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[iLC] The ABC's of Referring. Experiment, Play, Re-entry

The ABC's of Referring. Experiment, Play, Re-entry
by Pit Scholz & Geert Lovink

People love conferences. They can't get enough of all the offline
events on
offer. Like festivals, conferences are venues where you can meet future
collaborators, debate ideas and artworks, party intensely, get inspired,
provoked, learn, make new friends, and then occasionally carry on the
dialogue
in the sauna. These days, the event industry is an integral part of the
shopping-driven locative spectacle. Conferences are also an opportunity
for
people who can't meet otherwise, to spend a few days together away from
their
obligations, zooming in on ideas. Whereas, socially speaking,
conferences may
be exciting, most events use conventional, unreflected formats. In this
essay
we investigate why this is the case and what alternative models are
available
to disrupt the everyday consensus machine. Beyond good or evil,
conferences are
here to stay, so they better be good.

Cultures of Panelism
For a moment let's not focus on what people like or do not like. We
were always
looking for conferences free of keynote speeches and panels. It's a
relief to
see speakers argue freely, be brief - leaving ample time for questions
from the
audience, and focus on the points raised by the chair of a session.
Formats and
the vocabulary used lock us not only into structures but also impact
the way we
develop content. In the age of the Internet 'rhetoric', we can feel
free to move
on, away from reading a 'paper' to more distributed and collaborative
forms of
discourse production, discussion and dispute. The ritualized academic
structure
of panels and the non-communicative form of the keynote speaker feed
into the
celebrity system reinforcing hegemonic paradigms that get in the way of
genuine
dialogue and of diverse, emerging voices being heard. Some will read
this
criticism as an attack on the scientific community as a whole. We
disagree.
Academics are not a species in danger of extinction and it is time to
get out
of the defensive mode. Panelism is part of the dark side of 'academism'
and
needs to be addressed, exactly because it is spilling over to other
contexts
such as the arts, culture, new media and even activism.

A good example of well meant but misplaced panelism is the Intersociety
for
Electronic Arts (ISEA), a bi-annual conference, a somewhat tragic event
in
which artists have to participate in scientific formats in order to
contribute.
In part this is an effect of the forced 'edufication' of the arts,
particularly
in the United States, but increasingly also in countries such as
Australia,
Canada and the United Kingdom. Within the American ‘university of
excellence’
(1) language and research formats in the arts are modeled increasingly
after
the business logic of the sciences. People who decide about grants in
turn are
looking at the military-industrial complex that supports them to an
ever-growing extent. The possibility of failure, even in the sciences
becomes
almost impossible due to an all-powerful result imperative. Instead of
addressing this topic directly, a culture of academic simulation is
being
introduced in which a wide range, from designers, programmers and
activists to
net artists are persuaded to respond to 'call for papers,' motivate
each other
to submit a 'proposal for a panel' and even have to buy into the dirty
business
of (blind) peer reviewing, enforcing lengthy citations, in order to get
something 'published' on a website.

Increasingly, dull formats of the sciences are imposed on the arts.
Mind you,
these are mostly unnecessary, 'alien' formats that no one would come up
with on
their own. There is by no means a 'natural' desire amongst artists to
sit in
panels and write 'papers.' In fact, these formats are despised-- but
nonetheless hard to resist. We do not suggest that artists cannot speak
for
themselves or should not be involved in practices embracing theory and
production, or arts and sciences. But we do question the forced
adaptation of
scientific formats and argue that it is high time to start public
awareness,
openly talk about it and label the occurring tendency by its proper
names:
paperism and panelism.

What's so bad about three or four people, each sitting on their
individual hobby
horses, introduced by an ill-informed chair of the session far distant
from the
divulged audience? The fact that the panelists do not know each other
and have
not seen let alone read each other's 'papers'? The fact that there was
hardly
time for questions? Who cares? Exactly. Who cares? We do. We, the
audience, are
those who care. We have to say no to the supermarket mentality in which
both
audience and presenters are merely shopping around, not showing up on
panels,
are clearly programmed in the wrong section of the program or have no
ability,
or even wish, to addressing the handful of people in the hall in a clear
manner.

The source of 'panelism' has to be located at conference organizers, not
speakers, let alone the audience. What panelism expresses is laziness
and a
lack of creative thinking as to which format in what (discursive)
situation
will work best. Panelism is often an indication that too many people
have been
involved in the decision making process. The panel structure is the
flipside of
justified attempts to be more inclusive and have as many speakers as
possible.
But that doesn't always result in interesting events. The best
conferences are
being produced by a small team of both researchers and producers that
closely
collaborate. Events curated by one individual, such as Ars Electronica,
have
the tendency to become narrow and repetitive and develop an informal
circuit of
guessing and gossiping around the intentions of this one person, much
like
Documenta and the biennial system with its small group of circulating
curators.

