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       Urıka Jurman  
      A conversation with Eurovision 2000 (Marion von Osten, Peter Spillman in Susanna Perin)  
      EuroVision2000 is a media-activist network which focuses on 
        political, social and economical restructuration of EUrope in the context 
        of globalisation processes. While doing this it pays special attention 
        to the issues regarding borders, migration and asylum politics. 
How do you understand the notion of the political today and where and 
        how do you see the position and role of arts and culture in relation to 
        the possible and/or needed political actions, especially with regards 
        to the possible political implications and consequences which could improve, 
        i.e. change the existing situations and not merely satisfy on a symbolical, 
      manifestive level? 
      Susanna Perin: 
        Nowadays the notion of politics as an absolute 'power' and 'greatness' 
        has changed and split into numerous political actions and actors. (You 
        can obtain a good idea on the notion of the political today, if you take 
        a look at, for example, how heterogeneous the composition of the
        anti-globalisation movement is, at all the different groups and the different 
        ways they fight in.)  
        Being an artist or working in the cultural field you have to make the 
        same choice like every other person working in any other field; on the 
        basis of your ideals and believes you have to choose which role do you 
        wish to play in your society. So, it happens that if you are concerned 
        about what is going on around you, you will try to work on that, to change 
        reality with the instruments and the knowledge you have at your disposal.  
        However, working on a micro-political level (as we do) it is difficult 
        to speak about concrete results and consequences, about changes and improvements 
        you can make with your work. Of course we see the results of our work: 
        discussions are going on, new productions of videos and publications are 
        happening, people are coming together, they are collaborating, exchanging, 
        but still it is difficult to say in which direction and to which result 
        this will lead. We are trying to find out new forms, new ways of acting 
        and resistance. 
      Marion von Osten: 
        I agree with Susanna, as I think that the notion of the political went 
        through several transformations during the last centuries. Today completely 
        different groups in society use the term political to signify their specific 
        strategies. In the more general understanding the political seems to be 
        the tool to govern people. This is mostly what state politics and political 
        parties represent. This politics of governing the 'Other' and to be the 
        representative of the 'Other' is what one could still call the mainstream 
        politics. But when we talk about politics in the sense of self-articulation 
        we have to keep in mind the history of micro-politics: the gay and lesbian 
        movement, feminism, housing projects, the peace movement, the struggle 
        of the 'Sans Papiers', etc. These micro-political movements - instead 
        of representatives speaking for/in the name of 'Them' - build up networks, 
        places and discourses of self- representation, which have a great effect 
        on the notion of the political today. We can see that politics today are 
        to be viewed also as everyday life practices - like the Birmingham School 
        of Contemporary Cultural Studies did for example. They took a close look 
        on youth and pop culture in order to understand how these practices have 
        been productive for the reformulation and transformation of marginality. 
        This means that today the political is not an universal category anymore, 
        but a practice which can build up (temporary) spaces for (self)articulation, 
        beyond normative concepts of identity. These particular (instead of universalising) 
        articulations changed also the modernist concept of the Left, which tried 
        to empower and govern most of the working class. 
        But still, all political (mainstream or micro-political) movements and 
        strategies teach us the lesson that political articulations on the one 
        hand speak about something specific (exploitation, inequality, marginalisation) 
        and on the other hand create a fiction of the political, of the political 
        actions and of the political subjects. For example, the proletarian was 
        conceptualised, constructed (especially in Engel's translation of Marx) 
        as a white male, muscle power (industrial) worker even though this notion/image 
        spoke only for a few people in the society (not for woman or non-white 
        people i.e.), still this image has been a signifier, a code for the political 
        subject. 
        This process of fictionalising the political subject (a construction of 
        a common, normative image of the political subject) is also a part of 
        the micro-political struggles and movements. And this is a closure I have 
        always been interested in; is a practice, which can go beyond this closure 
        of categorising, possible? 
