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the
future of Sexuality
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Registration:
18:30-19:00, Conference: 19:00-21:15
Tickets
Where:
Waag
Society, Nieuwmarkt 4, 1012 CR Amsterdam [Center of the Nieuwmarkt]
The conference
language is English.
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Marie-Louise
Janssen, Lecturer,
Department of political science, Gender Studies, University of Amsterdam
Paid Sex and Public
Space
Since the debate on norms and values of Prime Minister Jan-Peter Balkenende,
the returning Christian morality seems to have gained ground in the
Netherlands. There seems to be a growing need to restrict sexual freedoms,
as it appears to be from the call for stronger sex laws and the prohibition
of sex in public space. Sex is replaced to the intimacy of the bedroom
and paid sex has to happen again behind the closed doors of a brothel.
"As long as it isnt visible" seems to be the motto nowadays.
This goes hand in hand with an increasing pathologizing of clients.
But what is exactly indecent with the window brothels? And what is wrong
with paid sex as long as it happens on basis of consent and in good
working conditions?
Melissa
Gira,
Editor, Sexerati.com, San Francisco
"The
Story of i": Sex in the Information Age
Sexuality, as it is produced
by social software, makes sexual networks visible and hackable. What
has come to be known as Web 2.0 -- microblogging, ubiquitous computing,
tools to push continuous partial attention & presence, and the rise
of social networking -- powers a space where sex is simply another facet
in our networked lives. Can the information age improve sex? What conflicts
arise from social networking & managing online identity? Are we
innovating sexual communities? And on what ethic is Sex 2.0 founded?
Luc
Sala
Sexuality: the back door into our essence
Is there logic or ratio to morality?
Has philosophy or psychology helped us in establishing what is good
or bad, moral or sin?
Has technology helped us to have better sex?
Is virtual sex limiting or expanding our sex life?
Has the illusion of sexual ownership changed because of science, technology,
feminism or psychotherapy?
Have new psychedelic substances like MDMA/Xtc or 2CB sex-therapeutic
value?
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18:30 - 19:00
Registration
19:00
- 20:00
Introduction
by our Moderator
Mirjam
Schieveld, Head of the Summer
Institute, International School for Humanities
and Social Sciences
Part I:
Marie-Louise
Janssen, Lecturer,
Department of political science, Gender Studies, University of Amsterdam
Paid Sex and Public
Space
Melissa
Gira,
Editor, Sexerati.com, San Francisco
"The Story of i": Sex in the Information Age
Luc
Sala
Sexuality: the back door into our essence
20:00 - 20:30
Coffee break with
drinks and snacks.
20:30 - 21:15
Part II:
Open discussion
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Tickets for Season Events are
....Regular
Ticket: € 30,-
....Discount
Ticket: € 20,- [*]
....Student
Ticket: € 10,-
As a non-for-profit foundation we don't charge
VAT.
How to pay for the tickets?
....a)
Online booking:
Ticket
Corner
........www.clubofamsterdam.com/ticketcorner.html
....b)
By bank: send an email with your details,
number of tickets, type of tickets
........and
event name to: ticketcorner@clubofamsterdam.com
........Bank:
Fortis Bank, Club of Amsterdam, Account 976399393,
Amstelveen,
........The
Netherlands, IBAN NL46 FTSB 0976399393, BIC FTSB NL2R
....c)
By
invoice: send an email with your billing
details, number of tickets, type of
........tickets.and
event name to: ticketcorner@clubofamsterdam.com
....d)
At the
registration desk the evening of the
event - unless
we are sold out
........earlier:
18:30-19:00
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Waag
Society
Waag Society is the name
of what started in 1994 as 'Society for old en new Media', de Waag.
Founders were Caroline Nevejan and Marleen Stikker, who is still Waag
Society's director. Before, Stikker was the mayor of the Digital City,
the first internet community in The Netherlands.
The Society's -soon to
be called 'Waag Society' - mission was to make new media available for
groups of people that have little access to computers and internet,
thus increasing their quality of living. After a complete restauration
of the Waag building, a small group of enthousiastic idealists began
their activities in 1996.
The medialab developed into an avant-gardistic thinktank with a lot
of freedom. But with an eye for commercial possibilities: attempts were
made to bring Waag prototypes to the market. Waag Society grew into
an institution that was active in the fields of networked art, healthcare,
education and internet related issues like bandwidth and copyright.
The international network
became increasingly important: Waag Society has a worldwide network
with partners in countries like India, Canada and the UK.
Nowadays, Waag Society is an acknowledged institute where apart from
R & D, there is room for experiment with new technologies, art and
culture. Partners come from all parts of society: universities but also
companies work together in our projects.
www.waag.org
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Marie-Louise Janssen
Lecturer, Department of political science, Gender Studies, University
of Amsterdam
Marie-Louise Janssen (1966) studied Cultural Anthropology at the University
of Amsterdam.
