State.

In Kerala, a term exists for people like my parents, bandied by neighbours and relatives – Gulf return. Always used in the singular, it is a term associated with privilege, a term for the once-insider who will die an outsider. It accentuates the success story, pretending to know and define those who, out of desperation, adventure or marriage, left their homes to seek work, and now return to expected social glory and envy.—Deepak Unnikrishnan, “Gulf Return,” Himal (December 2010)

A few months ago, we found ourselves sitting in a blush-walled room in the grey area between Mattancherry and Fort Kochi, Kerala. We were in a Gulf Return house on a Gulf Return street, in a town built with Gulf Return money. Just a short ferry ride away was a Dubai Ports World terminal; right on our doorstep, at the nearby Kunnumpuram Junction, was a UAE Xchange outpost, and an ice cream parlour selling Sharjah Shakes. We had left Dubai, with the intention of producing this issue looking at it from across the Arabian Sea, but everywhere we looked, Dubai was all around us.

Can you ever leave Dubai?

In the last year, we’ve produced THE STATE from Madagascar, Portugal, the US, India, and the UAE. Thus far, we’ve been thinking of this publication as placeless, rooted only in the nebulous printernet. Turns out we’ve been trying to figure out Dubai—this strange, wonderful, occasionally traumatic place we grew up in—all along. (Jury’s still out on whether that trauma was due to Dubai, or just the turbulence of adolescence.) The thing is, we are the children of Gulf Returnees ourselves. We didn’t leave our home countries to come here; Dubai’s the only home we’ve ever known. Yet most narratives of Dubai focus on its extremes—solar-sintered skyscrapers made from sun, sand and glass or the unknown labourers that built them; unbridled admiration for its visionary transformation or vitriolic, xenophobic schadenfreude; searing desert heat or lush, landscaped golf courses. As residents-but-not-citizens, we’re paradoxically privileged, yet invisible; our stories remain as yet untold.

Our first questions linger. How do you speak a place, or from a place? Can cultural production have terroir? What does it mean to be a publication from Dubai that has thus far evaded ever actually addressing its positionality head on? Consider this a first attempt.

Contents:

The State Shall Remain Nameless
Manan Ahmed Asif
An Arabikatha
Deepak Unnikrishnan

Teaching Moments in Dubai
Ayesha Mulla

Remembering My Narrow Veins
Maryam Wissam Al Dabbagh

Sharjah Smells Like Biscuits
Sophie Chamas

5,000 Kilometres of Evocations: Bombay – Dubai – Mumbai
Nilofar Ansher

Aesthetics of Disempowerment
Sheyma Buali
Memory Images from Dubai
Ben Thorp Brown

Speculations and Questions on Dubaization
Fadi Shayya

Indelible Marks: Africa’s Traces On Dubai
Jareh Das

A Drone’s Eye View of the Speculative Future
Manuel Schwab

The Brown Apple
Jaswinder Bolina

Language: English
Pages: 140

Price: €12.00

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Points in Line #2: Gestural Objects. Laura McLardy (Ed.). Points in Line.

Posted in magazines, writing on November 8th, 2013

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Points in Line #2: Gestural Objects. Laura McLardy (Ed.). Points in Line.

The second issue features contributions from:

Hanne Lippard
Dan Stockholm Henriksen
Julieta Aranda
Marion Coutts
Jeremias Holliger
Liz Magic Laser
Eric Ellingsen
Elise Eeraerts
Rodrigo Maltez Novaes
Emily Roysdon
Paul Schatz

Language: english
Pages: 30 + fold-out poster

Price: €8.00

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Motto @ X Marks the Bökship. 7-10.11.2013.

Posted in Events, poetry, Stores, writing on November 4th, 2013
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Thursday 7th November

Motto presents: TLTRPReß @ X Marks the Bökship.

Inc. Publication launch of The Significance Of The Photographic Image In A Filmic Context by Paulius Petraitis, accompanied by a presentation by the author.

Motto will present TLTRPreß titles, as well as a range of selected publications from various publishers.