        To make this point clearer: identity politics speaks for a specific group 
        of people and it also creates a collective identity which can very quickly 
        switch into a normative category - like, for example, the feminist movement 
        in the West which fought for equal woman rights and created a specific 
        notion of a Woman (white middle class woman) as a pre-given notion. Black 
        feminism and post-structuralist feminism brought into discussion that 
        this is normative, because there are as well black, lesbian, working class, 
        house wives, exploited, rich, etc. woman and not just one category. But 
        even this list which ends with 'etc.' shows how constructed particularity 
        is in itself. You will never name them all. 
       As a feminist today you definitely 
        identify more with the particular narrations of the movement as a differentiated 
        whole and you re-contextualise these events, theories and actions into 
        nowadays experiences.  
      But even in this act of re-contextualising - to 
        quote Rosi Braidotti - you can not take equality as your political aim. 
        You can only take it as a strategy. What Braidotti describes is that we, 
        i.e. women of all ages, should fight for equal opportunity, we should 
        stop being raped, we should have women in every sphere of life, but that 
        this is only the strategy. This can not be the goal because in order to 
        really achieve this you need to change the system: the system of representation, 
        the notion of political, the theoretical apparatus, the sexist logic of 
        work, etc. 'You can not simply hope that you can put women in the club 
        and not change the rules of the club', Braidotti argues (and I agree with 
        her completely). 
        So, I do believe that the practice of merely showing injustice or inequality 
        in the society (for example in a movie, video or in an exhibition) might 
        represent a strategy, but this will not change something structurally. 
        To conclude, for me exhibiting political practices or issues in an art 
        space is not a consequence of them being dependent on and inscribed into 
        the representational, but the other way around. The art space as a stage 
        can be productive for a political debate, as the political can be addressed 
        in the ambiguity of being symbolic and real, fiction and every day life 
        practice at the same time (before or even without it obtains a press text 
        or a petition). And in this way the political might help to restructure 
        the notion and structure of the stage, as well as the Art Spaces. 
        So, for me the good thing about the shift of the notion of the political 
        is, that it does not easily offer answers but it is more inclined to map 
        questions of what in fact is a political action. Is it real, is it symbolic, 
        what is the strategy, what is the aim, where are we going with it and 
        why? 
      Peter Spillman: 
        In my view traditional political institutions such as the national state 
        and parties are no longer central in the notion about the political. Neither 
        are certain rituals or formats which are closely connected to them - like 
        public debating, arguing, voting, demonstrating or 'classical' (street) 
        forms of political fights. I think that today the political within the 
        society is much closer linked to the social itself, with the rituals of 
        communication and interaction, everyday behaviour; taste, distinction, 
        consumer commodities, knowledge are all also notions of the political. 
        In that sense the processes of introducing hierarchies and normalisation 
        often have a very strong anti-political gesture, while the act of self-legitimation 
        often turns out as a heavy political act. Those cultural or artistic projects 
        which are of interest to me, always have a certain political relevance 
        in a sense that they provide the tools of self-empowerment for specific 
        individuals, scenes and situations, they introduce partially and/or temporary 
        new values and become relevant tools of identification for a specific 
        community. 
       I think it is very dangerous 
        to talk about the political as connected with the social self, with culture, 
        everyday and self-articulation practices, etc. without any connection 
        to the economy and global capital(ism). This view (as cultural studies 
        in general) which underlines the importance of the politicisation of the 
        fights for particularities, cultural differences, for self-articulation, 
        everyday practices which reformulate marginality, etc. does not make transparent 
        and does not question to the right extent the frame within which these 
        acts are taking place in - the overall presence, homogeneity of the capitalistic 
        system - (as that it is something unquestionable, unchangeable and therefore 
        not worthwhile bothering with) and it also does not stress enough how 
        much those phenomena are rooted in global capital/ism and in its fast 
        commodification and neutralisation, the de-politicisation processes. 
      
        Marion von Osten: 
        To a certain degree I completely agree with your comment. On the other 
        hand your question somehow implies that capitalism is the main determinator 
        for social and cultural structures, relations; for sure it is a very heavy 
        determinator, but definitely not the only one.  
