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    Augmented Minds and the Incomputable Public Program “Augmented Minds and the Incomputable” interweaves the exhibition’s generative topics, examining the spectrum of the extended mind and challenging the structural divisions imposed upon corporeal, technological, and spiritual intelligence. This program invites philosophers, system thinkers, and researchers to discuss shamanism, cosmotechnics, neuroscience, and digital labor in relation with Korea’s visual cultures and communal trauma. The three sessions explore non-hierarchical approaches to replenish the body-mind during this time of massive suffering and mobilize plural and coeval conditions of being and belonging. The Incomputable and the Incalculable Yuk Hui with Karen Sarkisov February 23, 4–5:30pm KST Join us on Zoom by clicking here (Zoom Webinar ID: 987 9167 8365) or here. The Incomputable and the Incalculable” features a lecture by philosopher Yuk Hui that draws on the concept of recursivity as a novel way of tracing the histo

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    Augmented Minds and the Incomputable Public Program “Augmented Minds and the Incomputable” interweaves the exhibition’s generative topics, examining the spectrum of the extended mind and challenging the structural divisions imposed upon corporeal, technological, and spiritual intelligence. This program invites philosophers, system thinkers, and researchers to discuss shamanism, cosmotechnics, neuroscience, and digital labor in relation with Korea’s visual cultures and communal trauma. The three sessions explore non-hierarchical approaches to replenish the body-mind during this time of massive suffering and mobilize plural and coeval conditions of being and belonging. Spirits Rising: Anti-Systemic Kinship in Korea Laurel Kendall, Seong Nae Kim, Yang Jong-sung, Yoon Yeolsu February 23, 11am–1pm KST Join us on Zoom by clicking here (Zoom Webinar ID: 971 0878 5224) or on the Gwangju Biennale Foundation’s Facebook page. “Spirits Rising: Anti-Systemic Kinship in Korea” investigates somatic p

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    Workshop | From Farmers’ Protests to Communal Archives P. Sainath January 28, 2021, 9-11am CET / 5-7pm Gwangju time Women farmers from various parts of Pune district attended the Kisan Baug protest near the collector’s office in Pune on December 11, 2020, in support of the nationwide farmers’ movement and its demand for a repeal of the new farm laws. (Photo: Vidya Kulkarni.) The job of journalists reporting on agrarian and rural affairs in recent months has become more vital than ever: firstly when at the outbreak of the pandemic thousands of distressed migrant workers were forced to walk for weeks from cities to villages, and then soon after, as farmers from several states in India have marched to Delhi to protest new laws that favor agribusiness corporations and threaten the livelihoods of many all over the country. In this workshop P. Sainath will highlight the importance of reporting and archiving stories and records from rural India, promoting counter-narratives to mainstream medi

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    Keynote | Leela Gandhi: On Uninjurability January 30, 2021 11am–12.30pm CET / 7–8.30pm Gwangju time Join : https://zoom.us/j/95876248641 (ZOOM ID : 958 7624 8641) “This lecture is about ideals of uninjurability. By this I mean an ability not to injure; or an ability to give and receive refuge and sanctuary and safeguard from injury; as well as an ability to refuse to be injured. I claim that practices and forms of thinking that advance uninjurability ideals engage in a critique of empire (minimally construed as the right to harm). They also offer a critique of renunciation (minimally construed as the right to exit injurious conditions of life and community).” Leela Gandhi is the John Hawkes Professor of Humanities and English at Brown University. She has taught at the University of Chicago, La Trobe University, and Delhi University, and held visiting professorships in Australia, Denmark, India, Italy and Iran. Gandhi's publications include Postcolonial Theory: A Critical Introduction (

