Date: Mon, 8 Feb 93 18:16:21 PST
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From: [email protected] (abg-n-ahzore)
To: [email protected] (SURFPUNK Technical Journal)
Subject: [surfpunk-0051] PMC: "Postmodern Culture" & review of Snow Crash
Keywords: surfpunk, Stuart Moulthrop, Postmodern Culture, Snow Crash, Neal Stephenson

+                +  Jesse Helms fears art because he still thinks it
                +  can change the world;  the NEA "Liberals" think
                +  all art should be allowed, because, after all,
                +  "It's only art!".
                +                     -- Hakim Bey
                +                     (at Komotion, san fran, 6feb93)
                +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Michael J. Current" <[email protected]> on FutureCulture
recommends this essay:

       Stuart Moulthrop, "Deuteronomy Comix."  A review
            of Neal Stephenson's _Snow Crash_.              REVIEW-1 193

It's part of the Jan93 issue of the e-journal "Postmodern Culture" (PMC).
Below I'm including the CONTENTS from this issue.

It's available for anonymous ftp from "ncsuvm.cc.ncsu.edu".
Talk gently to ncsuvm.cc.ncsu.edu -- it's not a unix machine.
Log in as "anonymous", and don't put "@" in your password.
Spell filenames with all caps.  "cd" into "PMC", but don't use a slash.
Be sure you use ASCII rather than BINARY transfer.  Say things like
"get REVIEW-1.193".  The Jan93 files all end in ".193".

It appears the authors do not want me to mail out PMC articles
inside SURFPUNKs -- they want you to have to access the archives yourself.
So I don't think they'll mind me mailing the contents and instructions.
These instructions do tell how to get articles via email instead of ftp.

                                               Happy hacking...  strick

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POSTMODERNCULTUREPOSTMODERNCULTURE
P       RNCU   REPO   ODER       E            P O S T M O D E R N
P  TMOD RNCU  U EP S  ODER  ULTU E               C U L T U R E
P       RNCU  UR  OS  ODER  ULTURE
P  TMODERNCU  UREPOS  ODER  ULTU E          an electronic journal
P  TMODERNCU  UREPOS  ODER       E           of interdisciplinary
POSTMODERNCULTUREPOSTMODERNCULTURE                      criticism
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Volume 3, Number 2 (January, 1993)                ISSN: 1053-1920
-----------------------------------------------------------------

Editors:                              Eyal Amiran, Issue Editor
                                     John Unsworth

Review Editor:                        Jim English

Managing Editor:                      Nancy Cooke
List Manager:                         Chris Barrett
Editorial Assistant:                  Jonathan Beasley


Editorial Board:

     Kathy Acker                     Chimalum Nwankwo
     Sharon Bassett                  Patrick O'Donnell
     Michael Berube                  Elaine Orr
     Marc Chenetier                  Marjorie Perloff
     Greg Dawes                      David Porush
     R. Serge Denisoff               Mark Poster
     Robert Detweiler                Carl Raschke
     Henry Louis Gates, Jr.          Mike Reynolds
     Joe Gomez                       Avital Ronell
     Robert Hodge                    Andrew Ross
     bell hooks                      Jorge Ruffinelli
     E. Ann Kaplan                   Susan M. Schultz
     Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett   William Spanos
     Arthur Kroker                   Tony Stewart
     Neil Larsen                     Gary Lee Stonum
     Jerome J. McGann                Chris Straayer
     Stuart Moulthrop                Paul Trembath
     Larysa Mykyta                   Greg Ulmer
     Phil Novak

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                           CONTENTS

AUTHOR & TITLE                                              FN FT

Masthead, Contents, and                              CONTENTS 193
    Instructions for retrieving files

Barrett Watten, "Post-Soviet Subjectivity"             WATTEN 193

Arkadii Dragomoshchenko, from _Phosphor_.  Tr.       DRAGOMOS 193
    Lyn Hejinian and Elena Balashova

Jerome McGann, Vitaly Chernetsky,                    SYMPOS-1 193
    Arkadii Dragomoshchenko, Mikhail Epstein,
    Lyn Hejinian, Bob Perelman, Marjorie
    Perloff, A Symposium on Russian
    Postmodernism, Oct. 26-Nov. 25, 1992

