[rohrpost] 27th of Febr., "Echostate,
Resonances" with: Stephen Kennedy and Kabir Carter and Politics
Shintaro Miyazaki
miyazaki.shintaro at gmail.com
Die Feb 22 11:00:53 CET 2011
Dear friends and supporters of "Oscillations Series - Sonic Theories
and Practices",
after a long break, we continue our acivity and have scheduled No. 5
until No. 11! The next talk will be this week on sunday 27th of Febr.
2011. We hope you have time, get warm clothes and take part at the
discussions. More Informations: http://sonictheory.com/
No. 5
date: 27th of February 2011, Sun, 6pm.
title: Echostate, Resonances and Politics
with: Stephen Kennedy (via skype) and Kabir Carter (moderated by Jan
Thoben and Shintaro Miyazaki)
place: General Public, Schönhauser Allee 167c, Berlin. http://bit.ly/gOS5Bh
The 5th session will be dedicated to a theory of sonic economy.
Abstract Stephen Kennedy: Echostate
Echostate is a term related to Foucault’s category ‘statement’, and
expands its scope by examining how statements get echoed and amplified
across a range of media that exist in multiple simultaneous forms.
Without challenging Foucault’s refusal to give examples of his
concept, the paper will seek to demonstr ate how it works as an
acoustic refrain where disparate and uncertain forms coalesce to
create an impact that once identified melt into air or undergo a
quantum leap before reforming in a newer, or indeed an older, time and
space, or spacetime. Hence certain phenomena can be described as
having the characteristics of a statement without operating as
exemplars.
Beginning with the question of representation as a field of
philosophical inquiry that impacts directly on the ways in which
contemporary mediated environments are understood, sonority is
presented here as embodying movement. This idea is pivotal if we are
to progress beyond the Ontic to the Ontological as a process that is
always in motion and is capable of accounting for the complexities
present in the contemporary digital age.The paper will move from Plato
to Jean Luc Nancy via Leibhiz, Scopenhauer, Neitzsche, Adorno,
Heidegger, Foucault, Deleuze, McLuhan, Lyotard, Attali, and Pauline
Oliveros to show how acoustic engagement can enhance critical thinking.
Profile of Stephen Kennedy:
Dr Stephen Kennedy is an academic at the University of Greenwich,
whose main research interests lie at the intersection of theory and
practice in relation to the political economy of contemporary
communications technology. He is currently in the process of producing
a book on this topic entitled The Technology Agenda. He is also a
practicing musician and DJ with a number of successful releases under
the name of One Deck & Popular and is currently working on a major new
research initiative Sonic Economies: A Politics of Decline in the
Motor City that proposes the comparative study of musical phenomena in
Coventry and Detroit from a geo-philosophical perspective.
Kabir Carter: Artist Presentation
New York based artist Kabir Carter will present materials related to
select sound works that he has realized over the past decade. He will
elaborate upon the influence of urban architecture, underground dance
music, postwar experimental music, and telematic art on his
activities, and relate his practice to ongoing trends in
telecommunications research and development, and architectural
acoustics.
Profile of Kabir Carter:
Kabir Carter’s work moves between performance and installation, and
focuses on the physical and emotional effects of architecture and
acoustics in private and public spaces. He has exhibited at Bronx
Museum of the Arts, New York; Diapason Gallery, New York; Inter Arts
Center, Malmö; Overgaden Institute of Contemporary Art, Copenhagen;
and the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York. He has also presented his
work at museums and art spaces throughout the United States. Carter
has participated in festivals and biennials including club
transmediale, Full Pull, Performa, Subtropics, and Unsound New York,
and has been an artist-in-residence at LMCC/Workspace: 120 Broadway,
and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute’s Create @ iEAR residency
program. He has received commissions and awards from the American
Music Center, Danish Arts Council, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council,
and Media Alliance, among others. Carter has written for various
publications including ART.CULT, Modern Painters, and Nutida Musik,
where he is regular contributor. He holds an MFA from the Milton Avery
Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College, where he was a Joseph
Hartog Fellow.