joanne richardson on Fri, 13 Sep 2002 20:32:21 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-ro] Cluj: tranzindex conference & experimental radio workshop |
Scuzati ca trimit mesajul in Engleza, nu m-am chinuit sa-l traduc in Romana mea proasta, pentru ca conferinta si workshopul la care ma refer o sa fie in limba Engleza anyway: Tranzindex conference (Sept 26 – 29) & Experimental radio workshop (Sept 30 – Oct 3) Casa Tranzit, Str. Baritiu 16, Cluj Conference realized with financial support of Concept Fundation, Soros Open Network Romania Preliminary Announcement & Call for Workshop Participation >From Sept 26 – 29, Tranzit (in collaboration with me and the Next 5 Minutes festival of tactical media in Amsterdam) will organize a conference to discuss current broadcasting standards and the possibilities to reclaim the media. Conference topics will include backdoor media education by NGOs founded by artists, the production of counterdocumentaries, current forms of media activism, notions of the public domain and media democratization, and minor media production and distribution models which have erased the distinction between producers and consumers. More information and a program of the conference will be distributed to the list in a few days. For now, I’m sending a preliminary call for participants to sign up for the Personal News Service Radio, a four day production workshop directly following the conference (Sept 30 – Oct 3). The workshop, led by Derek Holzer from Next 5 Minutes in Amsterdam, will include a technical demonstration of ‘how to do your own miniFM radio’ as well as a conceptual work with participants on creating short prerecorded broadcasts of their own personal versions of news & information that matters to them today. The personal news fragments will be broadcast from a miniFM transmitter (which typically has a range of one kilometer) in different places in Cluj. As a ‘workshop’ this is not open to the public, but will consist of a small group, around 12 people, working closely together & intensely. If you are interested in participating in this workshop, you need to SIGN UP IN ADVANCE (and as soon as possible) by contacting me at subsol@mi2.hr. Derek Holzer is a media practitioner with a background in pirate radio, net.radio and streaming media technologies. He was involved with the first net.radio experiments in Hungary (Pararadio) and Czech Republic (Radio Jeleni). He has also worked with Re-lab, a net.radio group in Latvia who gradually shifted their focus towards broader issues of ‘acoustic spaces’ and networked audio communications. In August 2001, Derek participated in the Acoustic Space Lab which brought together an international team of 30 sound artists, community radio activists, and scientists to experiment with a 32 meter antenna, recording sounds and data from planets, communication satellites and the surrounding environment. Derek will also make presentations about his own work and the Next 5 Minutes festival during the conference, as well as some smaller informal discussions in the evenings during Sept 30 – Oct 3 - which will be open to the public. For those of you who are interested in finding out more about the use of radio as an ‘art form,’ the history of miniFM movement, and attempts to overcome the broadcasting model, I am posting below a short text by Tetsuo Kogawa, one of the founders of experimental radio. __________________ |||||||||||||||||| POLYMORPHOUS RADIO Tetsuo Kogawa (Japan, 2001) Throughout its history, despite efforts by the Futurists in the 1920s, radio has been considered a means of communication rather than an art form. Therefore, it is ironic that just as traditional forms of radio are in decline, its possibilities as an art form are reaching extreme potentials. If, as Heidegger once suggested, the most extreme possibilities can only be reached at the end of something, what then ends with radio? What is radio's most extreme possibility? When the mini-FM radio movement originated in the early 1980s in Japan, most cities had only one FM station, if any at all, because only government-operated stations could obtain licenses; station administrators tended to be retired government officials. The Italian free radio movement and Felix Guattari's response to it stimulated us very much. It provided thrilling examples in which politics and culture creatively worked together and gave us hope with which to cope with the dismal state of Japanese mass media. Guattari stressed the radically different function of free radio from conventional mass media. His notions of transmission, transversal and molecular revolution suggested that, unlike conventional radio, free radio would not impose programs on a mass audience, whose numbers have been forecast, but would come across freely to a molecular public, in a way that would change the nature of communication between those who speak and those who listen. Friends and I began experimenting with radio transmission in the early eighties. At that time we intended to establish a pirate FM station. However, there were few people who could help us build an appropriate transmitter. This negative attitude had resulted largely from the psychological stigma attached to breaking the law during World War II when the authorities strictly banned the use of short-wave radio receivers, to say nothing of transmitters. Even now, there is still a general feeling that the airwaves belong to the government. However, we had a different idea - that airwaves should be public resources, not monopolized by the state. While we were experimenting, an interesting thing happened: I stumbled upon Article 4 in the Radio Regulations Book. It permits transmitting without a license if the power is very weak and is intended to