This texteo mixes (or creates a montage with) three elements: the ideas and images of
avant-garde/political filmmaker and theorist Jean Luc Godard, my writing describing lessons learned through my reflections on teaching LFYT 2007, and two dialectically related videos. In my blog post
"On Slogans" I write: "I ask you to think of the following slogans—penned by committed artists from long-past revolutions, times, and places, and then followed by my own slogan responses—as a call to arms for how we might better muster today's technology to contribute to an ongoing project of improving the possibilities for presentation, interpretation, and abstract social evaluation, human interaction, perception, and epistemology, through
media praxis."
"A pioneer of the French new wave, Jean-Luc Godard has had an incalculable effect on modern cinema that refuses to wane. Before directing, Godard was an ethnology student and a critic for Cahiers du cinema, and his approach to filmmaking reflects his interest in how cinematic form intertwines with social reality. His groundbreaking debut feature,
Breathless—his first and last mainstream success—is, of course, essential."
[cit]
The explicit linking of art, culture, revolution and philosophy has inspired a great many of the seminal works and theories of cinema history as well as today's new media practices, including this video-book and the LFYT class and other media practices it documents.
One of my ten
founding terms for this project is
Marx. Those who make and control ideas make and control history. Cultural revolution is integral for social, political, and material transformation.