A <em>Special Issue</em> is a tri-annually released publication created by the XPUB master's students, allowing students and staff to explore <!-- different workflows, collaboration, open source publication techniques and investigate not only --> not only the individual themes of each edition, but also the definition of what is or can be a publication.
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Each <em>Special Issue</em> addresses a specific "issue", often coordinated with outside events and collaborations, and culminates in a release party.
<!-- The form of each <em>Special Issue</em> varies as a means of critically engaging with the diverse media, scales, and historical specificity of a particular issue. -->
The organisation, tools, and workflows are reset every trimester to both allow the rotation of roles within this publishing experiment, but also permit to explore novel collaborative methods beyond their archetypes and stereotypes.
<divclass="issue-title"style="font-family: 'special-issue-13-t';">WOR(<spanstyle="font-family: special-issue-13-custom; font-size: 25px;">L</span>)DS FOR THE FUTURE</div>
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<p> Words have the power to shape reality. Wor(l)ds for the Future is a set of map making tools to re-imagine and collect wor(l)ds, and to re-publish an everchanging atlas. We invite you to delve into the materials and traverse the texts in any way you desire: by cutting and pasting the printed matter, or by unravelling the texts online. The choice is yours. You can reconstruct images and reinterpret words to create Wor(l)ds for the Future.</p>
<p>Kendal Beynon, Martin Foucaut, Camilo García A., Clara Gradel, Nami Kim, Euna Lee, Jacopo Lega, Federico Poni, Louisa Teichmann and Floor van Meeuwen</p>
<p> Radio Implicancies is a weekly broadcast of recorded and live matter brought to you by Piet Zwart Institute's Experimental Publishing programme. Radio Implicancies starts in the middle. Each broadcast means to engage with the way technologies are worlding the world. Take a deep breath and jump in on other ways of calculating, validating, ordering and framing collections of digital material. Let’s not wait for tomorrow to pay attention to the colonial conditionings of contemporary techno-cultures!
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<p>Avital Barkai, Damlanur Bilgin, Sandra Golubjevaite, Tisa Neža Herlec, Mark van den Heuvel, Max Lehmann, Mika Motskobili, Clara Noseda, Anna Sandri, and Ioana Tomici</p>
<p>From the other side of the world we were given data about a past dictatorship. A portion of an archive that exists to keep history truthful, educating the present, the recurrent time of political urgency and authoritarian repression. We were entrusted to secure it, manage it and publish it anonymously. Here, we cannot share the archive itself, but we can share our stories (experiences) and the process (tools, methods) we underwent while working with it. If the political situation sharpens and censorship and repression over meaning endanger our beings, this collectively assembled website is the place that offers an insight into possible solutions that do everything to keep our voices heard and our bodies intact.</p>
<p>Avital Barkai, Damlanur Bilgin, Sandra Golubjevaite, Tisa Neža Herlec, Mark van den Heuvel, Max Lehmann, Mika Motskobili, Clara Noseda, Anna Sandri, and Ioana Tomici</p>
<divclass="issue-title">INPUT / OUTPUT<br/>Tales from another module</div>
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<p>Dear operators,</p>
<p>We would to invite you to combine, modulate, compose, and play with our 10 unique contributions to the common assembly of the modular publication INPUT-OUTPUT. Each contribution consists of one or more modules. Each of them represents our individual interests in the matter of signals, circuits, language and interfaces, while using modular synthesis as a means to explore these concepts and systems. Outputs vary between sound, image and text. Assemble and use at your own risk.</p>
<p>Avital Barkai, Damlanur Bilgin, Sandra Golubjevaite, Tisa Neža Herlec, Mark van den Heuvel, Max Lehmann, Mika Motskobili, Clara Noseda, Anna Sandri, and Ioana Tomici</p>
<p><em>The Library Is Open</em> invites you to an afternoon of workshops that make the operations within libraries visible. Join us in exploring the actions and roles of legal and extra-legal libraries (municipal, pirate, academic, +++), their custodians, and the public that form a community around collections of texts.</p>
<p>Simon Browne, Tancredi Di Giovanni, Paloma García, Rita Graça, Artemis Gryllaki, Pedro Sá Couto, Biyi Wen and Bohye Woo</p>
<divclass="issue-title">The Network We (de)Served</div>
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<p>Dear guest,</p>
<p>We traveled from home to home by bicycle, setting up homeservers. As friends and companions on this <em>Infrastructour</em>, we studied our routers over drinks served by our hosts. Where possible we installed our servers in our homes, in other cases we had to depend on another member of the group. While self-hosting together we questioned our understandings of networks, autonomy, online publishing and social infrastructures, where each of us departed from a different question. We would like to share our personal (yet interconnected) routes with you, tell you a story, present our web- and printed zines, and invite you to explore our homebrewed network.</p>
<p>Simon Browne, Tancredi Di Giovanni, Paloma García, Rita Graça, Artemis Gryllaki, Pedro Sá Couto, Biyi Wen and Bohye Woo</p>
<divclass="issue-title">Start up, Burn out: Life Hacks</div>
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<p>Dear Entreprecarious Life Hackers,</p>
<p>(◕‿◕) Take your time to reflect on this: Are you doing what you truly want to do? (◕‿◕) ị̞͍s̯̩̠ ̴̩͉̫̗͇ț̠ͅh̪̼̟̪̕i͠s͎̝̩̯̩̠ ̗̘̰̟̩͕p̻̘͙͓á̩̭r̳͚͕̘͖ṯ̤̼͔͖ͅ ̜̱o̯̩̦̗̮̖̣f ̺͝y̥͡o̧̺͚͉̠͙̗ͅu̧̜͖̥r̸̘ ̹̤͙̳j̴̙̗o̵̼̲͉͖̮b̥͖͘ ͕͓ḏ̷̩e̫s͖̭͕̙̱͉ć̖͉̯̙̫̪r̶̠i̖p̨̜t̨̼͓ͅi͖͈͇͙͞o͏̹̠̬̻n͍̩͇̱͞? (◕‿◕) If happiness is a currency, how rich do you think you are? (◕‿◕) ♪♬ ғɪx ᴡᴏʙʙʟʏ ᴏғғɪᴄᴇ ғᴜʀɴɪᴛᴜʀᴇ ʙʏ ᴜsɪɴɢ ᴏʟᴅ ᴄᴅs ᴛᴏ ᴀᴠᴏɪᴅ ᴡᴏʙʙʟᴇs ᴀɴᴅ ᴘʀᴏᴛᴇᴄᴛ ᴛʜᴇ ᴄᴀʀᴘᴇᴛ. ᴛʜᴇʏ ᴀʟsᴏ ᴍᴀᴋᴇ ɢʀᴇᴀᴛ ᴄᴏᴀsᴛᴇʀs. ♪♬</p>
<p>Gill Baldwin, Simon Browne, Tancredi Di Giovanni, Paloma García, Rita Graça, Artemis Gryllaki, Pedro Sá Couto, Biyi Wen and Bohye Woo</p>
<p>You're welcome to share your books with us, regardless of where you got them from.