18 – 21h

Motto @ X Marks the Bökship is a temporary, accommodated bookstore project which is open daily from 11am, 7th – 10th November 2013.

X Marks the Bökship
210 / Unit 3 Cambridge Heath Road
London E2 9NQ
UK

E.R.O.S. #3: Woman

Posted in magazines, writing on November 1st, 2013
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E.R.O.S. Issue 3 | Woman

Nina Power, The Purloined Sex – Stalemate, By Way of an Editorial – Naomi Pearce,
Keep Strong (Before the Pain Turns to Tears) – Hannah Black, No Girl No Gun (Notes For a Story About Women) – Linda Stupart, National Velvet – Maija Timonen, The Phantom Film Syndrome – Beatrice Loft Schulz, Seduction as a Virtual Object – AnonID 711391, 711391 (Excerpts) – Clunie Reid, Bodies in Space/Bodies Without a Trace – Lucian, Mother Knows Best (Or, A Young Girl’s Guide to Success) – Edd Bagenal, The Woman who was Mistaken by her Husband for a Hat – Jurgen Mealfeyt, Breasts – Philippa Snow, The Diseases of the Era (Angelina Jolie’s Double Mastectomy) – Rózsa Farkas, Writing Desire, Writing Self – Sami Jalili, Postcards from the Revolution – Cally Spooner, A Solo Event for Thinking (Version Two) – Alice Butler, Unbound, Unleashed, Unforgiving (Kathy Acker’s ‘Non-Fiction’) – Alice Entwistle, Digressing From Nowhere (Remarking Woolf) – Friedrich Nietzsche, Ariadne’s Lament

E.R.O.S. #3: Woman
Publisher: EROS Press
Language: English
Size: 18.5 x 13 cm
Binding: Softcover

Price: €14.00
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Labyrinth. Four Times Through the Labyrinth. Olaf Nicolai, Jan Wenzel. Spector Books, Rollo Press.

Posted in writing on October 26th, 2013
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Labyrinth. Four Times Through the Labyrinth. Olaf Nicolai, Jan Wenzel. Spector Books, Rollo Press.

*New English Translation

“This book on labyrinths is wonderful! It enlarges the traditional catalog of labyrinths so much and so well, being itself labyrinthine,” remarked Jean-Luc Nancy, the French philosopher, on the German edition, published by Spector Books, ISBN 978-3-940064-82-0, in summer 2012. Sadie Plant, author of “Zeroes + Ones: Digital Women and the New Technoculture”, has now translated Labyrinth into English.

The starting point for this transcript of four lectures, all held in Leipzig in 2010, is a public art work that Olaf Nicolai installed in Paris in 1998. By exploring and combining a broad spectrum of topics that relate to the theme of the labyrinth, this book serves as both, a reference system to Nicolai’s work as well as an independent source book dealing with labyrinthian matter ranging from the minotaur to the floorplans of IKEA. Published in collaboration with Rollo Press.

320 pp., ca. 280 black-and-white illustrations,
softcover, perfect bound

Price: €12.00

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Originalausgabe / Original Issue. Anita Witek. Dent-De-Leone.

Posted in writing on October 10th, 2013
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Originalausgabe / Original Issue. Anita Witek. Dent-De-Leone.

“This fundamental difference between reality and representation, between material and image, between original and reproduction, the conditions of contemporary image production between everyday culture and questions inherent in art, is the starting point for Anita Witek’s artistic works.” (Franz Thalmair) published here for the first time in the shape of a Vogue magazine.

Language: English and German
Editor: Anita Witek & Åbäke
Text:Walter Moser, Franz Thalmair

Price: D €35

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Mousse Magazine #40.

Posted in magazines, newsprint, writing on October 10th, 2013
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Mousse Magazine #40.

Including :

Laura Poitras, Matt Wolf, Rachel Rose, Adriano Costa, Gavin Kenyon, Lucien Smith, Josh Kline, Ariana Reines, Vanessa Place.

The Resistance to Symbols, Outside Art. After Venice, Thinking Contemporary Exhibitions, After Effects: Art and Technology, Then and Now, Artists and Workers.

Price: D €9

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