tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post7360209275589185917..comments2024-03-24T02:21:53.258-07:00Comments on william morris unbound: Project for a new JournalTony Pinkneyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10044449613701140938noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post-16262637644398113982015-01-30T08:44:38.133-08:002015-01-30T08:44:38.133-08:00Just to make it clear, I’m from the UK and it’s ce...Just to make it clear, I’m from the UK and it’s certainly a toxic term with toxic connotations for most ordinary people so whilst anathema to you it would it a wise strategic move to reinvent the term itself or you’ll just be preaching to the converted. And ultimately, the only mechanism by which this could happen is via the democratic process. I also sense that Communism doesn’t sit so well with democracy- in fact it does seem that the only way to achieve Communism is via imposition rather than democratic will. Is it me or is there not much trumpeting of democracy for this reason in the blog?Annanoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post-49330984302856675292015-01-28T02:52:04.573-08:002015-01-28T02:52:04.573-08:00I can't of course tell where you're writin...I can't of course tell where you're writing from, Anna, but if it's from Eastern Europe, then (as I know from my time in Dresden amid memories of the old East Germany) communism may indeed be a politically impossible term at present. But in the West then I think (with Alain Badiou and Slavoj Zizek) that the political task is to reinvent it and hopefully make it usable again. I certainly do feel that any other term risks beginning a process of accommodation with capitalism rather than keeping open the dream of its abolition. And, on a more scholarly note, 'communism' was, as we know, William Morris's preferred term for his own political position.Tony Pinkneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10044449613701140938noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post-55548110348650062592015-01-27T09:04:15.415-08:002015-01-27T09:04:15.415-08:00That's interesting. Of course Syriza has huge ...That's interesting. Of course Syriza has huge popular support (not particularly for its leftist views but because people are desperate), i wonder whether you anticipate this new journal being a niche product or will try to make it as popular as possible. If the latter, communism in the title will make it a no go for many, being such a toxic word in our society.Annanoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post-89574878453914682872015-01-26T02:57:31.871-08:002015-01-26T02:57:31.871-08:00Thanks, John. If we could move the Morris Society...Thanks, John. If we could move the Morris Society decisively to the Left (perhaps on a wave of exaltation after the Syriza victory in Greece), then perhaps this could be a Society journal project. If one feels (as I think I increasingly do) that the Society will never budge from a historical (rather than contemporary-political) definition of itself, then it may be time to start thinking about forming an alternative Morris Society, one which takes his communism as its starting point and raison-d'etre. That is after all the Morrisian thing to do! When the SDF proved politically counter-productive, he founded the Socialist League; when the Socialist League eventually proved dysfunctional, he set up the Hammersmith Socialist Society.Tony Pinkneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10044449613701140938noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post-30948333254125213732015-01-25T07:19:12.984-08:002015-01-25T07:19:12.984-08:00Tony, what a great idea, you describe it brilliant...Tony, what a great idea, you describe it brilliantly!<br /> <br />A question - are you thinking of a Society journal (with recomposed editorial board, etc) or actually an independent journal?<br /><br />The title (taking from both your original post and subsequent comment) - how about "News from Nowhere - Journal of Contemporary Culture & Politics"?<br /><br />And David is surely right about the need for a redesign - and the new editor!John Eleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00271218896371708168noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post-3016788127993131732015-01-22T02:49:16.508-08:002015-01-22T02:49:16.508-08:00Thanks for your support, David. I think I might b...Thanks for your support, David. I think I might be tempted by an even more radical title for a new journal, actually. How does 'News from Nowhere: Journal of Communism and Culture' sound? Am planning to have a chat with Terry Eagleton about a project of this kind.Tony Pinkneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10044449613701140938noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-805540988587071256.post-70233872829488210642015-01-21T13:21:57.077-08:002015-01-21T13:21:57.077-08:00Tony you must be the new editor, what you suggest ...Tony you must be the new editor, what you suggest is brilliant, the journal is so dull and antiquarian. In addition to what you suggest it also needs a total re-design. Considering it’s the journal of a great 19th century designer, it’s a design disaster.<br /><br />It would also be good to get a good critique of Love is Enough. Deller, in his desperation to make Warhol and Morris similar completely ignores the differences, ignoring 100 years of modernism and the cavernous gap in their respective politics and the meanings and implications of their work. So the exhibition makes little sense at all. It’s not that they shouldn’t be compared, but we could learn most from their differences, not their similarities. The trouble is, love isn't enough.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07603269466356563197noreply@blogger.com