[Air-L] Liquid Book - The Post-Corporate University
Gary Hall
gary.hall at connectfree.co.uk
Wed Jun 17 05:07:53 PDT 2009
(Apologies for cross-posting)
The Post-Corporate University
We would like to bring to your attention an online experiment that is
currently taking place titled The Post-Corporate University. Edited and
curated by Davin Heckman, it is the second volume in Culture Machine’s
Liquid Books series. The volume is available now online and is open for
discussion, contributions and open collaboration. Please visit:
http://liquidbooks.pbworks.com/The+Post-Corporate+University
The Post-Corporate University starts from an assumption that the
University is in crisis and that this crisis has been caused by the
social and economic characteristics of neoliberalism. Asking the
question, Is Another University Possible?, it provides space for
multiple answers and interventions.
Please visit the site, read Davin Heckman’s chapter, 'Neoliberal Arts
and the 21st Century University', and contribute to the discussions, the
bibliography and the book.
About the Liquid Books Series
Culture Machine’s online ‘liquid books’ – to which everyone is invited
to contribute – are written and developed in an open, cooperative,
decentralised, multi-user-generated fashion: not just by their initial
‘authors’, ‘editors’, ‘creators’ or ‘curators’, but by a multiplicity of
collaborators distributed around the world.
They are freely available for anyone, anywhere, to read, reproduce and
distribute. Once they have requested access, users are also able to
rewrite, add to, edit, annotate, tag, remix, reformat, reinvent and
reuse them, or even produce alternative parallel versions of them. In
fact, they are expressly invited and encouraged to do so, as the project
relies on such an intervention.
It is hoped that the Liquid Books project will raise a number of
important questions for ideas of authorship, attribution, publication,
citation, accreditation, fair use, quality control, peer review,
copyright, intellectual property, content creation and cultural studies.
For instance, with its open editing and free content, the project
decentres the author and editor functions, making everyone potential
authors/editors. It also addresses an issue raised recently by Geert
Lovink: why are wikis not utilised more to create, develop and change
theory and theoretical concepts, instead of theory continuing to be
considered as the ‘terrain of the sole author who contemplates the
world, preferably offline, surrounded by a pile of books, a fountain
pen, and a notebook’?
At the same time, in ‘What Is an Author?’, Michel Foucault warns that
any attempt to avoid using the concept of the author to close and fix
the meaning of the text risks having a limit and a unity imposed on it
in a different way: by means of the concept of the ‘work’. To what
extent does users’ ability to rewrite, remix, reversion and reinvent
this liquid ‘book’ then render untenable any attempt to impose a limit
and a unity on it as a ‘work’? And what are the political, ethical and
social consequences of such ‘liquidity’ for ideas that depend on the
concept of the ‘work’ for their effectivity: those concerning
attribution, citation, copyright, intellectual property, academic
success, promotion, tenure, and so on?
To find out more, please go to the first Liquid Book, New Cultural
Studies: The Liquid Theory Reader:
http://liquidbooks.pbwiki.com/New+Cultural+Studies:+The+Liquid+Theory+Reader
For a quick and easy-to-read guide on how to collaborate on the writing,
editing and curating of a Liquid Book, please visit:
http://liquidbooks.pbwiki.com/How-to-Contribute-to-a-Liquid-Book
Clare Birchall and Gary Hall
--
Gary Hall
Professor of Media and Performing Arts
School of Art and Design, Coventry University
Co-editor of Culture Machine
http://www.culturemachine.net
Co-founder of the Open Humanities Press
http://www.openhumanitiespress.org
My website http://www.garyhall.info
Latest book: Digitize This Book!: The Politics of New Media, or Why We Need Open Access Now
http://www.upress.umn.edu/Books/H/hall_digitize.html
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