After finishing her study she has worked extensively on prostitution
and human trafficking. She is the co-founder of the Foundation Esperanza,
a Colombian/Dutch foundation for the prevention and combating of human
trafficking from Latin America to Europe. She obtained her PhD at the
University of Amsterdam in 2007 with a thesis entitled: Sex workers
on the Move. Latin American women in the European Prostitution.
At the moment she is teaching at the University of Amsterdam gender
and sexuality studies. Her research interests currently include Dutch
Prostitution and the Sex Industry.
http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/m.p.c.janssen
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Melissa
Gira
Editor, Sexerati.com, San Francisco
Melissa Gira (and though the name is as much a tag as a name, the
last can be pronounced gee-rha) is a writer, sex futurist,
and human rights advocate. She is the editor of Sexerati,
the award-winning blog about smart sex, produces The
Future of Sex video podcast, writes on sexual education &
pleasure for Good
Vibrations, and is the co-founder of the sex worker rights
blog Bound,
Not Gagged. She is also a correspondent for Gawker Medias
Gridskipper
and San
Francisco Metroblogging.
Her work has appeared in
print in $pread
magazine,
in the forthcoming WHORE!
magazine, and in the anthologies Best
Sex Writing 2008 (Cleis Press) and Dirty
Girls (Seal Press).
Currently, Melissa is the
Development Coordinator and Social Media Consultant for St.
James Infirmary, a free community health care clinic for
sex workers and their partners, and has consulted for the Desiree
Alliance, Center
for Sex and Culture, and the Open Society Institutes
Sexual
Health and Rights Project (with the Tactical
Tech Collective) in creating peer-based trainings in how
to use information and communications technology for advocacy.
Other sex/tech notorieties
include having been one of the first wave of webcam
girl performance artists, delivering the first podcasted
orgasm, and promoting prostitution hacks from
Silicon Valley to Scandinavia as part of The
Aphrodite Project.
She fully unpacked three
times in the last year and would much rather work out of her purse-sized
office: cell phone, wireless keyboard, and dv camera, wherever a cheap
GPRS signal and fancy boots can take her.
Melissa is based in San
Francisco.
www.melissagira.com
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Luc Sala
His activities span from ICT businesses to
esoteric poetry, he wrote a dozen books and engages in many cultural,
scientific and entrepreneurial activities. Recent projects include solar
crisis and magic wands.
On this very deep site
of thousands of pages of texts, books, poems and imagery you will find
archives and references to his Dutch language computer magazines (6000
articles), columns and mostly Dutch (and some English) articles about
new age/edge, the Ego 2000 new age magazine (80 articles), the complete
text of books about Virtual Reality (with contributions of JP Barlow,
Leary, Lanier), magic mushrooms (Paddo's), Fire rituals, RSI (Carpal
Tunnel Syndrome) and hundreds of columns about new media, computers,
ICT, new economy, life in Amsterdam, rituals and religion. Also his
poetry in English and Dutch, sometimes poems about actual and esoteric
subjects.
Editor/producer of around
3000 hours of television programs between 1995 and 2001 for Kleurnet,
including some 500 hours of personal interviews, travelogues, political
commentaries, documentaries etc. Part of this material will be internet-broadcasted
via Tribler, in cooperation with TUDelft.
Luc Sala will try to deal
with questions in his presentation from the perspective of the psychological
separation of essence and mask, inner child and personality. In his
view our sex life is, for many, a backdoor into our deeper core, our
shadow or wounded child and thus one of the few remaining effective
portals into letting go of that mask. He uses an intuitive method to
develop a model and to gauge the sexual preferences, inhibition and
enjoyment levels, potential and other aspect of sexuality.
He has worked with intuitives, psychedelics, hypnosis, many forms of
relational and psychotherapeutic work and believes that for many of
us releasing the inner child by facing our (half)-hidden sexual drives
and problems will make us happier, healthier and live longer. His latest
e-essay is titled "The
inner child that kills us" offers a new view on psychotherapy
and debunks myths about the use of NLP and other superficial methods
that only adapt our personality mask and hardly deals with the deeper
causes and traumas inside.
www.net.info.nl
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Mirjam Schieveld
Head of the Summer Institute, International School for Humanities and
Social Sciences
Mirjam Schieveld received her MA in anthropology from the Universiteit
van Amsterdam in 1993. She is currently working as a programme manager
for the Summer Institute of the International School.
www.ishss.uva.nl/summer.html
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Waag
Society
Nieuwmarkt 4
1012 CR Amsterdam
www.waag.org
[Center of the Nieuwmarkt]
Public Transport
Metro stop Nieuwmarkt. 1 stop from Centraal Station.
By Car
Ring of Amsterdam (A10), direction
Noord, exit S116 direction Noord/Centrum. After IJ-tunnel direction
het Muziektheater, or direction Centraal Station.
Parking at het Muziektheater.
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You can find resources related to this topic in
the sections
about
Books
Articles
Links
Club
of Amsterdam Journal
and for more events
Agenda
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Club
of Amsterdam
Phone +31-20-615 4487
info@clubofamsterdam.com
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