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Chto Delat

Chto Delat

Cover of When the Roots Start Moving – First Mouvement – To Navigate Backward – Resonating with Zapatismo

Archive Books

When the Roots Start Moving – First Mouvement – To Navigate Backward – Resonating with Zapatismo

Chto Delat, Free Home University

Essays €22.00

To Navigate Backward: Resonating with Zapatismo a book-within-a-book, the first of three mouvements (as in a musical composition) is a collection of essays titled When the Roots Start Moving: Chto Delat and Free Home University—investigating predicaments of rootedness and rootlessness and notions of belonging and of displacement across different geographical and epistemological coordinates.

Zapatismo—the insurgent movement of Indigenous peoples from Mexico—emerges as a form of belonging, a home (or a homecoming) for our hopes and political imaginaries, providing a praxis to learn from and with. The contributors of this book, without romanticizing or objectifying the Zapatista struggle toward Autonomy, offer their understanding of the Zapatistas' movement, of their poetics and politics within an Indigenous cosmovision and cosmopolitics, but also in relation with the current global ecological and social crises.

The book extend the research and practice of artistic collective Chto Delat, long since adopting Zapatismo as a lens to self-reflect and emblematically reminding of how the Zapatista imaginary continues to inspire those who are looking for emancipatory tools: through art, language, radical pedagogy and conviviality, as a practice of commoning and collectively reimagining an otherwise.

To Navigate Backward: Resonating with Zapatismo is a small act of reciprocity—in preparation for the Zapatistas' visit to the European continent, a gesture of solidarity with those who, with fierce care, leave their homes to reverse imposed trajectories, to look in the same direction and share a common horizon.

The conversation hosted in this book by Free Home University will continue in the following two mouvements—Between Displacement and Belonging and Motherlands/Mother Earth.

The collective Chto Delat (What is to be done?) was founded in early 2003 in St. Petersburg by a workgroup of artists, critics, philosophers, and writers from St. Petersburg, Moscow, and Nizhny Novgorod with the goal of merging political theory, art, and activism. Chto Delat sees itself as an artistic cell and also as a community organizer for a variety of cultural activities intent on politicizing "knowledge production". The activity of collective takes responsibility for a postsocialist condition and actualization of forgetten and repressed potentiality of Soviet past and often works as a politics of commemoration. From its inception, the collective has been publishing an English-Russian newspaper focused on the urgent issues of Russian cultural politics, in dialogue with the international context. In 2013, Chto Delat initiated an educational platform—School of Engaged Art in Petersburg and also provides resources for a space called Rosa's House of Culture.

Free Home University exists at the crossroad of engaged art, experimental pedagogy, and political commitment since 2014. Based in Lecce (Italy), FHU has been carrying out artistic investigations and processes of convivial research, engaging with communities of struggle and practice. Artists, farmers, activists, asylum seekers, scholars, thinkers and doers collectively inform learning spaces, through living, studying, and creating together.

And more

Cover of Visible – Art as Policies for Care – Socially Engaged Art (2010-Ongoing)

Nero Editions

Visible – Art as Policies for Care – Socially Engaged Art (2010-Ongoing)

Judith Wielander, Matteo Lucchetti and 1 more

Comprehensive documentation on 43 outstanding socially committed artistic projects over the past twenty years.

The book Visible: Art as Policies for Care. Socially Engaged Art (2010–Ongoing) was born from the editors' enduring curatorial research into long-term situated art projects that exist within the social sphere, beyond the logic of the traditional art system, confronting unjust systems, and prefiguring novel visions for living together.

The socially engaged art projects collected here hold a significant place in the constantly evolving trans-local art scene of the past two decades, and form a lens through which to observe changing realities and their urgencies; they redefine the concept of art in light of current climatic, political, and social changes and foster the dematerialization of the artwork in processes that become policies of culture and care.

