#Dbc discussion
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yoolean · 7 months ago
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Duality of man lmao
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dead-boys-club · 11 months ago
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hello everyone 💕 feel free to call me koko or kat.
i am 26; 070798
i am currently: active and accepting requests.
welcome to dbc, a lovely little anime blog that specializes in hurting your feelings 95% of the time, the other 5% is fluff.
i am actually desperately seeking friends!
what i receive: friends to share drabbles, blurbs, rambles and letters with
what you receive: a little writer with no life that also want to hear your ramblings
ig : pixxelvomit
discord : pixxelvomit
i don’t have many rules here or what i won’t write but i will begin with this;
this is my blog and i am in control of the content posted here. i have every right to deny a request without explanation if i don’t feel like nor enjoy your request; if it’s something i find uncomfortable, i simply won’t write it. arguing with me will not get you anywhere.
i am apothiosexual and genophobic; nsfw have a 50/50 on being accepted.
i do not write ‘romantic’ abuse, noncon, dubcon, ageplay, or any blatantly wrong genre. if you want to fight your case, go ahead; i will not listen or entertain your need to waste time on fighting against an opinion.
if you’re a minor and i find you interacting with nsfw/mdni posts, i will block you. no chance of pleading your case.
requesting:
i write for:
hsr - mha - tokrev - jjk - haikyuu - demon slayer - genshin
hcs, reactions, drabbles, timestamps.
if you want to discuss a full plot, message me.
request as much as you want.
be patient; i do the requests i feel like doing - i will not rush something. i do not want to give anyone a half assed response.
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kmp78 · 2 years ago
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"Does he care about anything anymore?  🙄He seriously looks like he doesn´t"
I think he's burnt out. Done and over with everything! That 'look' is what he really wants. Being comfy at 🏡 on the couch, go rock climbing or swanning the Meds. But he's smart enough to know such a leisurely lifestyle needs funding. Unfortunately, he chose the cheap route. Hence, the clown get ups with supposed shock and OMG, it's Jared Leto! value, the uninspired album and flop movies. He needs to take a break and come back when he has something meaningful to offer. Re-invent himself. This current 🎪 destroys everything he previously worked hard for. As much as I enjoy the entertainment it provides, it's boring, repetitive and forgotten the next day. I still like JL and I would rather discuss his successes or great interesting projects here than muse about the newest chapter of MissTTT snoozefest saga. Do people even remember how fun it used to be around here during DBC or the release of an actual successful album/movie? 🤔 I hope he finds some inspiration or at least takes some time away from the limelight. His mojo is majorly off!
The massive failure of this latest album def shows in his face and his demeanor. 💯
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intelmarketresearch · 3 days ago
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Auto Catalysts Market Growth Analysis, Market Dynamics, Key Players and Innovations, Outlook and Forecast 2025-2031
The global Auto Catalysts market was valued at USD 11,154.62 million in 2023 and is estimated to decrease to USD 8,135.97 million in 2024. However, it is expected to reach USD 8,780.56 million by the end of 2030, growing at a CAGR of 1.28% between 2024 and 2030. Auto catalysts, also known as automotive catalytic converters, are emission control devices that are installed in automobiles to reduce the emissions of harmful gases, such as carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and hydrocarbons (HCs).
Get free sample of this report at : https://www.intelmarketresearch.com/download-free-sample/440/auto-catalysts-market-research
North America market for Auto Catalysts is estimated to increase from USD 3,057.14 million in 2023 to reach USD 2,192.51 million by 2030, at a CAGR of -0.47% during the forecast period of 2024 through 2030.
Europe market for Auto Catalysts is estimated to increase from USD 4,299.62 million in 2023 to reach USD 3,427.31 million by 2030, at a CAGR of 1.24% during the forecast period of 2024 through 2030.
China market for Auto Catalysts is estimated to increase from USD 1,928.22 million in 2023 to reach USD 1,408.02 million by 2030, at a CAGR of 1.07% during the forecast period of 2024 through 2030.
The major global manufacturers of Auto Catalysts include BASF, Johnson Matthey, Umicore, Cataler, Tokyo Roki, N.E. Chemcat, Sinocat, Wuxi Weifu Environmental Catalysts, and Sino-Platinum, etc. In 2023, the world's top four vendors accounted for approximately 77.23 % of the revenue.
Report Scope
This report aims to provide a comprehensive presentation of the global market for Auto Catalysts, with both quantitative and qualitative analysis, to help readers develop business/growth strategies, assess the market competitive situation, analyze their position in the current marketplace, and make informed business decisions regarding Auto Catalysts.
The Auto Catalysts market size, estimations, and forecasts are provided in terms of output/shipments (K Liter) and revenue ($ millions), considering 2023 as the base year, with history and forecast data for the period from 2019 to 2030. This report segments the global Auto Catalysts market comprehensively. Regional market sizes, concerning products by Type, by Application, and by players, are also provided.
For a more in-depth understanding of the market, the report provides profiles of the competitive landscape, key competitors, and their respective market ranks. The report also discusses technological trends and new product developments.
The report will help the Auto Catalysts manufacturers, new entrants, and industry chain related companies in this market with information on the revenues, production, and average price for the overall market and the sub-segments across the different segments, by company, by Type, by Application, and by regions.
Market Segmentation
By Company
BASF
Johnson Matthey
Umicore
Cataler
Sino-Platinum
N.E. Chemcat
Wuxi Weifu Environmental Catalysts
Tokyo Roki
Sinocat
by Type
Gasoline Catalyst
Diesel Catalyst
Natural Gas Catalyst
by Application
Passenger Cars
Commercial Vehicles
Production by Region
North America
Europe
China
Japan
Consumption by Region
North America
U.S.
Canada
Asia-Pacific
China
Japan
South Korea
Southeast Asia
India
Europe
Germany
France
U.K.
Italy
Spain
Latin America
Mexico
Brazil
Rest of Latin America
Get free sample of this report at : https://www.intelmarketresearch.com/download-free-sample/440/auto-catalysts-market-research
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onosokkiindia · 4 months ago
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The Role of Sound Level Meters in Noise Pollution Control
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The rise of noise pollution has become a major issue for modern people who are struggling to stay healthy and keep the environment clean. Keeping on talking is very much harmful to the environment because of the various consequences like climate change. Unimaginable noise can also cause hearing problems as a result of the failure of our ear hairs by loud sounds. The sensational article discusses the author´s hatred of the rock band, which implies bad music is an indirect reason of noise pollution.
What is a Sound Level Meter?
A decibel meter is an instrument that measures the sound pressure levels in decibels (dB). It has a microphone and an amplifier as well as a display unit that records noise levels in real-time. These meters enable experts to evaluate noise pollution and take appropriate control measures.
The Science Behind Noise Measurement
Noise is a concept expressed in decibels (dB), with several kinds of topic that differ from the truth of the hearing ability of different kinds of people. Among the different frequency weightings, the most commonly used one is the A-weighting scale (dBA) which is for general noise studies. Another important one is the C-weighting (dBC) which is for low-frequency noise analysis.
Types of Sound Level Meters
Sound level meters come in different classes:
Class 1 meters offer high precision and are used for scientific and legal noise assessments.
Class 2 meters are more commonly used for general-purpose noise measurements.
Handheld meters are portable and easy to use, while fixed meters provide continuous monitoring.
Applications of Sound Level Meters in Noise Pollution Control
Sound level meters are used in various fields, including:
Environmental monitoring to track urban noise levels
Industrial settings to ensure workplace safety
Traffic noise assessment for urban planning
Construction sites to minimize excessive noise
Regulatory Standards for Noise Pollution
In order to protect the public health and improve workplace safety both the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) set noise exposure limits. Noise control laws are also enforced by governments at local and national levels.
Using Sound Level Meters for Compliance and Enforcement
Regulatory bodies use sound level meters to monitor noise levels in public and private spaces. Excessive noise can result in fines, legal action, or the implementation of noise control measures.
Advantages of Using Sound Level Meters
Highly accurate noise measurement
Portable and easy to use
Data storage and analysis capabilities
Challenges in Noise Measurement and Control
While sound level meters are effective, they have limitations, including:
Environmental factors (wind, reflections) affecting accuracy
Cost considerations for high-end devices
Difficulty measuring fluctuating noise levels
How to Choose the Right Sound Level Meter
Factors to consider when choosing a sound level meter include:
Accuracy and precision
Ease of use and portability
Budget and intended application
Recent Innovations in Noise Measurement Technology
Innovation in AI, IoT, as well as wireless technology has made noise management better by being more obtainable and at a faster pace. By means of a cloud-based monitoring system, the actual data may be tracked, analyzed, and also updated in the same facility.
Future of Noise Pollution Control
As noise pollution concerns grow, stricter regulations and innovative noise management solutions are expected to improve environmental and workplace noise control.
Conclusion
It is beyond doubt that sound level meters are undeniably necessary tools in the battle against noise pollution. Through the precise measurement and observation of noise levels, they facilitate the code enforcement of the laws and help in the creation of healthier atmospheres. As the technology gets better and improves the noise control will be far more successful, making the world less loud, a place where people can enjoy silence and peace.
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hairbeautysupplies · 11 months ago
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Unlock Your Salon's Full Potential with Hairdresser Supplies
Hello there, salon owners and hairstylists! Welcome to our blog post, where we will discuss how you can unlock your salon's full potential by investing in a quality hairdresser supplier. We understand the importance of providing exceptional services to your clients, and one of the key factors that contribute to that is the quality of your supplies.
1. The Importance of Quality Hairdressing Supplies
When it comes to running a successful salon, using high-quality hairdressing supplies is not just an option but a necessity. These supplies play a crucial role in ensuring customer satisfaction and loyalty. Imagine using cheap and unreliable products on your client's hair. 
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The results would be disastrous, and your reputation would suffer. On the other hand, utilising high-quality supplies will leave your clients feeling satisfied, impressed, and eager to come back for more.
It's not just about the immediate impact on your clients. The overall reputation and success of your salon are directly linked to the quality of your supplies. 
Word of mouth spreads quickly in the beauty industry, and if your clients are thrilled with their haircuts, colours, or styling, they will be more likely to recommend your salon to their friends, family, and colleagues. This positive feedback can significantly boost your business and help you establish a loyal customer base.
2. Key Features to Look for in Hairdressing Supplies
Now that we've established the importance of using quality supplies let's delve into the key features you should look for when selecting your hairdressing supplies. Durability is a vital aspect to consider. 
You want tools and equipment that can withstand the daily wear and tear of a busy salon. Investing in a hairdresser supplier will save you money in the long run, as you won't have to continuously replace them.
Versatility is another crucial factor. Your supplies should be able to cater to a wide range of hair types and styles. Whether you're working with straight hair, curly hair, or anything in between, having supplies that can adapt to different textures and lengths will enhance your salon's offerings and attract a more diverse clientele.
Ergonomic designs are also worth considering. As a hairstylist, you spend long hours on your feet, using various tools and equipment. 
Having supplies that are ergonomically designed will reduce the strain on your body and improve your overall comfort and efficiency. This, in turn, will allow you to provide better services to your clients. 
Final Thoughts
Investing in quality hairdresser supplier is a non-negotiable aspect of running a successful salon. The impact on customer satisfaction, loyalty, and overall reputation cannot be overstated. 
