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Offering a critical analysis of the UK political system, Tragedy of
Riches argues that politicians over the past twenty years have
changed our economic destiny for the worse. The corresponding
demise of ideology means that there can be no great improvement in
the British economy without fundamental political change. Stephen
Barber introduces the concept of the `mixed economic settlement';
the argument that the policy mix in which Europe and the United
States operates is forged in three contrasting forms of liberalism
to have emerged in the post-war West: economic, welfare and social
liberalism. He describes how our single-minded pursuit of
prosperity has constrained politics from being a force for good.
The book argues that the present economic policies of the UK
government are unsustainable and, if they are to tackle the
difficult issues of modern society, politicians and communities
alike need to face up to this truth.
"London Eyes provides paths through the city, chancing upon
those stories that ultimately have the potential to change London,
to see it with new eyes, casting new shadows and seeing new stories
open up at many turns. This collection has at its heart a joyous
fascination with the city and the texts, images and films that have
contributed to our ideas about London. It was a wonderful
opportunity to stumble upon some new panoramas." Film
Philosophy
London incessantly generates and incites cultural responses,
pre-eminently in the interconnected domains of literature and film.
This book demonstrates that those responses have been sustained as
vital experiments and engagements in configuring the city and its
inhabitants. Including essays by prominent cultural, literary and
film historians this volume forms an original and incisive
contribution to ongoing debates about the city's intricate cultural
history and its construction through both language and image, as a
crucial site of identity, desire, exile and displacement.
Gail Cunningham is Professor of English and Dean of the Faculty
of Arts and Social Sciences at Kingston University. Her recent
publications include Houses in Between (CUP, 2004) Anna Lombard
(Birmingham University Press, 2002) and He-Notes: Reconstructing
Masculinity (Palgrave, 2000).
Stephen Barber is a Professor of Media Arts at Kingston
University. His most recent publications include The Vanishing Map
(Berg, 2006), Hijikata (Creation, 2006) and The Art of Destruction
(Creation 2004). He has been awarded international prizes and
awards for his work by the Rockefeller Foundation, the Getty
Program, the Ford Foundation, the DAAD Berlin Artists and Writers
Programme, the Annenberg Foundation, the Leverhulme Trust, the
Japan Foundation, the British Academy, the Daiwa Foundation, the
Saison Foundation, and the London Arts Board.
This book shows how political inaction has shaped the politics,
economy and society we recognize today, despite the fact that
policymakers are incentivised to act and to be seen to act
decisively. Politicians make decisions which affect our lives every
day but in our combative Westminster system, are usually only held
to account for those which change something. But what about
decisions to do nothing? What about policy which is discarded in
favour of an alternative? What about opposition for naked political
advantage? This book argues that not only is policy inaction an
overlooked part of British politics but also that it is just as
important as active policy and can have just as significant an
impact on society. Addressing the topic for perhaps the first time,
it offers a provocative analysis of 'do nothing' politics. It shows
why politicians are rarely incentivized to do nothing, preferring
hyperactivity. It explores the philosophical and structural drivers
of inaction when it happens and highlights the contradictions in
behavior. It explains why Attlee and Thatcher enjoyed lasting
policy legacies to this day, and considers the nature of opposition
and the challenge of holding 'do nothing' policy decisions to
account.
Stephen Barber takes the reader on an extraordinary journey from LA
to Tokyo via Europe. He carries only a crumpled map in his pocket,
a map which plots a horrifying past, a disappearing present and a
future collapsing into banality. A virtual reality flight across
this territory reveals the surfaces of things, a landscape made by
war and technological advances. Coming back to earth and to his own
body, Stephen Barber follows the map from city to city. He
discovers how cities, once densely layered with a civilization's
history of follies and obsessions, are increasingly oblivious
places, accelerating the erasure of their own histories, forgetting
themselves. Barber's journey becomes a profound meditation on the
future of the city and the role of memory in our lives.Dazzlingly
written, erudite, and by turns funny, elegiac and horrific, The
Vanishing Map explores what cities were, are and will be. Deeper
than this, it questions how memory - personal, urban, national and
global memory - can survive.
Eadweard Muybridge is among the seminal originators of the
contemporary world's visual form. Projectionists examines mostly
unknown aspects of Muybridge's work: his period as a touring
projectionist who enthralled audiences with unprecedented
moving-images and his creation of a moving-image auditorium-long
before cinemas-in which to project his work at the 1893 World's
Columbian Exposition. That auditorium was both a catastrophe and a
vital precursor for the following century's manias for projection.
Based on new research into his travels, audiences, auditoria, and
projectors, Projectionists explores Muybridge's initiating role in
moving-image projection and also maps his driving inspiration for
subsequent filmmakers preoccupied with the volatile entity of
projection, from 1890s Berlin to contemporary Japan, via further
World's Exposition events and cinemas' overheated projection-boxes.
