Rushkoff defends the Dark Ages tonight on WFMU, 7pm EDT

Provocative thinker/Arthur columnist Douglas Rushkoff will be doing his weekly radio show, “The Media Squat” live tonight at 7pm EDT on WFMU. Streams at wfmu.org.

Doug tweets:

StreetsBlog Aaron Naparstek joins me on MediaSquat: WFMU.org, 7pm, and itunes WFMU. I plan to defend the so-called Dark Ages.

Should be interesting listening, especially for folks who were intrigued by Doug’s recent essays on the economy (“Let It Die,” “Hack Money, Hack Banking”) when he touched on current scholarship regarding life and commerce in the late Middle Ages.

DREAMTIME: Brightblack Morning Light opening for My Bloody Valentine!

ZOUNDS!

Here’s the BBML dates off the Matador Records site:

Friday, April 24: Denver, CO The Fillmore Auditorium w/My Bloody Valentine

Monday, April 27: Seattle, WA Wamu Theatre w/My Bloody Valentine

Thursday, May 21Flagstaff, AZ Mia’s Lounge w/Rio En Medio

Friday, May 22: Phoenix, AZ Modified w/Rio En Medio

Sunday, May 24: Tucson, AZ Solar Culture w/Rio En Medio

Wednesday, May 27: Santa Ana, CA Yost Theatre w/Rio En Medio

Wed June 10: New York, NY Webster Hall w/My Bloody Valentine

Thu June 11: Brooklyn, NY Studio B

Now taking requests…

We’re gradually putting text, photos and art from older issues of Arthur Magazine online.

There’s a lot in the archives for us to choose from, and we’re not doing it in any systematic order. If there’s something you’d like to see online sooner than later, let us know in the “Comments” section below. Requested items will then be brought online, archived and highlighted in the blog.

Yeah!

Today's Autonomedia Jubilee Saint – JOAN MIRO


April 20 — Joan Miro
Great Catalan painter, sculptor, printmaker, bon-vivant.

APRIL 20, 2009 HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS
* Thailand: Rice Planting Day
* Jewish Passover

ALSO ON APRIL 20 IN HISTORY…
1494 — Antinomian religious protestant Johannes Agricola born.
1893 — Surrealist painter Joan Miro born, Montroing, Spain.
1914 — Ludlow massacre of striking miners and families by National Guard.
1953 — U.S. Justice Department makes Communists register as foreign agents.
1969 — People’s Park planted, Berkeley, California.
1998 — German terrorist Red Army Faction announces dissolution after 28 years.

Excerpted from The 2009 Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints: Radical Heroes for the New Millennium by James Koehnline and the Autonomedia Collective

J.G. Ballard, 1930-2009

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Various British news sources are reporting the sad news that visionary author J. G. Ballard died this morning. From The Guardian:

JG Ballard, novelist and short-story writer, has died after a long battle with illness, his agent has said.

The 78-year-old author, who was best known for the award-winning Empire of the Sun, a semi-autobiographical novel written in 1984, and his controversial novel, Crash, later adapted into film by David Cronenberg.

His agent, Margaret Hanbury, said it was “with great sadness” that Ballard had passed away this morning after several years of ill health.

In early 2005, Arthur published a recent interview with Ballard by longtime enthusiast and counterculture historian V. Vale, whose Re/Search publishing house was just then releasing a new collection of Ballard interviews (J.G. Ballard: Conversations). Author Michael Moorcock, Ballard’s friend and sometime editor, graciously supplied Arthur with a short introduction for the piece.

Here is what Mike wrote:

J.G. BALLARD: Our Greatest Living Visionary Writer
by Michael Moorcock

(originally published in Arthur No. 15/March 2005)

Born in 1930, J.G.Ballard spent his formative years in a Shanghai civilian prison camp, experiences which form the basis of his autobiographical novel Empire of the Sun, filmed by Steven Spielberg. In England he abandoned his medicine degree at Cambridge to become a technical journalist. His first stories in New Worlds, Science Fantasy and Science Fictions Adventure from 1956 including “The Voices of Time,” “Vermilion Sands” and “Chronopolis” are in The Complete Short Stories of J.G.Ballard (2002). Three novels, The Drowned World (predicting climate change), The Crystal World and The Drought increasingly reflected his interest in surrealist painting. The Terminal Beach in Science Fantasy (1964) marked a new phase, dispensing altogether with the conventions of science fiction.

Appearing in New Worlds, which by then I was editing, “The Assassination Weapon” (1966) was the first of Ballard’s “condensed novels” where iconographic personalities and events became the basis of narrative. Other stories included “The Atrocity Exhibition Weapon,” “You: Coma: Marilyn Monroe” and “Plan For The Assassination of Jaqueline Kennedy” in New Worlds and, increasingly, in literary magazines such as Ambit and Transatlantic Review. His work encountered considerable hostility in the United States, where its irony went largely undetected. Doubleday, the publisher of The Atrocity Exhibition, ordered all copies pulped after it was printed. It eventually appeared from Grove Press in 1970. Meanwhile, “Why I Want to Fuck Ronald Reagan” became the basis of a UK court case, while his “Assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy Considered as a Downhill Motor Race,” “lost” by his U. S. agent, eventually appeared in New Worlds and Evergreen Review.

