- School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
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ItemIs This How Participation Goes?Papastergiadis, N ; Wyatt, D (The Department of Visual Arts, University of California, 2019)If the neoliberal regime is a constitutive force in a decentered and globalizing world, then what is the starting point for determining its flows, and what is its impact on art and culture? Conversely, have we not also seen art swell and expand through new kinds of transnational collaborations that are giving aesthetic form to cosmopolitan ideals? Are artists at the vanguard of the resistance against the gaping inequalities threatening to rip apart the social fabric or are they, despite their democratising intentions, an extension of an invidious system? These contradictory forces are played out on many fronts and with divergent inflections. In this brief essay we sketch out the hydraulic tensions between the corporate global culture and mass cultural participation by focusing on recent events in Melbourne. As a second-tier global city, celebrated for its livability and cultural vitality, the development of Melbourne’s cultural scene over the last fifteen years exemplifies the various spatial formations around which aesthetic experience is being organized and redistributed.
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ItemWhite night: city as eventButt, D ; Papastergiadis, N ; McQuire, S (Research Unit in Public Cultures, 2015)The nature of public events are changing as cities evolve. As people move more and more around the world, and information is circulating in increasingly complex patterns and rapid rhythms, the horizons of our urban landscape are also undergoing radical transformation. Urban illumination projects, which have become popular in cities around the world over the last decade, are a particularly visible sign of the ways in which new technologies and forms of public action are being combined to produce temporary transformations of urban space. In this project we seek to examine the impact of a major public event — White Night — in the City of Melbourne. Through this event we witness a significant shift in the location and duration of artistic events as they move to inhabit the urban fabric. But the event is also conditioned by a central expectation that the public can engage and interact with art, and with each other. Is the quality of the art or the public experience more important in defining the event? Or does framing the question in oppositional terms miss the point?
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ItemForestPAPASTERGIADIS, N (Zed, 2016)
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ItemThe Fold in Diasporic Intimacy and Cultural HybridityPAPASTERGIADIS, N ; Trimboli, D ; Ahn, S ; Khouri, K ; Supriyanto, E ; Yung, A (Sharjah Art Foundation, 2016)
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ItemSpace/Time: Matter and Motion in On KawaraPapastergiadis, N (UNIV CHICAGO PRESS, 2016-03-01)
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ItemFacing the Fall: Humanism after Nihilism in Christos Tsiolkas's WritingPapastergiadis, N (PENN STATE UNIV PRESS, 2016)Abstract The novels of Christos Tsiolkas provide a powerful portrayal of the hollowing out of radical political ideologies and the disaggregation of cultural bonds. The struggle of living in a world where both Marxism and multiculturalism are seen as failures has been expressed through a narrative form that at first resulted in nihilism and more recently led to an evocation of a form of embodied solidarity with the other. In this article, I contrast the ambivalent resort to nihilism in Tsiolkas’s work with the theoretical commentary by Sloterdijk and Žižek.
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ItemLa geo-politica del arte contemporaneoPAPASTERGIADIS, N ; Mosquera, G (Bogota Humana, Cultura, Recreacion y Deporte, Instituto Distrital de las Artes, 2015)
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ItemThe Cultures of the South as CosmosPAPASTERGIADIS, N (The Nordic Society of Aesthetics, 2016)As the Global South is increasingly interpenetrated by neo-liberal and authoritarian regimes the idea of the South as a site of emancipatory resistance and exotic cultural difference has ended. This article offers an alternative route into the cultures of the South. It focuses on the shifting forms of the South in contemporary visual art and outlines the possibilities of non-coercive forms of cultural exchange and the cartographies of a cosmopolitanism from below. This perspective on the South is most evident in the stories of embodied solidarity that stand in contrast to top down visions of socio-economic development and cultural homogenization.
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ItemNo Preview AvailableTransversal cultural spheres and the future of EuropePAPASTERGIADIS, N (Open Learning on Enteric PathogensDemocracy.net, 2016-02-22)
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ItemIn the Event of Art: Open Letter to Pavel BüchlerPAPASTERGIADIS, N (Ludion, 2016)
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