<html><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html charset=utf-8"></head><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space;" class=""><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial;" class="">Thank you, Renate, and thank you, Kyle, for your introduction and these thoughtful prompts in the lead out to this discussion of the many ways in which we might consider, and [re]consider what might constitute “social practice” and the practice [reproduction of the social]. I am happy to note that I realized this morning, looking through the empyre archive, that my experience with conversations here, and those with Dont, now span several years. I am, as always, grateful for time spent with his thought and the work of Ultrared. </div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial; min-height: 14px;" class=""><br class=""></div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial;" class="">I particularly appreciate the opportunity to discuss Maya Gonzales’ The Logic of Gender: On the separation of spheres and the process of abjection. Given the expansiveness of our subject and field, the formulation provided in this text, and in those accompanying it, particularly around [feminisation][flexibilisation][abjection] in post-crisis late capitalism provide us with critical means through which we might begin to tie together threads of conversation that identify both individual and collective cultural [re]production that is waged, unwaged and feminised—abject.</div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial; min-height: 14px;" class=""><br class=""></div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial;" class="">Thinking through the category of social practice at the particular moment in capitalism, and indeed, in the decades leading up to our latest economic crisis and present, I find this quote from the essay particularly useful:</div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial; min-height: 14px;" class=""><br class=""></div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial;" class="">In a country where the Prime Minister himself advocates the organisation of community services on a “voluntary basis”, under the central policy idea of the “Big Society”, a culture “where people, in their everyday lives, in their homes, in their neighbourhoods, in their workplace … feel both free and powerful enough to help themselves and their own communities”, anti-state feminists are faced with a dilemma:</div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial; min-height: 14px;" class=""><br class=""></div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial;" class="">Our aim is for provision “in and against the state”. This raises a core question in the struggle over public goods and shared resources and labour: how are we to ensure that our autonomous efforts to reproduce our own communities do not simply create Cameron’s Big Society for him? — thereby endorsing the logic that if the state will no longer provide for us we will have to do it ourselves? [Feminist Fightback, ‘Cuts are a Feminist Issue’]</div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial; min-height: 14px;" class=""><br class=""></div><div style="margin: 0px; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue'; -webkit-text-stroke-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); -webkit-text-stroke-width: initial;" class="">So, the question here for me, obviously, is one that we have struggled with in various ways at the level of social practices and cultural reproduction collectively and as individuals. Namely, how to work autonomously and collectively in the realm of the abject and late capital?</div><div style=""><blockquote type="cite" class=""><div class="">On May 1, 2016, at 10:17 AM, Renate Terese Ferro <<a href="mailto:rferro@cornell.edu" class="">rferro@cornell.edu</a>> wrote:</div><br class="Apple-interchange-newline"><div class="">----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------<br class="">A warm welcome to Kyle Lane-McKinley who will hosting our next discussion topic on -empyre-, Social Practice and Social Reproduction: the politics of participatory art. I heard Kyle speak just this past February on a panel at the College Art Association on Social Practice and Art and I knew then that he would make a great addition to our soft-skinned space. We are thrilled that he has agreed to organize and host this upcoming month on -empyre- and very grateful. Thanks so much Kyle. <br class=""><br class="">His biography is below. <br class=""><br class="">Kyle Lane-McKinley is an artist and an educator in Santa Cruz, California, where he lives with his partner Madeline Lane-McKinley, and their daughter Tuli. Kyle completed an MFA in Digital Art and New Media at UC Santa Cruz in 2010, where he continues to work as a lecturer, research associate, and as associate-director of the Social Practice Arts Research Center (SPARC at UCSC). Kyle's pedagogy is informed by his background in worker collectives, popular education projects, and grassroots social movements. His research interests include theories of representation and reification, critical spatial practice, revolutionary feminism, speculative futurism, and counter-cultural history.<br class=""><br class="">Renate<br class=""><br class=""><br class="">Renate Ferro<br class="">Visiting Associate Professor<br class="">College of Architecture, Art and Planning<br class="">Department of Art<br class="">Tjaden Hall 306<br class=""><br class="">-empyre soft-skinned space moderator<br class=""><a href="mailto:empyrelistserv@gmail.com" class="">empyrelistserv@gmail.com</a><br class=""><br class=""><br class=""><br class=""><br class="">_______________________________________________<br class="">empyre forum<br class="">empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au<br class="">http://empyre.library.cornell.edu<br class=""></div></blockquote></div><br class=""></body></html>