        Before this background EuroVision2000 received a critique (in Bonn 
        at the Videonale 9) that our political arguments have a much too 
        strong attitude against late capitalism and neo-liberalism, instead of 
        focusing more on the cultural and social production of power relations. 
        We were also criticised that the project performs merely a very pure critique 
        of capitalism, and to some extent we had to agree. 
        You can not throw the baby out with the bath water; not today when an 
        anti-capital, anti-neo-liberal movement is in the making. You still need 
        to reflect upon the power relations and the construction of subjects before 
        the background of social, cultural and economical aspects. 
        One will never understand the success of the financial market if you do 
        not see that a very specific subjectivity (which is heavily culturally 
        coded) is needed in this business. And this subjectivity (the broker) 
        has its narrative as a very important (male) performer, who is addicted 
        to numbers, to white shirts, ties, hard core sex or viagra. Sure, you 
        can say, he is only acting for money and he is not guilty for that is 
        the capitalist system, but that will not say a lot, will it? 
        And to make a short remark on cultural studies, as you are criticising 
        it - I would even say that this critique which I hear very often is a 
        kind of a gossip of the Left, just like the Birmingham Cultural Studies 
        had been guilty for the commodification of subcultures or their de-politicisation. 
        If you read the texts by Stuart Hall or Angela McRobbie you see that in 
        the past as well as today they always make the class issue in relation 
        to the race and gender issue the issue. Their interest is to make the 
        production of hierarchies through political marginalisation and economical 
        inequality a central question and they kept referring to Marx and Althusser 
        even at times when it was not very much 'en vogue' in the German and French 
        theoretical world. So, in that way I would argue against the critique 
        on cultural studies and say that it has been much more down to the post-modern 
        philosophical schools in the 80's, who argued against the subversive in 
        capitalist societies and who prayed that as a consequence of it a huge 
        mega capitalist society will develop in the future in which we will all 
        be friendly and dance with the enemy. We should be very careful with such 
        unproductive and pessimistic cultural statements and try harder to analyse 
        what is really happening in the global south as well as in our neighbouring 
        surroundings. 
        I understand your question in a way, that (for sure) there had been some 
        culturalists in the past and that are still today influenced by surface 
        post-modern thinking (everything is fluid, possible etc.) which spoke 
        about 'the end of politics', the end of social movements, etc. And these 
        are the people who are telling me, for example, that one would not use 
        'capitalism' anymore in a text, the way I do. As if it would be just about 
        a trend or fashion to name power relations. This is plain stupid. 
        As we can see today there are critical movements all over the world. So, 
        my thesis is that, the pessimism of post-modern thinking was grounded 
        in its lack of taking into account the fights and struggles in the so 
        called Third World; the globe in general. (But these were not fights and 
        struggles in the notion of an INTERNATIONALE.) In this way the so called 
        post-modern crisis represents a very western view; a view that is concerned 
        with the loss of the universality of European thought. Today, political 
        movements are no longer mainly situated in Europe and U.S.A., but in completely 
        different parts of the world, continents and places all across the globe. 
      And I am very lucky that at the present Europe has to open up its eyes. 
      Maybe one of the ways how 
        to overcome the manifestive, symbolical level can also be to use work 
        in progress and a continuity in ones work as regards the issues one deals 
        with. For a number of years you have already been engaged (while involved 
        in projects such as: MoneyNationTV, Zurich,1998; EuroVision2000; MoneyNation2, Vienna, 2000) in the issues of restructuring EUrope, 
        in the processes of globalisation and specially in the issues of borders 
        and migration. Can you tell me more about all of this; what was your starting 
        point, how did you become involved in these issues? 
      
        Susanna Perin: 
        On my part there were different levels of getting engaged in these issues. 
