Latest

Book, Defund Culture: A Radical Proposal

Talk, ‘Liquidate AI Art’, Computer Arts Society, London, 15 October, 2025.

Masked Media: What It Means to Be Human in the Age of Artificial Creative Intelligence

(2025) Ecologies of Dissemination issue of PARSE Journal #21 - Summer, edited by Eva Weinmayr and Femke Snelting. (I am one of the contributors to this experimental issue which emphasizes collective, community-based and relational practices of knowledge production over individual authorship.) 

Robot Review of Books

Some recent and not-so-recent publications

A Brief History of Writing: From Human Meaning to Pattern Recognition and Beyond, with Joanna Zylinska

Experimental Publishing Compendium

Combinatorial Books: Gathering Flowers (book series)

How To Be A Pirate: An Interview with Alexandra Elbakyan and Gary Hall by Holger Briel’.

'Experimenting With Copyright Licences' (blogpost for the COPIM project - part of the documentation for the first book of the Combinatorial Books pilot)

Contribution to 'Archipiélago Crítico. ¡Formado está! ¡Naveguémoslo!' (invited talk: in Spanish translation with English subtitles)

How to Practise the Culture-led Re-Commoning of Cities (printable poster), Partisan Social Club, adjusted by Gary Hall

'Writing Against Elitism with A Stubborn Fury' (podcast)

'The Uberfication of the University - with Gary Hall' (podcast)

'"La modernidad fue un "blip" en el sistema": sobre teorías y disrupciones con Gary Hall' ['"Modernity was a "blip" in the system": on theories and disruptions with Gary Hall']' (press interview in Colombia)

'Combinatorial Books - Gathering Flowers', with Janneke Adema and Gabriela Méndez Cota - Part 1; Part 2; Part 3 (blog post)

Open Access

Most of Gary's work is freely available to read and download either here in Media Gifts or in Coventry University's online repositories PURE here, or in Humanities Commons here

Radical Open Access

Radical Open Access Virtual Book Stand

'"Communists of Knowledge"? A case for the implementation of "radical open access" in the humanities and social sciences' (an MA dissertation about the ROAC by Ellie Masterman). 

Main | Response to Curt Rice, 'Diamond Open Access Needs Institutions, Not Heroes’ »
Wednesday
Mar252026

'Defund Culture by Any Means Necessary': Minor Compositions Podcast Season 2 Episode 5 

'Defund Culture by Any Means Necessary': Minor Compositions Podcast - Season 2, Episode 5, with Gary Hall and Seth Wheeler, hosted by Stevphen Shukaitis

https://www.minorcompositions.info/?p=1885

YouTube: https://youtu.be/mk-j2uh9cdk

Now available on all the usual podcast platforms.

In this episode owe are joined by Gary Hall and Seth Wheeler for a wide-ranging conversation on cultural funding, radical publishing, and the changing conditions of collective knowledge production.The discussion begins with Gary Hall’s recent book Defund Culture: A Radical Proposal, which challenges conventional calls to increase arts funding by asking a more fundamental question: what – and who – is cultural funding actually for? Rather than defending existing institutions, Hall proposes that the current crisis in arts funding might be an opportunity to rethink the entire landscape, redistributing resources away from entrenched, upper-middle-class infrastructures toward more collective, plural, and relational forms of cultural production. 

From there, the conversation moves into the practical and political challenges of radical publishing today. Reflecting on projects such as Open Humanities Press and Agit Press, Hall and Wheeler discuss the tensions between openness and enclosure in contemporary publishing, the uneven realities of open access, and the difficulty of sustaining collective, non-commercial forms of intellectual work. Wheeler draws on experiences from worker movements to highlight the historical role of print media – newsletters, pamphlets, and leaflets – as machines to produce consciousness, capable of expanding political dialogue beyond academic and activist enclaves.How do these earlier forms resonate with, and diverge from, today’s digital platforms? What happens when knowledge production becomes entangled with the logics of content creation, personal branding, and algorithmic visibility? The conversation explores how financial precarity and platform economies shape what can be said, by whom, and under what conditions: raising questions about whether genuinely collective and autonomous forms of media can exist within, or beyond, these systems.

Ultimately this is a question of infrastructure: how to build alternative networks for producing and distributing knowledge that do not simply replicate existing hierarchies. From decentralized publishing models and cooperative platforms to the enduring importance of print as a social and organizational process, the episode maps out both the challenges and the possibilities of creating new cultural forms grounded in collaboration, redistribution, and shared intellectual life. Rather than offering definitive solutions, this conversation opens up a space for thinking through what it might mean to defend/defund culture by transforming it – experimenting with new modes of publishing, new institutional arrangements, and new ways of working together.

More on the book, Defund Culture: A Radical Proposal: https://www.mediastudies.press/pub/nb-hall-defund/release/4
Open Humanities Press: https://openhumanitiespress.org
Agit Press: https://www.agitpress.net

Intro / outro music – Mischief Brew, The Reinvention of the Printing Press