Journals/Magazines

1,000 copies only. Massively expanded to 92 pages, same price! Contents this time include: * Untold: Interview with this forward looking dubstep producer * Dubplate Cutting Houses: Woofah shines a light on this hidden corner of UK soundsystem culture * Newham Generals: Keeping it grimey * Tony Thorpe: Major interview with this UK Bass legend - from 400 Blows to the KLF to dubstep * Who Killed Michael Smith?: The tragic story of the legendary dub poet, with contributions from Linton Kwesi Johnson and Dennis Bovell * Young Warrior and Joe Ariwa: The sons of Jah Shaka and Mad Professor on the next generation of UK Dub * Sci-Fi and Reggae: Rastas in space, reggae producers looking to the stars… * The last days of Studio One: Ron Vester, Studio One’s official photographer, talks to us about his time with Coxsone Dodd * Dubkasm: Teachings in Dub by way of Bristol and Brazil * Hessle Audio: Ramadanman and Ben UFO step up * YT: In depth look at the Born Inna Babylon album * Hot Gal Commandments * Colin Tubb: First episode of a new cartoon series * Memories of Eek A Mouse * Reviews NO adverts! NO rehashed press-releases! NO pdfs or downloads - printed version only! Woofah issue 4 - OUT NOW!

Misery and the Value Form 1. Crisis in the Class Relation Taking the capitalist class relation as a self-reproducing whole, the horizon of its overcoming appears as an invariant aspect of this whole, albeit one with a historically variant quality. Surplus population and capital's basic problem of labour characterise core dynamics underlying the shift in this horizon beyond the old programme of workers' power. 2. Misery and Debt A re-reading and historical interpretation of Marx's “general law of accumulation”— the tendency for the expanded reproduction of capital to throw off more labour than it absorbs—in light of the growth of surplus populations and surplus capital in the world today. 3. Notes on the New Housing Question Preliminary materials for a theory of home-ownership, credit, and housework in the post-war US economy. How is the fundamental separation between production and reproduction transformed when the home becomes the commodity through which all others are sold? 4. Communisation and Value-Form Theory The theory of communisation and Marxian value-form theory emerge from the same historical moment, mutually complement each other, and point towards the same radical conception of revolution as the immediate transformation of social relations, one in which we cease to constitute value and it ceases to constitute us. 5. The Moving Contradiction A reconstruction of the systematic dialectic of capital as a dialectic of class struggle. The forms of value which are constituted by and regulate social practice are totalising and self-reproducing through the subsumption of labour under capital. The totality so constituted is inwardly contradictory, and ultimately self-undermining: capitalist accumulation is a moving contradiction, i.e. a historical contradiction, between capital and proletariat. 6. The History of Subsumption The philosophical/logical concept of subsumption is employed in various periodisations of capitalist society, such as those of Théorie Communiste, Jacques Camatte, and Antonio Negri. A critical examination of this concept and its historical uses. 7. Sleep-Worker’s Enquiry Worker's enquiry in the cynical mode: the unrevolutionary working life of the web developer.

Datacide Eleven release date: February 2011. 64 pages. Original printing is sold out, to buy this issue please go HERE to obtain the 2022 reprint! Datacide events, page 3 Nemeton: Political news, page 4 Features Christoph Fringeli: Hedonism and Revolution: The Barricade and the Dancefloor, page 6 Stewart Home: Dope smuggling, LSD manufacture, organized crime & the law in 1960s London, page 8 John Eden: Shaking the Foundations: Reggae soundsystem meets ‘Big Ben British values’ downtown, page 12 Alexis Wolton: Tortugan tower blocks? Pirate signals from the margins, page 16 Neil Transpontine: Dance before the police come, page 21 Christoph Fringeli: From Subculture to Hegemony: Transversal Strategies of the New Right in Neofolk and Industrial, page 24 Christoph Fringeli: Appendix to “From Subculture to Hegemony”: Metapolitical Strategies of the Nouvelle Droite, page 26 Christoph Fringeli: Appendix to “From Subculture to Hegemony”: Ernst Jünger’s “Waldgang”, page 27 Nemeton: From Conspiracy Theories to Attempted Assassinations: The American Radical Right and the Rise of the Tea Party Movement, page 28 R. C.: How to start with the subject. Notes on Burroughs and the ‘combination of all forms of struggle’, page 37 Fiction Riccardo Balli: Sonic Fictions, page 40 Dan Hekate: Digital Disease, page 45 Howard Slater: Infra-Noir. 23 Untitled Poems, page 46 Matthew Fuller: Office Work, page 48 Record Reviews, page 52 Matthew Fuller and Steve Goodman: Beat Blasted Planet. An interview with Steve Goodman on ‘Sonic Warfare’, page 58 Terra Audio: “Free Parties”, page 60 Gorki Plubakter: “This is the end… the official ending”, page 61 The Lives and TImes of Bloor Schleppy (11), page 62 Charts, page 63 With 64 pages, this is the biggest issue of datacide yet!