In the final part of 'Tokyo Trilogy', the gorgeous media
provocatrice Angeliko Slavsko returns to the tsunami-hit
megalopolis to team up with her gang and instigate an all-out
confrontation.
The iconoclastic work of the Vienna Action Group is now more
contemporary than ever before, and THE ART OF DESTRUCTION provides
a comprehensive introduction to that work in both film and
performance. Fully illustrated and annotated, and including an
extensive filmography, this is a book of compelling interest to all
students of film, art and performance, and for all readers engaged
with questioning social and corporate cultures.
"The devil is at our heels . . . . at the heart of the city's
aberrations." Picture a lost city in northern England during the
momentous winter of 1978-the final winter before the onset of the
Thatcher era, at the peak of the punk rock movement. A notorious
serial killer-the Yorkshire Ripper-terrorizes the city's women,
unhindered by an aimless police force. Violent outbursts of gang
warfare transect the city's streets while an immense insane asylum
overlooks the chaos from the outskirts. This innovative and
disturbing novel follows a group of teens as they engulf themselves
in punk-rock cacophonies and the accompanying riots that erupt in
the city's decrepit hotel ballrooms and subterranean nightclubs.
Written in a captivating, immersive first-person voice that meshes
raw corporeality and urban insurgency, White Noise Ballrooms
deploys recent history to piercingly illuminate the contemporary
moment.
Antonin Artaud's journey to Ireland in 1937 marked an
extraordinary--and apocalyptic--turning point in his life and
career. After publishing the manifesto The New Revelations of Being
about the "catastrophic immediate-future," Artaud abruptly left
Paris for Ireland, remaining there for six weeks without money.
Traveling first to the isolated island of Inishmore off Ireland's
western coast, then to Galway, and finally to Dublin, Artaud was
eventually arrested as an undesirable alien, beaten by the police,
and summarily deported back to France. On his return, he spent nine
years in asylums, remaining there through the entire span of World
War II. During his fateful journey, Artaud wrote letters to friends
in Paris which included several "magic spells," intended to curse
his enemies and protect his friends from the city's forthcoming
incineration and the Antichrist's appearance. (To Andre Breton, he
wrote: "It's the Unbelievable--yes, the Unbelievable--it's the
Unbelievable which is the truth.") This book collects all of
Artaud's surviving correspondence from his time in Ireland, as well
as photographs of the locations he traveled through. Featuring an
afterword and notes by the book's translator, Stephen Barber, this
edition marks the seventieth anniversary of Artaud's death.
Antonin Artaud is one of the great cultural legends of the 20th
century. His Theatre of Cruelty altered the course of modern
theatre and his experiments with the Surrealist movement have
proved inspirational throughout Europe and America. But Artaud's
life was one of terrible failure and confrontation, an exploration
of the extremes of agony and joy. At the end of a long series of
journeys - both physical and spiritual - aimed at creating a
magical culture of the human body, he was arrested and interned for
nine years in a succession of French lunatic asylums, where he
suffered starvation and was subjected to 50 electroshock
treatments. This book is a faithful portrait of his life and work.
Following his release from the Rodez asylum, Antonin Artaud decided
he wanted his new work to connect with a vast public audience, and
he chose to record radio broadcasts in order to carry through that
aim. That determination led him to his most experimental and
incendiary project, To Have Done with the Judgement of God,
1947-48, in which he attempted to create a new language of texts,
screams, and cacophonies: a language designed to be heard by
millions, aimed, as Artaud said, for "road-menders." In the
broadcast, he interrogated corporeality and introduced the idea of
the "body without organs," crucial to the later work of Deleuze and
Guattari. The broadcast, commissioned by the French national radio
station, was banned shortly before its planned transmission, much
to Artaud's fury. This volume collects all of the texts for To Have
Done with the Judgement of God, together with several of the
letters Artaud wrote to friends and enemies in the short period
between his work's censorship and his death. Also included is the
text of an earlier broadcast from 1946, Madness and Black Magic,
written as a manifesto prefiguring his subsequent broadcast.
Clayton Eshleman's extraordinary translations of the broadcasts
activate these works in their extreme provocation.
Tokyo during the 1960s was in a state of uproar, full of protests,
riots, and insurrection. Tatsumi Hijikata--the initiator of the
"Butoh" performance art and the seminal figure in Japan's
experimental arts culture of the 1960s--created his most famous
works in the context of that turmoil, his experimental film
projects and his horror and erotic films uniquely invoking the
intensity of the decade. Based on original interviews with
Hijikata's collaborators as well as new research, Film's Ghosts
illuminates Hijikata's work against the backdrop of 1960s urban
culture in Tokyo. This will be an essential book for readers
engaged with film and performance, urban cultures and architecture,
and Japan's experimental art and its histories.
