Partner Info

Back Issues


19.08.2008

Mute | 9 (2008)

Your five a day
30.05.2008

Mute | 8 (2008)

06.03.2008

Mute | 7 (2008)

Show invisibles? migration / data / work
11.09.2007

Mute | 6 (2007)

Living in a Bubble: Credit, Debt and Crisis
04.05.2007

Mute | 5 (2007)

It's Not Easy Being Green

Partner Journals


Latest Articles


16.10.2008
Attila Ilhan

Being recognized abroad

In an article published in 1966, the Turkish poet and journalist Attila Ilhan argued that Turkish literature was far from having gained real recognition abroad. Is the situation substantially different now, despite the Frankfurt accolade? [ more ]

16.10.2008
Selahattin Batu

Understanding the West

16.10.2008
Ahmet Hamdi Tanpinar

The city

15.10.2008
György Konrád

Urban asphalt gave flower to utopia


New Issues


Eurozine Review


07.10.2008
Eurozine Review

A savage joke

"Index" follows counter terrorism from the courtroom to the community; "Osteuropa" anticipates a renaissance of Jewish life in eastern Europe; "The Hungarian Quarterly" has it out with eastern European savages; "Dilema veche" goes undercover in Italy; "Host" asks who flies the flag of commitment; "Kulturos barai" deplores toothless journalism; "Akadeemia" celebrates academia; "Magyar Lettre Internationale" debates '68 East and West; and "Fronesis" reads Marx beyond Marxism.

16.09.2008
Eurozine Review

Graphic and explicit

02.09.2008
Eurozine Review

The enzyme of freedom

12.08.2008
Eurozine Review

Why should I fill my pack with stones?

29.07.2008
Eurozine Review

Ready... steady... pray!


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Mute Self-description

Mute magazine was founded in 1994 by Simon Worthington and Pauline van Mourik Broekman, relaunching a title with an earlier life as a student magazine at the Slade School of Art, London, from 1989-1991. Initially, Mute sought to discuss the interrelationship of art and new technologies, but as mass participation in computer-mediated communications became more integral to contemporary capitalism, its coverage expanded to engage with the broader implications of this shift.

Mute publishes articles online on a weekly basis, collating a selection of these into a quarterly printed magazine. Its content combines so-called "clusters" dedicated to specific topics (climate change and capital, the politics of multiculturalism, precarious labour) with a wide range of reviews and commentaries, both of which feature in the print publication.

Mute's website also features ongoing coverage of relevant news and events contributed by editors and readers in various open publishing sections. In one of these, the "Public Library" torrent, readers can also freely up- and download media files relevant to Mute's areas of enquiry (films, recordings of talks, etc.).

Mute's open submission areas were included in 2005, when its publishing model was oriented fully towards the Internet. This involved making all content freely available online and granting readers a variety of new capabilities, including the creation of their own "Mute", a file formatted in basic PDF style that brings together selected site content. As Mute itself is also printed on a Print On Demand (POD) basis, it is hoped this latter facility will be extended to allow readers' personalized versions to automatically go to print too. Mute's POD tool is one of several ancillary web-resource initiatives it runs through its sister project OpenMute.

Mute has eight (mostly part-time) members of staff and is funded by Arts Council England.

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