When working with others, what are your methods?
Describing her scholarly and grassroots organizing practices in the Living with Concepts micropublication, Danielle Boissoneau shares a question perpetually asked and re-asked among collaborators: “What are your methods?” In this context and beyond it, a focus on methods underscores their importance to expansive, accountable, and equitable collaboration. How to work together amid difference and conflict? What strategies sustain groups and collectives in the short and long-term? How can methods reshape the means and ends of a project? What methods do we need now? Contributors across Blackwood programs and publications demonstrate the varied forms collaboration takes. In academic labs, artist collectives, activist organizations, and ad hoc groups, they highlight the diverse methodologies for working together, and the attendant impacts of methods on project outcomes.
Take Care, Circuit 3: Infrastructures and Aesthetics of Mutual Aid
Running with Concepts: The Empathic Edition
Hollow Bones: Screening and Conversation
Strategies for Radical Democracy
Collaborative and Community-engaged Research
Towards a Transversal Methodology and Alternative Pedagogy
Banners for Land & Water Protectors
Protocols, Policies, and Proposals Performed
Toolbox
Hands Become Ears
Basket Rescue Operation
New Cultural Practices, 1900–1926
Back Up Your Data!
ORGANIZING OUR GRIEF
Questions Of, For & About Consent
Queer Collectivity in the Echoes of the Dance Floor
How Not to be Consumed
Finding Language
Racial Justice in the Distributed Web
The Pussy Palace Oral History Project
Filling Spirits: Community-oriented Cuisine and Gardening
Casting Our Kino-Eyes Over the Collective Horizon
The LEAP Manifesto
The Archive and Us
Feminist Data Manifest-No
Embracing an interdisciplinary approach to plastics pollution awareness and action
Danielle Boissoneau
LEAP
HOW ARE WE
Feminist Data Manifest-No
Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research
Protocol
Collaboration
What makes a strong bond?