Zero Infinite

Postdigital Publishing

39 min · 18. feb. 2026
episode Postdigital Publishing cover

Beskrivelse

Although digital technologies promised a renaissance in the publishing industries, publishers still struggle with digital innovations and try to hold on to traditional workflows, production, form and business models. How can we open-up this top-down mode of communication? In this episode we discuss the future of (digital) publishing through interviews with Janneke Adema, Michael Dieter, Morehshin Allahyari and Daniel Rourke. How to approach the act of publishing (digital) in the postdigital age? What happens when we approach the book as an apparatus and what does that mean for the book as we know it? What does is mean for the notion of the author and the reader when we perform the book differently? In the studio: Miriam Rasch, Leonieke van Dipten Contributors: Janneke Adema, Michael Dieter, Daniel Rourke, Moreshin Allahyari. Publisher: Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam, March 2017. Resources: Morehshin Allahyari and Daniel Rourke, The 3D Additivist Cookbook [https://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/the-3d-additivist-cookbook/] (2016), Institute of Network Cultures Janneke Adema and Gary Hall, Posthumanities: The Dark Side of “The Dark Side of the Digital” [http://quod.lib.umich.edu/j/jep/3336451.0019.201?view=text;rgn=main](2016), Disrupting the Humanities: Towards Posthumanities Alessandro Ludovico, Post-Digital Print: The Mutation Of Publishing Since 1894 [http://postdigitalprint.org/] (2012), Onomatopee

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4 episoder

episode Postdigital Publishing cover

Postdigital Publishing

Although digital technologies promised a renaissance in the publishing industries, publishers still struggle with digital innovations and try to hold on to traditional workflows, production, form and business models. How can we open-up this top-down mode of communication? In this episode we discuss the future of (digital) publishing through interviews with Janneke Adema, Michael Dieter, Morehshin Allahyari and Daniel Rourke. How to approach the act of publishing (digital) in the postdigital age? What happens when we approach the book as an apparatus and what does that mean for the book as we know it? What does is mean for the notion of the author and the reader when we perform the book differently? In the studio: Miriam Rasch, Leonieke van Dipten Contributors: Janneke Adema, Michael Dieter, Daniel Rourke, Moreshin Allahyari. Publisher: Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam, March 2017. Resources: Morehshin Allahyari and Daniel Rourke, The 3D Additivist Cookbook [https://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/the-3d-additivist-cookbook/] (2016), Institute of Network Cultures Janneke Adema and Gary Hall, Posthumanities: The Dark Side of “The Dark Side of the Digital” [http://quod.lib.umich.edu/j/jep/3336451.0019.201?view=text;rgn=main](2016), Disrupting the Humanities: Towards Posthumanities Alessandro Ludovico, Post-Digital Print: The Mutation Of Publishing Since 1894 [http://postdigitalprint.org/] (2012), Onomatopee

18. feb. 202639 min
episode Pausing Precarity cover

Pausing Precarity

What does it mean to be precarious, and who self-identifies as part of the precariat? Is it a political position? And if so, how can precariats start to organize themselves? In this first episode of the Zero Infinite podcast we discuss precarity, anti-austerity and work through interviews with Alex Foti, Baruch Gottlieb and Henry Warwick. How did the precariat arise, and who exactly is part of the precariat? The second half of the episode is a homage to the work of the late Mark Fisher. We listen to audio clips from his talk at the INC event MyCreativity in 2014, in which he analyzed the nature of neoliberalism and its consequences for individual wellbeing. What influence does a social system have on mental health, and how can this responsibility become clear? In the studio: Miriam Rasch, Max Dovey, Inte Gloerich Contributors: Leonieke van Dipten, Alex Foti, Baruch Gottlieb, Henry Warwick, Mark Fisher, Ania Molenda and Cristina Ampatzidou Publisher: Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam, Februari 2017. Resources Alex Foti, Anarchy in the EU [http://www.agenziax.it/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/anarchy-in-the-eu.pdf] (2009), Agenzia X Dmytri Kleiner, Universal Basic Income is a Neoliberal Plot to Make You Poorer [http://furtherfield.org/features/articles/universal-basic-income-neoliberal-plot-make-you-poorer](2016), Furtherfield Baruch Gottlieb and Dmytri Kleiner: Telekommunisten [http://telekommunisten.net/] Henry Warwick’s website [https://misterwarwick.wordpress.com/] Mark Fisher, Capitalist Realism [http://www.zero-books.net/books/capitalist-realism] (2009), Zero Books Mark Fisher, Ghosts of My Life [http://www.zero-books.net/books/ghosts-my-life] (2014), Zero Books Franco ‘Bifo’ Berardi and Erik Empson, Precarious Rhapsody [https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6889115-precarious-rhapsody] (2009), Minor Compositions Paul Cedarström and Peter Flemming, Dead Man Working [http://www.zero-books.net/books/dead-man-working] (2012), Zero Books Oliver James, The Selfish Capitalist [http://selfishcapitalist.com/index.php/the-selfish-capitalist/] (2008), Vermilion Silvio Lorusso’s blog Welcome to the Entreprecariat [https://networkcultures.org/entreprecariat/]

18. feb. 202639 min