Journalist at RFI (ex-DW, BBC, CBC, F24...), writer (on art, music, culture...), I work in radio, podcasting, online, on films.
As a writer, I also contributed to the New Arab, Art UK, Byline Times, the i Paper...
Born in Paris, I was based in Prague, Miami, London, Nairobi (covering East Africa), Bangui, and in Bristol, UK. I also reported from Italy, Germany, Haiti, Tunisia, Liberia, Senegal, India, Mexico, Iraq, South Africa...
This blog is to share my work, news and cultural discoveries.
The Young Karl Marx by Raoul Peck - Trailer for England:
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels meet cute in this intense, fervent film about the early development of communism from I Am Not Your Negro director Raoul Peck.
In May, at the Watershed, Bristol, my HQ :) ! My name will be there... Watch out.
In two weeks, the key album of the history of Bristol's recent music scene, Massive Attack's Mezzanine will turn 20 years old.
Initially, last summer, the band was planning a few events to celebrate and my book should have been out in English around that time.
Yet... Bristol and especially this band wouldn't be Bristol if there was not any delay, turn around, second thoughts and last minute desire for further perfectionism... Just as it happened in the making of the album itself!
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In July 1997, the band therefore released an E.P. featuring a first extract from the coming record, 'Risingson', to please fans and their label.
Here is the B-side, a song sampling a part of Siouxsie and the Banshees' 'Metal Postcard':
This book is dedicated to the history of the band Massive Attack and to their relationship with their home town of Bristol, a city built on the wealth generated by the slave trade.
As a port Bristol was also an arrival point for immigrants to the UK, most notably the Windrush generation from the Caribbean in the 1950s.
Author Melissa Chemam's in-depth study of the influences that led to the formation of the Wild Bunch and then Massive Attack looks into Bristol's past to explore how the city helped shape one of the most successful and innovative musical movements of the last 30 years.
Based on interviews with Robert (3D) del Naja and others, the book examines the inner tensions between the founding members of Massive Attack - 3D, Daddy G and Mushroom - their influences, collaborations and politics and the way in which they opened the door for other Bristol musicians and artists including Banksy.
- The book is published under licence from Anne Carriere in France by Tangent Books.
Its French title is En Dehors De La Zone De Confort - De Massive Attack A Banksy
(978-2-8433-7809-6)
About the Author
Melissa Chemam is a
French journalist and author who has worked for France 24, the BBC World
Service and Radio France International, as well as many magazines, and for the
filmmaker Raoul Peck. Since 2003, she has been based in Prague, Paris, Miami,
then in London, Nairobi and Bangui, travelling into more than 40 countries.
“Suddenly, Massive Attack
are happening”, writes Miranda Sawyer in Q Magazine in March 1991. “A silver
album! That ‘all-important’ critical acclaim! Even seminal world rockers U2
want to meet them!”… From the caves of Bristol’s underground and forbidden
parties, the non-musicians will emerge worldwide in only a few months…
From 1989, the work that Massive Attack’s three core members have started take
a more definite shape, and it becomes clear for Cameron McVey and Jonny Dollar
that an album is on its way, and not an ordinary album. Produced without a
definite plan in mind, their art, which creates after “cutting and pasting” from
an extraordinary playlist of references, seems to work magically, just like
3D’s art of collage at the time…
Cambridge University students’ “decolonisation” campaign has spread to Classics, Physics, Chemistry and Engineering, a document reveals.
Over 30 university departments will be targeted by students as they step up their efforts to examine whether courses are too dominated by white, male, Euro-centric perspectives.
Working groups have been set up to discuss possible changes in a number of subjects, according to a spreadsheet seen by The Daily Telegraph.
The Classics Society has held a panel discussion to discuss “what decolonisation would look like”, while a “decolonising Physics reading group” is up and running, the document says.
The Geography Faculty is described as being “fairly far ahead” in its efforts to decolonise the curriculum, while the Law, Sociology and Architecture faculties have set up a decolonisation working groups.
Chemistry, Medicine and Engineering are all featured on the list of subjects that have been earmarked for further campaigning, according to the document which was posted on the “Decolonise Cambridge” Facebook group.
The Decolonise Cambridge Facebook group earmarked more coursed which needed further examination, according to the group's document
The document explains how students in the Department of Politics and International Studies “managed to get the department to place decolonisation as core agenda in the upcoming changes to the curricula” with a student and staff faculty meeting due to take place next term.
Decolonise seminars are due to run in the History and Philosophy of Science department at the start of the Easter term.
Jessica Tan, the Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) Education Officer at Cambridge University students’ union, said she plans to set up a team to centralise efforts to decolonise the curriculum across a range of different subjects.
The move followed an open letter, signed by over 100 students, titled “Decolonising the English Faculty”.
Other leading universities have refused to bow to pressure from decolonisation campaigns aimed at names of buildings and statues, as well as their curriculum.
The National Union of Students’ (NUS) campaign called Liberate My Curriculum was set up to “expose institutional racism” within higher education and bring together individual decolonisation campaigns at various universities.
Ilyas Nagdee, the NUS Black Students’ Officer, said that there are numerous examples of Britain’s imperial past being “celebrated without any context or challenge from the institutions which are meant to be Britain’s centres of critical thought.” He said this includes a statue of Queen Victoria at Royal Holloway University, Churchill College at Cambridge, as well as the Cecil Rhodes statue at Oxford and the Wills Memorial Building at Bristol.
Mr Nagdee said that the NUS campaign is “predominantly borne out of the frustration of students of colour who have not seen their history reflected in their textbooks”.
He added: “The whitewashing of history is then exacerbated at university not only in the content of courses but within the spaces of learning.”
Protesters have held near-daily rallies since Clark was killed by police on March 18
[File: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images/AFP]
A sheriff's vehicle in the US state of California has hit an activist as protesters continued their near-daily rallies, calling for justice for Stephon Clark, an unarmed black man killed by police.
Video of the incident shared on Twitter shows the police vehicle accelerating as a protester walks in front of the car. The protester is thrown to the ground.
The Sacramento Sheriff's office did not immediately respond to Al Jazeera's request for comment, but a deputy with the South Sacramento California Highway Patrol confirmed to local media that someone suffered minor injuries from the collision.
Local media also reported that the protester was hit after officers issued multiple warnings for those at the rally to disperse.
The incident occurred as demonstrators marched to demand justice for Clark, a 20-year-old father of two who was killed by police on March 18.
Police officers involved in the shooting death say they believed Clark was holding a gun as they shot at him more than 20 times in his grandmother's backyard. It was later revealed that the young man was only holding a mobile phone.
His killing set off a wave a demonstrations from Sacramento to New York City, reiginating calls to end what many call the systemic racism among US police forces.
On Friday, it was revealed that Clark had been struck eight times, mostly in the back, by police, according to an independent autopsy, commissioned by Clark's family.
'Own your responsibility'
Member's of Clark's extended family spoke at Saturday's rally, saying "nothing seems to change" when it comes to how police treat people of colour.
The "situation seems to happen quite often, that someone who looks like me isn't going home," Curtis Gordon, Clark's uncle, told the rally, local media reported.
"You really can't internalise that unless you live it," he was quoted as saying, adding that the police officers involved in Clark's killing "must become accountable".
"You must own your responsibility," he said.
The killing of Clark comes amid years of national outrage over what activists and others call institutionalised racism among US police.
Nearly a quarter of those killed in 2016 were African Americans although the group accounts for roughly 12 percent of the total US population.
According to a watchdog group The Sentencing Project, African American men are six times more likely to be arrested than white men.
People of colour make up around 67 percent of the 2.2 million people in US prisons and jails.
These disparities, particularly the killing of African Americans by police, has prompted the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement, a popular civil rights movement aimed at ending police violence and dismantling structural racism.
On Friday, a white police officer who fatally shot Alton Sterling, a black man in the southern US state of Louisiana, in 2016 was fired, police said. The sacking came just days after the state's district attorney said it would not be pressing charges against the two officers involved.
Consciousness permeates reality. Rather than being just a unique feature of human subjective experience, it’s the foundation of the universe, present in every particle and all physical matter.
This sounds like easily-dismissible bunkum, but as traditional attempts to explain consciousness continue to fail, the “panpsychist” view is increasingly being taken seriously by credible philosophers, neuroscientists, and physicists, including figures such as neuroscientist Christof Koch and physicist Roger Penrose.
“Why should we think common sense is a good guide to what the universe is like?” says Philip Goff, a philosophy professor at Central European University in Budapest, Hungary. “Einstein tells us weird things about the nature of time that counters common sense; quantum mechanics runs counter to common sense. Our intuitive reaction isn’t necessarily a good guide to the nature of reality.”
David Chalmers, a philosophy of mind professor at New York University, laid out the “hard problem of consciousness” in 1995, demonstrating that there was still no answer to the question of what causes consciousness. Traditionally, two dominant perspectives, materialism and dualism, have provided a framework for solving this problem. Both lead to seemingly intractable complications.
“Physics is just structure. It can explain biology, but there’s a gap: Consciousness.” The materialist viewpoint states that consciousness is derived entirely from physical matter. It’s unclear, though, exactly how this could work. “It’s very hard to get consciousness out of non-consciousness,” says Chalmers. “Physics is just structure. It can explain biology, but there’s a gap: Consciousness.” Dualism holds that consciousness is separate and distinct from physical matter—but that then raises the question of how consciousness interacts and has an effect on the physical world.
Panpsychism offers an attractive alternative solution: Consciousness is a fundamental feature of physical matter; every single particle in existence has an “unimaginably simple” form of consciousness, says Goff. These particles then come together to form more complex forms of consciousness, such as humans’ subjective experiences. This isn’t meant to imply that particles have a coherent worldview or actively think, merely that there’s some inherent subjective experience of consciousness in even the tiniest particle.
