The Preliminary Committee for the Founding of a New Lettrist International (NLI) was organised by the Neoist Alliance and the London Psychogeographical Association. Group moniker used by Stewart Home between 1994 and 1999 as a corporate identity for his mock-occult psychogeographical activities. ... The London Psychogeographical Association (LPA) is a largely fictitious organisation devoted to psychogeography. ...
Their First Congress took place in recognition of the way that telematics had industrialised the imagination: it is, was and will be a virtual congress which was not mediated by electrickery. It is, was and will be an imaginist Congress. The term telematics is used in a number of ways: The integrated use of telecommunications and informatics, also known as ICT (Information and Communications Technology). ... This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Reversing traditional polarities, the congress unified the myth creation process rather than creating a myth of unity. This was achieved by commencing with participants submitting accounts of the proceedings before encountering one another. Organised from the intrinsic interconnections of such accounts rather than by the management of extrinsic connexions bureaucratic manipulation was claimed to be avoided. It was further claimed that task groups would emerge from this process. None have emerged to date. For meanings of this word with its more common spelling, see connection (disambiguation). ...
The LettristInternational (LI) was the first breakaway group from Isidore Isou's Lettrist Movement (LM).
One of their most important texts was Ivan Chtcheglov's Formula for a New Urbanism which was not published until 1958 in the first issue of the journal Situationniste Internationale.
He advocated a new city where everyone would be able to live in their own cathedral.
The Preliminary Committee for the Founding of a NewLettristInternational (NLI) was organised by the Neoist Alliance and the London Psychogeographical Association.
The NLI aimed to take the work of the LettristInternational forward particularly after grasping the importance of the Hurufi movement which emerged in the Ottoman Empire in the early seventeenth century.
Their First Congress took place in recognition of the way that telematics had industrialised the imagination: it is, was and will be a virtual congress which was not mediated by electrickery.