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Autonomedia and Semiotext(e)

Related: American academia - critical theory - deconstruction theory - Post-structuralism - publishing - queer theory

A collection of Semiotext(e) titles that have been read.

Semiotext(e) is an American independent publisher. It is widely credited for having introduced radical French theory to America in the late 1970s via its magazine issues and Foreign Agents series. In 2000 the MIT Press began distributing Semiotext(e), taking it over from the anarchist publishing collective Autonomedia.

Autonomedia publishes books on a variety of topics, such as anarchism, "autonomist" and extraparliamentary marxism, cyberfeminism, psychedelics and drug literature, turn of the century queer individualist anarchist novels, etc. Well-known authors include Antonio Negri, Peter Lamborn Wilson (also known as Hakim Bey), Silvia Federici, PM, John Moore, and others. They also are known for publishing the "Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints," in which every day of the calendar recalls a deceased person of some significance to progressive movements or thought, and also is a holiday of some sort.

Semiotext(e)

Semiotext(e) is an American independent publisher. It is widely credited for having introduced French Theory to America through its magazine issues and Foreign Agents series. In 2000 the MIT Press began distributing Semiotext(e), taking it over from the anarchist publishing collective Autonomedia. The Semiotext(e) offices are located in Los Angeles.

Semiotext(e) began in 1974 as a journal started by French philosopher Sylvère Lotringer in an effort to bridge radical French theory and the intellectual and art worlds of New York City. The original editorial board included ten people, mostly graduate students at Columbia University where Lotringer teaches, who chipped in fifty dollars apiece to get the journal started. They held their first conference in 1975: the "Schizo-Culture" conference on prisons and madness. Speakers included Gilles Deleuze, Felix Guattari, Michel Foucault, and Jean Baudrillard, now all staples of the Semiotext(e) backlist. Out of this conference came their second issue of the journal, which sold out in three weeks. Following issues included Italy: Autonomia; Post-Political Polics, and the infamous Polysexuality. In 1983, Lotringer began the Foreign Agents book series in their iconic 4.5" x 7" black-covered format. They could be read on the subway, a few pages at a time, like the newspaper: their place was in the pockets of spiked leather jackets as much as on the shelves.

In the late 1980s filmmaker and writer Chris Kraus came up with an idea to publish the American equivalent to the Foreign Agents series in writerly terms - non-mainstream American writers who exercise radical subjectivity. Semiotext(e)'s Native Agents series launched with Cookie Mueller's Walking Through Clear Water in a Pool Painted Black. The Native Agents series went on to publish urgent and visionary fiction and nonfiction by the likes of Kathy Acker, Eileen Myles, Michelle Tea, and Bob Flanagan.

In 2003 Semiotext(e) implemented their more overtly political arm, the Active Agents series These books, which include Amira Hass's Reporting From Ramallah and Alain Joxe's Empire of Disorder, are published quickly in response to urgent issues. Hedi El Kholti joined Semiotexte as co-editor in 2003 introducing a new energy in the press embodied in Semiotext(e)'s recent book, David Wojnarowicz: A Definitive History of Five or Six Year's on the Lower East Side, as well as upcoming titles by controversial French writer Tony Duvert, whose work proposes non-privatized forms of sexuality as cultural conduits.

Since 2005, the three have been joined by associates Andrew Berardini, Nick Zurko, Shannon Durban, Robbie Dewhurst, Max Kim, Justin Cavin, Jared Elms and translators Noura Weddell and Arianna Bove.

The word Semiotext(e) was a originally meant as a pun, connecting semiotics to text, adding the "e" to signify the magazine's initial bi-lingual nature. It later came to signify the mostly female writers that Chris Kraus published. With the advent of the internet, it has also become their electronic logo. --http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semiotext%28e%29 [Jan 2007]

Autonomedia

Autonomedia is one of the main North American publishers of radical theoretical works, especially in the anarchist and ultra-left marxist tradition. For many years Autonomedia was linked with the press Semiotext(e), which was one of the major sources for English language translations of post-structuralist literature, especially in the 1980s. According to Hakim Bey, Semiotext(e) "was founded in 1974 by Sylvère Lotringer, a French scholar working for Columbia University whose self-appointed task was to introduce the Paris of '68 philosophers to America. That would include Baudrillard, Lyotard, Foucault, etc. And then, somewhere around 1982, Autonomedia become the umbrella book company." In the early 2000s, however, the two presses split; Semiotext(e) became part of MIT Press.

Autonomedia publishes books on a variety of topics, such as anarchism, "autonomist" and extraparliamentary marxism, cyberfeminism, psychedelics and drug literature, turn of the century queer individualist anarchist novels, etc. Well-known authors include Antonio Negri, Peter Lamborn Wilson (also known as Hakim Bey), Silvia Federici, PM, John Moore, and others. They also are known for publishing the "Autonomedia Calendar of Jubilee Saints," in which every day of the calendar recalls a deceased person of some significance to progressive movements or thought, and also is a holiday of some sort. --http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autonomedia [Jan 2007]

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