Eric Kluitenberg on Sun, 16 Apr 2000 23:37:44 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Ravi Sundram lectures @ De Balie (Amsterdam) & via the net -Thursday April 20th |
A N N O U N C E M E N T Ravi Sundrama lectures @ De Balie, Amsterdam & live via http://www.balie.nl/live Wonderland 2000 #5 Ravi Sundaram (SARAI - New Delhi) "Recycled Modernity, or the hidden abodes of Computer culture(s) in India" De Balie - Grote Zaal, Thursday April 20th, 2000 Aanvang: 20.00 uur This presentation takes a look at the fuzzy world of gray electronic culture, which has transformed the meaning of everday life in contemporary India. Consider this: in contrast to the West, informal networks and players dominate electronic daily life in South Asia, neighbourhood cable, internet booths and grey market computers dominate the market. We cab argue that a recyled or a 'pirate electronic modernity" has emerged in India's cities, largely non-legal and often outside the domain of the old state. Within the country, the everyday form of this electronic culture often draws in those social groups excluded from the old hegemonic social coalition. Further, this recyled culture has developed a historically specific investment in modernity, as well as the global, yet through its practice often breaks modernity's rules. This is a world that is magical and dispersed, but on its own terms, often making a muddle of Western (and Indian) radical solutions. CV. ------------ Ravi Sundaram is a Fellow of the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies in Delhi and the Joint Director of the Sarai, the New Media Initiative ( http://www.sarai.net ). Ravi Sundaram is researching issues of urban cultures in India in the context of the decline of the rural imaginary of old-style nationalism, and the rise of new urban cultures of conflict, violence and increased access to a global modernity. Specifically, Ravi Sundaram's work looks at the cohering of a new electronic culture in South Asia (television, mass music culture and the new computer culture) and the changing urban spaces in India from the 1980s onwards. He has spoken and written extensively on these issues in India and the rest of the world. This program can also be followed live via the Internet (in co-operation with the Digital City Amsterdam - DDS): http://www.balie.nl/live or: http://live.dds.nl ----------------------------------------------------------------- URL's: * SARAI - a new centre for networkd and urban culture in New Delhi: http://www.sarai.net * Complete text - "Asian Futures...." http://www.bln.de/dogfilm/hm.dat.sund.html * Interview for Telepolis (by Geert Lovink) "About the Brazilianization of India": http://www01.ix.de/tp/english/html/result.xhtml?url=/tp/english/inhalt/reg/1047/ 1.html&words=Sundaram * Article in Mute - Critical information Services (London) - "The Nineteenth Century and the Future of Technocultures in India": http://www.metamute.com/issue11/sundaram.htm * A few lectures on-line: http://www.hkw.de/forum/forum1/doc/statem/e-sundaram.html http://www.c3.hu/events/98/sundaram/ http://www.telefonica.es/fat/esundara.html ----------------------------------------------------------------- TICKET SALES & RESERVATION Admission: DFL 12,50 (DFL 10,00 CJP/CKV/PAS 65/Stadspas/Collegekaart). Reserve by telephone: 020 - 55 35 100. Ma t/m do van 14.00 - 20.00 uur, vr van 14.00 - 21.30 uur en za van 17.00 - 21.30 uur. Opening hours kassa: ma t/m do van 17.00 - 20.30 uur, vr en za van 17.00 - 22.00 u. ----------------------------------------------------------------- De Balie, Kleine-Gartmanplantsoen 10, Amsterdam Information: +31.20 - 553 51 51 _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold