lunes, 10 de diciembre de 2007

El cambio de Obama en USA


"Meaningful Change You Can Vote For" is a detournment of a Barak Obama presidential campaign poster.
Six copies of the poster were placed placed on the Brown University campus (Department of Modern Culture and Media) on September 23, 2007. Pictured below is the poster at the intersection of George and Brown Streets.

The poster uses the official Senate portrait and campaign logo of Obama under the satirical campaign slogan "Meaningful Change You Can Vote For". Below the slogan are five campaign promises for a radical emancipatory political project :

  • Free universal healthcare and tertiary education
  • Free treatment of contagious disease in Africa, Asia, & Latin America
  • Open borders and immediate legalization of all illegal immigrants
  • Withdrawal from economic and military neocolonialism
  • The return of the working class to international politics

Barack Obama, of course, does not actually endorse these goals, either rhetorically or in actual policy. Finally, above the "Obama 08" logo is the tagline "The philosophers have only interpreted the world... Obama will change it." The tagline is based on Karl Marx's Tenth Thesis on Feuerbach: "The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it."
My goal with this project was to encourage the viewer to critically question not just Obama's politics, but American electoral politics in general. Obama was chosen because he represents to many (and, indeed, makes great effort to represent himself as) an alternative to the cynicism of American politics, the last great hope of liberal democracy. He presents himself as a "real" candidate in an electoral system which systematically disenfranchises the poor and citizens of color, and in which "choice" between candidates is analogous to that between Coke and Pepsi. He is "meaningful change you can vote for."
PARA SEGUIR LEYENDO...

jueves, 29 de noviembre de 2007

El racismo político suizo


In 2004, the same SVP had success in restricting the naturalization laws for prospective new Swiss citizens, something which the party campaigned for again last year. Both times, this illustration was used on posters, showing thieving hands of many skin colours reaching into a pile of Swiss passports. Swiss naturalization laws are already among the strictest in the world.

More than a century later, in 2007, we find these somewhat less explicit posters in Switzerland, promoting the right wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) and various supported initiatives. This poster roughly translates as "Free pass for all? NO". The issue at hand was a vote on the 8th of February on whether the country should carry on its policy of mutual open labour markets with the European Union, and also extend this to new EU members Bulgaria and Romania.

Naturally, the birds trying to get a bite out of Switzerland aren't white doves or owls, they're crows, black as the night, with obvious symbolism. In any case, the SVPs campaign failed and the policy of open labour markets was extended.

Fuente: Crestock.com

domingo, 11 de noviembre de 2007