XPPL is a platform for potential pirate librarianship where knowledge comrades share information freely. The library gathers all the books and articles floating around on our shelves, hard drives, memory sticks and bathroom floors. It starts at XPUB, but it can go anywhere you want it to.</p>
<p>Natasha Berting, Angeliki Diakrousi, Joca van der Horst, Alexander Roidl, Alice Strete and Zalán Szakács</p>
<p>In the Ouvroir de Numérisation Potentielle (the workshop of potential digitisation, or OuNuPo) the XPUB practitioners reflected on several topics: how culture is shaped by book scanning? Who has access and who is excluded from digital culture? How free software and open source hardware have bootstrapped a new culture of librarians? What happens to text when it becomes data that can be transformed, manipulated and analysed ad nauseam?
To answer these questions, the XPUB practitioners have written software, built a bookscanner and assembled a unique printed reader.</p>
<p>Make ocr/output/publication.txt</p>
<p>Natasha Berting, Angeliki Diakrousi, Joca van der Horst, Alexander Roidl, Alice Strete and Zalán Szakács</p>
<divclass="issue-title">A BED, A CHAIR AND A TABLE</div>
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<p>Dear active archivist,</p>
<p>Can an archive save the Poortgebouw? This former squat and vibrant living community is facing a key moment in the future. In this publication, oral histories from the building’s illustrious past interact with material from various collections, including the Poortgebouw’s own Autonomous Archive. Here, archiving is not the end, but the beginning of a debate.</p>
<p>Join us.</p>
<p>Natasha Berting, Elisa Chaudet, Angeliki Diakrousi, Joca van der Horst, Alexander Roidl, Alice Strete and Zalán Szakács</p>
<p>Yaar be welcome amongst there books wit rum. We call on ye to battle the terror of the mind, produced by there current intellectual property regime? Transcend the juridical binary of illegal vs. legal, and claim political legitimacy on the digital seas of grey!</p>
<p>All hands ahoy!</p>
<p>Emily Buzzo, Karina Dukalska, Max Franklin, Giulia de Giovanelli, Francisco González, and Nadine Rotem-Stibbe.</p>
<p>Come Adopt a Walk or Rock Step Triple Step Triple Step along, a Fine Line, and discover Euclid in Motion towards A Sonification of the Dutch Elections 2017, to finaly embrace the Drone Oddities 1, 2 and 3 to Rest.</p>
<p>Concretely yours,</p>
<p>Emily Buzzo, Karina Dukalska, Max Franklin, Giulia de Giovanelli, Clàudia Giralt, Francisco González, Margreet Riphagen, Nadine Rotem-Stibbe, and Kimmy Spreeuwenberg.</p>
<p>Pick the Pig, you are a risky trader. Pick the Chicken, and you'll sit on your eggs until they hatch. Maybe you'll be lucky and get a Bull market, or maybe not and have to deal with the Bear. Tear up a book, and get dealing with the free market, exploitation, taxation and the privatization of services. Pit resources and economics against each other and feel the Artifical Scarity burn.</p>
<p>Looking forward to ruin you!</p>
<p>Emily Buzzo, Karina Dukalska, Max Franklin, Giulia de Giovanelli, Clàudia Giralt, Pleun Gremmen, Francisco González, Julia Kul, Margreet Riphagen, Kimmy Spreeuwenberg, and Noémie Vidé</p>
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<h1>XPUB</h1>
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XPUB is the Master of Arts in Fine Art and Design: <em>Experimental Publishing</em> of the Piet Zwart Institute. XPUB focuses on the acts of making things public and creating publics in the age of post-digital networks. XPUB's interests in publishing are twofold:
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<strong>first</strong>, publishing as the inquiry and participation into the technological frameworks, political context and cultural processes through which things are made public;
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and <strong>second</strong>, how these are, or can be, used to create publics by expanding the means of discourse circulation beyond print media and its direct digital translation.