So, whether you're in need of durable tools, versatile products, or ergonomic designs, look no further than DBC Hair & Beauty Supplies. They have a wide range of options to suit your specific requirements and budgetary constraints. Don't settle for anything less than the best for your salon and your clients.
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rocknvaughn · 5 years ago
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New Colin Morgan Interview with Edge Media Network about Benjamin - UPDATED
I am reblogging this because, after the author was made aware of an error in the posting of his article (if anyone clicked through to read it on the site, there was a whole question and answer that was repeated), the error was corrected and another three questions and answers were added! I am correcting it here, but they were very interesting, so I suggest you read the full article again!
I shall post the link at the bottom, but I wanted to type it out so that non-English speakers could more easily translate it. (This article was listed in their “Gay News” section of the site, hence the focus on the gay roles.)
British Actor Colin Morgan: How the Queerly Idiosyncratic ‘Benjamin’ Spoke to Him
by Frank J. Avelia
In writer-director Simon Amstell’s sweet, idiosyncratic, semi-autobiographical comedy, “Benjamin,” Colin Morgan plays the titular character, an insecure filmmaker trying to resuscitate his waning career (at least it’s waning in his mind) after one major cine-indie success. Benjamin is also doing his best to navigate a new relationship with a young French musician (Phenix Brossard of “Departures”).
Thanks to the truly endearing, multifaceted talents of Morgan, Benjamin feels like an authentic creation--one that most audiences can empathize with. Sure, he’s peculiar, has a legion of self-esteem issues and an almost exasperating need for acceptance as well as an inconvenient talent to self-sabotage the good in his life. But who can’t relate to some or all of that?
“Benjamin” is one of the better queer-themed films to come out in recent years, in large part because it eschews emphasis on the queer nature of the story. Instead, the film is a fascinating character study with Morgan slowly revealing layers and unpacking Benjamin’s emotional baggage.
Morgan is a major talent who has been appearing across mediums in Britain for many years. His London theatre debut was in DBC Pierre’s satire, “Vernon God Little” (2007), followed by the stage adaptation of Pedro Almodovar’s “All About My Mother” (2007), opposite Diana Rigg. Numerous and eclectic stage work followed (right up until the Corona shutdown) including Pedro Miguel Rozo’s “Our Private Life” (2011), where he played a bipolar gay, Jez Butterworth’s dark comedy, “Mojo” (2013), Arthur Miller’s “All My Sons” opposite Sally Field (2019), and Caryl Churchill’s “A Number” (2020), to name a few.
His TV work includes, “Merlin” (playing the wizard himself), “Humans” and most recently, in a very memorable episode of “The Crown”. Onscreen he can be seen in “Testament of Youth”, “Legend” with Tom Hardy, “Snow White and the Huntsman” and Rupert Everett’s take on Oscar Wilde, “The Happy Prince.”
He’s played a host of gay roles in the past on stage, screen and TV.
EDGE recently interviewed the star of “Benjamin” about the new film and his career.
Why Benjamin?
EDGE: What drew you to this project and were you part of its development?
Colin Morgan: It’s always the strength of the script for me on any project and Simon’s script was just so well observed, he managed to combine humor and poignancy in delicate measure and when I first read it I found myself being both tickled and touched. Then reading it again and from “the actor” POV... I knew it would be a real challenge and uncharted territory for me to explore. I auditioned for Simon and we tried it in different ways and then when I was lucky enough for Simon to want me on board, we began to work through the script together, because it was clear that this was going to be a very close working relationship... it was important for the level of trust to be high.
EDGE: I appreciated that this was a queer love story where the character’s queerness wasn’t the main focus. Was that also part of the allure of the project?
CM: I think Benjamin’s sexuality is just quite naturally who he is and therefore that’s a given, we’re on his journey to find meaning and love and there’s certainly a freshness to what Simon has written in not making sexuality the main focus.
Great chemistry
EDGE: Can you speak a but about the process involved in working with Amstell on the character and his journey?
CM: Simon and me worked very closely over a period of weeks, at that time prior to shooting I was doing a theatre project not far from where he lived so I would go to him and rehearse and discuss through the whole script all afternoon before going to do the show that night, so that worked out well. It’s so personal to Simon, and to have had him as my guide and source throughout was fantastic because I could ask him all the questions and he could be the best barometer for the truth of the character; a rare opportunity for an actor and one that was so essential for building Benjamin. But ultimately Simon wanted Benjamin to emerge from somewhere inside me and he gave me so much freedom to do that also.
EDGE: You had great chemistry with Phenix Brossard. Did you get to rehearse?
CM: Phenix is fantastic, Simon and me did chemistry reads with a few different actors who were all very good but Phenix just had an extra something we felt Benjamin would be drawn to. We did a little bit of rehearsal together but because it was a relationship that was trying to find itself there was a lot of room for spontaneity and uncertainty between us, which is what the allure of a new relationship is all about, the excitement and fear.
Liberating process
EDGE: Did your process meld with Amstell’s?
CM: I’ve said this a lot before and it’s true, Simon is one of the best directors I’ve worked with. Everything he created before shooting and then maintained on set was special. We always did improvised versions of most scenes and always the scripted version too. It was such a creative and liberating process. That is exactly the way I love to work. And for a director to maintain that level of bravery, trust and experimental play throughout the whole shoot stands as one of the most rewarding shooting experiences I’ve had.
EDGE: When I spoke with Rupert Everett about “The Happy Prince,” he very proudly boasted about his ensemble. Can you speak about working with Rupert as he balanced wearing a number of creative hats?
CM: Again, this was an extremely rewarding project to work on and quite a similar relationship as with Simon in the respect that Rupert was the writer/director and Oscar Wilde is so personal to him. And then we also had many scenes together in front of the camera, so Rupert and me had a real 3D experience together. It was a long time in the making. I was on board, I think, two years before we actually got shooting so I had a lot of time to work with Rupert and rehearse. He really inspired me, watching him wear all the different creative hats, such a challenging and difficult job/jobs to achieve and he really excelled--plus we just got on very well.
Playing queer roles
EDGE: You haven’t shied away from playing queer roles. Do you think we’re moving closer to a time when a person’s sexual orientation is of little consequence to the stories being told, or should it always matter? Or perhaps we need to continue to evolve as a culture for it to matter less or not at all...
CM: That’s a hard question to answer, I think certainly the shift in people’s attitudes has changed considerably for the better compared to 40 years ago, but there will always be resistance to change and acceptance from individuals and groups whether it be sexuality, religion, race, gender--we’re seeing it every day.
Evolution is, of course, inevitable, but if we can learn from the past as we evolve that would be the ideal. Unfortunately, we rarely do learn, and history repeats itself.
EDGE: You were featured prominently in one of my favorite episodes of the “The Crown” (”Bubbikins”) as the fictional journo John Armstrong. Can you speak a bit about working on the show and with the great Jane Lapotaire?
CM: I had an exceptionally good time working on “The Crown.” Director Benjamin Caron, especially, was so prepared and creative, and made the whole experience so welcoming and inclusive. It was an incredibly happy set, with extremely talented people in every department, and I admired the ethos of the whole production and have no doubt that’s a huge ingredient to its success, along with Peter Morgan’s incredible writing.
I was also a fan of the show, and it was an honor to be part of the third season. And I can’t say enough amazing things about Jane Lapotaire. We talked a lot in between filming, and I relished every moment of that.
EDGE: You’ve done a ton of stage work. Do you have a favorite role you’ve played onstage?
CM: I’ve been so lucky with the theatre work I’ve done, to work with such special directors and work in wonderful theatres in London. I’ve worked at the Old Vic and The Young Vic twice each, and they’re always special to me. Ian Rickson is a liberating director, who I love. It’s hard to pick a favorite, because the roles have all been so different and presented different challenges, but, most recently, doing “A Number,” playing three different characters alongside Roger Allam and directed by Polly Findlay, was a really treasured experience, and I never tired of doing that show, every performance was challenging as it was.
Miss the rehearsal room
EDGE: You were doing “A Number” earlier this year. Did you finish your run before the lockdown/shutdown?
CM: Just about! We had our final performance, and then lockdown happened days later. I feel very sorry for the productions that didn’t get the sense of completion of finishing a run. I mean, finishing a full run leaves you in a kind of post-show void anyway, even though you know it’s coming, so to not know it’s coming and have it severed must be even more of a void.
Memories of performing just months ago seem like such an unattainable thing in this COVID world right now. I can’t tell you how much I’m hoping we get back to some semblance of live performance.
EDGE: What was it like to appear onstage opposite Dame Diana Rigg in “All About My Mother?”
CM: Well, I think “iconic” is an apt word for both the experience of working with Diana and the lady herself. In between scenes backstage we used to talk a lot and we got told off for talking too loudly, so Diana began to teach me sign language and we would spell out words to each other, maybe only getting a couple of sentences to each other before she was due on stage and I had to get into position for my next entrance-- we did a radio play together two years ago and she remembered, she said, “Do you remember A-E-I-O-U?” signing out the letters with her hands.
EDGE: None of us knows the future in terms of the pandemic and when we might return to making theatre. I’m a playwright myself and find it all supremely frustrating but I’m trying to remain hopeful! Where are you right now in terms of the standstill we are in and what the future might hold?
CM: Yes, I’m so worried for theatre. It’s a devastating blow. I’m sure as a playwright, you know that the creative spirit in individuals hasn’t been diminished by this virus. People are creating important art in this crisis but we need the platforms to present it and bring people to some light again out of this really scary period, but it needs to be safe and it’s a worrying time. The virtual theatre approach must be looked at I think. We need to experiment and find new paths at least for the time being. I’m involved in developing some things right now and how we can work on things in both an isolated and collaborative way. It’s entirely counterintuitive to what the family-feel and close bond of a group in a rehearsal room is like-- I miss the rehearsal room so much!-- but we can’t sit still, we must create and we must act.
What’s in a role?
EDGE: Looking back on the great success of “Merlin,” what are your takeaways from that experience?
CM: Some of the most treasured memories of my life will forever be connected to “Merlin,” the cast, crew, production, everyone! The invaluable training of being in front of a camera every day! The chance to inhabit a character and live with him for five seasons! There’s too much to list and words probably won’t do justice anyway, but I’m truly grateful for everything the show gave me.
EDGE: How do you select the roles you play?
CM: I guess they select me in a way. I can’t play a role unless it speaks to me and provokes me in some way, but ultimately it’s the characters that I have a fear about playing, not knowing how I’m going to enter into the process of living them, when I don’t have all the answers it’s a good indicator of a character I must play. If I have all the answers, there’s less scope for exploration and discovery which isn’t as interesting for me.
Link here
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trashandtreasurespod · 4 years ago
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Drunk Book Club: Dennis Cooper's FRISK 
Special thanks to Anile for commissioning this episode! You can find out more about commissions on our Patreon.
This month we stretch our muscles by getting into some ~literary fiction~! More precisely, the work of Dennis Cooper, a big name in queer outsider art who influenced previous DBC alumni Billy Martin (aka Poppy Z Brite) and Chuck Palahniuk and whose published alongside inevitable future subject Brett Easton Ellis.
FRISK, the story of a dude who has a lot of sex and even more fantasies about violently murdering his partners, is considered his most intimidating work so….let’s plunge right into that deep end! Pack a bag, because we did a LOT of extra reading for this one. Also, all the content warnings. My God, all of them.
