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Office for Contemporary Art Norway At the 54th International Art Exhibition, La Biennale di Venezia
Fondazione Querini Stampalia
Laboratorio Occupato Morion
Aula Tafuri, Palazzo Badoer
Auditorium Santa Margheritar
www.oca.no


reported by Art&Education

shared by numero civico rovereto

 VISUAL ARTS


Scene from one of the anti-Berlusconi demonstrations in Italy in December 2010.


Office for Contemporary Art Norway

Upcoming lectures as part of OCA's 'The State of Things' / Norway at La Biennale di Venezia



www.oca.no

Gender Theorist Judith Butler on
The Politics of the Street and New Forms of Alliance

Wednesday, 7 September at 18:00 / Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Venice

and

Media Activist Franco Berardi on
The 'Movimento Studentesco' and Pier Paolo Pasolini:
A Misunderstanding

Thursday, 8 September at 18:00 / Laboratorio Occupato Morion, Venice


In June 2011, OCA launched 'The State of Things' during the opening of La Biennale di Venezia, as Norway's official contribution to its 54th edition. In lieu of an exhibition, OCA organises a series of public lectures by leading intellectuals who were asked to offer their perspective on the state of things-in relation to the state of Europe today, a politics of resistance, immigration, diversity, human rights, capital, asylum and, possibly, aesthetics. In this endeavor, OCA proposes a programme reflecting on the increasing social friction and intolerant atmosphere worldwide in relation to difference and complexity, which is under attack from often inflammatory political rhetoric.
'The State of Things' begun with talks by Jacques Rancière, Leo Bersani, Vandana Shiva, Jan Egeland, Fawaz Gergez and Eyal Weizman, and continues in September with lectures by Judith Butler and Franco Berardi. The lectures are free and open to everyone. They are also available through live streaming and later archived at OCA's website. A publication compiling all the papers will be published upon the completion of the programme in January 2012.


Lecture # 7
Gender theorist Judith Butler speaks about The Politics of the Street and New Forms of Alliance
Wednesday, 7 September / 18:00
Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Campo Santa Maria Formosa, Castello 5252, Venice

Although some have argued that the politics of the street has been replaced by new media politics, it seems that the public sphere within which politics takes place is now defined by a specific mode of bodies interacting with media. Hannah Arendt once argued that there could be no exercise of freedom without the creation of a 'space of appearance' and even 'a right to appear'. How do we understand those new forms of democratic insurgency that form alliances that are not in coalitional forms? Who is the embodied 'we' on the street transported through media, and yet in place and at risk?

Judith Butler is Maxine Elliot Professor in the Departments of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature and the Co-Director of the Program of Critical Theory at the University of California, Berkeley. Butler is the author of, among others, Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (1990), Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of 'Sex' (1993), Excitable Speech (1997) and Is Critique Secular?: Blasphemy, Injury, and Free Speech (co-written with Talal Asad, Saba Mahmood and Wendy Brown in 2009). She is also active in gender and sexual politics and human rights, anti-war politics and Jewish Voice for Peace. Butler is presently the recipient of the Andrew Mellon Award for Distinguished Academic Achievement in the Humanities.


Lecture # 8
Media activist Franco Berardi speaks about The 'Movimento Studentesco' and Pier Paolo Pasolini: A Misunderstanding
Thursday, 8 September / 18:00
Laboratorio Occupato Morion, Salizada San Francesco della Vigna, Castello 2842, Venice

In 1968 the relation between Pier Paolo Pasolini and the Student Movement in Italy was a troubled one. In the midst of the controversy, Pasolini was accused by the students of being a populist representative of a backward culture, nostalgic of a legendary pre-modern time. This paper will argue that, from today's perspective, things seem different, and Pasolini can be understood not to have been looking to the past but to the distant future that is now our present: an age characterised by barbarianism and of ignorant aggressiveness. Today, in the age of the televisual and financial dictatorship, reading Pasolini is a way to retrace the genesis of Italy's present.
Franco Berardi founded the magazine A/traverso (1975-81) and was part of the staff of Radio Alice (1976-78). After being involved in the political movement of Autonomia in Italy during the 1970s, Berardi fled to Paris, where he worked with philosopher and psychoanalyst Félix Guattari in the field of schizoanalysis during the 1980s. He currently teaches social history of the media at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera in Milan, and is the founder of the European School of Social Imagination (SCEPSI) which was inaugurated in San Marino in May 2011.


'THE STATE OF THINGS' UPCOMING AUTUMN LECTURES

Lecture # 9
Saskia Sassen - When the Acute Challenges of Our Epoch Materialise in Cities
Date and Time: Thursday, 20 October / 17:30
Location: Aula Tafuri, Palazzo Badoer, Università Iuav di Venezia, Calle della Lacca, San Polo 2468, Venice

Lecture # 10
T.J. Clark - The Experience of Defeat
Date and Time: Thursday, 17 November / 18:00
Location: at Auditorium Santa Margherita, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, Campo Santa Margherita, Dorsoduro 3689, Venice







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