This may interest some of you: Stewart Home: 'How I discovered America' Infopool No.6 2002 Launch party at the Griffin, Leonard Street, EC1 Sunday November 17 at 8pm. "For me photography is most alluring when both the person behind the lens and what is being photographed self-consciously manifest their subjectivity. Travelling across "Britain" to discover "America" is only one of the many ways in which such subjectivity might remake the world in both photographic and material form. This then is the difference between pastoralism and psychogeography. The psychogeographer (and photography is only of any interest to me in so far as it is a form of psychogeography) knows that the world cannot be recorded, it can only be remade. The pastoralist, on the other hand, wants to believe that everything that is fabricated pre-existed this fabrication, and that it will "endure" "forever" because it is in some way "natural" and "real". The pastoralist is incapable of properly articulating the difference between a William Morris wallpaper and a Jess Franco film, and will always prefer the reactionary idealism of arts an crafts to material science in the form of proletarian postmodernism. Truth is process, pastoralism stands for stasis and death." Stewart Home from the introduction. The 28-page b/w illustrated pamphlet will be available for £2.00.