WOR(L)DS FOR THE FUTURE
Republishing Toolkit for an Imaginary Atlas
Words have the power to shape reality. Wor(l)ds for the Future is a set of map making tools to re-imagine and collect wor(l)ds, and to re-publish an everchanging atlas. We invite you to delve into the materials and traverse the texts in any way you desire: by cutting and pasting the printed matter, or by unravelling the texts online. The choice is yours. You can reconstruct images and reinterpret words to create Wor(l)ds for the Future.
This project is a republication of Words for the Future (2018), a multivoiced series of ten booklets. In the 2020 version, XPUB1 (Experimental Publishing) students from the Piet Zwart institute reinterpret the original material through methods such as annotating and prototyping in Python (a coding language we used to analyse text as texture). The ten booklets were cross-examined and mapped in order to find interconnections and links.
We approached this project through the perspective of cartography. Alfred Korzybski wrote: "The map is not the territory". In other words, the description of the thing is not the thing itself. The model is not reality. Cartography always entails a selection and transformation of properties of a complex reality that affect the way maps – partial views of reality – are deciphered and received. With this notion in mind, we created a mapping to highlight our individual explorations and interpretations using a language of symbols created to represent our understanding of the original material of Words for the Future.
A map could relate to something that no longer exists. It could also relate to something that does not yet exist. Maps could be seen as fictions therefore, as spaces for the imaginary.
Join us to un-map and re-map an infinite amount of potential constellations, and to navigate speculative wor(l)ds which holds the capacity to bleed into the very fabric of our shared grounds.
Download and print the materials to create your Atlas.
We suggest to print as A3. (Otherwise it would be too small)
A pluralistic open license
© 2020 XPUB - SPECIAL ISSUE 13
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to individual, group(s), and non-profit organization(s), obtaining a copy of this project, to use, copy, print, modify, merge, distribute, and/or sell contents or copies of the project, in whole or in parts, subject to the following conditions.
Exception : the image that was the original artistic response to LIQUID by TILT (Andrea Božić and Julia Willms) falls under their copyright and is excluded from this license.
Kinship implies co-relations between Wor(l)ds For The Future and further distributions which will potentially be made. If you want to republish and re-distribute the content, verbatim or derivative, we ask you to send us a copy. By copy we mean a copy of the republished content. For instance, if it is a print or a physical object please send it to XPUB/ WH4.141 t.a.v. Piet Zwart Institute/ WdKA/ Rotterdam Uni. Postbus 1272 300 BG Rotterdam, NL. If it is a file please send it to pzwart-info@hr.nl /attn: XPUB cc. If it is a change in a cloned git repository of the work, please send a patch so we can archive it in a branch. Which means, if you clone or download our git repos on this link to modify the project files, we ask you to send us the modifications so we can archive them as well.
Commercial use is only permitted if no profit is derived. Said differently, you can sell copies of the work only to cover the costs of the distribution, printing and/or production, needed to circulate copies of the work. We are asking you to be transparent about such expenses.
The above copyright notice and this license shall be included in all copies or modified versions of the project. Any re-publication, verbatim or derivative, of the contents must explicitly credit the name(s) of the author(s) of WORDS FOR THE FUTURE, as well as those of the author(s) of WOR(L)DS FOR THE FUTURE. This attribution must make clear what changes have been made.
Conceptualised, designed, created, edited, produced, published and distributed by the XPUB 1 class of 2020:
Tutors:
Print run: 100
Type set:
Special Type set:
Thanks
Special thanks to Leslie Robbins, Wilco Lamberts and Printroom Rotterdam.
Made possible by Piet Zwart Institute
Rotterdam, NL
Winter, 2020