CONTENT WARNING: Discussion of sexual assault, pedophilia, coprophagia, water sports, snuff, necrophilia, graphic descriptions of gore/dismemberment, racism, queerphobia, transphobia, grooming, ageism, and misogyny.
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
The JT Leroy Scam
William S Burroughs’ Nike Commercial
Cooper’s Formalism and The Sluts
Interview w/ Cooper’s Biographer
Article BY Cooper’s Biographer
Personal Relationships in Cooper’s Writing (Salon)
On Cooper’s Mother (LA Times)
BOMB Magazine Interview
Not Like Other Gays (Honcho Magazine)
1:00 Content Warnings 4:00 Drinks 9:00 A Helpful Timeline 14:00 OH Shit, it’s the Frankfurt School 26:00 Sexual, Not Erotic 30:00 The Sad-But-Not Ballad of Dennis Cooper 42:00 “In Your Lane” vs “Blinkers On” 57:00 Interview Diving
Say hi to Dorothy and Vrai on Twitter @writervrai and @dorothynotgale
Our icon was designed by Allison Shabet.
Get bonus episodes on our Patreon
Join us every two weeks on Soundcloud, iTunes or Stitcher – and if you’d leave a rating and review, so that more people can find their way to us, we’d appreciate it!
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dykebookclub · 5 years ago
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update!
book club #1!!! i’m not sure what the best approach is yet, but since this is the first one i just thought we could do 2 books for the entire month of september (you don’t have to read both ofc!) and during the month this blog can act as the meeting point where ppl can send their thoughts etc. i will tag every post about the monthly books with spoilers so ppl can blacklist (example: #dbc 1 book 1 + #dbc 1 book 2, for this month). and at the end of the month i will open a discord voice channel where ppl can join for an actual live discussion
this is just a test month tbh so all tips are welcome for the next ones but this is the plan for this upcoming september!
in a few weeks i will announce next month’s plan and book(s)! so please lmk what we can change for next month! and how many books or live meetings!
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definingbillcipher · 8 years ago
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I remember when the editor and I were first tossing around ideas for DBC, they suggested I wait until the show was over. That way we wouldn't be surprised in case the show introduced anything that would break the story. I decided to go ahead with it anyway. That ended up being for the best, as there's no way I would've gone forward if I had seen the Last Mabelcorn, because that stuff was crazy
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digitalbcards · 2 years ago
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How Digital Business Cards Can Help You Promote Your Companys’ Commitment to the Environment
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At Digital Business Cards DBC, we are committed to helping organizations like yours promote their commitment to the environment. We are a tech-savvy and innovative brand in the corporate world. In today's blog, we'll look at the direct environmental effects of traditional business cards and discuss how our environmentally friendly digital cards might be a good solution.
 We'll explain the long-term benefits of switching to DBC using our years of industry knowledge. Join us as we reveal how our cutting-edge methodology may improve your brand's reputation while also promoting a more sustainable future for the globe.
Let’s Dive Deeper!
Businesses all around the world are becoming more environmentally conscious, therefore finding sustainable solutions to reduce their environmental impact has moved to the top of the priority list. One area that is commonly neglected is the use of conventional visiting cards, which can lead to deforestation, water pollution, and excessive water usage. We can stress how environmentally beneficial digital business cards can be for firms looking to show their dedication to the environment by looking at the real environmental consequences of using paper business cards. We'll go over the benefits of switching to digital business cards and how they can help your organization achieve its sustainability goals, with a focus on reducing waste, water use, and deforestation.
Water Usage: A Hidden Environmental Impact
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By minimising the amount of water that is diverted from the bays, rivers, and coasts, using less water helps to maintain their environmental integrity. Due to the high water requirements for the production of paper business cards, there are environmental problems such as water pollution, excessive water use, and stress on freshwater resources.
Less water use leads to a reduction in the amount of water utilized in wastewater treatment plants.
According to a study, it takes 17,000 gallons of water to make one tonne of paper. To put this in context, let's calculate the annual water consumption for printing paper business cards:
Calculating the Environmental Impact:
• The average weight of a business card is 1.35 grams.
•  Assuming that 148,812 tons of paper are used in producing paper business         cards each year (based on average weight).
•  Multiplying the tons of paper used (148,812) by the gallons of water required       to produce one ton of paper (17,000).
•  Gallons of water used annually: 2,529,821,000
 According to the computation above, the production of paper business cards alone uses more than 2.5 billion gallons of water annually. Businesses must seriously investigate eco-friendly alternatives like digital business cards because of the large water usage's potential negative consequences on regional water sources, ecosystems, and communities.
 Digital Business Cards: A Sustainable Solution
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Digital business cards have grown in popularity as a more sustainable option to conventional paper business cards in recent years. These cutting-edge cards communicate contact information and marketing materials digitally, doing away with the need for printed materials and lessening environmental effects.
 Let's look at several ways digital business cards can help create a future that is more sustainable:
1: Water conservation: As was already said, producing paper business cards uses a lot of water. Digital business cards, on the other hand, don't use any paper and don't require any water to produce them. Businesses can dramatically lower their water footprint and support water conservation efforts by converting to digital business cards.
ii) Preventing Deforestation: Making conventional visiting cards necessitates cutting down trees, which contributes to deforestation and the loss of wildlife habitat. Digital business cards, on the other hand, are produced without the use of any paper or wood, assisting in the fight against deforestation and the preservation of our native forests.
 iii) Waste Reduction: Paper business cards are frequently thrown away after only a short while, which significantly increases trash generation. DBC cards, on the other hand, are reusable and environmentally friendly, doing away with the need for constant reprints and cutting down on waste. This can support a circular economy strategy that reduces waste and conserves resources.
iv) Convenience and Versatility: Compared to conventional business cards, digital business cards provide a high level of convenience and variety. They don't require manual upgrades or physical exchanges because they can be simply shared and updated with only a few clicks. To make DBC digital business cards more interactive and engaging for recipients, they can also include multimedia components like films, links, and social network profiles.
 v) Cost-Effective: For organisations, especially larger ones with many of staff, producing and repeatedly reprinting paper business cards can mount up to significant expenditures. DBC cards, on the other hand, require only a single investment and can simply be updated and shared without adding to the printing expense. This can encourage sustainability while resulting in long-term cost benefits for organisations.
vi) Customization and Branding: When compared to conventional paper business cards, digital business cards provide more personalization and branding capabilities. Businesses can use digital business cards to make customised, personalised cards that reflect their own identities and messaging. This can assist businesses in promoting their dedication to sustainability and setting themselves apart from rivals.
 vii) Innovation and Accessibility: DBC smart cards are interoperable with a range of digital devices and platforms, making them simple to share via email, social media, and messaging apps. These smart cards can also be connected with other analytics and digital marketing platforms, enabling organisations to monitor engagement, gauge effect, and make fact-based decisions. Businesses can benefit from the creativity and adaptability of digital business cards in the modern world.
Conclusion
Traditional paper business cards can have a significant negative environmental impact because of water usage, deforestation, waste generation, and economic factors. However, businesses may actively promote sustainability by switching to green digital business cards. Digital business cards have many benefits, including the ability to personalize them, the potential for branding, accessibility, innovation, and the prevention of deforestation. By using digital business cards in their marketing initiatives, companies may demonstrate their commitment to sustainability, align with sustainability goals, and contribute to the development of a greener future.
In view of the increased awareness and importance of environmental sustainability, businesses need to reconsider their normal paper business card practices and adopt more ecologically friendly alternatives like DBC smart cards. Together, we can make little but significant adjustments that will minimize our environmental impact and enhance the future of our planet. So why not adopt smart cards and aid in the drive to establish a more environmentally friendly workplace environment? Start now and add to the solution!
Also Read: Strengthen Your Networking Growth with DBC Smart Business Cards.
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professorevamarieking · 3 years ago
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DJ Levar, Legendary Pioneer from the Disco Brothers Connection audio podcast by Professor Eva Marie King https://open.spotify.com/episode/4auNTNWcWeANFE1iaYOTVv?si=kHIakuCJR8KgIHYDnGbarw&utm_source=copy-link On this episode I discuss DJ Levar professionally known as Kevin James, Founding DJ in the Disco Brothers Connection (DBC). The DBC originated on Sayres Avenue in SouthSide Jamaica, Queens in the early 1970s and began jamming in Saint Albans Park in 1974-1975.  DJ Levar and his crew of cousins sponsored some of the most populated Park Jams in the history of Saint Albans Park which was located on Merrick Boulevard between Sayres Avenue and Linden Boulevard.  As a preteen I spent many weekends sitting on the grass watching my elder sister Putt-Putt do the hustle with some of the best dancers in NYC including David Perry a well-known and renowned Hustler.  DBC would rock "Love is the Message" by MFSB for more than a half hour as the participants of the Park Jams watched all of the couples take over the dance floor on the white tiles in the front of the Park.  In those days it was common to see the Gods and Earths from the Nation of Gods and Earths on the dance floor doing the Six-Step aka The God Hustle.  DBC also rocked breakbeats and their MC, "Richard the Boy with the Golden Voice," engaged the crowd.  Richard was said to have worked at WWRL 1600 AM radio station and also to have a large sound system of his own at his home at nearby Foch Boulevard and 171st Street.  Listen to additional audio podcasts on this Queens Hip Hop History channel. Access the social media for DJ Levar via Instagram: @KevLevar http://www.Instagram.com/KevLevar and Facebook: Kevin James http://www.Facebook.com/VeryKind Connect with me via: @ProfessorEvaMarieKing on Instagram: http://www.Instagram.com/ProfessorEvaMarieKing. (at Queens, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/ClqNvJDOu03/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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coinboxltd · 3 years ago
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*Daystar Business Community (DBC) Prays with Dr. Sam Adeyemi* It is that time of the month when business people in Daystar pray with Dr. Sam Adeyemi. Join other entrepreneurs and business owners in Daystar as we discuss solutions to business issues, pray for insight & direction, and receive divine instructions from God. Date: 6th October 2022 Time: 7:00 pm (WAT) Venue: Zoom Register, share widely and show up. https://bit.ly/dbcprayswithdrsamadeyemi Our time of Manifestation is now! #TrustinGod #DBCprayswithDrSam https://www.instagram.com/p/CjUmNvADg3i/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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derbysilkmill · 3 years ago
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h**k this and h**k that…”: Art(i)factualism, Detournement, Belper Punks, and DIY Making (1719 -2022)
Anything can be used -- Situationist Maxim
The two fundamental laws of detournement are the loss of importance of each detourned autonomous element – which may go so far as to lose its original sense completely – and at the same time the organisation of another meaningful ensemble that confers on each element its new scope and effect.  SI Communique 1957
Even writing 50 pages of crap can give a sense of achievement.  DBC Pierre Guardian 2017
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Dovedale Crescent, Belper, Derbyshire, e-1970s:
A modern housing estate of near-identical detached houses: bungalows, two and three-bedroom dwellings constructed in the early 60s – man-made (unimaginatively) from red orange brick – individual constructions facing snaking black tarmac forming distinctive interconnected roads, streets, nooks, crescents, avenues and closes. Classified by their idiosyncratic banal pastoral signifiers like ‘Beaurepaire’, ‘Millersdale’, ‘Lowlands’ ‘Ladywood’ and ‘Dovedale’ – these were surely ironic places to live since the new-built estate was a brutal imposition of bricks-absurd covering over the once-green fields. A new estate, hacked out of the benign land of rolling hills of Belper because farms, fields, woods, leas, dells, hollows, natural beauty spots, and wildflower meadows were here before the houses and their inhabitants came. 2 Dovedale Crescent Wally Cant – Pit Deputy; 4 Dovedale Crescent Bob Smith - Coal-face worker; 6 Dovedale Crescent Alec Laws - Shot blaster; 25 Dovedale Crescent (facing Alec Laws) ‘big’ John Marshall – coal face worker; 21 Dovedale Crescent (facing Wally Cant) Jimmy Bell - pit worker; 23 Dovedale Crescent a man of unknown occupation and provenance who wore a deerstalker, tweeds, grubby shirt and regimental military tie, thick corduroy britches and thick leather-soled plain shoes, a fellow  who, to all intents and purposes, looked like an old English estate owner and looked down on the NCB deferent families who surrounded his Englishman’s castle, with class difference. How he got here nobody knew. Oh, on his face he wore steel-framed bank-manager glasses and sported an ex-RAF handlebar moustache; in socio-cultural terms, then he was a hu-man manmade  archetype existentially homological to semiotic-ally important inorganic manufactured objects like the 20th century designer angle-poise desk lamp or a Bahausian architect-designed bent tubular metal and leather chair.
