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    <title>eCommons Collection: 2004  Rockefeller Fellowship Nominee</title>
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    <description>2004  Rockefeller Fellowship Nominee</description>
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    <dc:date>2013-05-24T13:49:56Z</dc:date>
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    <title>2004 Rockefeller New Media Foundation Proposal</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/1813/3983</link>
    <description>Title: 2004 Rockefeller New Media Foundation Proposal
Authors: Easterling, Keller
Abstract: Offshore, an exhibition and website, is the fictional media counterpoint to a non-fiction book I have just&#xD;
completed titled Terra Incognita.&#xD;
Terra Incognita, travels around the world looking at formulaic spatial products in difficult political&#xD;
situations. While generally considered to be politically immune formats of neoliberal magistrates and&#xD;
their business counterparts, these products are also the tools of rogue nations, cults, and other&#xD;
impresarios. Far from banal, they can become political pawns and even instruments of aggression,&#xD;
storing new myths, desires and symbolic capital in a complex spatial cocktail. Terra Incognita visits six&#xD;
such cocktails: tourism in North Korea, fantastic forms of sovereignty in commercial and religious&#xD;
franchises, high-tech agricultural formations in, automated global ports, microwave urbanism in India's&#xD;
IT enclaves and the global industry of building implosion. These runaway stories, found in the&#xD;
international pages of the newspapers and the global news wires, create something like footnoted&#xD;
fiction in a book of political misadventures.</description>
    <dc:date>2006-12-15T15:04:22Z</dc:date>
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