Marjorie Perloff, and Mikhail Epstein, two           SYMPOS-2 193
    draft essays circulated as part of
    Postmoder Culture's symposium on Russian
    Postmodernism

Vladislav Todorov, "The Four Luxembourgs"             TODOROV 193
    (fiction)

Wendy Wahl, "Bodies and Technologies: _Dora_,            WAHL 193
    _Neuromancer_, and Strategies of
    Resistance"

Alan Aycock, "Derrida/Fort-da: Deconstructing          AYCOCK 193
    Play"

Kathleen Burnett, "Towards a Theory of                BURNETT 193
    Hypertextual Design"


POPULAR CULTURE COLUMN:

Honoria, "Introducing Mail Art: A Karen Elliot
    interview with Crackerjack Kid and Honoria"     POP-CULT 193


REVIEWS:

Stuart Moulthrop, "Deuteronomy Comix."  A review
    of Neal Stephenson's _Snow Crash_.              REVIEW-1 193

Jon Thompson, "Consuming Megalopolis."  A review
    of Celeste Olalquiaga's _Megalopolis:
    Contemporary Cultural Sensibilities_.           REVIEW-2 193

Philip E. Agre, "Sustainability and Critique."
    A review of Will Wright's _Wild Knowledge:
    Science, Language, and Social Life in a
    Fragile Environment_.                           REVIEW-3 193

Susan J. Ritchie, "Constructing an Archipelago:
    Writing the Caribbean."  A review of Antonio
    Benitez-Rojo's _The Repeating Island:
    The Caribbean and the Postmodern
    Perspective_.                                   REVIEW-4 193

James Morrison, "Hitchcock: The Industry."  A
    review of Robert E. Kapsis's _Hitchock: The
    Making of a Reputation_.                        REVIEW-5 193

Josephine Lee, "Cookbooks for Theory and
    Performance."  A review of Case, Sue-Ellen
    and Janelle Reinelt, eds.  _The Performance
    of Power: Theatrical Discourse and Politics_,
    and Reinelt, Janelle G. and Joseph R. Roach,
    eds.  _Critical Theory and Performance_.        REVIEW-6 193

Glen Scott Allen, "Baptismal Eulogies:
    Reconstructing Deconstruction from the
    Ashes."  A review of Jacques Derrida's
    _Cinders_, tr. Ned Lukacher, and Jacques
    Derrida's _The Other Heading: Reflections on
    Today's Europe_, tr. Pascale-Anne Brault &
    Michael B. Naas.                                REVIEW-7 193


LETTERS:

Vaillancourt-Rosenau and Foley, an exchange           LETTERS 193


NOTICES:

Announcements and Advertisements                      NOTICES 193

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                           ABSTRACTS

Barrett Watten, "Post-soviet Subjectivity in Arkadii
    Dragomoshchenko and Ilya Kabakov"

         ABSTRACT: The break-up of official culture in the
    Soviet Union led to aesthetic developments characterized by
    an intense, utopian, and metaphysically speculative
    subjectivity.  Identifying these "post-Soviet" developments
    with postmodernism would be to misunderstand them, however.
    Aspects of this subjectivity can be seen in the
    installations and texts of Ilya Kabakov, developing out of
    Moscow conceptual art originating in the 1970s and now being
    shown in museums in the West, and in the poetry of Arkadii
    Dragomoshchenko, representative of the 1980s "meta" litera-
    ture from Moscow and Leningrad, now appearing in American
    translations.  Both projects, while formally very different,
    dismantle Soviet authority in ways that are more culturally
    specific than generically postmodern.  --BW


Jerome McGann, Vitaly Chernetsky, Arkadii Dragomoshchenko,
    Mikhail Epstein, Lyn Hejinian, Bob Perelman, and Marjorie
    Perloff, "A Symposium on Russian Postmodernism"

