Slogans from London Tuition Hike Demonstrations

10 Dec

on December 9th, 2010 plus a note on a slogan by Patrick Cheval
From: http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?story=20101210061450677

The violent, inspiring ‘student’ demo in central London on December 9th 2010 was the most imaginative demonstration we have ever been on including the annus mirabalis of 1968. The Trotskyist left were very much pushed aside, even the clued-in but all too reductive ultra-left hardly made a mark, as what was blatantly uppermost everywhere both in a genial, friendly but vandalistically spirited atmosphere and in many a homemade, stuck together, often gloriously-penned, cardboard placard was a kind of open-ended situationist influenced communality; an individual collectivity you knew was just right because it felt right.

The violent, inspiring ‘student’ demo in central London on December 9th 2010 was the most imaginative demonstration we have ever been on including the annus mirabalis of 1968. The Trotskyist left were very much pushed aside, even the clued-in but all too reductive ultra-left hardly made a mark, as what was blatantly uppermost everywhere both in a genial, friendly but vandalistically spirited atmosphere and in many a homemade, stuck together, often gloriously-penned, cardboard placard was a kind of open-ended situationist influenced communality; an individual collectivity you knew was just right because it felt right. There was also a fair amount of spray-canned slogans on the base of the statues in Parliament Square: Things like: Demand the Impossible ‘ (very 1968) and ‘First Greece  then Paris  now London in Insurrection’ followed by ‘ I wish I could say beautiful things but I can’t’ – when they  just had and hauntingly!

As for the placards consider the following: Employed and Appalled’,  ‘You can have my brain when you take it from my cold dead hands’,  ‘The University is a Factory: Strike, Occupation’,  ‘I wish my boyfriend was as dirty as the police’, ‘An arts for arts sake strike’, ‘Let them eat credit’, ‘Save money eat the poor’, ‘Apathy is Dead’, ‘I am Julien Assanage’, ‘Smile you are now on a database’, ‘Don’t make us pay for what the  W(B)ankers did’, ‘Fees rise  / Class divide’ etc. Some too were obviously quite sophisticated extensions around and about the fall out of modern art: ‘This is not a placard’ (surely a running commentary on surrealist Rene Magritte’s, ‘This is not a pipe’ painting of a pipe?) and ‘This is not a good SIGN’ (surely a Duchampian commentary – and better than the old geezer himself – on the aridity of post modernism?). And then there was something very topical: a BBC ‘current affairs’ intellectual had just got caught out on with a spoonerism calling Tory minister, Jeremy Hunt “Jeremy Cunt” thus putting every born again early 1070s feminist’s back-up.  What a windfall with placards saying ‘Fuck Fees. Stop the Cu*ts’, ‘Tories put the ‘n’ in cuts’, ‘Clegg/Cameron Cu*ts’ etc. And not forgetting the splendid posse of Muslim 15 year old gals (Brick Lane Pakistanis?) wearing hijabs holding up a placard saying ‘Class War, Clegg is a Wanker’.

Also there were a series of large, hefty placards saying: ‘Negative Dialectics: Adorno’ (while on the back) ‘Sentimental Education: Flaubert’. Others were, ‘One Dimensional Man: Marcuse’, ‘Down and Out in London in Paris: George Orwell’, ‘Life against Death. N. O. Brown’. ‘Society of the Spectacle’ Debord’ etc. For us one of these created the best incident of all. Not retiring intellectual egg-heads some of this lot carrying them went right up front to the battle lines and a cop was knocked off his horse by the  ‘Negative Dialectics: Adorno’ placard (other protestors though were helping in derailing the arsehole) to be whisked off to  cop-hospital on the critically injured list. Some distance away the placard on which was spelt out ‘The Society of the Spectacle : Debord’ was then furiously mangled by another cop the remnants thrown on a protected grass verge fronting Westminster Abbey!  (This is all true and was witnessed by one of us).

Truth is the last few weeks has seen the biggest and most autonomous (well, on the way to getting there) uprising of students (masked welfare proles in reality) the UK has ever seen and the art students it seems are to the fore. Though most of the action (hardly critique) is about cuts in the art and culture generally there’s a growing contingent beginning to point in the direction where the transcendence of art lies. It’s shaping up to look like what bro’ and I did in 1968 WRIT LARGE;  admittedly more proletarianised today as there’s  really no jobs / careers to be had at the end of the line except for grovelling crawlers!

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In 1789 proletarians were necessary because work had to be done

In 1989 there is work but only because there are proletarians

After all critiques of work made by workers what is now important is the  suppression of work

The above slogan was initially painted in very big letters on a wall in Paris in 1989. It was conceived and executed by Patrick Cheval one of the original French situationists at the time of the group’s dissolution in 1972. Though the slogan was removed by the usual officially run anti- graffiti outfit, Jack de Montreuil (ex Os Cangaceiros) made it into a postcard. Patrick Cheval is outstanding because he was one of the few bona fide situationists post 1968 who didn’t cop out (Neither did Sebastiani or Rene Reisel but there were others) becoming a menial school caretaker.  “Alas, alack poor Yorick”, Patrick was also an uncontrollable alcoholic and a few short years after this slogan shone in brief brilliance, the moonshine killed him. Before he died so youngggg Patrick wrote a book on fishes and fishing which we hope to place on the RAP web once Jack de Montreuil fishes it out…..

Dave & Stu’

SLOGANS

Graffiti

First Greece  then Paris  now London  in insurrection. I wish I could say beautiful things but I can`t

Demand the Impossible

Placards

Employed and Appalled

You can have my brain  when you take it from my cold dead hands

Negative dialectics. Adorno (on the back – Sentimental Education.  Flaubert

One Dimensional Man. Marcuse

Society of the Spectacle  .Debord  (later removed by the riot police defending Westminster  Abbey)

Down and out in London and Paris.Orwell

Life against Death. N.O.Brown

The university is a factory

Strike Occupation

You can have my brain  when you take it from my cold dead hands

Tories put the `n` in cuts

Clegg/Cameron Cu-ts

Fuck Fees. Stop  the Cu-ts

I wish my boyfriend was as dirty as the police

An arts for arts sake strike

Art against the cuts

`Let them eat credit

Fees rise  / Class divide

I am Julien Assanage

Save money eat the poor

This is not a good SIGN

This is not a placard

A tax on the rich  not attacks on the poor

Apathy is Dead

Don`t make us pay for what the  W/Bankers did

Smile you are now on a data base

We are doing it for estate kids

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Source: http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?story=20101210061450677

4 Responses to “Slogans from London Tuition Hike Demonstrations”

  1. Coral December 10, 2010 at 8:40 pm #

    Hi, I was : ‘I wish my boyfriend was as dirty as your policies’ ….. not police.

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