UTOPIA & YOUTH
EXPERIMENTATION AND RESEARCH IN CONTEMPORARY
ARTISTIC PRACTICES
Utopia and Youth
Within the context of the generalised youth protests that rocked Greece last December – also gaining widespread international recognition – this year’s workshop focuses on the relation between utopian discourse and youth. A historical study of youth movements reveals that youth has always functioned as a nodal point of resistance against the socio-political status quo of the day, advancing radical political transformation and social change. This is not to say, however, that all youth mobilization has a progressive orientation; on the contrary, it has also been lured by utopias of exclusion such as the Nazi Utopia of Racial Purity. Hence, the workshop will deal in depth with youth creativity and youth violence, will examine the role of youth subcultures in social and political mobilization, focusing on both the creative as well as the destructive dimensions of youth activism.
6th Painting Studio ASFA (Athens School of Fine Arts)
Basic timetable:
2 July: arrivals
3 July – 6 July: presentations
14 - 15 July: preparation of the presentation of the work
16-17 July: show and presentations of final works
18 July: end of show - departures
Number of Participating Students: 11
Organizer-Facilitator: Vassilis Vlastaras, Visual artist, Lecturer, ASFA
Assistant Organizer-Facilitator: Maria Glyka, Visual artist.
04 July, 2009
Immortalist Revolution...
Can you stay young? Are social changes necessary?
The ImmorTalist Manifesto: Stay Young & Save the World
by Richard Elixxir
1stBooks, 2001 see Amazon.com
No More Aging, No More Dying
Old Age and Death are no longer necessary or acceptable.
We are either the last to grow old and die, or the first to stay young
and live forever.
We choose to be the first to stay young and live forever.
Our goal is simple: kill Old Age and Death!
The Death Ideology, which worships changeable biological reality as
ontological essence, must be overthrown. Mortalism, which makes us
submit and grovel to Old Age and Death, must fall like the walls of
Jericho.
To "accept" Old Age and Death would be a perversion of our
natural instinct for self-preservation. The only ones who
are not afraid of Old Age and Death are the clinically
depressed -- the Haters of Life.
We indict Old Age and Death as the root cause of all
human misery, neurosis, and depression.
We expose Evil as the dance of mortals playing god.
We convict Old Age and Death for crimes against humanity.
In the beginning was The Dream.
The conquest of aging and death.
The attainment of the elixir of youth.
The Advent of physical immortality.
The Dream is about to come true.
Humanitys epic struggle against Mortality is about to
end with a decisive victory. We will use diet,
stem cells, cloning, molecular biology, genetic engineering,
artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, regenerative science
and medicine ... whatever it takes.
The First Breakthrough in anti-aging and life-extension
research has already happened. Yet most people do not
know it.
The Bible foretold of its advent. Behold, I show you a
mystery: We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be
changed....in the twinkling of an eye...this corruption shall
put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on
immortality..." (I Corinthians 15: 51-55)
learn more...
Proposed Bibliography on Youth
Angel W. (1990), Youth Movements of the World, Harlow: Longman.
Boren M.E. (2001), Student Resistance-A History of the Unruly Subject, London and New York: Routledge.
Brown S. (2005), Understanding Youth and Crime, Maidenhead: Open University Press.
Cavalli A. and Galland O. (1995), Youth in Europe, London: Pinter-A Cassel Imprint.
Chisholm L. and Kovacheva S. (2002), Exploring the European Youth Mosaic, Strasbourg: Council of Europe Publishing.
Cohen P. (1997), Rethinking the Youth Question, Basingstoke: MacMillan Press.
Coleman J. and Hendry L. (1996), The Nature of Adolescence, London: Routledge.
Craig S. and Bennet S.E. (1997), After the Boom-The Politics of Generation X, London: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
Epstein J. (ed) (1998), Youth Culture: Identity in a Post-modern World, Malden Mass: Blackwell.
Fornas J. and Bolin G. (eds) (1995), Youth Culture in Late Modernity, London: SAGE.
France A. (2007), Understanding Youth in Late Modernity, Maidenhead: Open University Press.
Frank T. (1997), The Conquest of Cool, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Hall S. and Jefferson T. (eds.) (2006), Resistance Through Rituals, Abingdon: Routledge.
Hodkinson P. and Deicke W. (eds) (2007), Youth Cultures: Scenes, Subcultures and Tribes, London: Routledge.
MacDonald R. (ed) (2000), Youth, the ‘Underclass’ and Social Exclusion, Abingdon: Routledge.
Miles S. (2000), Youth Lifestyles in a Changing World, Buckingham: Open University Press.
Mizen P. (2004), The Changing State of Youth, Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan.
Muncie J. (2006), Youth and Crime, London: SAGE.
Nava M. (1992), Changing Cultures-Feminism, Youth and Consumerism, London: SAGE.
Roche J., Tucker S., Thomson R. and Flynn R. (eds.) (2005), Youth in Society, London: SAGE.
Savage J. (2007), Teenage-The Creation of Youth 1875-1945, London: Chatto & Windus.
Wallace C. and Kovatcheva, S. (1998), Youth in Society-The Construction and Deconstruction of Youth in East and West Europe, Basingstoke: Palgrave.
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