As you go . . . Journal

As you go . . .
the roads under your feet,
towards a new future


journal

The Editorial

January, 2022


sarah bushra

I began my editorial role reading Teodora Jeremic’s Notes on Breathing, thinking at length about the simple act of breathing. Jeremic instrumentalizes air, and our relation to air, to lightly reveal the myth of the individual. Departing from a muffled underwater dream, we read Jeremic’s voice rising in determined, imaginative, and hopeful intonation welcoming the genesis of a collective body, as an afterglow of the luminous optimism in protests. 

Writing from a country stifled in pain, I’m reflecting on the kind of hope a collective mobilization impregnates. Elaine Scarry writes about the unsharability of physical pain, saying: “physical pain does not simply resist language but actively destroys it, bringing about an immediate reversion to a state of anterior to language,…” What Scarry refers to as the sounds and cries that precede linguistic structures, are today mirrored as incessant ringing of hollowed words parroted across social media and public platforms. For the 15 months civil war in Ethiopia, ‘care’, ‘reconciliation’, and ‘empathy’ have been in slow erosion of value and meaning. At the moment, what eludes Ethiopians the most is a way out of the current crisis, a way to heal deep rooted ailment. Foresight does not arrive unbidden, but follows a committed exercise in empathy.  Bell Hooks reminds us of Fromms definition of love as ” the will to extend one’s self for the purpose of nurturing one’s own or another’s spiritual growth.” There is work in love, empathy, and care.

At the beginning of the New Year, citizens of Khazakistan took to the streets to protest the hike in fuel prices, a last straw in a series of severe consequences from decades-long corrupt governance. What began as peaceful demonstration quickly escalated into violence, exasperated by government crackdowns on protestors. Despite the dissolution of humanitarian and social values on all fronts, some continue to courageously stand for justice. In an imitation of this resilient praxis from afar, we stand in solidarity with partners and peers from Khazakistan.

The last text I read before withdrawing from the journal was Sinkneh Eshetu’s futuristic inquiry: “virtually driving back in time?”. Here the author describes the meeting of two worlds, the dissonance and marvels in confronting divergences among communities. This text reminds us meeting differences with intrigue rather than threat is a corner stone for critical thinking.

Coming back to the journal in January after a brief hiatus, I carry with me the image of water. Deciding to ride the waves, to be close to water, to find the ease to cleanse and to always be able to imagine a rebirth – countless times – now and again.

The journal now opens to Ash Moniz’s jumping ship, a poetic blues in text, contemplating the Suez Canal blockage in March 2021. In what reads like a cubist style, Moniz presents parts of his research in a prism of vantage points, firmly grasping the abstractions in time and stillness.

With this note, we invite you to read and reread the following regenerative entries in As you go… roads under your feet, towards the new future. Each encounter unfurls a new thread and provokes necessary conversation central to localities of our partner cells: Zdenka Badovinac, Rockbund Art Museum, Times Museum, Artcom platform, Robel Temesgen, Sinkneh Eshetu, Public Library in Bor.

Sarah Bushra


Editorial by Biljana Ciric


Contact: what.could.curating.do@gmail.com

Chief Editor: Biljana Ciric
Editorial Board: Moderna Galerija (Ljubljana, Slovenia), Rockbund Art Museum (Shanghai, China), Times Museum (Guangzhou, China), National Library in Bor (Serbia), Addis Ababa University (Etiophia), Artcom (Astana, Kazakhstan), and WCSCD (Belgrade, Serbia)

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