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FISHER, Jack Henrie (ed.)
Counter-Signals #4: Identity is the Crisis, Can’t You See?

[¡Silver paper is reflective, can’t you see?] The fourth issue of Counter-Signals assembles texts and images to query the claims and break the chains of “visual identity” in capitalism. What is an identity and what can we do about it?

Alight upon and confront in these pages: proletarian negativity, IBM design managers, RAF red flag color tests, German workers’ cinema in the 1970s, new demands for wages and working conditions, the body with erogenous holes, pixel infinities of double queerness, evil chop suey cheap wasp workers, the formal condition of possibility for the production of communism, sensationalized crinoline violence, zine-as-dildo, spectral laundry comrades, scare drag and dazzle make-up, the libidinal economy of reproducible totems, the daily coercion of design labor, serious problems in local gender translation, The Political Program of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, infrastructure for smuggling and the hidden contents in the gender-migrant’s luggage, José Carlos Mariátegui and the abolition of gamonalismo, class recomposition in Indonesian punk, kaleidoscopes masquerading as binoculars in the spectacle of woke capital, graphic design as an intractable script of the nation-state, and more much much more.

[publisher's note]

With conbtributions by Jack Henrie Fisher, Nathan Brown, Ulrike Jordan, Gerd Conradt, Lisa Vinebaum, Samo Tomšič, Bea Walker, Verónica Casado Hernández, Nat Pyper, Werker Collective, Evan Fusco, Michalis Pichler, Andrea García Flores (Gato Negro Ediciones / miau ediciones), Angel Gonzalez, Chris Lee, Mahmoud Keshavarz, Hannah Bruckmüller and Michal B. Ron, Jorge Cano Febles, Anuar Portugal, Carlos Quiroz, Erin Madarieta, Alex Lahr, Sean Martin-Iverson, and Jacob Lindgren.

Published by Other Forms, 2021
Periodicals / Media Studies / Cultural Studies / Graphic Design / Gender Studies / Queer Culture

Price: 25€

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FISHER, Jack Henrie (ed.) - Counter-Signals #4: Identity is the Crisis, Can’t You See?