A Sinister Assassin contains original translations of Antonin
Artaud’s last writings and interviews, most never previously
available in English. A Sinister Assassin presents translations of
Antonin Artaud’s largely unknown final work of 1947–48,
revealing new insights into his obsessions with human anatomy,
sexuality, societal power, creativity, and ill-will—notably,
preoccupations of the contemporary world.  Artaud’s last
conception of performance is that of a dance-propelled act of
autopsy, generating a â€body without organs†which negates
malevolent microbial epidemics. This book assembles Artaud’s
crucial writings and press interviews from September 1947 to March
1948, undertaken at a decrepit pavilion in the grounds of a
convalescence clinic in Ivry-sur-Seine, on the southern edge of
Paris, as well as in-transit through Paris’s streets. It also
draws extensively on Artaud’s manuscripts and original interviews
with his friends, collaborators, and doctors throughout the 1940s,
illuminating the many manifestations of Artaud’s final writings:
the contents of his last, death-interrupted notebook; his letters;
his two final key texts; his glossolalia; the magazine issue which
collected his last fragments; and the two extraordinary interviews
he gave to national newspaper journalists in the final days of his
life, in which he denounces and refuses both his work’s recent
censorship and his imminent death. Â Edited, translated, and
with an introduction by Stephen Barber, A Sinister Assassin
illuminates Artaud’s last, most intensive, and terminal work for
the first time. Â
Following England's future corporate and digital disintegration,
and the fall of its cities, a hallucinatory conflict - inspired and
propelled by the history and traces of 1970s punk rock and the
spectres of Jimmy Saville and Peter Sutcliffe, the 'Kings of Leeds'
- erupts between the South and the North, so virulent and
all-engulfing that only fragments of its memory can survive.
Examining a seven year period in Ballard's career, from 1966 to
1973, this volume includes various original essays, two interviews
with Ballard from the early 1970s and a selection of Ballard's
works.
"Here Lies" preceded by "The Indian Culture" collects two of
Antonin Artaud's foremost poetic works from the last period of his
life. He wrote both works soon after his release from the
psychiatric hospital of Rodez and his return to Paris, and they
were published during the flurry of intensive activity and protests
against his work's censorship. The Indian Culture is the first and
most ambitious work of Artaud's last period. It deals with his
travels in Mexico in 1936 where Artaud sets aside his usual
preoccupations with peyote and the Tarahumara people's sorcerers to
directly anatomize his obsessions with gods, corporeality, and
sexuality. Here Lies is Artaud's final declaration of autonomy for
his own body from its birth to its imminent death, won at the cost
of multiple battles against the infiltrating powers amassed to
steal that birth and death away from him. Both works demonstrate
Artaud's final poetry as a unique amalgam of delicate linguistic
invention and ferociously obscene invective. "Here Lies" preceded
by "The Indian Culture" was translated by the award-winning
translator Clayton Eshleman, widely seen as the preeminent
translator into English of Artaud's work, with its profound
intensity and multiply nuanced language. For the first time since
its first publication, this bilingual edition presents the two
works in one volume, as Artaud originally intended. This edition
also features a contextual afterword by Stephen Barber as well as
new material, previously untranslated into English.
FRACTURED EYE is new large-format annual film journal, edited by
well-known authors Stephen Barber and Jack Hunter, who between them
have produced around 50 books on global cinema and cultural
history. FRACTURED EYE does not concern itself with either
"mainstream" or "cult" cinema, but rather takes its cue from Amos
Vogel's seminal 1974 study Film As A Subversive Art. Subjects
covered by FRACTURED EYE Volume One include illegal film
pornography in the 1970s, execution film documents of WW2, film
documents of extreme performance art, subversive film
documentaries, unfilmed surrealist film scenarios, revolutionary
Japanese cinema of 1969, the origins of film projection technology,
films of urban demolition, surgical films, and various works of
renegade, politically prohibited or transgressive cinema. The book
is heavily illustrated with unusual and often disquieting
photographs, and is recommended for adult readers only. Subjects
covered include Vienna Aktion Cinema, Tokyo 1969, Tatsumi Hijikata,
Pierre Guyotat, Koji Wakamatsu, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Skladanowsky
Brothers, Georges Franju, and much more.
Controlled atmosphere infrared furnace setup, operation, theory and
troubleshooting for LCI model LA-309P model Lab furnaces with PLC.
IR thermal processing.
With a foreword by former BBC political editor and Ambassador to
Washington Peter Jay, this collection of essays examines the
geo-political and economic implications of the City of London's
financial markets in a globalised world. Exploring globalisation,
the growth of China and India, terrorism, corporate social
responsibility, the powerful foreign exchange markets and questions
of democratic control, this book is lively and stimulating.
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