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                                        <a href="http://imap.usc.edu/wp-content/uploads/usc-autonets-poster1.jpg"><img class="" alt="usc autonets poster" src="http://imap.usc.edu/wp-content/uploads/usc-autonets-poster1-700x389.jpg" height="389" width="700"></a></h1>
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<p>Local Autonomy Networks :: Los Angeles with Gender Justice LA</p>
<p>March 8, 2013</p>
<p>USC School of Cinematic Arts Gallery, SCA 120</p>
<p>6:30-9:30pm</p>
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<p>6:30-8:30pm Workshop using Theater of the Oppressed</p>
<p>8:30-9pm Opening reception</p>
<p>9-9:30pm Performance</p>
<p>Exhibition hours</p>
<p>Sat-sun 3/9-3/10, 12-4pm</p>
<p>Mon-Thurs, 3/11-3/14, 11am-7pm</p>
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<p>“The colonial world is a compartmentalized world… The colonized world
is divided in two. The dividing line, the border, is represented by the
barracks and the police stations… In capitalist societies, education…
those aesthetic forms of respect for the status quo, instill in the
exploited a mood of submission and inhibition which considerably eases
the task of agents of law and order.”</p>
<p>“The [government] agent does not alleviate oppression or mask
domination. He displays and demonstrates them with the clear conscience
of the law enforcer, and brings violence into the homes and minds of the
colonized subject.”</p>
<p>- Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth</p>
<p>On March 8, 2013, Local Autonomy Networks, a project started by Micha
Cárdenas, will be joining with Gender Justice LA’s Theater of the
Oppressed Group to host a workshop and performance about the
militarization of college campuses and community-based responses to
violence. Starting with the question, “Does this look like safety to
you?”, the two-hour workshop will respond to the recent policy at the
University of Southern California to set up mini borders, complete with
metal expanding fences and computer-aided checkpoints, at all of the
school’s entrances at night. These checkpoints, reminiscent of both the
US/Mexico border and the Israel/Palestine border, reinforce a
militarized mindset that contradicts USC’s image of integration with the
surrounding community. ID checks such as these only serve to make
transgender people and undocumented people unsafe, effectively excluding
them from the community. Join us for a two-hour workshop that will
culminate in a performance just outside one of the checkpoints where we
will use Theater of the Oppressed to embody what safety looks like to
our community of genderqueer and transgender people of color and allies.</p>
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<p>More about Local Autonomy Networks / Autonets:</p>
<p>Local Autonomy Networks (Autonets) is an artivist project focused on
creating networks of communication to increase community autonomy and
reduce violence against women, LGBTQI people, people of color and other
groups who continue to survive violence on a daily basis. The networks
are both online and offline, including handmade wearable electronic
fashion and face to face agreements between people. The networks are
being established through a series of workshops, performances,
presentations and discussions at art, activist and academic venues in
the Americas and Europe. The project was started by Micha Cárdenas but
is rapidly expanding into an ecology of networks involving many artists,
hackers and activists.Autonets includes a line of mesh networked
electronic clothing with the goal of building autonomous local networks
that don’t rely on corporate infrastructure to function, inspired by
community based, anti-racist, prison abolitionist responses to gendered
violence. The Autonets garments, when activated, will alert everyone in
range of the the local mesh network who is wearing another autonet
garment that someone needs help and will indicate that person’s
direction and distance.</p>
<p>These technologies are being developed through workshops and
collective design processes, inspired by existing networks of horizontal
knowledge production in queer, transgender, survivors of gender
violence and diasporic communities. We are currently in collaboration
with groups wanting to use Autonets to reduce violence against
genderqueer and trans people of color in LA, prevent disappearances in
Bogotá, Colombia, help provide safety for sex workers in Toronto and
facilitate queer youth of color to avoid violence in Detroit. Autonets
is fashion hacking for social reorganization, recoding the meaning of
fashion symbols such as hoodies that have associations ranging from
Trayvon Martin to the Black Bloc, or femme fashion elements like dresses
and bracelets, into symbols of connectivity and autonomy.</p>
<p><a href="http://autonets.org">http://autonets.org</a></p>
<p>More about GJLA:</p>
<p>Gender Justice LA is building a strong grassroots multi-racial
coalition of transgender people and allies to advocate for our rights,
win concrete improvements in our lives, and challenge oppression.</p>
<p>Are you ready to help us transform Los Angeles?</p>
<p><a href="http://www.gjla.org/">http://www.gjla.org/</a></p><p><br></p><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div dir="ltr">micha cárdenas<br>PhD Student, Media Arts and Practice, University of Southern California<br>Provost Fellow, University of Southern California<br>
<br>New Directions Scholar, USC Center for Feminist Research<br><br>MFA, Visual Arts, University of California, San Diego<br><br>Co-Author, The Transreal: Political Aesthetics of Crossing Realities, <a href="http://amzn.to/x8iJcY" target="_blank">http://amzn.to/x8iJcY</a> <br>
<br>blog: <a href="http://transreal.org" target="_blank">http://transreal.org</a><br><br></div>
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