Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

M/C Event: Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy

View through CrossRef
An M/C Event held in the Conference Room of the University of Queensland Library on 12 May 2000 The early, mythological phase of digital culture is now rapidly running out of its utopian energies. Law and order are taking command over the last pockets of digital wilderness. The taming of the cyberculture by "click 'n mortar" businesses and their willing government executors took only a few years. The time of institutionalization, mega mergers and security paranoia has arrived. These new conditions, driven by the current hyper-growth, have an as yet invisible effect on the cultural new media sector (arts, design, education), which had perceived itself for so long as "ahead of the wave". To prevent Internet from turning into a nightmare (from which it then has to awake), neither the utopian vision has to be eliminated, nor do we need to withdraw to the apocalyptic pole, which states that the world and its network will collapse anyhow -- with or without our interference. The conflict between utopia and negativism needs to be played out. The deeper we are drawn into the Virtual, the more there is a need to stage its inherent paradoxes and contradictions. But how ? The recordings from this event are available in RealAudio and Windows Media streaming audio formats.   "Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy" Geert Lovink, Media Scholar and Activist Responses by Greg Hearn and David Marshall M/C Event University of Queensland 12 May 2000         Introduction and Acknowledgements Axel Bruns  28k  56k  28k  56k "Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy" Geert Lovink  28k  56k  28k  56k First Response Greg Hearn  28k  56k  28k  56k Second Response David Marshall  28k  56k  28k  56k Reply to Respondents Geert Lovink  28k  56k  28k  56k Audience Questions & Answers - Part 1 Geert Lovink Greg Hearn David Marshall  28k  56k  28k  56k Audience Questions & Answers - Part 2 Geert Lovink Greg Hearn David Marshall  28k  56k  28k  56k Acknowledgements Geert Lovink visited Brisbane as a participant in Alchemy, an International Masterclass for New Media Artists and Curators, which was organised by the Australian Network for Art and Technology in association with the Brisbane Powerhouse - Centre for the Live Arts from 8 May to 9 June 2000. M/C and the Media and Cultural Studies Centre are highly grateful to ANAT and Geert Lovink as well as the Australian Key Centre for Cultural and Media Policy for making this event possible. Citation reference for this article MLA style: Geert Lovink, with Greg Hearn and David Marshall. "Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy." M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 3.3 (2000). [your date of access] <http://www.api-network.com/mc/0006/cyberculture.php>. Chicago style: Geert Lovink, with Greg Hearn and David Marshall, "Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy," M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 3, no. 3 (2000), <http://www.api-network.com/mc/0006/cyberculture.php> ([your date of access]). APA style: Geert Lovink, with Greg Hearn and David Marshall. (2000) Directions for cyberculture in the new economy. M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 3(3). <http://www.api-network.com/mc/0006/cyberculture.php> ([your date of access]).
Queensland University of Technology
Title: M/C Event: Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy
Description:
An M/C Event held in the Conference Room of the University of Queensland Library on 12 May 2000 The early, mythological phase of digital culture is now rapidly running out of its utopian energies.
Law and order are taking command over the last pockets of digital wilderness.
The taming of the cyberculture by "click 'n mortar" businesses and their willing government executors took only a few years.
The time of institutionalization, mega mergers and security paranoia has arrived.
These new conditions, driven by the current hyper-growth, have an as yet invisible effect on the cultural new media sector (arts, design, education), which had perceived itself for so long as "ahead of the wave".
To prevent Internet from turning into a nightmare (from which it then has to awake), neither the utopian vision has to be eliminated, nor do we need to withdraw to the apocalyptic pole, which states that the world and its network will collapse anyhow -- with or without our interference.
The conflict between utopia and negativism needs to be played out.
The deeper we are drawn into the Virtual, the more there is a need to stage its inherent paradoxes and contradictions.
But how ? The recordings from this event are available in RealAudio and Windows Media streaming audio formats.
  "Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy" Geert Lovink, Media Scholar and Activist Responses by Greg Hearn and David Marshall M/C Event University of Queensland 12 May 2000         Introduction and Acknowledgements Axel Bruns  28k  56k  28k  56k "Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy" Geert Lovink  28k  56k  28k  56k First Response Greg Hearn  28k  56k  28k  56k Second Response David Marshall  28k  56k  28k  56k Reply to Respondents Geert Lovink  28k  56k  28k  56k Audience Questions & Answers - Part 1 Geert Lovink Greg Hearn David Marshall  28k  56k  28k  56k Audience Questions & Answers - Part 2 Geert Lovink Greg Hearn David Marshall  28k  56k  28k  56k Acknowledgements Geert Lovink visited Brisbane as a participant in Alchemy, an International Masterclass for New Media Artists and Curators, which was organised by the Australian Network for Art and Technology in association with the Brisbane Powerhouse - Centre for the Live Arts from 8 May to 9 June 2000.
M/C and the Media and Cultural Studies Centre are highly grateful to ANAT and Geert Lovink as well as the Australian Key Centre for Cultural and Media Policy for making this event possible.
Citation reference for this article MLA style: Geert Lovink, with Greg Hearn and David Marshall.
"Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy.
" M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 3.
3 (2000).
[your date of access] <http://www.
api-network.
com/mc/0006/cyberculture.
php>.
Chicago style: Geert Lovink, with Greg Hearn and David Marshall, "Directions for Cyberculture in the New Economy," M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 3, no.
3 (2000), <http://www.
api-network.
com/mc/0006/cyberculture.
php> ([your date of access]).
APA style: Geert Lovink, with Greg Hearn and David Marshall.
(2000) Directions for cyberculture in the new economy.
M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture 3(3).
<http://www.
api-network.
com/mc/0006/cyberculture.
php> ([your date of access]).

Related Results

CYBERCULTURE IN EDUCATION
CYBERCULTURE IN EDUCATION
The work presented here aims to dialogue about cyberculture and the transformations that it makes possible in pedagogical practices, as well as the challenges and conflicts that pe...
E-sports and sports cyberculture: perspectives of social actors in this universe
E-sports and sports cyberculture: perspectives of social actors in this universe
This study is an analysis of e-sports, understanding them as a particular way of sports culture expression in line with the contemporary social paradigm that implies cyberculture. ...
Strategi Komunikasi Pemasaran Melalui Event
Strategi Komunikasi Pemasaran Melalui Event
Abstract. PT Amerta Indah Otsuka held an event to improve and maintain its products. The event organized by PT Amerta Indah Otsuka is the Pocari Sweat Run 2024 event, which is a ma...
Event management evaluation indicators in enterprise management
Event management evaluation indicators in enterprise management
The article develops a set of indicators that will make it possible to evaluate event management in enterprise management as fully as possible. During the research, directions for ...
(originally published in December 1998)
(originally published in December 1998)
This paper is included in the First Monday Special Issue #3: Internet banking, e-money, and Internet gift economies, published in December 2005. Special Issue editor Mark A. Fox as...
Cyberculture and Globalization
Cyberculture and Globalization
Globalization should be understood as a new economic, political, and cultural dynamic in what is now a global space. It is diagnosed based on a description of the different phases ...
Event based SLAM
Event based SLAM
(English) Event-based cameras are novel sensors with a bio-inspired design that exhibit a high dynamic range and extremely low latency. They sensing principle is different than the...
From Ephemeral Planning to Permanent Urbanism: An Urban Planning Theory of Mega-Events
From Ephemeral Planning to Permanent Urbanism: An Urban Planning Theory of Mega-Events
Mega-events like the Olympic Games are powerful forces that shape cities. In the wake of mega-events, a variety of positive and negative legacies have remained in host cities. In o...

Back to Top