Some articles retrieved from the excellent http://zerowork.org/
- Printer-friendly version
- Login or register to post comments
Some articles retrieved from the excellent http://zerowork.org/
The libcom library contains nearly 20,000 articles. If it's your first time on the site, or you're looking for something specific, it can be difficult to know where to start. Luckily, there's a range of ways you can filter the library content to suit your needs, from casual browsing to researching a particular topic. Click here for the guide.
If you have an ebook reader or a Kindle, check out our guide to using ebook readers with libcom.org.
If you'd like to upload content to the library which is in line with the aims of the site or will otherwise be of interest to libcom users, please check out our guides to submitting library/history articles and tagging articles. If you're not sure if something is appropriate for the library, please ask in the feedback and content forum. If you don't have permissions to post content yet, just request it here.
about | donate | help out | submitting content | other languages | a-z | contact us | site notes
Comments
Bump, as this is now complete - with everything which is available online, and possibly everything which is available generally as only a couple of unpublished bits from issue 3 are not here which perhaps were not even written. So clarification on this would be useful if anyone knows!
Amazing! I have wanted to get my hands on this great collection for such a long time! can't wait to devour all these texts!
There are, indeed, a few more "bits" to be added to the section of www.zerowork.org/ on issue 3. Also forthcoming on that site are historical accounts of the genesis and evolution of the Zerowork collective and its work. The first installment: "Background: The Genesis of Zerowork #1" - examines the political and theoretical roots of the journal's perspective and provides brief biographical sketches of the editors - will be uploaded fairly soon. The subsequent two installments "Background: From Zerowork #1 to Zerowork #2" and "Background: From Zerowork #2 to Zerowork #3" will take longer. There will also be quite a few more documents added to the website to facilitate research by those wishing to know more about the influences that shaped the thinking of the editors and materials they generated besides the journal.
Great, thanks for the info and keep up with the good work on the zero work site, look forward to the new additions!
The essay mentioned above "Background: The Genesis of Zerowork #1" - that examines the political and theoretical roots of the journal's perspective and provides brief biographical sketches of the editors - has now been uploaded and can be accessed from www.zerowork.org