Post-Digital Transitions

16.01.2014

Post-Digital Transitions

Photo from www.postmedialab.org/taking-care-of-things
Photo from www.postmedialab.org/taking-care-of-things

"Taking care of Things!" workshop in Lüneberg from January 15th till January 18th and Micropolitics of the Post-Digital: From street protests to transitional spaces in Brazil panel at the transmediale festival on Sunday the 2nd of February at 12.00. 

The Post-Media Lab/CDC at Leuphana University of Lüneburg, one of the main reSource partners, is organising "Taking care of Things!", a workshop at the Stadtarchiv Lüneburg, taking place from January 15th till January 18th. Reflecting critically on post-medial (non-archives, the workshops bring together artists, researchers and activists to reflect on transformation of things – analog and digital – into life-cycles and specific practices of care

See the full programme here: www.postmedialab.org/taking-care-of-things

 

Connected to these issues, the panel Micropolitics of the Post-Digital: From street protests to transitional spaces in Brazil will take place at the transmediale festival on Sunday February 2nd, 2014, at 12.00 in the auditorium of HKW.

 

Reflecting on a post-digital approach as a condition in which the utopian promise of the global technological progress is put under crisis, this panel investigates practices and projects of de-colonisation of corporate culture, as well as of the “digital” paradigm per se. By specifically focusing on hybrid and syncretic Brazilian contemporary political, cultural and economical scenarios, the post-digital condition highlighted in such context brings together a variety of practices that deal with transitional processes between online and offline existence, ecology of technical and non-technical resources, techno-shamanism from the junction between technology and practices of ancestral knowledge, insurgent political movements and the formation of a sustainable networked society. The panel proposes a multiple angle of analysis where technology becomes an open tool to imagine unpredictable connections in the everyday life from civic engagement to artistic and political activism, and to social change.

 

Participants: Oliver Lerone Schultz, Marcus Bastos, Fabiane Borges, Lucas Bambozzi & Adriano Belisário.

 

This panel is supported by the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung and the Goethe-Institut São Paulo. In collaboration with the Post-Media Lab at CDC/Leuphana University of Lüneburg, and the Studies Group "Mundo em Rede" at the Post-Graduate Program in Technology and Digital Media /PUC-SP.

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