Contents INTAKES: COMMUNITIES, COMMODITIES AND CLASS IN THE AUGUST 2011 RIOTS Although initially a ‘community riot’ in Tottenham, where the principal target was the police, the disturbances spread rapidly as ‘commodity riots’ across London and eventually many other major conurbations. Access to electronic devices servicing social media appeared to have accelerated the diffusion of disturbances in comparison to those in July 1981. The spatial restructuring of local shopping streets into more distant retail parks and shopping malls encouraged mobility and organisation amongst the ‘looters’. Failures of policing, though highlighted by the media, were a result of surprise, lack of trained personnel and logistical problems, rather than cop ‘conspiracy’. DRIVING THE NHS TO MARKET: PART 1 The establishment of the NHS in 1948 is widely seen as the jewel in the crown of the post-war class settlement in Britain. The Conservative Secretary of State for Health, Andrew Lansley is committed to change this and wrenching the jewel from the fallen social democratic crown. The Health and Social Care Bill threatens to open the way for the breakup of the NHS and its replacement by a US-style private health care system. Yet this drive to the market in health care is not new. The basis for the proposed ‘reforms’ were put in place under New Labour. In this article, we place the current market ‘reforms’ in historical context. We shall see how the neoliberal attempts to re-commodify health care over the past thirty years have faced formidable problems, not only from the fact that NHS has remained popular, but also because the delivery of health through an integrated public service has proved to be highly cost effective. GOING UNDERGROUND Is there a future for traditional workplace-based organisation? How does the modern changing nature of work affect opportunities for workers to organise as workers – or even as revolutionaries? In this article, we review the Solidarity Federation pamphlet Workmates which looks at these questions in the context of the anti-privatisation struggles on the London Underground in the late 1990s and early 2000s. While the pamphlet poses many of these questions and offers insight into the process of workers resistance to management attacks, often the answers are left all too brief or unexplored.

OUT NOW! ISBN 978-3-948332-18-1 Features include: Christoph Fringeli: Revolution and Counterrevolution in Germany 1919 Ross Wolfe: Marxism Contra Justice - A Critique of Egalitarian Ideology Joke Lanz: Ghosts & Handbags - A short Travel Report from the Japanese Underworld Matthew Hyland:Masterless Mouths poems by Howard Slater fiction by Dan Hekate news roundup by Nemeton record reviews by Low Entropy, Saxenhammer, Prole Sector, Controlled Weirdness, Christoph Fringeli book reviews: Neil Transpontine: A Fascist Tulpa in the White House? - Right-wing ‘Meme Magic’ and the Rise of Trump Frankenstein, or the 8-Bit Prometheus - Micro-literature, hyper-mashup, Sonic Belligeranza records 17th anniversary by Riccardo Balli Dale Street: Lions Led by Jackals – Stalinism in the International Brigade, by Christoph Fringeli Christoph Fringeli: No borders, no fatherland! France – What’s New for the Left? Activities since last issue Lives and Times of Bloor Schleppy graphics and illustrations by dybbuk, lesekill, Darkam, Sansculotte

Journal of the "transgressive" industrial culture type with a mixed bag of contributions, musically on a full length CD, in written form on 165+ pages. Edited by Robert H. King in 1993. Music feat. Controlled Bleeding, Soviet France, Lull (Mick Harris), Techno Animal, Nocturnal Emissions, Greater Than One and others. The book compiles articles and interviews (with Annie Sprinkle, Adam Parfrey, Stelarc, Mark Pauline) and also features Derek Jarman, Robert Anton Wilson, Adi Newton, erm... Boyd Rice, and more....

Now available again: Datacide Eleven, originally from 2011. datacide eleven originally appeared in February 2011, a little bit over two years after the predecessor issue which had been published in October 2008 and had been accompanied with a conference in Berlin. Issue eleven contains some of the papers presented at the 2008 conference (those of John Eden, Stewart Home and Alexis Wolton) as well as then-new material. Between the two issues was the launch of a new datacide web site (then part of the c8 orbit, now to be found at https://datacide-magazine.com) and a number of other activities, largely event-based, both musical and in the form of talks, sometimes as a combination of the two. datacide eleven itself was launched with a number of talks taking place over two days at Cagliostro, the bar and meeting point at Ostkreuz - then also the location of the Praxis store - and a party taking place at Subversiv with Kovert, Baseck, DJ Balli, Cannibal Brothers, Nemeton, LT and Christoph Fringeli. For this 2022 reprint the issue was carefully re-edited which chiefly concerned formatting issues. None of the content has been altered besides obvious typos and mistakes, but the layout had to be adjusted to the bound rather than stapled finish, and to take advantage of the colour (inside) cover and to give a bit more space to some articles a total of four pages were added. A new back page image was provided by Luke Hekate.