        One part is linked to the changes of the traditional notion of the political 
        as Peter has already described before. My perception from the beginning 
        of the 90's was that the economically-based decision power, economical 
        transformations, neo-liberalism and globalisation, had much greater influence 
        on our everyday life than the 'national-political' resolutions. So, for 
        me it seemed to make sense to work on these issues. The other point which 
        touches me even more personally is connected with the migration issue 
        as this is determined with my personal story. I come from a family of 
        emigrants; several of my family members were economical emigrants - in 
        the 20's from several European countries and in the 50's from various 
        different continents (Australia, Latin America, Canada). Seeing how the 
        conditions of emigrants changed as a consequence of the Schengen agreement 
        came as a great shock to me. Coming together with Marion and Peter (in 
        1999) who were already engaged in these issues gave me even more tools 
      and a greater motivation to focus on these issues in my work. 
      
            Marion von Osten: 
        I would say, that the continuity of this debate is not merely a result 
        of our collaborative format (that is true only to a certain extent). First 
        of all: it is also a part of the collective consciousness; namely the 
        awareness and critical discourse have been a side effect of neo-liberal 
        politics which affirm the ideology of being the 'fittest' - personally 
        and economically. Secondly: closing the EU-borders, the Schengen agreement 
        produced a shock also in the Western European societies, as we have just 
        been invited to perceive the opening of the former 'block states' and 
        the borders. I like this image of turning the state structure of Europe 
        before '89 upside down; just the sides changed. You have the EU 'block 
        state' in the West today instead of the 'East block' which existed before 
        '89 and national entities in the East now, just like before in the Western 
        European reality. However something did not change at all: this idiotic 
        rigid border line. On the other hand there has been a collective desire 
        (in both parts, East and West, if I use this stupid dualism) for merging, 
        exchange, opening, curiosity. This is what I experienced when I moved 
        to Berlin in 1991. I have been very curious and I engaged myself in numerous 
        cultural activities, where I got into close contact with cultural actors 
        and theoreticians from Leipzig, Dresden and East-Berlin. But to my astonishment 
        the so called (cultural) Left in the western part of Germany and in Switzerland 
        was not really interested in these transitional, transformational processes. 
        This is why a few years later (1998) I organised the MoneyNations project in the Shedhalle in Zurich as there was still a huge blind spot 
        in the perception of these very specific processes. For Moneynations 
          2 the situation became much more complicated, as two years later we 
        have been confronted with the NATO bombardment and Haider being elected 
        in Austria. This changed the whole attitude and focus of the project in 
        the terms of state-racism, hegemony, every day discrimination practice 
        inside and outside the Schengen border. 
      
        In connection to the questions dealing with the possible political implications 
        which could overcome the symbolical level, I would also like to refer 
        to the notion of a ghetto or even a 'safe pool' which is often a critique 
        of socially and politically concerned cultural or artistic projects and 
        which came up also in the discussion which followed your presentation 
        in Ljubljana, mainly because of your standpoint that you are not interested 
        in reaching a broader public and that you are not interested in presenting 
        the videos in the mass media. 
        How do you perceive the notion of a ghetto - especially in relation to 
        your project? 
      
        Marion von Osten: 
        Yes, I agree that this 
          question is to be seen in connection to that issue, but first of all I 
          must state that I do not agree with the negative notion of the ghetto 
          in general, but I will come back to this point later on. 
          I would say that EuroVision2000 is not the best example for talking 
          about the ghetto in a negative sense, as a closure (i.e. as a symbolical 
          act only within the art world). A closure, an exclusion neither by the 
          process of building up the producers network nor by distributing the material 
          took place in the case of EuroVision2000. One of the aims of the 
          project was for video producers from all over Europe to get involved in 
          an exchange, to form a network of friendships of those who are concerned 
          (beyond the Schengen Borders) about racist and reactionary practices in 
          the EU-transformation process and to initiate local and specific inventions 
          - artistically and politically. The videos which have been produced or 
          send to us for screening, have been used to create a climate for discussions 
          and debates. In Prague (just before the WTO demonstrations started in 
          October 2000) we tried to establish a dialogue between leftist and autonomous 
          scenes from the West and critical intellectuals from the local scene. 