He remains a seminally controversial writer hugely admired by the likes of Martin Amis, Salman Rushdie, Fay Weldon, Angela Carter, Iain Sinclair and most of the best science fiction writers. Described as pornographic and psychotic when first reviewed, Crash (1973) was filmed by David Cronenberg starring James Spader in 1996. Concrete Island (1974) and High Rise (1975) continued similar themes of our psychological and sexual relationship with contemporary phenomena and iconography. The Unlimited Dream Company (1979) and Hello America (1981) are enjoyable satires; his autobiographical The Kindness of Women (1991) was a sequel to Empire of the Sun. Recent novels like Cocaine Nights (1996), Super-Cannes (2000) and Millennium People (2003) continue to develop techniques describing his unique experience and his notion that contemporary bourgeousie have become the new slave class.

Today he lives in the same London suburb where he settled some 45 years ago and, as a widower, raised three children, eschewing electronics and still working at his typewriter. Combining the creative insight and originality of a modern William Blake, Ballard is our greatest living visionary writer.

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Today's Autonomedia Jubilee Saint – LORD BYRON

lordbyron
April 19 — Lord Byron
Wit, dandy, into incest and man-boy love. Died fighting for Greek freedom and romantic ideals. Good poet, too.

APRIL 19, 2009 HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS
*Snakes Return to Ireland Day

ALSO ON APRIL 19 IN HISTORY…
1824 — British romantic poet Lord Byron dies of malaria, Missolonghi, Greece.
1943 — Warsaw Uprising begins in Jewish ghetto, Poland.
1993 — Feds end siege of Branch Dividians near Waco, Texas.
2005 — German Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger elected Pope Bendect XVI.

Excerpted from The 2009 Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints: Radical Heroes for the New Millennium by James Koehnline and the Autonomedia Collective

April 25, Phantasmaphile Blog Presents Trinie Dalton Book Talk at the Observatory in Brooklyn

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This Saturday, Phantasmaphile‘s Pam Grossman hosts “Mirror Horror” at the Observatory, a brand new event space in Gowanus run collaboratively by seven Brooklyn-based bloggers and artists. Trinie Dalton, Arthur contributor and creator of the multidisciplinary modern myth anthology MYTHTYM, will be giving a visually-enhanced talk on the theme of mirrors in horror films and art, followed by a book signing. Should be a grand old time!

When: Saturday, April 25th, 7pm

Where: Observatory (same building as Proteus Gowanus, Cabinet Magazine, & Morbid Anatomy Library). 543 Union Street (at Nevins), Brooklyn, NY 11215

Subway: R/M to Union Street or F/G to Carroll St. Directions here.

Admission: Free. But bring cash for wine & copies of the gorgeous book, MYTHTYM. Trinie will be happy to sign it for you.

Some more background on Trinie Dalton:

“Trinie Dalton has long made popular zines on variety of subjects. She brings together artists, musicians, critics, novelists and cartoonists in one gorgeous stew. MYTHTYM compiles the best work from her previous zines on Werewolves, mythical beings, and the natural world. But best of all, this volume includes an entirely new, 100-page body of work on the theme of mirrors. This new section will investigate the mirror as a symbolic object in horror stories. The metaphorical mirror within the scope of mental illnesses such as schizophrenia. The metaphysical implications of mirroring, especially in the ancient world of alchemy. Reflective surfaces. Disco. The mirror’s role in psychedelic, symmetrical art. The first mirrors to emerge in primitive cultures, and the roles they played in early mythologies. Mirrors as scrying tools. It can branch out from there, into light, rainbows, death, vampirism, magic. Not restricted legally to mirrors by any means. In fact if it were all about mirrors that would be too many mirrors.” — PictureBox, Inc

Download an excerpt from MYTHTYM here.

April 25, Dance Party to Support Community Resources for People with Autism in Western Mass

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“Community Resources for People with Autism has served Western MA families since 1989. We are the ONLY Autism Support Center for all four counties of Western MA. We currently serve more than 990 families with new referrals coming to our agency every month. Our mission is to ensure that every individual with autism fulfills their highest potential and be fully included in their community. Due to the state budget crisis we are in danger of losing funding used to directly support families” (CRPA website)

Join us on Saturday, April 25 for a dance-a-thon/fundraiser with DJ Snack Attack (George Myers, of Breaking World Records and Grey Skull fame) and friends, amazing raffle prizes, food, drinks, and the knowledge that you are helping members of your community.

Saturday, April 25, 6pm – 12am
American Legion Club Post 224
190 Pleasant Street
Easthampton, MA 01027
Requested Donation of $20

For tickets, info, or to pledge, call (413) 529-2428 or visit the CRPA website.

Today's Autonomedia Jubilee Saint – JOE LABADIE

Joe Labadie
April 18 — Jo Labadie
American individualist poet, writer, anarchist theorist.

APRIL 18, 2009 HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS
* Zimbabwe: Independence Day
* Festival of Fabulous Wildmen

ALSO ON APRIL 18 IN HISTORY…
1839 — French decadent Charles Baudelaire expelled from college.
1850 — American anarchist poet Jo Labadie born, Paw Paw, Michagan.
1857 — American lawyer for the underdog Clarence Darrow born.
1898 — French Symbolist painter Gustave Moreau dies, Paris, France.
1906 — Great San Francisco earthquake destroys much of the city.
1955 — Relativist theorist Albert Einstein dies, Princeton, New Jersey.

Excerpted from The 2009 Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints: Radical Heroes for the New Millennium by James Koehnline and the Autonomedia Collective