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dc.date.accessioned2016-01-07T16:19:50Z
dc.date.available2016-01-07T16:19:50Z
dc.date.issued2015-11-08
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2077/41463
dc.language.isoengsv
dc.subjectPoachingsv
dc.subjectFeminismsv
dc.subjectCollectivitysv
dc.subjectUsershipsv
dc.subjectStrugglesv
dc.subjectPropertysv
dc.subjectAuthorshipsv
dc.subjectTacticssv
dc.subjectUnder the Radarsv
dc.titlePoached Eggs: Women as Poacherssv
dc.type.svepartistic work
dc.contributor.creatorWeinmayr, Eva
art.typeOfWorkSeminar/Workshopsv
art.relation.publishedInSideroom and W139, Amsterdamsv
art.description.projectThe term ‘poaching‘ is predominantly connected to male-coded activities, often celebrated as a heroic out-law figure, taking from the rich and giving to the poor. What are the female ways to poach, the tactics to enter enclosed territory, the relationships, networks and tricks of appropriation? With this exploratory mapping session, we will draw on Stephen Wright’s definition of poaching in Toward a Lexicon of Usership (2013), and discuss the gendered understanding of poaching from a feminist perspective. There will be poached eggs — on toast with sweet chili jam. Idiotic Code: On Resistant Usership What are our idiotic, failing and resistant processes and uses-usages of the body, of living-life, and their prostheses and (technological) extensions or software: from drugs, spiritual practices, ethno-botanical divination, steam bathing, physical exercise, intimacy, community or sexuality, to those technologies that are more commonly understood as technologies (a.k.a computing). How can we develop an ‘idiotic‘ code, which escapes the logics of a surveilling, controlling and disciplinary system? In what way can we practice a resistant use of identitarian technologies such as race, gender or sexuality? "How to un-think something you don't know you're thinking?" (Lisa Nakamura) With guests and contributors AND (Eva Weinmayr, Rosalie Schweiker), Maria Berrios, Marthe Van Dessel, Vinay Gupta, Immaterial Labour Union, Kat Jungnickel, Ryan Maguire, Nadya Peek, and Nick Srnicek will investigate various questions and dilemmas within the realm of usership's technological, cultural, political and personal limitations/potentials for deviance and resistance.sv
art.description.summaryPoached Eggs: Women as Poachers is a one day event led by Eva Weinmayr and Rosalie Schweiker in the context of Idiotic Code: On Resistant Usership, a multi-disciplinary seminar organsied by Sideroom and Future Ruins taking place in Amsterdam from 18 October — 8 November 2015.sv
art.description.supportedByAmsterdam Fund for the Arts, Mondriaan Fundsv
art.relation.urihttp://w139.nl/en/article/23455/idiotic-code-on-resistant-usership/sv


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