accommodate wireless microphones and remote-control toys, for example. My idea was to use this type of tiny unit for radio transmitting. During several tests of small ready-made FM transmitters we found that some of them could cover a half-mile radius Some former students and I established Radio Home Run in 1983. Every day, from 8 PM to midnight, one or two groups aired talk or music programs. Radio Home Run quickly became a meeting place for students, activists, artists, workers, owners of small shops, local politicians, men, women and the elderly. The function was centripetal rather than centrifugal: listeners tended to want to come to the station. Through our experiments we came to the conclusion that we must work within a half-mile service area. Tokyo is densely populated so even a half-mile area has at least ten thousand inhabitants. This meant that mini-FM could function as community radio. To the extent that each community and individual has different thoughts and feelings, we believed there should be different kinds of radio – hundreds of mini-FM stations in a given area. If you had the same number of transmitters as receivers, your radio sets could have completely different functions. Conventional radio and television is generally eager for as large a service area as possible: from nation-wide to global networks. According to these models, communication is considered a way of conveying information as a material entity from one place to another. Mass media has functioned (and still does) as a strong catalyst of industrialization, characterized by the transportation of solid material, integrated homogeneous grouping and an industrious work ethic. However, as Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela have argued, such a notion of communication is forced and distorted. Human communication is based not on tube conveyance but on structural coupling. In the process of transmitting, we became more interested in pursuing a new way of getting together rather than circulating information. We found that even one kilometer community is too large and there are more different units of cultures and tastes of the individuals. Micro-revolution can happen only on such a level. The action of transmitting together changed our relationships in a way that seemed distinct from the effects of other collective actions that did not involve transmitting. It is in this context that I gradually understood the meaning and potential of mini-FM. Radio could serve as a communication vehicle not for broadcast but for narrowcasting. Radio transmission technology could be available for individuals to take control of their transmission and reception. Mini-FM had a powerful therapeutic function: an isolated person who sought companionship through radio happened to hear us and visited the mini-FM station; a shy person started to speak into the microphone; people who never used to be able to share ideas and values found a place for dialogue. I called this kind of media "polymorphous media" or "polymedia." Polymedia are not intended simply to link smaller units into a larger whole: instead they involve the recovery of electronic technology that individuals can communicate, share idiosyncrasies and be "convivial." Although I have been involved in the free radio movement and have also worked with pirate stations in Japan since the early 1980s, I now doubt if radio, when developed to its most extreme potential, can be appropriately called "free radio." My experiences have led me to imagine therefore what ends with radio: we are now in the process of surpassing radio as a communication means and also as a form of self-expression for artists. Both of these models belong to modernity, the same matrix that adopted terms such as freedom and democracy. It has become necessary to think a new direction or framework for human self-fulfillment that does not rely on these types of notions of freedom. Perhaps now the era of freedom as an ideology has ended. This does not mean that freedom was an illusion or that we enter a new age of non-freedom. Rather, it means that other concepts completely different in character from freedom are emerging. Compared to technologies using steam and springs which are based on compression and release, radio is a medium beyond freedom in the sense that it is based on electronics, a post-freedom technology. When radio was first developed, there was no inherent need to separate transmitters from receivers. However, at that time, freedom was still a valid political ideology, so transmission and reception were strictly separated to allow for contrasts between the free and the not free: transmission was monopolized by the broadcast stations and "unfree people" called "listeners" were created artificially. A new horizon has been opened, outdating the separation of transmission and reception that had been forced upon electronic media. The question in the age of satellite media is no longer whether or not radio or television is "free" but whether it is "polymorphous." We are at the dawn where we can imagine a different type of radio, such as Murry Schafler describes in "Radical Radio." Schafler criticizes radio that "has become the clock of Western civilization, taking over the function of social timekeeper from the church bell and the factory whistle," and imagines a new type of radio that could "ring with new rhythms, the bio-cycles of all human life and culture, the biorhythms of all nature." This does not imply that we should reject all radio that tries to convey messages - message radio. But I just want us to think about the different potential of radio, the experimental side of radio. __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! 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