A group of late-teenage boys sit talking on the wooden six-barred gate guarding the entrance to common scrubland known as the back-field.  Like the gang of vultures in Disney cartoon film of Rudyard Kipling’s story called The Jungle Book (bored flock birds perched on the thick branch discussing what to do “I don’t know…what do you want to do”? ordinary lads from the estate lads - birds of a feather - were discussing what fashions were now passing and emerging on the local scene in terms of youth wear and companion hairstyles. As they talked together about flash clothes they stared blankly at the essential electric company substation on the opposite side of the road.
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Mop-top Vultures, Jungle Book, Walt Disney, 1967
Youth, emerging from the mod(ernist) culture of the late sixties was transitioning-transposing-morphing with velocity into suedeheads via skinheads. The transformation was subtle but sure of itself in style. # 5 clipper blade all over from now-on-in for getting the new suede-head felt-smooth smart combed look, i.e. grown out skinhead #1.  Navy-blue wool Crombie coats were still in; nowadays with funereal ‘suede’ collars, red handkerchiefs in top pocket pinned with a new DCFC club badge the size of a tanner gave the look a local tribal sense. Button-down cotton shirts were printed with beautiful checked and colourful designs, manufactured by either Brutus or Ben Sherman. Trousers were smart -- blue or green two-tone ‘Stapress’. A uber suedehead – like the cool Steve Ottowell (Lowlands Road) - now even carried a gentleman’s umbrella. The classic black umbrella replaced the army-surplus green mod parka as protection against the weather. The metal tips sharpened by the suedehead; (converted) reground for fighting on the grinder-wheel at work. Suedeheads were very creative and modified stainless steel combs too. The long tapering handle reformed into a stiletto blade at work on the same workshop grinding wheel trans-formed into a dual tool for doing your hair right or wrong and harm. [1] Working-class youth then – blue-collar apprentices serving the demands of Derby-based industrialism - were reworking the city-gent look – a legacy from the bowler hats worn in the violent (awful) film Clockwork Orange; revising the populist anti-hippy proletarian skinhead fashion. Contra the skinhead and his/her hard-worker look, Suedehead chic parodied or copied the hard-core white-collar post-shopfloor office worker: ‘all of a sudden stepping out wearing a bowler hat…Suedehead represented a more tailored approach to the skinhead aesthetic with velvet-collared Crombie, houndstooth checked suits and brogues’. [2] 
Brogues were highly-polished black leather shoes, and handmade by Loake, Grenson or Gibson. Patterned with geometric indentations and raised leather ornamentation this traditional footwear spoke out for the English past. [3] The hard-soled shoes were worn with thin wool blood-red ankle socks which contrasted mysteriously with the dark surrounding serious formal trousers and black shining leather clothing worn against the slack ethnic swinging sixties. [4] 
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[1] See blog Hegel’s Trowel and Elaine Scarry’s distinction between tools and weapons. The suedehead comb was a tool for personal aesthetic use, styling hair, sharpened for inflicting pain, a weapon: suedehead was a dark cult…P173 
[2] Andrew Stevens, Introduction to Suedehead, 2015
[3] In The Wheelwrights Shop (1923) the author Georg Sturt recounts how one of the master blacksmiths he admired marked with dot punch and file a simple geometric pattern, a mysterious enigmatic design ‘come down from some far-off generation’. Sturt called it ‘a simple and ancient decoration. A design very like it (it could hardly be less ornate) may often be seen stamped in leather across the toes of a pair of boots, where likewise it may be of a prehistoric date’.
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 [4] The Language of Things (2009) is a book by Deyan Sudjic. A design historian and commentator on the attraction to modern objects and how they communicate subconscious and conscious meanings to consumers notes that there is a whole family of objects and artefacts that juxtapose red details against black backgrounds from the VW golf GTI to the cult Tizio angle poise light. In all cases they connote argues the critic ‘a faint air of suppressed violence’ in that their original model was the red dot safety catch on the Walther PKK gun.  I recently plagiarised (incorporated-subverted this series by including this red-dot-on-black-ground detail on a loom I have made for the Museum of Making. See Detournement and Adam Blenkoe below Weaponising Weaving...?   
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At the end of the day, then, these lads took off their blue-collar steel-toe-capped workshop boots and slipped into their newly-acquired brogues. Not content though with the shoes as they were, they paid a King-Street cobbler to adorn their new leather outsider/insider brogues with Blakey metal ‘segs’. Function-wise, nailed into the soft natural leather undersole of this expensive footwear, the metal tips let into heels and toe sections were crafty customisations – pragmatic additions - to prevent the wearer wearing out the vulnerable animal hide when walking about on tarmac across town; aesthetically segs were sonically transformational making a great CLICK CLACK CLICK CLACK noise on English pavements. The 1970 streets rang with the alarming sound of footwear made musical instrument, and remade walking a violent performance. Amplification of the latest youth culture.
 Respected New-Left man Raymond Williams (1921-1988) - the Welsh intellectual at the forefront of the developmental trajectory of what became both lauded (and derided) as Cultural Studies - in his well-known books Keywords and Resources of Hope mentions that there are only two other words in the English language that rhyme with Culture.
1) Sepulture – burial, grave or tomb
2) Vulture – bird of prey that scavenges on carrion.
Hence Culture-Vulture [5]  
 Despite his apparent radical stance that culture is universal, democratic, classless and for everyone - a thesis developed in his essay ‘Culture is Ordinary’ – he worries that what he identifies as new ‘flip words’ such as “culture-vulture” are malign phrasal attacks against any attachment to learning or the arts -- a stabbing verbal assault on what he would call ‘high-culture’ wounding what he wants to say the word ‘Culture’ stands for. Moreover, worried for high culture, he was surprised that, as the late 60s collapsed and 70s progressed, ‘we don’t yet call museums or art galleries or even universities culture-sepultures’, i.e. dead burial places. For Williams, writing back in the 1950s, milk bars and teddy boys upset the Marxist Williams as valueless bubble-gum mindless ‘low-popular’ culture and kickstarted the serialisation of youth cults: Teddy Boy, Rocker, Mod, Skinhead, Suedehead, neoTeds and then the Punks. To be fair, Williams politically-motivated writing translates a second alternative meaning of the ‘complex’ word ‘culture’ a word sign Williams would say had as its other signified a particular or common ‘way of life’. Yet, still, Ray said the working classes needed saving by equal access to big culture in the form of ‘the arts’: literature, classical music, and top Universities. The cultural problem I had was getting my hands not on Ulysses, Prokofiev or a sporting chance to join Williams at Cambridge, but on the sublime de-culture objects: Gibson-Black-Leather-Brogues. Us Dovedale Crescent lads were culture vultures only hungry for the low-level youth culture meat Williams’ academic elite Marxism had no appetite for. Red socks were easy to acquire. Barbara Blount was a market trader who lived a few houses up from us round the corner in a bigger identical non-identical house. She bought-up ‘seconds-socks’ from a hosiery factory on Spencer Road – Blounts -- and repaired unwanted socks or tights quality-controllers rejected. Repaired, the Blount family sold the saved stock from a bleak cold Ripley Market Place; or from the back of their modern brick garage store. She sold scrap socks to the estate; cheap and fair. Via Barbara I got into my first red-socks, i.e. small signs of self/group expression showing off the way-of-life I wanted to be part of. The shirts favoured by suedehead - Brutus and Ben Sherman - were also cultish objects of material fashion. Out of my reach until finally getting a knocked-down gorgeous sky-blue checked Brutus (life saved again by Barbara Blount) -- I had to imagine/fantasise the dead-man check shirts I found (picked over) at diabetic jumble sales me mam ran were the real thing. Fool’s gold or creative thinking? Whatever, I used the same stubborn suspension of disbelief in my quest to walk in the same shoes as those big youth-culture vultures sat on that three-bar gate. For no matter what them damned Gibson brogues were dead expensive. Down in Belper on the High Street – near the cobblers - was the Army and Navy Stores.[6] In the shop window were some lookalike brogue-esque black shoes with decorative indentations and raised leather applique. They caught my eye. The laces were black and red chevrons but these could be easily swapped out for thin leather laces. They were called Toppos and a lot of us younger lads adopted them in place of – or until – brogues could be got.[7]  But like the umbrella and steel comb, they needed adaptation. Blakeys were expensive, and I don’t think the thinner rubber soles would have taken the heavy metal masculine accoutrement so what we did was hammer drawing pins nail-like into heels and toes of the false-brogues to get the metallic clipping sound we wanted to hear. DIY fashioning was a constant presence on our new estate.  When mid 70s there was a rock’n’roll revival after Showaddywaddy starred on New Faces and Bill Haley came to play the new brutalist concrete Assembly Rooms in Derby neo-teds at Belper High posed at the youth club in crap paper-thin drape suits bought from the NME back pages in an early manifestation of mail-order consumerism; rag-traders cottoning on to new fads. Now then Barbara Blount started selling illuminous pink, green and orange socks. Surprisingly, since as the son of market-traders he was the first to get to new objects of commercial fashion - and a popular shop in Derby Market Hall sold the real things - my best mate (her son) Simon Blount made himself a Teddy boy bootlace-woggle by deconstructing an unwanted B52 bomber kit from Airfix and using the weapon of war’s pilot to form a passable, but absurd, imitation of the type of neckwear the Teddy boys from Leicester were seen wearing on TOTP. The pilot’s arms were set on a plain back tab and stuck out to resemble cow-horns his visored helmeted head the contrived animal’s skull/head. He left it all white. It had a sort of Greco-Roman classical sculptural style. 
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Showaddywaddy, circa 1974
[5] Raymond Williams, Resources of Hope: Culture, Democracy, Socialism, (London, Verso, 1989), p 6.
[6] From here, post-suedehead times (after a temporary Ted– revival) – we would buy large navy-blue sailor’s bell-bottom trousers as ‘found’ skinners as Bootboy slowly evolved from suedeheads
[7] A pair of Toppos became an actual well-known (socio-historical) youth-culture object in Belper, recognised as a credible alternative to Grenson brogues. I was talking with Tim Finch in The Grapes pub Belper a few years back. Tim, a life-long youth-culture follower and knowing modish fashion exponent, says they were called Toppos after some kid called Toppo who recognised their stylistic worth and set the phenomenal trend off; in our town at least.
