CULTURE JAMMING


'Culture jamming' is the act of transforming mass media to produce commentary about itself, using the original medium's communication method. It is a form of public activism which is generally in opposition to commercialism, and the vectors of corporate image. The aim of culture jamming is to create a contrast between corporate or mass media images and the realities or perceived negative side of the corporation or media. This is done symbolically, with the "detournement" of pop iconography.
Culture jamming is based on the idea that advertising is little more than propaganda for established interests, and that there is a lack of an available means for alternative expression in industrialized nations. Proponents see culture jamming as a resistance movement to the hegemony of popular culture, based on the ideas of "guerrilla communication".
Culture jamming's intent differs from that of artistic appropriation (which is done for art's sake) and vandalism (where destruction or defacement is the primary goal), although its results are not always so easily distinguishable.

Contents
Origins
Examples of culture jamming
Culture jamming organizations or people
See also
References

Origins


Coined by the collage band Negativland on its release ''JamCon '84'', the phrase "culture jamming" comes from the idea of radio jamming: that public frequencies can be pirated and subverted for independent communication, or to disrupt dominant frequencies.
Culture Jamming has roots in the German concept of Spaßguerilla and in the Situationist International (SI) of the 1960s. The SI first compared its own activities to radio jamming in 1968, when it proposed the use of guerrilla communication within mass media to sow confusion within the dominant culture.
It is also thought that the phrase might, in part, come from the 1967 episode of ''The Prisoner'', "It's Your Funeral", which featured subversives calling themselves 'Jammers', who were attempting to disrupt the Orwellian dystopia in which the series takes place.
The Canadian magazine Adbusters began to promote culture jamming in 1989. American author and cultural critic Mark Dery further popularized the term with his 1993 monograph ''Culture Jamming: Hacking, Slashing and Sniping in the Empire of Signs''. [1]

Examples of culture jamming


Techniques of culture jamming include adbusting, performance art, graffiti, flash mobs and hacktivism (such as cybersquatting and Google bombing).

★ "Media Burn," a spectacle staged in 1975 by the performance art collective Ant Farm.

BUGAUP, an Australian group founded in 1979 and most active in the 1980s, which creatively defaced advertising billboards, especially those featuring cigarette and alcohol advertising. The group's acronym which stands for Billboard-Utilising Graffitists Against Unhealthy Promotions, is also a pun -- to "bugger up" is an Australian slang term meaning "to spoil/ruin"

Naomi Klein's No Logo highlights the work of Jorge Rodriguez-Gerada [2], of Artfux and the Cicada Corps of Artists. An excerpt is in Brandweek magazine. [3]

The Bubble Project, a street art movement which involves placing empty "speech bubbles" on posters and advertisements.

★ The Church of the SubGenius, a satirical religion.
A "Kill your TV" slogan with skull motif in downtown Toronto


Gorillaz' "Reject False Icons" movement, encouraging the placement of stickers on pictures of "False Icons" like Ashlee Simpson and Usher. Supporters also use graffiti to spread the word.

Billboard modifications, done in the style of the original billboard, by groups (e.g., the Billboard Liberation Front) or individuals.

★ Modifying slogans to create political statements. For example "Just do it... or else!" was used as a modified slogan to comment on Nike's sweat shop practices.

Google bombing, a widespread effort to purposely influence the automated association of specific keywords with results produced by internet search engines, especially Google.

The Who's 1967 album ''The Who Sell Out,'' featuring satirical faux commercials on the cover and between the tracks.

★ The band Negativland's ''Dispepsi'' album, in which recordings related in some way to soft drinks are used to comment (in a negative way) on the beverage industry and its marketing practices.

★ The Church of Satan's ad featuring founder Anton Szandor LaVey holding a snake in the style of Apple Computer's "Think Different" campaign.

★ The 1994 burning of £1,000,000 in cash by the K Foundation.

Sousveillance, the recording or monitoring of authority figures.

Whirl-Mart is an event that seeks to mimic and mock what they perceive as the absurdity of the shopping process, often by organising a crowd to walk around a Wal-Mart in an apparent daze for several hours, buying nothing.

★ The defacement of stolen (and then returned) library books by Joe Orton and Kenneth Halliwell, for which they were imprisoned for six months in 1962. Written about in detail in John Lahr's "Prick Up Your Ears."
André the Giant as street art


André the Giant Has a Posse, a street art campaign.

Kerry Against Bush a spoof political pressure group, based in Kerry Ireland who urged voters to vote against GW Bush in the 2004 election. Their logo was a jam of a kerrygold butter logo. The website is archived here

Nike-Jam by 01.org

★ Stickering stop signs to create messages (e.g., "Stop War," "Stop Eating Animals," etc.).
Madison Avenue & 57th Street, NY.

Queens, NY.

Culture jamming organizations or people



Adbusters

adcrit.org

Anti-Pearlman Permanent Poster League

The Anti-Advertising Agency

Arthur was here

Banksy

Billboard Liberation Front

Billionaires for Bush

Borat

Bureaucrash (A project of the Competitive Enterprise Institute)

Brass Eye

BUGAUP

Cacophony Society

Chumbawamba

ClubIvy

Chunting

Culture Jamming Website in English

deAD

Emergency Broadcast Network

Evan Coyne Maloney

The Evolution Control Committee

Gorillaz

Graffiti Research Lab

Horna Art

Joey Skaggs

Kaos Agents
★ (Kaos Agents of Scandinavia)

The KLF and the K Foundation

Laugh it Off

Luther Blissett Project

Monochrom

Mark Dice

Negativland

Todd F. Tietchen

Trademarked Culture Jamming Poetry

Publixtheatre Caravan

®™ark

Reverend Billy and the Church of Stop Shopping

SHOPDROPPING.NET

The Yes Men

Memefest, international festival of radical communication

Dons à l'Etalage, french website about shopdropping free records

See also



Artivist

Culture

Creative activism

Meme

Broadcast signal intrusion

Balls of Steel (TV)

Flashmob

Wobblies - famous culture jamming of Christian hymns

Operation Mindfuck

Situationism

Subvertising

Detournement

References



★ Tietchen, T. “Language out of Language: Excavating the Roots of Culture Jamming and Postmodern Activism from William S. Burroughs' Nova Trilogy.” ''Discourse: Berkeley Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture.'' 23, Part 3 (2001): 107-130.

★ Klein, Naomi (2000). No Logo. London: Flamingo.

★ Lasn, Kalle (1999) Culture Jam. New York: Eagle Brook.

★ Kyoto Journal: Culture Jammer's Guide to Enlightenment. [4]

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