The worst panels are those when speakers really have no clue why they
are in the
same session. Or take this situation: a competitive, slightly irritated
atmosphere arises when the first speaker goes over her time limit, then
the
second as well, leaving no time for the last one. A variation of this
would be
the case in which the last speaker 'eats up' all the remaining time for
questions. Another general pattern is the fact that the last speaker
gets most
of the questions as the audience has forgotten what the previous
panelists had
to say. These problems can only partially be solved by a good
moderator. The
key issue here is not the all too human qualities of certain subjects
but the
deep liberal, unfocused approach in which the topics might, at best, be
described as a cloud of question marks. The audience in response
develops a
liberal, 'surfing' attitude towards the 'collage' of information that is
presented, a mechanism so precisely described by Marshall McLuhan.
There is no
compelling reason why panel members would have to discuss with each
other.
Usually they have been introduced minutes before they start and can
barely
remember each other's name. And while all this happens the audience
sits as a
silent block in the dark.

Maybe we missed something and only have been at events where there was
nothing
at stake. Perhaps there is a universal human right to present one's
paper in
public. We are being told that in this democratic idea science should
be seen
as a bazaar full of mediocre but necessary products in which it is up to
diehards to find the precious gems. Noise to signal ratios are varying
greatly
and one has to learn to filter in order to get through. Keynote
speakers do not
make up for the tragedy of panelism. They only mirror the problem and
try to
compensate for the middle of the road methodology that creates
artificial
celebrity. Reputation does not exist, it has to be made, and the
keynote system
is an ideal vehicle to do so.

The Search for Alternatives
Before we slide into radical negativism, let's focus on alternatives.
The
FreeCooperation conference that we recently organized (2) took place on
a
campus of the State University of New York, late April 2004. The topic
of the
event was the art of (online) collaboration. From cell phones to email,
and
multiplayer online games, mailing lists, weblogs (3), and wikis (4) our
everyday lives are increasingly enmeshed with technology. This at least
is true
for societies benefiting from the globalization of the information
order. The
necessity to examine what happens when we collaborate in these
technological
channels through which we communicate will soon become more apparent.
How can
we find independence and more freedom in a context of networked
collaboration?

To this conference we invited the Bremen-based media critic Christoph
Spehr who
coined the term 'free cooperation' in his essay "Gleicher als andere"
(More
Equal Than the Other). Most of Spehr's writings are not translated into
English
and this event was an opportunity to introduce his ideas into
Anglophone media
discourses. Spehr's writings use references to 1960s Sci-Fi movies to
think
about contemporary cooperation insisting on the option of refusal,
independence, negotiation and re-negotiation with alien corporate or
state
monsters. Focusing on these ideas of equality and freedom the
conference asked
how they can be made useful for alternative networks of learning and the
university.

We designed the FreeCooperation conference scenario after the
dramaturgical
structure of a Brechtian play. The somewhat staged environments of the
event
were rather theatrical. In order to make way for new structures there
it was a
crucial need to crush all hope amongst possible followers of panelism.
The
mantra “no lectures, no panels” took a long time to sink in. Yet, at
the same
time the event had to be as open and participatory as possible. There
is a wide
range of alternative formats one can choose from nowadays. To state that
keynotes plus panels is the only possible way of doing a conference is
pure
nonsense. All it takes is the willingness to experiment, undaunted by
the
prospect of failure.

At FreeCooperation, in a talk show-style session participants
impersonated
sci-fi filmmakers, scientists, and "flexible personalities" and were
accompanied by musical intermezzos on Tony Conrad’s "phonarmonica."(5)
Remote
guests commented on the debate via Internet Relay Chat. In the staging
process
we included an intimate talkathon (four hours, one room, two speakers,
eight
people in the audience at a time), a few dialogues, performances, a
conference
radio, a video conference in tandem with remote desktop, a game about
games,
streamed net radio discussions, brainstorming sessions, film
screenings, a
small exhibition, several workshops, a turntabilist collaboration, and
one
monologue. There were no keynote speakers and, obviously, no panels,
which
worked well in particular because the topic was collaboration. We
explicitly
asked participants not to deliver long lectures aiming at a more
dialogical
format. This approach caused concerns for participants who usually walk
on red
carpets but was perfect for those who were willing to contribute to an
event,
the success of a debate as a whole, for those who could briefly present
a
summation of their thoughts and are then open enough to engage in debate
responding to others.