Another guy who eventually came to embrace constructing his own articles of fashion was Robinson Crusoe.  Shipwrecked and alone with no skills and experience of making things Daniel Defoe’s gentile everyman of the book of 1719 had to manufacture his own clothes, utensils, baskets, tables, chairs, general estate, and interestingly an umbrella. i.e. Crusoe made himself by necessity a tailor, weaver, potter, carpenter, architect, boat-builder, stonemason, baker, toolmaker and candlestick maker. He got his materials from repurposing and recycling the wrecked ships commodities and materials (especially dead sailor’s clothes) and those of the raw natural world where he found himself a past-passive consumer desperate and thrown into commodity poverty which made him be active. On the island washed up money he had no use for: ‘I smiled to my self at the sight of this money. ”O drug!” said I aloud, “what art thou good for?’
‘And now in managing my household affairs, I found my self wanting in many things, which I thought at first it was impossible for me to make, as indeed as to some of them it was… I began to apply my self to make such necessary as I found I wanted, as particularly a chair and a table; for without these I was not able to enjoy the few comforts I had in the world; I could not write, or eat, or do several things with so much pleasure without a table.
So I went to work; and here I must needs observe, that as reason is the substance and original of the mathematicks, so by stating and squaring every thing by reason, and by making the most rational judgement of things, every man be in time master of every mechanic art. I had never handled a tool in my life, and yet in time, by labour, application and contrivance, I found at last that I wanted nothing but I could have made it, especially if I had had tools; however, I made abundance of things, even without tools, and some with no more tools than an adze and a hatchet, which were perhaps never made that way before, and that with infinite labour…
However, I made me a table and a chair, as I observed above, in the first place, and this I did out of the short pieces of boards that I brought on my raft from the ship… ‘
 Elaine Scarry - who I cited on making in Hegel’s Trowel - writes about Defoe’s intent to expose human making as at the heart of autonomous healthy modern enlightenment subjectivity.
Crusoe begins by being a person who “makes” either as a result of acute need (where willed artifice is the only available strategy of self-rescue) or as a result of accident (where artifice entails the human genius of observing a wholly unintended outcome), but increasingly becomes one who wilfully “makes” merely to make. That is, in addition to transforming his external world, Crusoe has transformed the nature of the act of creating itself; he has remade making; he has remade the human maker from one who creates out of pain to one who creates out of sheer pleasure.
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Robinson Crusoe, Daniel Defoe, Penguin, 1981
May 1956, some situationist writing somewhere in Europe:
Detournement as Negation and Prelude
Detournement, the reuse of pre-existing artistic elements in a new ensemble, has been a constantly present tendency of the contemporary avant-garde both before and since the establishment of the SI. The two fundamental laws of detournement are the loss of importance of each detourned autonomous element – which may go so far as to lose its original sense completely – and at the same time the organisation of another meaningful ensemble that confers on each element its new scope and effect. Detournement has a peculiar power which obviously stems from the double meaning, from the enrichment of most of the terms by the coexistence within them of their old senses and their new, immediate sense. Detournement is practical because it is easy to use and because of its inexhaustible potential for reuse. Concerning the negligible effort required for detournement, we have already said, “The cheapness of its products is the heavy artillery that breaks through…walls of understanding”. (Methods of Detournement, May 1956)
Detournement has a historical significance. What is it? “Detournement is a game made possible by the capacity of the devaluation” writes Jorn in his study Detourned Painting (May 1959), and he goes on to say that all the elements of the cultural past must be “reinvented” or disappear. Detournement is thus first of all a negation of the value of the previous organisation of expression. It arises and grows increasingly stronger in the historical period of decomposition of artistic expression. But at the same time, the attempts to reuse the “detournable bloc” as material for other ensembles express the search for a vaster construction, a new genre of creation at a higher level. Any elements, no matter where they are taken from, can serve in making new combinations…Anything can be used. Situationist International Anthology, Edited translated Ken Knabb, 1981)
 To explain Detournement – the hybrid aesthetic outlined in the SI communique - we can turn to Asger Jorn’s avant-garde painting Paris By Night (1959). referenced above.[8] 
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Paris By Night, Asger Jorn, 1959 Oil on Canvas
Rather than create (buy) a new painting, Jorn would salvage a piece of obsolete art, in this case a romantic lone figure gazing into the Paris night, from junk shops.[9] Taking these discarded portraits, Jorn added expressionistic patterns in the style of Jackson Pollock - an act of experimental cultural intervention he called a modification. The political import of the modification was that it allowed an artist to simultaneously breathe ‘new life’ or value into two different devalued cultures, in one straightforward gesture. The received dead-art of bourgeois naturalistic painting received renewed input from the avant-garde, whilst the avant-garde retained its status within the field of culture, a status suggested by the new art’s stubborn situation within the existent framing of the canvas or wooden picture frame. Through this new cultural arrangement Jorn gestured to destroy or devalue a passé art form - classic portrait painting, say - whilst, through reclamation or salvage, re-valued art’s essential potential as a carrier of meaning. Jorn’s experimentation, then, was not about re-making a new art or ‘ism’, ignorantly destroying the old ‘isms’, but ‘playing around’ with orthodox cultural heritage, amalgamating diverse forms of cultural production into revolutionary new conglomerations. Like the SI, the avant-garde Jorn wanted to ‘reinvent’ and ‘bankrupt’ culture on an ‘entirely new basis’, though, at the same time, acting in and with that culture.[10]  
[8] ‘Paris By Night’ Jorn detourned painting analysis cut and pasted from doctoral thesis Worker’s Playtime, Steve Smith, 2004
[9] Crow, The Rise of the Sixties, pp. 50-51.
[10] Knabb, Situationist Anthology, pp. 111-113. 
Detournement = DESTROY = Creation
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It is this devaluation and re-valuation of one form of cultural expression at the expense of the other - the alchemical change brought about by experimental modification - that interests detourners and two women from Derbyshire; both work in fashion.    
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Derbyshire Maker Vivienne Westwood wearing detourned white-office shirt – Seditionaries - Circa 1976
Auchencairn, South-West Scotland, 2008:
17th June 2008. BBC Radio Scotland. Vivienne Westwood is live on air talking about her work. She says in her still-strong peak-district accent (slow and considered):
 I’d been making clothes with holes and rips
in for quite a while. 
I’d tear the cloth and
machine around it. I was making clothes 
with holes in. People would come into the shop and
moan about the price. 
I never understood why
they didn’t go home and make their own clothes
with holes in or rip the clothes they had.
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November, 1976, Belper High School: In a state-of-the-art Derbyshire comprehensive school - under diffused delayed pressure from the subversive philosophy of a well-documented situationist led counter-culture of May ’68 - a movement  bent on collapsing high and low cultural difference – a school led by an (allegedly) communist red-head and a progressive education policy that protested against the eleven-plus and so ripped up the difference between grammar and secondary modern education, high and low culture, school and non-school life - hip kids - some of whom end up in sixth form doing art - crowded around an opened New Musical Express; a cult-pose pop newspaper I despised as much as The Guardian) for it signified violent class distinction and affected commodity adoption by those who bought and drawled all over it like daft dogs. That said, there is the feint idea that something cultural is happening in England; a thing emergent from the sticky residual and stubborn dominant culture to paraphrase the aforementioned Raymond Williams. Inside the bohemian rock-world rag is a DIY identikit sketch of what a ‘punk rocker’ must dress like. And, not long to go from this real now, the “rough-tough” Clash (London punks) are playing a concert in Nottingham. After maths and before geography Alison Taylor, a student at Belper High School, strides down to the Oxfam shop on the still-a-mill-town-for-now High Street (or was it the ‘dead-man’s-shop on the Market Place?) with two lads from that comprehensive culturally-maligned detourned school. The future pro-textile-designer/maker buys two differently patterned formal suit jackets. Takes the unwanted old-man clothing home to Ambergate.[11] That night, in her bedroom-as-atelier, razor blades both out-of-fashion thin-lapelled jackets SSSHHHHKKKK down the middle seam. She sews them back up together – sutures rough as you like – and brings the two split rejigged garments back to school the next day. Not the next day, the local lads - early Derbyshire punks - go to see the group from the capital; stood in Nottingham Palais, wearing the doctored detourned jackets. Later in the year one of these punk rockers would get beaten up by Teddy Boys on Abbey Street, Derby, after leaving a shop selling commercial punk clothes called ID.
Alison Taylor, Belper High School, 1976
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[11] Alison Taylor studied art at Hull Art College. She is a successful design-maker and has an artisan textile company in West Sussex.
October, 1976, Modern Belper – A New Housing Estate: A quiet clever man, Alex Paxton, lived a few doors up from us on Dovedale Crescent. He, like most of the others on this new 1960s Belper housing estate, owned his own house. Our house, like up to twenty-more, was not owned by us: it belonged to the National Coal Board (NCB). The nationalised industry purchased these new state-of-the-art houses to entice miners to old-mill-town Belper -- from South Scotland and County Durham -- to dig out coal in the Derbyshire pits. The coal dug up made electric. Some aspirational people on our modish ‘white-heat-of-technology’ street resented our social-cultural presence smearing their residential art and commodity dreams. Even though the miners were making electricity to drive their new consumer goods - Black & Decker saws, drills or jigsaws as well as TVs and refrigerators - they rejected the miners as an unwanted addition; black-collar stains on their social scene. A petition was circulated amongst residents to put a block on taking our place on the street even before the first miners arrived. What do I think today, about this coming-together? Was it accidental? Planned out? Socio-cultural Detournement? NCB left-wing thinkers creating a Jornian cultural intervention, making a modification, creating a new ‘Belper by Day’. Growing up on the estate the prole kids of the miners and the offspring of upwardly mobile toy shop owners, market traders, Deb chemists, self-employed electricians and skilled craftsman - products of two tribes - notionally clashed economically and culturally but also got mixed up with each other in an everyday picture. A sort of social alchemy came about and notional NCB hacking had made a new situation. A few of us naturally – post suedehead - became punks. Well me and the Deb chemist’s son; the original owner of one half of Alison Taylor’s hybrid schizoid jackets known as Paul Hough.    