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    Panel | Ecological and Planetary Movements Marian Pastor Roces, Cian Dayrit, and Beaska Niillas December 11, 2020 10–11.30am CET / 6–7.30pm Gwangju Join : https://zoom.us/j/94610141679 (ZOOM ID : 946 1014 1679) Through the mounting challenges of this pandemic, there has been greater violence, incarceration and surveillance of indigenous communities, land and water defenders, as well as agrarian resistances. In this session we invite participants to foreground their practices toward ecological justice, Indigenous leadership and the role of public culture in addressing Rights to self-determination, traditional knowledge as well as planetary toxicity. GB13 participant, artist and activist Cian Dayrit speaks about artistic strategies of communal mapping with agrarian and indigenous communities in the Philippines within ensuing land and resource struggles. Activist and Sámi nature guardian Beaska Niillas shares his strategies of boycott, moratorium, legal cases to protect land and water res

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    Talk | Kkureomi: UNBOXING with Sisters Rice Brewing Sisters Club Saturday, December 12, 2020 10–11.30am CET / 6–7.30pm Gwangju time Join : https://zoom.us/j/92624453720 (ZOOM ID : 926 2445 3720) The discussion will be held in Korean, with English simultaneous interpretation. A box of locally-grown crops sent directly from women farmers to consumers, kkureomi materializes overlooked forms of labor and brings economic independence to women. Three sister communities from South Korea—Rice Brewing Sisters Club, the Sister’s Garden, and organicpunk—come together for a special session, in which they will be unboxing a kkureomi package together with ten guests including artists, writers, farmers, chef, community organizers, and activists, joining from home and abroad. Please join our conversation as we unwrap the kkureomi, in Rice Brewing Sisters Club’s words, “a box of goods and goodies made from the sisters’ joint harvest and research this year,” and make our way through indigeneity, soil an

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    Video | Lokman Tsui: On the Internet and Digital Security Policies and the Pro-Democracy Movement in Hong Kong In this video, scholar and activist Lokman Tsui talks about the relationship between grassroots social movements, new technologies, and digital surveillance. He discusses how the recent internet and digital security policies have influenced the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong, and how technology can be used to protect ourselves from intimidation and surveillance. Lokman Tsui is a scholar, activist, and currently an Assistant Professor at the School of Journalism and Communication of the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), where his research focuses on free expression, digital rights and internet policy. Lokman was formerly Google's Head of Free Expression in Asia and the Pacific (2011–14).

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    Video│Minhyung Kang: Decentralized Practices

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    Video│Nadège: Pulsating Infrastructure: Imaginaries, Stories & Bugs Nadège discusses the practices to develop conditions of possibility in our daily fights, focusing on collective care on and off the Internet. She proposes the idea of 'Imagining technology' and the capitalistic expectation on technology infrastructure that has been failing. How could we reinterpret success, reliability, and availability from a feminist lens? “Technology is: a story, a poem, a conversation, a memory, a song, a body, a relationship, a gathering, a parting, a plant, a meal, a herb, a nap...” Nadège has been involved in transfeminist tech projects such as Laboratorio de Interconectividades collective and Kéfir infrastructure co-op. Currently, N. plays music, draws, cooks and sometimes work as a freelance translator. https://www.genderit.org/users/nadege/

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    Talk | From Tibet to Indonesia: Rupture and Continuum Kartika Pratiwi and Ritu Sarin & Tenzing Sonam, with Inza Lim 28 November 2020 11:30AM Dharamshala / 1PM Jakarta / 3PM Gwangju Join : https://zoom.us/j/98730721064 (ZOOM ID : 987 3072 1064) This conversation brings forth artistic and cinematic strategies dedicated to sites of collective memory, and the persistence of trauma under authoritarian rule and occupation. Kartika Pratiwi will discuss the potential of digital storytelling and alternative educational platforms to create space for witness accounts and survivors’ stories from the mass killings of 1965–66 in Indonesia, which started as an anti-communist purge following a coup d'état attempt in Indonesia. Known for their films emerging from the Tibetan struggle and Himalayan geography, filmmakers Ritu Sarin and Tenzing Sonam will introduce their long-term project featuring the personal archive of Lhamo Tsering—Sonam’s father who was one of the leaders of the CIA-backed guerrilla