Graham Harwood

Nine [9] - Linker and other Subjective Mappings

Lecture given at the symposium "Mapping"

Graham Harwood

Graham Harwood

netzspannung.org

Media Files

Abstract

“Nine(9)” can be said to have two main tragectories. Primarily it is software built by and for those of us locked out of the narrowly engineered subjectivity of mainstream software. It is software which asks itself what kind of currents, what kind of machine, numerical, social and other dynamics it feeds in and out of, and what others it can help bring into being?
The second vector is related to this. It is software that is directly born, changed and developed as the result of an ongoing sociability between users and programmers in which demands are made on the practices of coding that exceed their easy fit into standardised social relations.
These two threads interweave in most cases. It is how they do so, how their multiple elements are brought into communication and influence that determines their level of success.
“Nine(9)” can most usefully be understood to work in these terms. It is a socio-technical pact between users of certain forms of license, language, cultures and environment. The various forms of its freeness or openess are being developed as part of the various rhythms of the life of this software; its production and critical engagement with the process of permission. In addition to this, “Nine(9)” requires new social machines to spawn its codes, to diffuse and manage its development and implementation.

Artists / Authors

Date(s)

Organizer

Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe (ZKM)

Location

Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, Lorenzstrasse 19, 76135 Karlsruhe, Germany

Partners / Sponsors

Goethe-Institute and the German Ministry of Research and Education BMBF.

URL

» http://www.on1.zkm.de/zkm/programm

Submission

, Apr 21, 2004

Category

Keywords