                        Hacking Life: 
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Poly(semic)
Nowadays living in the 21st century everywhere it’s hats off to hacking: ‘Hack this’ and ‘hack that’. There are 24-hour hack spaces in Leeds, Bristol, Manchester, Nottingham, Sheffield, Leicester, London: Hackspace UK is here to stay. I’ve seen ‘apron hack’ events at work; heard of pubescent international computer hackers on local news who live in Codnor, Portslade, or Fife; during a typical day I say self-critical things like ‘what a hack’ when I see or do bad workmanship; AVG watches out for me scanning for dangerous folk that hack your computer. Dominic Morrow told me on a visit to Nottingham Hack space “some-here-people-want-to-hack-the-state”. You can be hacked off, miserable and down in the mouth about something – the state or status of making perhaps (or people running you down for being miners). Aggression brought about by being hacked off can lead you to hack something to pieces; even death. Newspaper ‘hacks’ cut-up stories and quotes - distorting text to a new end and can produce hack writing, texts ‘banal, mediocre, or unoriginal’.  Leicester hack space gang - anarchistic to a person - always managed to hack the communal beer barrel when we had re: make parties: ‘we’re only ‘ere for the beer’ and would give you a kick on the shin (a hack) to get to the bottom dregs of the local-brewed ‘Ay Up’ kegged ale before you could.  Is the word/concept ‘hack’ what my old English lecturers would call critically a polysemic ‘floating signifier’? A sign/word/lexeme that can mean or be made to mean so many things - denotational with spiraling connotations - by so many different in-crowd users (like its sister word ‘disruptive’) that its position as a major mention-tool in contemporary maker hipster overuse renders it banal and unoriginal? Can you hack the word hack or hack hackerworld? Or is hack a positive case of a democratic general ‘unlimited semiosis’, a phrase borrowed from the proto semiotician Charles Pierce and adopted by Umberto Eco which describes the uncontrolled life of a sign/word in language?In my dull mind to hack describes a sort of contemporary hijacking, a commandeering of an artefact and then cutting it up for an adaption.  As synthesiser, hacking culture re-makes the selected object into something useful and not of its originally designed purpose as commodity (for commodities as objects are what get hacked most): Toppo’s shoes and drawing pins; a green landscape  in Belper carved up into housing estate; the private street hacked into by a mining community; grammar school clashed with secondary-modern education to form an new alloy called the comprehensive; plastic B 52 Bomber model becomes repurposed as teddy-boy paraphernalia; Oxfam jackets cut up and reformed, Crusoe hacks his ruined ship and makes an interior for his cave, and Westwood’s stencilled shirts adorned with zips and holes.  Back in 2013, during the Re:make experimental phase of manufacturing a new Derby Museum of Making, a Rolls Royce engineer put together some plastic milk crates and with a pair of scissors cut up some thick cardboard and made a prototype back that slotted into the already-in-place slots of the milk crates. The back was modified and CNC cut from 12 mm plywood and 8mm clear acrylic. It became the infamous crate chair. The museum manufactured its own chairs; DIY self-production a radical gesture of active making against the passive buying ethics Westwood identified at her Kings Road shop SEX. Visitors asked ‘can we buy these chairs from you?’ 
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 Crate Chair, Co-produced, 2013, plastic, felt and plywood 
Hacking is voguish then but not new, not now. I can think of two other interconnected examples of hacking; one historical the other contemporary (if you count the mid-70s as historical and today contemporary). Both activities and actors as ‘hackers’ used a common-garden DIY store electric jigsaw. In 1977 I used an inverted jigsaw at Abbey Patterns Derby to make a plywood pattern for a decorative grate. It was probably made by Black & Decker. Adam Blenkoe brought his modified Makita jigsaw to Derby in 2016.
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 Jigsaw Illustration, Woodworkers Bible, Alf Martensen,
Abbey Patterns, Derby 1976: 
My first experience of any form of patternmaking - which is my original first-choice trade -  was arranged by Alex Paxton. Some-thing called ‘a patternmaker’, he, as I have said, owned his own house – he was a business partner in Abbey Patterns, a small master-shop in Derby. Alex as patternmaker was a skilled man. We knew Alex was a maker because Alex’s wife came down to our rented house and inter alia mixed with us spoil of miners. 
Back in 1976, still a schoolboy, while my mates were off to buy punk records after seeing see the Clash (modishly rejecting Tangerine Dream, Deep Purple, Genesis -- yada yada) I visited Abbey Patterns workshop one Saturday morning for a taster session. Arranged by my father via Alex via Pam his wife – I was invited to try patternmaking, see if I liked the strange esoteric trade, had aptitude for the rationally complex craft. Abbey Patterns was then -1977 – manufacturing in a tiny cramped pattern-shop in a post-residential converted house on Gerrard not Abbey Street. I got to the ‘hacked-out’ Derby house by bus. Prompt 8am. I was set to work right from the off. No time to lose. I had a single tea break when they the two partners stopped for ten minutes, until stopping the week’s work at 12pm. My task was to work on an improvised machine the patternmakers had contrived to shape a small pattern – approximately 300 x 300 mm square – the kind of pierced grate-cum-screen you see on the pavements of red-brick terraced housing forming cast-iron apertures that let air and light into small underground cellars, walls, and chimney stacks. The contraption was ingenious. 
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They had inverted an old Black & Decker/Wolf/Bosch Jigsaw, and removed the blade for a small wood file. The bed could tilt to create required degrees of draft or taper for patterns when machining intricate shaped work. A full-sized paper photocopy of the required intertwined design was glued with PVA onto a small sheet of 12mm birch plywood. The laminated ply product was perfect for making a pattern with fine interlocked sections because the pattern would have structural integrity at all sections of the pattern, thus resisting breakage (or shrinkage) in the foundry environment. It saved time-consuming jointing as might be expected in pre-plywood classic purist pattern practice and construction since the membrane of birch laminations made an integrated and thus strong stock material. However, plywood is tricky and hard to ‘pare out’ with traditional chisels and gouges. Conflicting grain directions add strength but carve poorly. A file can therefore abrade the material evenly and flatly.
The black lines on the white paper indicated to me where I had to file to. The fretwork design was cut as close to the line possible – potentially with the same customised jigsaw contraption using a blade rather than rasp or file.  (This is pre - CNC existence. Today the design would simply be imported from a digital drawing package, into a tool-pathing software such as Vectric 2D Cut or v-carve, and automatically routed out with precision tapered hi-tech cutters. The CNC operator a semi-skilled presence. So, in some ways the inverted–hijacked jigsaw I used at Abbey Patterns prefigured this need for mechanised patternmaking. Abbey Patterns made a lot of grates, and detailed small scale cast-iron work that can still be seen on the Derby streets -- if you are smart/interested enough to spot them. In this way their business needs and technical nous drove forward their creative DIY product design, inventive in-house toolmaking. Amazed at what I had seen, I left Abbey Patterns when they said it was time to go home catching the red Trent 90 bus back to Belper. Looking back in time these skilled patternmakers didn’t self-consciously call themselves hackers.
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Abbey Pattern Street Grate, Cast Iron, Derby, 2022
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(‘anything can be used’) - rubbing Abbey Pattern Co grate – blue charcoal on paper, Steve Smith, 2018
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The Mekons, Leeds, circa 1976
440 Kingsland Road Workshops, London, 1992--“Never Been in a Riot”: Mark White was the first lead singer with the Leeds-university based punk groupuscule The Mekons. Around about 1977 The Mekons put out a delicious scrappy amateurish single “Never Been in a Riot”. Never Been in a Riot was the avant-garde groups anti-masculine pink repost to the butch ‘rough-tough rock’n’roll revolutionary red art of The Clash and their song “White Riot”. These softer punks were thus ideologically detourning the hard-core detourners -- hacking to bits the SI influenced cultural big-time punk-rock hackers (and the punk rock movement at large) posing in their stencilled political sloganeering shirts (Red Guard, Brigade Rosso) rebel anti-fashion contradictorily made popular and fashionable by Viv Westwood. Nowadays he was not a punk singer, but a humble maker in our cooperative London workshop: 440 Kingsland Road, an old print works converted and chopped in two – hacked into a ground-floor woodwork shop and first-floor graphic design studio - in Hackney.  
Fast forward to 2015. I am back working with a hacked jigsaw again in a Derby workshop. Returned, I am part of a team returning making to Lombe’s Silk Mill – the world’s first factory. In the workshop is a maker from London: Adam Blenkoe. Up-and-coming, a neo-21st century maker up from the East London Hack space – he is running a morning weaving workshop. Apart from Adam and me, students are all women. Interested in traditional textile crafts - embroidery, dressmaking, tapestry, weaving – attendees are disturbed to not find scissors, sewing machines, overlockers, embroidery hoops, needles and thread, paper patterns, plastic cutting French curves arranged on the cutting table, rather a selection of thick art books: thick cult texts on the art of Bauhaus, Russian constructivism, De Stijl.
There was no sign of a loom either. There was simply a Makita jigsaw bolted rather amateurishly to an aluminium off-the-shelf mobile CNC bed. Driven by electric stepper motors that pulsed right, left, vertical and horizontal, forward and back the jigsaw could be driven in micro movements along a digitally-programmed X-Y-Z axis. Like the inverted machine at Abbey Patterns the orthodox functional saw blade had been removed and replaced in this instance with a broad-gauge needle. 
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Commercial Makita Jigsaw Bolted to CNC Frame
The women were encouraged to select abstract designs from the art books on the table. Then, having selected one avant-garde pattern, students cut felt or cotton samples replicating the geometry they had found in the coloured plates.
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Liubov Popova, Embroidery Design For The Artisan Co-operative Verbovka, 1917 (cut-and-pasted papers on paper)
The bright primary-coloured sections were then individually placed on a large single canvas back cloth over which the jigsaw sat still waiting to be activated.
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Adam Blenkoe and Student Loading the Jigsaw Loom
When each art-weaver student had added to the cloth picture – thus constructing a communal patterned wall hanging (à la Lyubov Popova, Alexander Rodchenko, Annie Albers) - Blenkoe flicked the electric switch on the CNC.
Fired up by the powerful current of the mains electricity the jigsaw ranged over the cloth to a pre-set quilted grid pattern and, at the same time, as the probe-like needle oscillated in a highspeed pecking action, stabbed the felt through the background material. Sort of tattooing the textiles the constructivist cum Bauhausian inspired synthetic designs were infused deep into the skin of the white cloth. When the noisy jigsaw motor stopped running, returning quietly to its fixed X-Y-Z home position (the workshop sounded like a hi-tech weaving shop as the needle click-clicked-click-click clicked back and forth like speed shuttle making -- a kind of metallic sonic composition) the tapestry was complete. In stark contrast to the thin hard lifeless 2D reproduction masculine modernist plates the workshop attendees’ patterns were lifted from – the dead lifeless art prints were paradoxically facsimiles of historical designs for wall hangings or rugs - the plagiarised Silk Mill weaving had depth, softness, life, texture, warmth, a non-masculine aura. Post-man-work; maybe. Moreover, rather than simply passively (spectacularly) consuming the geometric abstract designs from the art book as commodity, the weavers-in-the-workshop had actively produced their own tangible material original self-made artefact.
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Finished Constructivist Wall Hanging
Circa 1977 Alex Paxton, as I have conjected, didn’t know he had hacked the small bladed shop-bought DIY power tool – designed for amateur woodworkers to cut curved shapes – just like some of us didn’t know we were punks until the NME posted that picture of what a punk lookalike looked like. But I suggest, Blenkoe a 21st maker knew he was a hacker hacking this electric jigsaw. Obviously, Adam at the Museum of Making workshop Derby, wasn’t punching-out the State, but coloured felt. Yet, that said, there is for me, if no one else (even Blenkoe), hard political import in this radical soft textile-hacking gesture. Like The Mekons chant “Never Been in a Riot”, his antimacho punk art was a deft retro counter-critique within trendy macho-modernist (hackneyed) critical thought movements. His target - if not the Clash – was perhaps butch graphic aesthetics or cultural art revolutionaries and their sanctification of hard-edged constructivist art; Blenkoes workshop and his co-opted women students - was hitting back with a detourned form of constructivist/suprematist art ‘modified’ and emasculated with a sub-Jornian fuzzy textile making attitude. Self-conscious - perhaps ironic - metro-cosmopolitan Adam was cutting up – emasculating – man-making craftwork itself. Blenkoe took a masculinised woodworking tool ‘the jigsaw’ (and CNCing – a staple of the new ‘techno’ male-dominated maker movement) and co-opted ‘mediated’ it for a ‘feminised’ arty-crafty weaving course. One in the loom or jigsaw for men running all the male workshops in the world. Bauhaus detourned – constructivism hacked off. Hacking, then can be practical, technical, political or cultural.