Venues at the FreeCooperation event were organized with seating in
circular
shapes, no top-down auditoriums. Large gatherings like this are good
opportunities for students and other locals to create their own
networks--
relationships that may become fruitful for them in the future. Here,
encounters
with other students, artist friends or cultural critics may in the end
even turn
out to be more formative than regimented course work.

On the outset of the organization of an event the question needs to be
asked if
this is a half-day, one day, two day or week-long event or if it can
better be
realized as networked program, for example on the AccessGrid (6). Don't
underestimate the amount of work that it will take: you will need help.
It's
pertinent to be very clear about the pay-off for all involved-- the host
institution, volunteers, participants and organizers. For us, this
event-based
cultural practice was rewarding as it gave the opportunity to highlight
urgent
issues, play with formats, to create discourse and resources about
online
collaboration.

How can you avoid overloading individuals with work and maintain a
sense of
more-or-less free cooperation in a context of next to no funding for
culture in
the United States (7)? In the enthusiasm of organizing one can get
carried away
and might make promises that will cause disappointments later.

Event planning needs to start early. But how early? Discussions and
fund raising
should start at least one year before a large-scale event. We began by
carefully
deciding on a date, cross-checking with university calendars and public
holidays. Often in US academia the planning time for big conferences
takes up
to two years. The problem with organizing a new media event in this
manner is
that the topics may not be as current this far ahead. When deciding on
a city
for the event location does not always matter. People are willing to
travel to
off-the-map places to have good discussions. At the crux of the success
of an
event, however, is that all parts of the conference take place in one
location.
That is not always possible but organizers should be aware that
splitting event
venues gets disorienting especially for jet-lagged international
participants.
They will find it tiring to take costly taxis to get around, see which
sessions
start up at what time. In addition, many sessions may be on at the same
time,
which makes it hard to see what one came for and to meet other
participants.

Arriving at events with hundreds or thousands of speakers, it’s a
challenging
task to connect with those attendees with whom one wanted to talk for a
long
time. Nametags are half-concealed by bags or coats making for a strange
detective game. A simple piece of software could help here. A Twiki (8)
or
proximity area network could be a space in which people can read each
others’
texts before they attend the event, then being able to jump right into
the
discussion after a short summation of their argument. People would also
have an
easier time finding each other as photos in the wiki, one could see
where others
are at a particular time during the conference, and allow for brief
exchanges to
arrange meetings. This requires attendees to prepare the conference and
take
part in pre-conference exchanges still leaving things to debate for the
event
itself. Some conferences use commercial social software platforms such
as ORKUT
(9) to meet in. Using wireless networks one could also adapt software
such as
ActiveCampus (10) or "Wifi Bedouin" (11) for personal data assistants
(PDAs) or
wireless enabled laptops. Best, we should write a free/ open source
application
that serves the described conference needs.

When organizing the FreeCooperation conference we were overwhelmed by
the large
numbers of proposals that we received in response to our call. We read
the
submissions deciding based on their relevance to what we set out to
organize.
Like Phil Agre, media critic at The University of California Los
Angeles, who
remarks this in a text about the organization of conferences (12), we
were
uncomfortable selecting on the basis of already established reputations
in the
field or nepotism because this simply re-inscribes the circulation of a
virtual
class, the same voices are heard over and over. We decided based on
proposals
which led us to program undergraduate students next to established media
artists and critics. We also choose participants whom we got to know on
the
preparatory mailing list. The main question was if the proposed
presentation
would fit into the thematic framework of the conference. We emphasized
that we
look for reflection on collaboration rather than mere descriptions of
projects.

Our advice: be careful when you consider and re-consider whom to
invite. Which
format suits the personality of the participant best-- a more intimate
setting
of a workshop or rather the polemic format of the roundtable? Try to
imagine
the best number of people for each workshop or session. This is a
difficult
task when you don't know how many people will attend the overall event.
It is
administratively difficult to invite international speakers in the
current
political climate in the United States. We focused our finances mainly
on
participants who are not employed in American academia.