The publication is composed of four main sections with overarching photo documentation—interviews, essays, forums, and short literary texts—collecting contributions by artists, anthropologists, novelists, activists, and sociologists, such as Anna Tsing, Wissal Houbabi, Maria Thereza Alves, Tania Bruguera, Jonas Staal, DAAR - Decolonizing Architecture Art Research, Giuseppe Campuzano and Nan Goldin.

Edited by Martina Angelotti, Matteo Lucchetti, Judith Wielander.

Contributions by Ubah Cristina Ali Farah, Maria Thereza Alves, Martina Angelotti, Art Labor, Kader Attia, Gianfranco Baruchello, Richard Bell, Black Quantum Futurism, Brave New Alps, Tania Bruguera, Zoe Butt, Giuseppe Campuzano & Miguel López, Beatrice Catanzaro & Fatima Kadumy, CATPC, Marco Cavallo, Chimurenga, Luke Ching, Chto Delat, Emanuele Coccia, Cooking Sections, Luigi Coppola, Radha D'Souza & Jonas Staal, DAAR / Sandi Hilal & Alessandro Petti, Nico Dockx & Seppe Nobels, Maddalena Fingerle, Forensic Architecture, Futurefarmers, María Galindo, Néstor García Canclini, Daniel Godínez Nivón, Morten Goll, Adam Greenfield, Raphaël Grisey & Bouba Touré, Helon Habila, Helena Producciones, Sandi Hilal, Kim Hou, Wissal Houbabi, Adelita Husni Bey, Emily Jacir, Karrabing Film Collective, Selom Kudjie & Ibrahim Mahama, Zacharias Kunuk, Maria Lai, Le Nemesiache, Carolina Lio, Matteo Lucchetti, Wu Mali, Colum McCann, Marisa Morán Jahn, Zanele Muholi, Myvillages, Paolo Naldini, Jesús "Bubú" Negrón, Tone Olaf Nielsen, Otobong Nkanga, Rachel O'Reilly, Ahmet Öğüt, P.A.I.N., Jasmeen Patheja, Narawan Kyo Pathomvat, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Ai-jen Poo, Pussy Riot (Nadya Tolokonnikova), Sahar Qawasmi & Nida Sinnokrot, Tabita Rezaire, Robida, Rojava Film Commune, ruangrupa (Farid Rakun), Jon Rubin & Dawn Weleski, Beatrice Salvioni, Alejandra Sarria, Igiaba Scego, Dread Scott, Superflex, Pelin Tan, Bert Theis, Anna Tsing, Nomeda & Gediminas Urbonas, Nadeesha Uyangoda, Éric Van Hove, Judith Wielander, Andrea Zegna, Anna Zegna.

Cover of How to love a homeland

Kayfa ta

How to love a homeland

Oxana Timofeeva

Russian writer and philosopher Oxana Timofeeva was born and grew up in various parts of the USSR. The book explores the difficulty of reducing one’s sense of homeland to one’s country alone, the philosophical interconnectedness of movement and rootedness, our plant and animal souls, and how we need to reimagine our desired, fictional if need be, homelands. The book interweaves vignettes from Timofeeva’s childhood across different parts of the USSR with a philosophical discussion of ideas on homeland in the thought of Brecht, Deleuze and Guattari, and other main figures of literature and philosophy. 

Oxana Timofeeva is Sc.D., professor at “Stasis” Center for Philosophy at the European University at St. Petersburg, leading researcher at Tyumen State University, member of the artistic collective “Chto Delat” (“What is to be done”), deputy editor of the journal “Stasis”, and the author of books History of Animals (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018; Maastricht: Jan van Eyck, 2012), Introduction to the Erotic Philosophy of Georges Bataille (Moscow: New Literary Observer, 2009), Solar Politics(forthcoming, Polity, 2022).

Commissioned and published by Kayfa ta (2020) 
Translation from Russian by Maria Afanasyeva 
Design template by Julie Peeters 
Cover illustration by Jumana Emil Abboud