 No women at all if possible into the workshop, both for their sakes and the sake of the workshop…Weimar Bauhaus edict 1923
At the ‘revolutionary’ Bauhaus workshops, it is pointed out, the early years (1919-1920) the Council of Masters passed resolutions that aimed at benefitting the large numbers of women students attending the school. The new Weimar Constitution assured women unrestricted freedom of study. In his inaugural speech to the Bauhaus students Walter Gropius, the Bauhaus director, made express reference to the women present. His notes referred explicitly to ‘no special regard for ladies, all craftsmen in work’ and ‘absolute equality of status, and therefore absolute equality of responsibility’. Yet as early as September 1920 Gropius was backtracking. And suggesting ’no unnecessary experiments’ should be made and that women should be sent directly to the weaving shops having completed the mandatory Vorkurs (the compendium multidisciplinary craft course 21st century art foundation courses came from). If weaving was refused, rebel female students were directed towards bookbinding or pottery. No women were allowed to study architecture; female student cohort made unwelcome in the woodwork shop.
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Bauhaus Weaving Studio Loom
It may be noted that the Weimar Bauhaus presented a number of fundamental obstacles to the admission of women and that those who overcame the first hurdles were forcibly chanelled into the weaving workshop. Much of the art then being produced by women was dismissed by men as ‘feminine’ or ‘handicrafts’. The men were afraid of too strong an ‘arty-crafty’ tendency and saw the goal of the Bauhaus – architecture – endangered. (Bauhaus archive, 1919-1920, Magdalena Droste)
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Bauhaus girls looking out from weaving shop, circa 1925
Bolshevik art in the Soviet Union, in particular ‘constructivism’ and its related movements ‘suprematicism’ and ‘productivism’, post-1917 revolution, looked to deconstruct the bourgeois world epitomised by a residual adherence to a ‘his’ and ‘her’ conception of society and human expression. The Russian avant-garde – of which Liubov Popova as a rare woman art-worker was a part – practice ‘unfolded in the context of the Bolsheviks proclamation of the emancipation of women under socialism, which was supposed to entail the destruction of the private, domestic sphere of everyday life in which women had traditionally been trapped, and their seamless entry into productive and public life – including the practice of art.’ However, coincidental with the gender-distinctions and craft bias evidenced at the Weimar Bauhaus the progressive constructivist project still split artisan practices along predictable male-female lines:
Popova chose to enter production  through the traditionally feminine fields of fabric and clothing design, while Rodchenko [her close communist art collaborator] taught in the exclusively masculine wood and metalworking faculty at the newly established state art school VKhUTEMAS, focusing on furniture design, and maintained a reputation for ‘iron constructive power’ among his colleagues in the avant-garde group Lef (Left Front of the Arts).[12]
[12] Rodchenko & Popova: Defining Constructivism, 2009, Tate Modern Exhibition Publication. In ‘His and Her Constructivism’ Christina Kiaer writes that despite Popova Rodchenko anomaly, ‘There is ample evidence, within the works, writings, and lifestyles of the members of the left avant-garde, that they rejected most stereotypes of femininity inherited from capitalism, and embraced the egalitarian ideals of the ‘new everyday life’ and the full participation of women in artistic, literary, and working life’. She calls the constructivist radicals formal experimenters and productive practitioners of a prototypical ‘Bolshevik feminism’.
Cultural Goods:
“Kings road shopper…it’s just a fake make no mistake a rip off for me a Rolls for them” Rip Off Sham 69
“Turning rebellion into money” White Man in Hammersmith Palais, The Clash
Back to Vivien Westwood, then.  A brilliant maker, if confused thinker, this infamous Derbyshire rebel woman professed a Situationist agenda and, despite supressing some of it with some sweet bad faith -- post 1968 she’s running a Kings Road shop selling commodified rebellion, a situation critiqued by the situationist influenced punk commodities she aligned herself with –- she was in 1977 (and still is) anti-consumption –pro-making. What else was/is her complaint that folks didn’t/don’t go home and make their own ripped clothing or adorn it with zips and DIY stencilled slogans about then? But what did the SI (Situationist International) have against commodities? Despite unthinkingly (knowingly) luring the likes of Vivienne Westwood into their philosophical elephant trap – as she co-opted their abandoned-by-now Mai ’68 theory for snappy political slogans she could rescue, repurpose and hack for her very saleable detourned revolutionary clothing “demand the Impossible” - Raoul Vaneigem and the SI wrote about how paradoxically a sort of cultural existential spiritual poverty is brought about by the totalising domination of the Society of the Spectacle in which commodified goods and their spectacular consumption are paid for in the name of social distinction by consumers. But these states-of-modern mind are in fact disabling, ontologically ‘alienating’ rendering the subject a passive consumer. They called this condition-in-common proletarianisation: The act of choosing between a variety of commodities, whether they are roles or things, lifestyles, or opinions is, by virtue of its distinctive hierarchical position in the alienated whole, fated to be an instance of ‘false choice offered by a spectacular abundance’; an irrelevant and meaningless choice between empty and equivalent commodities.
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Every product represents the hope for ‘a dramatic shortcut to the long-awaited promised land of total consumption’. But the fulfilment of this promise is possible only with the attainment of the totality of commodities, a desire which excites the accumulation of commodities but which is ultimately insatiable. ‘The satisfaction that the commodity in its abundance can no longer supply by virtue of its use value is now sought in the acknowledgement of its value qua commodity’. Commodities circulate as ends in themselves; goods which are presented as unique ultimate products, the very best and latest goods, are replaced and forgotten the next. (Sadie Plant, The Most Radical Gesture: The Situationist International in a Postmodern Age, - Guy Debord Society of the Spectacle cited in ‘’)
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Man Gifts, Black and Decker advertisement, circa 1950s
But as we have seen above, within radical SI influenced culture (macho punk V effete punk) there, by anti-spectacle logic, exists a circular self-critical ongoing examination of the holes and misunderstandings in its own theoretical position. (The society of the spectacle is wholesale, totalitarian, and therefore subjectively inescapable) Vaneigem – the Mai ’68 philosopher (overshadowed by distinctive Debord (philosopher as commodity)) - might contra Debord - controversially shout out: "THREE CHEEERS FOR COMMODIITES—HIP-HIP-HOORAY”. Writing in 1967 -- contra inter alia the malign product fetishism the continental radicals sensed pervading everyday post-war life -- Vaneigem declared for a need, not to refuse manufactured goods, but to subvert modernity’s electrical and technological commodities for creative ends. Predicting, pre-empting, prescribing, ‘producing’ what we today call ‘hacking’, a creative German engineer he told of, ‘Using makeshift equipment and negligible funds’, had created a DIY apparatus able to replace a Cyclotron; a homemade particle accelerator using magnets and high voltage electrodes. (The Revolution of Everyday Life). Blenkoe and his subjugated reborn modern-man jigsaw can be retrospectively reviewed from this Vaneigem(ist) perspective.
                         Clash of Worlds: 
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Bauhaus, “Arty” Book, Cover Detail,
If an ELU electric jigsaw, like a Seditionaries shirt, the glossy art book on Bauhaus Adam Blenkoe left out for his constructivist felt workshop, a Clash LP, Gibson Brogues, are distinctive BRANDED commodities so are Universities, art galleries, football grounds, shops, night clubs.  Museums couldn’t escape the critical mind of the SI, any more than the power tool did. These carefully curated places can be – and are – today consumed as any cultural commodity. Modern subjects consume passively the museum as brand, looking over the fixed and revered inanimate objects. In consuming these residual respected cultures, we are looking to exhibit a spectacle of intellectual social distinction. The SI were getting at the exhibitionistic posing inherent in spectacular intellectual-consecrated consumption. ‘Who do we think is watching us when we consume culture?’ to paraphrase Jean Paul Sartre. (In his 2018 book Fewer Better Things Glenn Adamson – former director of the Museum of Arts and Design New York ‘one of the main  things people look at in exhibitions is one another’.
Peter Wollen, in a very precis reprise of the compendium of ideas which situationism is constructed from writes that, despite their provocative journalism and philosophical gesturing, the Situationists’ wilder projects for détournement never took off. But they did want to change the cultural landscape and they are still well known for their urban fantasies and desire to alter the city. Arguing that ‘the Paris Metro should be running all night, special aerial runways should be constructed to facilitate journeys across the rooftops, churches should be turned into children’s playgrounds (or Chambers of Horror), railway stations should be left exactly as they are—except that all timetables and travel information should be removed from them. Graveyards should be abolished. Prisons should be opened. Street-names should be changed’ and anti-museums set up; art galleries should be raided i.e. hacked: ‘All museums should be closed and the art works distributed, to be hung in bars and Arab cafés’.
Jean Baudrillard in Revenge of the Crystal; Selected Writings on the Modern Object and its Destiny: 1968-1983 suggests that after functional objects, objects he calls ‘by-gone objects’ have been superseded or become obsolete in commodified society, i.e. non-functional, they nevertheless stick around the social and cultural scene and inter alia re-function as ‘rare, quaint, folkloric, exotic or antique objects. They seem inconsistent with the calculus of functional demands in conforming to a different order of longing: testimony, remembrance, nostalgia, escapism’. Baudrillard theorist of the simulacra goes on ‘One might be tempted to see them as relics of the traditional and symbolic order. Yet for all their difference, these objects also form part of modernity, and this is the source of their double meaning’[13] to the philosopher of commodity-objects-as signs list we might add ‘industrial’. For writing in 1968 amidst the heat of the Mai’68 anti-commodity fire Baudrillard and his cohort were still living in the epoch of production, manufacturing and thus industrial society. In our post-industrial setting the objects and functional tools of industry thus evoke as live signs of by-gone dead objects the secondary denotations and connotations he identifies in religious, ethnic, hereditary objects. Industrial-alia is chic and now belongs to that different order of longing: testimony, remembrance, nostalgia, escapism.
The industrially-derived objects on display as museum ‘collections’- housed in the open-displays of Museum of Making – are not left to do the work of this secondary order: creating/facilitating passive nostalgic longing in its spectating visitors.  The world’s first factory is the Silk Mill in Derby which as the Museum of Making unlike many heritage places (and definitely other passive engagement museums –physically speaking anyway) has an authentic working workshop space where things can be actively made inspired by and associated with the industrial artefacts and objects on show.  For example, my making course Kitchenalia used selected relevant industrial objects from the collections – carved patterns, aero-dynamic wooden models, presentation bowls and hand-made spoke gouges – as a starting point for this woodworking course. Although participants made serving platters, utensils and bowls, they explored the same skills and techniques used to make the objects picked out from the collections. In this way they were actively engaging with the process of making the by-gone functional objects and refuting their consignment to the realms of that secondary order of non-functionalism. Plus, in making artefacts they are acting under Westwood’s punkish radical imperative to make their own functional objects – not buy them from the internet or expensive commercial cookery shops. Consumption is therefore purposefully clashed with authentic production, commercialism confronted with DIY. The workshops are at the living centre of the museums’ making ethos and inform a certain development of a city ‘Making Quarter’. As part of the MoM project we have already created a mobile workshop ‘The Makory’ which we take out across the city - loaded up with tools and museum collections – into unorthodox spaces like laybys, country parks and inner-city concrete carparks reclaiming creativity and making – moving the museum in a converted – hacked - library bus.