          Such dialogues do usually not take place and during the entire Anti-WTO 
          Campaign this proved to be the case, for most of the Westerners were of 
          the opinion that the political means are the same wherever you go. In 
          Brussels we organised a regularisation campaign with the Sans Papiers 
          Office Antwerp, as this was rated highly on the political agenda in Belgium 
          at that time. We used places on very different symbolic levels for this 
          positioning, places that have not been art spaces, but media spaces, spaces 
          for screenings and cultural events. (For instance the regularisation campaign 
          took place in the Brussels 2000 main hall, while a discussion on the production 
          conditions of cultural producers was placed in an unemployment office 
          in Saint Josse.) 
          But concerning the ghetto in another sense I would agree with the connection 
          of the notion of a ghetto with EuroVision2000. I just read a wonderful 
          article by my friend Marc Siegel, a gay film critic from Los Angeles, 
          now living in Berlin, about the homosexual ghetto. From the perspective 
          of homosexual life and its subculture the ghetto has always been a possibility 
          to exist and survive. The knowledge and codes of localities and events 
          (clubs, bars, parks), people's sexual desires, dress codes and styles 
          are shared in the ghetto and establish temporary spaces of articulation. 
          I do believe that self-expression can not be understood without the specificity 
          and particularity of a scene and individual desires that are articulated 
          in it. In this understanding of a ghetto social activity maps the urban 
          space as a temporary experience, as well as a productive space for none-normative 
          living conditions. In this way the ghetto can also be understood as a 
          cumulating point which can construct a local surrounding in which a broader 
          community (of minorities) is able to communicate and where one can live 
          without total control. For EuroVision2000 it was our aim to construct 
          a heterogeneous space of exchange and interests, sharing problems and 
          even having fun; i.e. in constructing a community which is not closed, 
      but specific. 
      Peter Spillman: 
        Saying that I am not interested in presenting videos in the mass media 
        does not mean that some of the videos and reports which are part of the EuroVision2000 programme would not be a good fit for such a context. 
        But I am personally no longer interested in making deals and compromises, 
        convincing - or what happens more often these days - giving advice and 
        coaching mass media people how to become politically correct. My intention 
        is not a kind of a media reform or institutional improvement. I would 
        like to concentrate my energy more on the side of production and invention, 
        creating new situations, connections and networks among cultural activists 
        and of course also for ourselves, which empowers new constellations of 
        work and exchange, our own ways of looking at reality, experimental crossovers 
        of disciplines and knowledge. As far as I can see almost every cultural, 
        critical and theoretical content which is sooner or later successfully 
        distributed and in the end mainly commercialised as mainstream in the 
        mass media or in a broader context of society, was in one way or the other 
        developed in a 'kind of a ghetto', often temporary zones of specific interests 
        and social constellation, often in connection with some kind of alternative 
        economical structures. So, in that sense I see broader distribution as 
        a very different project from initiating or cultivating cultural productive 
      contexts. And it seems to me that it is very difficult to mix the two. 
      Susanna Perin: 
        The way in which we reached our decisions for EuroVision2000 - 
        showing different aspects of the same phenomena (through videos by different 
        authors), a complex image of reality and providing inputs, starting points 
        for the following discussions - does not fit in the TV 'news-documentary-reports' 
        language. In opposition to the mass media which pretends to give you the 
        'real, objective information', but in the end hides the related effects, 
        we chose the complexity and effects. I do not have the impression of working 
        in a ghetto, because we are acting and moving in numerous different cities, 
        contexts and situations. I would feel like I was in a ghetto only if I 
        were working merely in art spaces, inter-acting solely with other artists. 
        Together with artists, activists and theoreticians we are acting in the 
        art and cultural field as well as the political. Of course we have a same 
      or at least a similar ideology. 