         ABSTRACT: Jerome McGann moderates an email discussion
    among Vitaly Chernetsky, Arkadii Dragomoshchenko, Mikhail
    Epstein, Lyn Hejinian, Bob Perelman, and Marjorie Perloff
    about Russian Postmodernism.  The discussions took place on
    Oct. 26-Nov. 25, 1992.  The symposium includes poetry by
    Arkadii Dragomoschenko, from XENIA, and an essay by
    Dragomoschenko, "Eroticism of For-Getting, Eroticism of
    Beyond-Being" (translated by Vanessa Bittner with Arkadii
    Dragomoshchenko).  A draft of an essay by Marjorie
    Perloff was circulated at the beginning to all participants;
    this essay, and also excerpts from an essay by Mikhail
    Epstein (sent during the symposium), are included the file
    SYMPOS-2 in this issue.  Participants received an advance
    copy of Barrett Watten's essay, available in this issue as
    WATTEN 193.  --EA


Wendy Wahl, "Bodies and Technologies: _Dora_, _Neuromancer_, and
    Strategies of Resistance"

         ABSTRACT: A pragmatic warning for cyborgs seeking to
    resist the "gradual and willing accommodation of the
    machine," the author focuses on the ability of therapeutic
    and cybernetic networks to recuperate resistance. From
    Freudian clinical practice to the historicized future of
    William Gibson's _Neuromancer_, promising theoretical
    disruptions of oppositional pairs are reclaimed in practice,
    often with chilling results. This reclamation is often
    signaled by the material moment when gender oppositions
    break down; in a backlash against their inclusion with "the
    other," the nostalgic and paranoid reaction of male
    theorists excludes the object, locating interiority once
    again within their experience. Is there any space in a
    postnatural future for a female subject with interiority?


Alan Aycock, "Derrida/Fort-da: Deconstructing Play"

         ABSTRACT: Although the writings of Jacques Derrida are
    notable for their playfulness, little attention has been
    given to the possibilities of a deconstructive approach to
    the study of play itself.  Derrida's discussion of the
    "fort-da" game is presented to suggest some elements of such
    an approach, and five examples drawn from participant
    observation of the game of chess are analysed from a
    deconstructive viewpoint.  Some implications of
    deconstruction are offered for further ethnographic
    investigation.  --AA


Kathleen Burnett, "Toward a Theory of Hypertextual Design"

         ABSTRACT: Commencing with a critique of Poster's
    modes of information, this article employs Deleuze &
    Guattari's metaphor of the rhizome to explicate
    electronically mediated exchange, of which hypertext is the
    apparent fulfillment.  The "approximate characteristics of
    the rhizome"--principles of connection, heterogeneity,
    multiplicity, asignifying rupture, and cartography and
    decalcomania--are considered as principles of hypertextual
    design.  --KB

----------------------------------------------------------------
TO RETRIEVE SINGLE ITEMS LISTED ABOVE, send a mail message to
listserv@ncsuvm or [email protected] containing as its
one and only line the command

    get [fn ft] pmc-list f=mail

(replace [fn ft] with the filename and filetype, as listed in the
table of contents, for the file you want to receive).  There
should be no blank lines, spaces, or other text preceding this
line.

TO RETRIEVE THE WHOLE ISSUE as a package, send a mail message to
listserv@ncsuvm or [email protected] with the command

     get pmcv3n2 package pmc-list f=mail

If you request the issue as a package, please make certain you
have sufficient virtual disk space on your e-mail account to
receive it (at least half a megabyte).  More detailed
instructions are available in the file NEWUSER PREFACE: to
retrieve this file, send a mail message to listserv@ncsuvm or
[email protected] with the command

    get newuser preface pmc-list f=mail

If none of the above works for you, contact the editors.

_Postmodern Culture_ uses only ASCII text (the character-code
common to all personal computers): this means that readers can
download the text of the journal from the mainframe (where mail
is received) to any personal computer and import it into almost
all word-processing programs.  Text in the journal uses a 65-
character line, so you should set your margins accordingly before
importing journal files into a word-processing program.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

_POSTMODERN CULTURE_ is published by Oxford University Press
three times a year (September, January, and May) using the
Revised LISTSERV program ((c) Eric Thomas 1986, Ecole Centrale de
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COPYRIGHT: Unless otherwise noted, copyrights for the texts which
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requires the written consent of the editors and of the publisher.

-----------------END OF CONTENTS 193 FOR PMC 3.2-----------------

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The SURFPUNK Technical Journal is a dangerous multinational hacker zine
originating near BARRNET in the fashionable western arm of the northern
California matrix.  Quantum Californians appear in one of two states,
spin surf or spin punk.  Undetected, we are both, or might be neither.
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