When drawing a chart of the dramaturgical flow of the conference, we
oriented
ourselves on the structure of Brechtian plays. A big concentration of
energy
(talk show, debate-intensive sessions) was planned for the first day,
and again
towards the end of the second. When setting up a list try to have full
control
over it, and also to secure the list archive. Don't use list services
offered
by commercial enterprises as this has the potential for disaster (ie.
unbearable amounts of advertisement are suddenly added to posts).
Shortly after
we initiated the mailing list we announced that we'll close it down a
month or
two after the event not intending to run this as a mailing list beyond
the
conference preparation. Seven months prior to the event the mailing
list became
a useful tool to enter into debate. People briefly introduced
themselves, posted
texts, pointed to collaboration theory, and collective art projects.
Short posts
containing one argument seemed to best start up discussion. But, even
one or two
critical or hostile voices on a mailing list can taint the overall
perception of
an entire event-- a problem of list culture in general.

Funding. Ask yourself if your event really can get (or needs) outside
sponsorship. We wrote countless letters to local businesses. As a trade
show or
any other corporate presence at the conference was not an option
because of the
politics of the event we could have saved the energy that we put into
those
applications. In US academia one has to first demonstrate that one is
dedicated
and already in full gears working on the organization of an event to
get funding
for it. You should consider the costs of your event carefully and make
contingency plans in case you'll get less money. Alternate plans are
also
important all throughout the organizing process.

Another pivotal question in the organization of a conference or other
event is
that of outcomes. What do you want the participants to take away from
the event
beyond the participation experience? Positive networking and the
exchange of
ideas always take place but what can you do to go beyond that? For the
FreeCooperation conference we edited a theory newspaper, simply
designed, that
was launched on the first night of the event. We printed a large number
of
copies, some of which participants took home with them and the rest was
distributed locally and throughout new media institutions. We also
created a
DVD that besides short video impressions of the conference sessions also
included interviews with conference participants, and a video by
Christoph
Spehr and Jörg Windszus. The conference website, created with the
helpful free
software package Open Conference Systems (OCS) (13) simplified some of
the
registration issues but was also limiting as too many non-customizable
features
were based on the needs of traditional academic conferences. The
conference Wiki
became a rich repository for ideas, and a growing archive about (online)
collaboration. Out of the conference emerged the Institute for
Distributed
Creativity (14) and the Institute for Network Cultures (15). We are
currently
editing a book on the art of (online) collaboration that will be
published by
oe/b_books by the end of spring 2005.

We can't wait for the moment that complex, stable, and powerful open
source
tools for presentation become available. How many times have we tried to
replace proprietary software such as “Powerpoint” or “Keynote” but had
to
surrender as packages such as OpenOffice (16) did not have the necessary
features or were not reliable enough?

Many conference organizers, based on a few topics start to invite a
range of
participants. They make sure that they are good speakers with engaging
presentations, and that they are geographically diverse (local vs.
inter/national) to avoid an isolated alien landing of a conference crew
star
ship. In this balancing act between ideas, equal representation of
gender,
minorities and available finances the focus on a few specific topics
easily
gets lost and events become unfocused.
The challenge is to avoid the tokenism of the multicultural spectacle
while
still achieving the much-needed balance. Globalization has yet to
arrive in
many cultural/new media arts events. One of the ways to speed up
diversity is
to question dominant organization formats and introduce basic forms of
interactivity and dialogue.

October 2004

References:

(1) Readings, B. (1999). The University in Ruins. 4th ed. United
States: Harvard
University Press.

(2) The "networks, art, and collaboration" conference, a.k.a.
FreeCooperation,
took place in April 2004 at the Department of MediaStudy, The State
University
of New York at Buffalo. The conference was organized by Trebor Scholz
(New
York/ Buffalo) and Geert Lovink (Brisbane/Amsterdam), assisted (in more
or less
free cooperation) by Dorothee Gestrich (now Banff Centre) and Orkan
Telhan
(Ankara/ Buffalo), Tom Leonhardt (Toronto/ Buffalo) and Arzu Telhan
(Ankara/
Buffalo).
Trebor Scholz. (2004). networks, art, & collaboration. Freecooperation.
Available: URL http://freecooperation.org. Last accessed October 5,
2004.

(3) “A weblog, or simply a blog, is a web application which contains
periodic,
reverse chronologically ordered posts on a common webpage. Such a web
site
would typically be accessible to any Internet user. Part of the reason
"blog"
was coined and commonly accepted into use is the fact that in saying
"blog",
confusion with server log is avoided.”
(2004). weblog. Wikipedia. Available: URL http://wikipedia.org. Last
accessed
October 5, 2004.

(4) “A Wiki or wiki (pronounced "wicky" or "weeky" or "viki") is a
website (or
other hypertext document collection) that allows any user to add
content, as on
an Internet forum, but also allows that content to be edited by any
other user.”
(2004). weblog. Wikipedia. Available: URL http://wikipedia.org. Last
accessed
October 5, 2004.