      It is interesting that in 
        your answers you made the division between an art and independent media 
        space on a couple of occasions while you were talking about the notion 
        of the ghetto - it sounded as if the notion of the ghetto is for you applicable 
        only within an art context. In my opinion not just an art space or if 
        I am more precise - an art system, but also an alternative media space 
        can function as a ghetto in a negative sense, but on the other side independent 
        media can function also in a positive sense as a ghetto, because they 
        can be constitutive or of survival importance for some communities, minorities. 
        In connection to the ghetto problem how do you see the view that the task 
        of an 'alternative' or 'independent' media is to form 'a new' audience 
        by spreading 'independent, right' information which functions as enlightenment 
        because of which a change within the consciousness will appear in the 
        audience and this will result in a social-political action and a broader 
        change in existing situation? 
      
        Marion von Osten: 
        My answer derives from many intensive conversations, cultural and artistic 
        collaborations and is against the so called objective reporting. Personally, 
        as an artist and also within the EuroVision2000 project we were 
        arguing for a dialogue instead of monologues, for inter-culturality instead 
        of multi-culturality. In that way, as I mentioned already above, I do 
        not have a problem with the ghetto in the way I described it and not even 
        in an alternative media scene. The ghetto I am talking about is about 
        connecting and not always about the same group of people; it is about 
        communication between people, if you like - even all over the world, but 
        not with everyone. I really have a problem with a ghetto as people usually 
        ask about it - as something negative. It is just too easy to say that 
        a ghetto is bad and the broader public is good; as if when the videos 
        would have been broadcast broadly the problem of the political or the 
        question of the public and the resulting action would have been solved. 
        Our point has been a different one. Most of the EuroVision2000 more classical documentary films were broadcast or even made by the money 
        from Channel 4. So, a lot of EuroVision2000 videos have already 
        been shown on TV or in other public spaces. The videos in general are 
        distributed by the artists and film makers themselves or by galleries 
        as they do not belong to us. They are not our property. Nowadays the whole 
        collection of EuroVision2000 films is distributed by FilmCoopi 
        Vienna and the Pompidou Centre in Paris might take some of them and place 
        them in their collection. But for me this is not the most interesting 
        point of the project, this common idea of success. What we did is, we 
        used the videos for debates, discussion rounds about socio-political issues 
        in three complete different political surroundings: Prague, Brussels and 
        Bologna. We tried to find people that are locally involved, affected, 
        influenced with questions about the globalisation process, but never because 
        they would merely have the same opinion about these complex questions. 
        Our work has been to start a dialogue, an intervention and to try to find 
        collaborators in the political and cultural field. That is, as I witness, 
        in the media as well as in the art scene already a lot, as the documentary 
        film maker and artist, or alternative media people and film makers have 
        not so much to do with each other. From my long experience I know that 
        one has achieved a lot, if one has made people listen to each other and 
        clarify their standpoints, in one has achieved that the issues of representation 
        are debated and negotiated, that the political instead of the aesthetic 
        gets to be the topic, that we question our strategies, that we criticise 
        our works, that we are not competitive, that we can articulate even small 
        things not only large productions, etc. And this is the good thing about EuroVision2000. But the project never had the idea to be an ideal 
        or an institution. It is a temporary, provisory, transit space. And that 
        is again a good thing as new things can emerge through the project and 
      can be put under questioning (also in our own activities). 
      Peter Spillman: 
        As a consequence of my remarks above I would no longer believe in the 
        positive effect of enlightenment or the self explanation of the better, 
        more perfect truth, and therefore more effective information. In the Western 
        media the idea of improved information or bringing the objective truth 
        has become a kind of an ideology. Counter-information alone will not change 
        any principal power structures in society as long as the position of the 
        enlightened owner of true information and the right knowledge is based 
        on a hierarchical and paternalistic pattern. Talking for (or in the name 
        of) the suppressed and marginalised others, the victims of the system, 
        who are without a chance of formulating their own positions, is a very 
        problematical approach, because the proposed solutions often represent 
        projections or even the interests of the speakers and introduce new power 
        structures. While organising EuroVision 2000 we were aware of this fact, 
        so we tried to find positions and perspectives that are no longer translated 
        or mediated by any 'objective' third party, but which are more subjective 
        and out of the position of being personally involved. 