 [13] J. Baudrillard, Revenge of the Crystal, p35
Punk Making: 
Punk was infamously founded (found out) on a radical DIY ethic. The low-fi influential fanzine Sniffin’ Glue drove forward this do-it-yourself ethic of anti-consumption – a well-told critique of complicated commercial pop and elite ‘progressive’ music – by printing in one of its most renowned editions a diagram showing three guitar chords. The gesture was a call to self-production, the guitar its means of original production. Showing finger positions required to make A, E, G chords it challenged the passive consumer-of-other-people’s-songs to stop passive consumption fandom and demanded “NOW FORM A BAND”.
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Sniffin Glue, Fanzine, 1976
Over the last thirty years I have led many studio-courses and summer-school introductions to furniture making; most recently in courses prototyping #2 development phase of Museum of Making programming and a post-opening two craft course called Kitchenalia and Plywood Furniture where attendees made their own handmade chopping boards bowls and utensils, cabinets, bookcases, shelving units. After explaining to students what they can do with a simple raw skill saw and rail, biscuit jointer, and router, I refer to the Sniffin’ Glue provocation. I say, plagiarising Sniffin’ Glue, in order to provoke as the fanzine wanted to, ‘here’s a saw, here’s a router, here’s a biscuit jointer -- now you go make your own furniture’.
Power tools – hand-held machines – are not independently spectacular commodities, but inevitably gain their social distinction – semiotic worth – from their purchase price; good kit is expensive. But community craft centres like ORW, where I worked for ten years in London, and the 2021 Museum of Making inner-city workshop, are built on the premise of the DIY ethic. Not self-consciously anarchist or punk, yet subconsciously culturally determined by the autonomous punk ethos – all small community fabrication studios enable independent making by holding-in-common the tools needed for DIY furniture production: a saw, a router, a biscuit jointer (21st century it is a domino jointer). Given that amateur makers and post-grad students can’t afford to set up workshops and buy expensive equipment seminal to the manufacture of aesthetic and utilitarian artefacts, (you need more than scissors or razor blade) the community workshop hold these means of production as joint stock which can be commandeered with membership fees, small rents, and short-term public hire.  Skilled help and technical advice the essential complimentary resource.
In a ‘sniffing glue’ punk-making mind-set I try to disenchant the ‘mystery of making’ (without undermining its skilled aspect) as fast as possible by associating independent making with the three-chord-mentality. The rawness of three-chord making can, I often want to point out, be reduced to two items of kit (planer and saw) or one chord production with a modern accurate circular or hand-held rail saw. In a workshop with a single robust circular saw, stripped back of guards and riving knives (illegally) I can rip, crosscut, groove, rebate, tongue, tenon and mortice furniture components to a professional standard. Most south-of-England antique restorers and cabinet-making workshops - secreted in hard-to -find anonymous marginal buildings - work a central table saw hard in this anarchist making fashion - stereotypically an old Wadkin cast-iron like the one we had at the Silk Mill circa 2013. I know because I’ve been in these raw brute foundational workshops and made complex beautiful stylish furniture in them. They exist all over the country if you can or want to find them and design/make your own stuff.
More than this, community ownership of machines and tooling and spaces of production advance punk’s anti-consumption theory and praxis because in buying one communal router, one shard biscuit jointer, one accessible saw they remove the temptation, or unavoidable need, for would-be makers to outlay hard-earned wages, bare subsistence incomes and allowances on commercial woodworking products they only need to use intermittently to create made objects. The sheds of England are full of unused and unwanted power tools. Bought from DIY retail outlets or specialist craft suppliers, these expensive goods lie idle. The rhetoric of the community workshop is clear to hear.
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 Banally, the sign/word ‘Hack’ abuts the word ‘Hacienda’. Spanish for a ranch, or large estate, or the house or building on these, Hacienda derives – and the dictionary tells me this - from the Latin root faceienda : things to be done, from facere : to do. Andy Warhol had the art Factory in New York, Factory Records was a Manchester urban record label, the Hacienda its independent night club. Tony Wilson of Factory Records plagiarised the SI - as is the rebel logic of the circular political SI idiom – and christened the Manchester night club The Hacienda after Chtcheglov’s hackneyed and well-hacked essay ‘Formulary for a New City’: ‘the hacienda must be built’. He argued for cities modified, detourned, hacked and the creation of a bizarre quarter, a happy quarter, a sinister quarter. And advocated mobile houses and transformable liquid strange experimental city environments. [14]
                        [14Sadie Plant, The Most Radical Gesture: The Situationist International in a Postmodern Age, Routledge, 1992, p. 61.
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The Makory, Hacked ex-council Library Bus, Museum of Making, 2019
Going Nowhere, Detourned magazine image, Mai ’68 DIY screen print poster, ink on paper 1968
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What might you get when you recombine a library bus with a workshop or a traditional museum with a live-making in-house workshop or put a museum collection in that workshop or put a museum in a factory and make that museum a factory to rebuild a museum? What happens when you clash active blue collar making low (non-official) culture of the factory/workshop with the high (official) culture of passive contemplative museum musing?
See detournement
The two fundamental laws of detournement are the loss of importance of each detourned autonomous element – which may go so far as to lose its original sense completely – and at the same time the organisation of another meaningful ensemble that confers on each element its new scope and effect.
Plywood - a DIY furniture making course - ran by Steve Smith - is a popular event at Museum of Making. This Autumn he is planning a furniture-making course exploring the cult Italian mid-80s designer furniture movement Memphis Style.
The Museum of Making workshop and studio programme is now running workshops on making ceramics, metalworking, tin-smithing, woodwork, weaving, clothes making.
Adam Blenkoe has recently finished a commission for the Barbican and is in discussion with Museum of Making workshop  ‘bringin’ back’ his ‘felting machine’ to the city for 2022.
Steve Smith has completed a clothes-making course ran by fashion designer and tailor Abi Wastie. Abi is a course leader at Museum of Making.
DIY is a new exhibition for 2022 at the Museum of Making
Director of Projects, Hannah Fox, is a former student of Belper High school and led the way advocating the installation/juxtaposition of a live making workshop within a museum setting at Derby’s Museum of Making. She is leaving the project to join the Bowes Museum Barnard Castle.
 Steve Smith, Workshop - Studio Supervisor, May, 2022
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ippnoida · 4 years ago
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JLF 2022 announces second tranche of speakers
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The annual Jaipur Literature Festival (JLF) announced its second list of speakers for the 15th edition, set to take place from28 January to 1 February 2022 in Jaipur. As the just-released list shows, the Festival will once again be a grand marathon of ideas between idealists, realists, visionaries, intellectuals, the avant-garde, and the iconoclasts, who will engage in informed discussion and be united by an abiding love for literature.
The second list of 25 speakers include Indian poet, LGBTQ rights activist, and author of Like Blood on the Bitten Tongue: Delhi Poems and How Many Countries Does the Indus Cross Akhil Katyal; British biographer, literary agent, and author of several book books - including those on the lives of the writer John Buchan, spy Guy Burgess, and Edward VIII - Andrew Lownie; Mumbai-based writer and journalist Anindita Ghose; British archaeologist and author of (co-written with late anthropologist David Graeber) the New York Times bestseller The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity David Wengrow; award-winning British-Turkish novelist and the most widely read woman author in Turkey Elif Shafak; Rajya Sabha MP, Ex-Union Minister and author of several well-known books Jairam Ramesh; Sahitya Akademi Award recipient, renowned poet, writer, critic, playwright, and editor who has written extensively in English and Malayalam K Satchidanandan; PEN Open Book Award-nominated Jamaican poet, writer, and essayist Kei Miller.
Making the list more vibrant, the line-up includes renowned Bangladeshi journalist Mahfuz Anam; critically acclaimed historian and writer of the most recently published False Allies: India’s Maharajahs in the Age of Ravi Varma Manu S Pillai; American academic and author of the award-winning books Edge of Empire, Liberty’s Exiles, and The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World Maya Jasanoff; British writer of Booker Prize-shortlisted book Brick Lane - Monica Ali; actor, child-rights activist and writer of six children’s books, translated into more than 15 languages globally, Nandana Dev Sen; co-chairman of Forbes Marshall, engineer, businessman, and author of The Struggles and the Promises Naushad D Forbes; feminist, publisher, and writer of the recent ZOHRA! A Biography in Four Acts Ritu Menon; author of internationally bestselling and award-winning books Underland, The Old Ways, Landmarks, and The Lost Words: A Spell Book (with writer Jackie Morris ) - Robert Macfarlane.
Giving it a diverse flavor, the speaker list includes celebrated Hollywood actor, director, and writer Rupert Everett; award-winning British poet, author of 12 poetry collections, two books on wildlife and two novels Ruth Padel; Indian novelist, critic, and academic Saikat Majumdar; Sri Lankan writer of Chinaman: The Legend of Pradeep Mathew which won the Commonwealth Prize, the DSC Prize, the Gratiaen Prize and was adjudged the second greatest cricket book of all time - Shehan Karunatilaka; award-winning Indian film actress, TV personality and author Sonali Bendre; Sahitya Akademi Yuva Puraskar recipient author Tanuj Solanki; author of a range of books that include The Body Adorned, Discourse in Early Buddhist Art and Yogini Cult and Temples and India: A Story Through 100 Objects Padma Bhushan Vidya Dehejia; senior Indian journalist and National Award winning filmmaker Vinod Kapri.
Namita Gokhale, writer, publisher, and co-director of the Jaipur Literature Festival, said, “Our second list of speakers unfurls to provide a further glimpse into the rich diversity of voices to be platformed at Jaipur Literature Festival 2022. We are proud to present writers and thinkers, dreamers and doers, from across languages, cultures, and continents.”
William Dalrymple, writer, historian, and co-director of the JLF, said, “We are coming back with a truly spectacular lineup of literary superstars from across the world. In fiction we have this year’s Booker winner, the great Damon Galgut, his predecessors Monica Ali & DBC Pierre, Pulitzer winner Jonathan Franzen and Turkish superstar Elif Shafak. We have Rob Macfarlane on nature writing, Rupert Everett on Hollywood, Vidya Dehejia on Chola bronzes. We also have a special focus on archaeology and ancient history: Cat Jarman on the Vikings, David Wengrove on the Dawn of Everything and many more.”
Every year, the Festival brings together a diverse mix of the world’s greatest writers, thinkers, humanitarians, politicians, business leaders, sports people, and entertainers on one stage to champion the freedom to express and engage in thoughtful debate and dialogue. The Festival has hosted nearly 5000 speakers & performers and welcomed over a million booklovers from across the world since its inception in 2007. Today, the JLF has grown to become a global literary phenomenon, which is home to riveting conversations, debates, and dialogue.
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briefmarketshare · 4 years ago
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DBC(Direct Bonded Copper) Substrate Market is Expected to Grow at a Healthy CAGR with Top players: Rogers/Curamik, Nanjing Zhongjiang, Heraeus Electronics, KCC, Stellar Industries Corp
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