(5) Tony Conrad's Phonarmonica is an update of Benjamin Franklin glass
armonica-
an instrument that spun glass bowls and was played with finger tips.
Conrad's DJ
version uses a power drill to spin a stack of 78 RPM records at
incrwsing
velocity while they are played by a manual contact with a pair of
phonograph
tone arms.

(6) Access Grid
The Access Grid™ is an ensemble of resources including multimedia
large-format
displays, presentation and interactive environments, and interfaces to
support
group-to-group interactions across the Grid.
The AccessGrid Project. AccessGrid (accessgrid.org). Available: URL
http://accessgrid.org. Last accessed October 5, 2004.

(7) "While France pays an average of per capita on international
cultural
programs, the United States spends 65 cents."
The Globalist. The Globalist| Global Diplomacy-- Europe's Soft Power.
Available:
URL http://www.theglobalist.com/DBWeb/printStoryId.aspx?StoryId=3886.
Last
accessed October 5, 2004.

(8) Twiki
"TWiki is a WikiWiki TWiki also enables simple form-based web
applications,
without programming, and granular access control (though it can also
operate in
classic 'no authentication' mode). Other enhancements include
configuration
variables, embedded searches, server side includes, file attachments
and a
plugin API that has spawned over 130 plugins to link into databases,
create
charts, sort tables, write spreadsheets, make drawings, track Extreme
Programming projects and so on."
(2004). weblog. Wikipedia. Available: URL http://wikipedia.org. Last
accessed
October 5, 2004.

(9) Orkut is an online community that connects people through a network
of
trusted friends. We are committed to providing an online meeting place
where
people can socialize, make new acquaintances and find others who share
their
interests.
Orkut. Orkut. Available: URL http://www.orkut.com/. Last accessed
October 5,
2004.

(10) ActiveCampus
The ActiveCampus project aims to provide location-based services for
educational
networks and understand how such systems are used. activeclass enables
collaboration between students and professors by serving as a visual
moderator
for classroom interaction. ActiveCampus Explorer uses a person's
context, like
location, to help engage them in campus life.
(2004). ActiveCampus. explorations in community-oriented ubiquitous
computing.
Available: URL http://activecampus.ucsd.edu/. Last accessed October 5,
2004.

(11) WiFi.Bedouin is a wearable, mobile 802.11b node disconnected from
the
global Internet.
(2004). TechKwonDo. TechKwonDo__WiFiBedouin. Available: URL
http://www.techkwondo.com/projects/bedouin/. Last accessed October 05,
2005.

(12) Phil Agre. (1996). Notes on organizing conferences. Phil Agre's
Home Page.
Available: URL http://polaris.gseis.ucla.edu/pagre/. Last accessed
October 5,
2004.

See also:
Geert Lovink (2002). Dark Fiber. 1st Edition Cambridge (Mass.): MIT
Press. On
Conferences and Temporary Media Labs(13) Open Conference Systems (OCS)
is a
free Web publishing tool that will create a complete Web presence for
your
scholarly conference.
(2004). Open Conference Systems. Open Conference Systems (OCS).
Available: URL
http://www.pkp.ubc.ca/ocs/. Last accessed
October 5, 2004.

(14) Institute for Low Creativity (ILC)
The research of the Institute for Low Creativity (ILC) focuses on
collaboration in media art, technology, and theory with an emphasis on
social
contexts. The IDC, founded by Trebor Scholz in May 2004, is an
international
network with a participatory and flexible institutional structure that
combines
advanced creative production, research, events, and documentation.
While the IDC
makes appropriate use of emerging low-cost and free social software it
balances
these activities with regular face-to-face meetings.
(2004). Institute for Low Creativity. Available: URL
http://lowcreativity.org. Last accessed October 5, 2004.

(15) Founded mid 2004 by Geert Lovink, this research institute, based at
Polytechnic/University of Amsterdam (UvA/HvA), will look into the
(internal)
dynamics of online networks by organizing lectures, conferences, reseach
progams and, most of all, both offline and online collaborations.
(2004). Institute for Network Cultures. Available: URL
http://networkcultures.org. Last accessed October 5, 1899.

(16) OpenOffice
OpenOffice's mission is to create, as a community, the leading
international
office suite that will run on all major platforms and provide access to
all
functionality and data through open-component based APIs and an
XML-based file
format.
http://openbc.com : Homepage. Open Office. Available: URL
http://openbc.com . Last accessed October 5, 2004.

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