        The idea of participation or an engagement is a better description of 
        the disposition where I would expect some effects on the existing situations 
        to take place; something like the appearance of a critical political spectator 
        who is also it's own activist. Namely, in neo-liberalism everything is 
        participative and everybody should participate, of course mainly in a 
        commercial sense and with the final consequence of buying something. Participation 
        in a project like EuroVision2000 means something totally different 
        and might be better described with the term 'personal engagement'. The 
        engagement in such a project includes for example not only the producers 
        of videos, but also critical spectators who become their own activists 
        instead of just being passive viewers. Therefore projects like EuroVision2000 will never address the mass public and that is not negative as far as 
        'reaching the mass public' and 'initiating personal engagement' are two 
      very different approaches. 
      If I understand you correctly 
        - we can notice the same approaches as used by the power structures (talking 
        for the suppressed and marginalised other) also in the so called alternative 
        or independent media, just from another point of view. This was actually 
        one point of my fifth question - that the so called independent media 
        often act with the same structure, patterns (enlightenment, talking for 
        the suppressed other, etc) as the mainstream does, just from another angle. 
      
        Peter Spillman: 
        Yes I agree, there is also this structural similarity I am talking about. 
        However, it is clear that the mainstream media have a different motivation 
        and different interests than any alternative media, as they are normally 
        commercial enterprises with investors in the background who need a profit 
        to be made for them. So they will only report about the 'marginalised 
        others' in a popular manner, in the spirit of a scandal, if there is a 
        chance to attract viewers and raise the quote of spectators, and this 
        is very often performed in a very racist way. On the other hand, the so 
        called alternative media have always defined themselves as the distributors 
        of 'suppressed' information and here there is, as you say, a real danger 
        to traditionally reproduce the power structures (the West and the rest) 
        by talking about the suppressed 'Other' even if it happens in the belief 
        of doing good. What I am trying to point out is, that in our view an alternative 
        approach to information is more than just a more precise or objective 
        report. It is a question of the position of the speakers and those who 
        we are speaking about. For us, alternative use of media means finding 
        ways to speak up, to share opinions and to enable locally adapted forms 
        of distribution.  
      Will you place your videos 
        also on the Internet (in a sense of an open archive) so that people could 
        use and contribute materials even more freely than they are at the present? 
      Peter Spillman: 
      Yes, we are looking for finances to do so. 
      Marion von Osten: 
        For EuroVision2000 our statement has been that when we talk about 
        different forms of racism, we actually discuss the complexity of questions 
        and viewpoints on racism and not about the propagandistic use of terms 
        in order to enlighten others. The question of a critical cultural production 
        begins somewhere else. The question begins at how we are used to represent 
        the knowledge about the 'Other'. One part of the enlightenment practices 
        has been that they brought the 'world' to us; in the end also over TV 
        sets! For what price? Most definitely for the price of colonialism, if 
        nothing else. Enlightenment itself drew the rational mastermind against 
        the naivete of the 'rest of the world', the so called natives, the 'naturkinder'. 
        It is my opinion that if we want to understand how racism is structurally 
        coded in our society today, we can not focus on one story told by some 
        Westerners, who are trying to bring the 'right' light to the case, which 
        will then be shown on broadcasts. I am a greater believer in the subjectification 
        of objectivity and in the specifity of narrations, localities and voices: 
        to let speak and to listen, to answer, intervene and to question, to fight 
        and to understand, instead of aiming at making 'voice-overs' and believing 
        in straightness. I believe this would actually be a broader change in 
        an existing situation, with even revolutionary aspects in it, as it would 
        change our notion from abstract, objective information to a relational 
    understanding of it. 
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