Panpsychism doesn’t necessarily imply that every inanimate object is conscious. “Panpsychists usually don’t take tables and other artifacts to be conscious as a whole,” writes Hedda Hassel Mørch, a philosophy researcher at New York University’s Center for Mind, Brain, and Consciousness, in an email. “Rather, the table could be understood as a collection of particles that each have their own very simple form of consciousness.”
But, then again, panpsychism could very well imply that conscious tables exist: One interpretation of the theory holds that “any system is conscious,” says Chalmers. “Rocks will be conscious, spoons will be conscious, the Earth will be conscious. Any kind of aggregation gives you consciousness.”
Interest in panpsychism has grown in part thanks to the increased academic focus on consciousness itself following on from Chalmers’ “hard problem” paper. Philosophers at NYU, home to one of the leading philosophy-of-mind departments, have made panpsychism a feature of serious study. There have been several credible academic books on the subject in recent years, and populararticles taking panpsychism seriously.
One of the most popular and credible contemporary neuroscience theories on consciousness, Giulio Tononi’s Integrated Information Theory, further lends credence to panpsychism. Tononi argues that something will have a form of “consciousness” if the information contained within the structure is sufficiently “integrated,” or unified, and so the whole is more than the sum of its parts. Because it applies to all structures—not just the human brain—Integrated Information Theory shares the panpsychist view that physical matter has innate conscious experience.
Goff, who has written an academic book on consciousness and is working on another that approaches the subject from a more popular-science perspective, notes that there were credible theories on the subject dating back to the 1920s. Thinkers including philosopher Bertrand Russell and physicist Arthur Eddington made a serious case for panpsychism, but the field lost momentum after World War II, when philosophy became largely focused on analytic philosophical questions of language and logic. Interest picked up again in the 2000s, thanks both to recognition of the “hard problem” and to increased adoption of the structural-realist approach in physics, explains Chalmers. This approach views physics as describing structure, and not the underlying nonstructural elements.
“Physical science tells us a lot less about the nature of matter than we tend to assume,” says Goff. “Eddington”—the English scientist who experimentally confirmed Einstein’s theory of general relativity in the early 20th century—“argued there’s a gap in our picture of the universe. We know what matter does but not what it is. We can put consciousness into this gap.”
“What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe?” In Eddington’s view, Goff writes in an email, it’s “”silly” to suppose that that underlying nature has nothing to do with consciousness and then to wonder where consciousness comes from.” Stephen Hawking has previously asked: “What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe?” Goff adds: “The Russell-Eddington proposal is that it is consciousness that breathes fire into the equations.”
The biggest problem caused by panpsychism is known as the “combination problem”: Precisely how do small particles of consciousness collectively form more complex consciousness? Consciousness may exist in all particles, but that doesn’t answer the question of how these tiny fragments of physical consciousness come together to create the more complex experience of human consciousness.
Any theory that attempts to answer that question, would effectively determine which complex systems—from inanimate objects to plants to ants—count as conscious.
An alternative panpsychist perspective holds that, rather than individual particles holding consciousness and coming together, the universe as a whole is conscious. This, says Goff, isn’t the same as believing the universe is a unified divine being; it’s more like seeing it as a “cosmic mess.” Nevertheless, it does reflect a perspective that the world is a top-down creation, where every individual thing is derived from the universe, rather than a bottom-up version where objects are built from the smallest particles. Goff believes quantum entanglement—the finding that certain particles behave as a single unified system even when they’re separated by such immense distances there can’t be a causal signal between them—suggests the universe functions as a fundamental whole rather than a collection of discrete parts.
Such theories sound incredible, and perhaps they are. But then again, so is every other possible theory that explains consciousness. “The more I think about [any theory], the less plausible it becomes,” says Chalmers. “One starts as a materialist, then turns into a dualist, then a panpsychist, then an idealist,” he adds, echoing his paper on the subject. Idealism holds that physical matter does not exist at all and conscious experience is the only thing there is. From that perspective, panpsychism is quite moderate.
Chalmers quotes his colleague, the philosopher John Perry, who says: “If you think about consciousness long enough, you either become a panpsychist or you go into administration.”
The latest film from Warwick Thornton.
Inspired by real events, Sweet Country is a period western set in 1929 in the outback of the Northern Territory, Australia.
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Bristol Museums are opening a vast chapter of British history again:
Empire Through the Lens
Bristol Archives holds an extraordinary collection of photographs and films showing both public and private aspects of life in the British Empire and Commonwealth.
Until 31 August 2018
From about 500,000 images, we asked 27 people to each choose one piece. The selectors include development workers, artists, photographers, historians and relatives of the photographers.
They each bring a different perspective to the collection, and represent a broad range of personal knowledge, aesthetic appreciation and academic thought on the people and countries shown in the images, the legacy of Empire and the post-colonial experience.
Most of the collection dates from the 1880s to the 1960s and is just a snippet of the many thousands of images that are being catalogued and digitised.
Please note that the exhibition may contain some challenging images.
This exhibition is a display of the collection held by Bristol Archives and will take place at Bristol Museum & Art Gallery.