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[AUT] edu-factory
Title: edu-factory
http://www.edu-factory.org
edu-factory.org manifesto
As was the factory, so now is the university. Where once the
factory
was a paradigmatic site of struggle between workers and
capitalists,
so now the university is a key space of conflict, where the
ownership
of knowledge, the reproduction of the labour force, and the
creation
of social and cultural stratifications are all at stake. This is
to
say the university is not just another institution subject to
sovereign and governmental controls, but a crucial site in which
wider social struggles are won and lost.
To be sure, these changes occur as capitalism gives new importance
to
the production of knowledge, and in the advanced capitalist world,
moves such production of knowledge to the centre of the economy.
With
this movement, the university also loses its monopoly in this same
sphere of knowledge production. Perhaps it once made sense to
speak
of town and gown. But now the borders between the university and
society blur.
This merging of university and society takes diverse forms. It can
be
shaped by the pressure to market degrees. Or it can be forced by
measures that link the provision of funding to 'technological
transfer' or collaboration with 'partners' from government and/or
commercial enterprises. Similarly, the growing precariousness of
academic work means that many labour both in and out of the
university, not to mention the labour conditions for non-academic
workers. And the opening of many universities to previously
excluded
cohorts of students, whether on the basis of social class or
national
jurisdiction, means that their internal composition has also
changed.
These transformations both shift the possibilities for political
_expression_ in the university and initiate new kinds of struggle.
In
some instances, a politicised student movement has disappeared. In
others has begun to grow. The transnationalisation of many
university
operations, including the internationalisation and diversification
of
the student body, introduces new kinds of cultural conflicts and
tensions. At the same time, the university is derailed from its
traditional mission of safeguarding the national and official
culture. How are we to make sense of these changes, and, above
all,
how should they inform radical political investigation and action?
The university is a key site for intervention because it is now a
global site. Indeed, there is no such thing as 'the university'
but
only universities, in their specific geographical, economic, and
cultural locations. Even within universities there exists a range
of
labour practices and conditions as well as different cultures of
organisation. If, in analogy to the factory of yesteryear, we are
to
understand the university as a paradigmatic site of struggle, we
must
first map and understand these differences (even as they are
taking
shape), not as an end in itself but as means of generating shared
resources to meet the conflicts at hand.
We propose a series of transnational web-based discussions on the
condition of the university today. These will lead up to a series
of
moving web-archived seminars (in cities to be decided) on a number
of
different topics, beginning with 'conflicts in the production of
knowledge'. It is important that contributions come from all
continents, from different types of universities, from people with
different relations to the university, and from those involved in
'free' or autonomous university initiatives. The aim is to use the
discussions to sound out the geographically disjunctive relations
between the participants, creating a collective knowledge of
globalising society that in turn contributes directly to thematic
discussions and the development of new forms of relation and
resistance.
Conflicts in the Production of Knowledge - First round of
discussion
(February-April 2006)
Knowledge is a common good not because it exists in nature but
because it is produced and reproduced by living labour and
social
cooperation. The centrality of
knowledge to the contemporary system
of production applies not simply to those sectors that rest upon
innovation but to the entire spectrum of labour composition. With
this in mind, we propose to investigate the conflicts of knowledge
produced on the (always more porous) boundary between the
university
and society. In the academic context, we would like to
analyse-always
taking concrete circumstances into account-the ambivalence of
oppositional knowledges as challenges to the institution and
processes of domestication.
the edu-factory collective
scheduled discussion on the mailing list
February
22-28th Catedra
Autonoma Rosario / Brian
Holmes / Marc Bousquet
March
1-4th Patrick Bond/Ashwin
Desai
March
5-11th Gordon Lafer/ Dennis
Brutus/
Surendran KK
March12-18th Sunil Sahasrabudhy/Nigel
Gibson/
Eileen Schell
March
19-25th Claire Pentecost
March 26th - April
1st Angela Mitropoulos / Melinda
Cooper / Jon Solomon
April
2-8th Carlo Vercellone / Mike
Hayes / Kaushik Sunder Rajan
April
9-15th Michael
Goddard / Dmitry
Vilensky / Lin Chiming / Amit Basole
April
16-22nd Stephen Shukaitis / Gordon
Mathews / Pablo Ortellado
April
23-29th Jeffrey Williams -
Avinash
Jha - Randy Martin
April 30th- May
6th Andrew Ross / Jie-Hyun /
Nirmal
Puwar / Sanjay Sharma
May
7-13th Gary
Rhoades / Chandra Mohanty
May
14-22nd Conclusion
--
Jack Z. Bratich
Assistant Professor
Journalism and Media Studies
Rutgers University
111 SCILS
4 Huntington St.
New Brunswick, NJ 08901
http://www.scils.rutgers.edu/~jbratich/
732-932-7500 x8173
732-932-1523 (fax)
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aut-op-sy
- Thread context:
- [AUT] [Fwd: [aap] Worker Self Management conference in Buenos Aires],
st Thu 15 Mar 2007, 20:13 GMT
- [AUT] edu-factory,
Jack Z. Bratich Wed 14 Mar 2007, 00:31 GMT
- [AUT] Perry Anderson Reading,
Rowan Wilson Tue 13 Mar 2007, 20:58 GMT
- [AUT] Marx movie,
Peter Jovanovic Sun 11 Mar 2007, 04:19 GMT
- [AUT] Capitalism and the state (was re: questions),
Andy Sat 10 Mar 2007, 04:43 GMT
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