Arachne
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Excerpts from Just War by Timo Tuhkanen
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In conversation with Tao Lin on his mandalas
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Office Ergonomics: an interview with Thomas Levine
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Three poems by Roger Van Voorhees
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Nest of Ghosts by Libros Fantasma
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The Whistleblower Fantasy by Dorothy Howard
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Recline Decline: Working Hard or Hardly Working by Whitney Mallett
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Towards a Marxist Cyber Theology of Chaos Magic by Angel Ashley
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What’s Eating Youtube?: Food Commodity Content Online by Die Ashley
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Accumulation and unraveling of the self by Thea Ballard
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Narrative time and excitation in computer music, EDM, and noise by Alexander Iadorola
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On blogging by James Curry-Castillo
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Virtual Self-Improvement & enhanced mindfulness practice by Rebecca Beauchamp and Jónó Mí Ló
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Number and numbness: Data journalism, the rationality community, and the misuse of mathematics by Samuel Hopkins
Hello World
The Arachne webzine is a collaborative project to examine the entanglement of mythology and embodied interactions with technology. The metaphors and mythos of weaving are pervasive in the present network cultures and in longstanding attempts to describe technology’s intertwinedness with all aspects of life.
The Arachne webzine is the result of homespun design work, which engages with each contribution on a one-to-one basis. Aspects of thought that we continue to engage with include: contemporary visual culture; intersectional gender, race, and labour studies; queer ontologies and metaphysics; human-machine interaction; trans and posthumanism; speculation; sound; magic; migration; and orientation.
We use the origin story of the spider found in Ovid’s Metamorphoses (8 AD) as a recurring motif. Arachne (Greek: ἀράχνη) was a weaver who was challenged by the goddess Pallas Minerva (Greek: Athena, Ἀθηνᾶ) to a weaving contest. Her story represents the theme of humans holding contests with the gods. Although there are other accounts, in Ovid’s story, Arachne fatally lost, despite the goodness of her craft and the beauty of the garment she produced. As a sort of lenient curse for thinking she could beat Pallas Minerva, Arachne and all of her offspring were transformed into spiders, allowing them to keep weaving while no longer enjoying human pleasures.
From Ovid’s The Metamorphoses:
- Bk VI:1–25 Arachne rejects Minerva
- Bk VI:26–69 Pallas Minerva challenges Arachne
- Bk VI:70–102 Pallas weaves her web
- Bk VI:103–128 Arachne weaves hers in reply
- Bk VI:129–145 Arachne is turned into a spider
Contact: info at arachne dot cc for content inquiries.
Arachne is a labour of love by Dorothy Howard and André Fincato.