King Mob Echo
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
"The first issue of King Mob Echo contained only one original statement from those who put the magazine together and that was on the back page with Urban Gorilla Comes East written by Phil Cohen and Don N Smith. Basically it's a series of questions about how modern repression works in relation to working-class youth. It is, in effect, quite well written put in a short list of generalised, rhetorical, even poetic questions such as, "Why is King Kong the most heavily guarded animal in the Children's Zoo? Why is he asleep." etc and is the outline for a kind of research directive for Catch 22, a proposed youth initiative in the East End of London." --Phil Cohen |
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King Mob Echo (1968 - ,six issues) was the magazine of radical collective King Mob.
King Mob Echo 1 (April 1968)
- "Elsewhere in King Mob Echo 1 there is a translation from the SI's pamphlet on ... articles about spontaneous violence, an image of Rosa Luxemburg's corpse," --The Situationist International in Britain Modernism, Surrealism, and the Avant-Garde (2016) by Sam Cooper
- "King Mob Echo 1 (1968): 1. Raoul Vaneigem, 'Desolation Row', King Mob Echo 1 (April 1968), in Vague (ed), King Mob Echo: English Section of the Situationist International, 81. Bob Dylan, 'Desolation Row', on Highway" --The Situationist International in Britain Modernism, Surrealism, and the Avant-Garde (2016) by Sam Cooper
This first issue features a film still from Louis Feuillade’s film Fantômas on its cover, a menacing masked man above the "I am nothing but I must be everything" Karl Marx quotation (from Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right ).
Its contents include:
- “The Return of the Repressed” by Norman O. Brown
- “Desolation Row”, the title of a freely translated excerpt from Raoul Vaneigem’s Traité de savoir-vivre à l'usage des jeunes générations (1967)
- “Urban Gorilla Comes East”, the magazine’s only original King Mob statement, co-written by Phil Cohen (also known for his involvement with the London Street Commune and the 144 Piccadilly squat) and Donald Nicholson Smith
- A photo of Rosa Luxemburg's corpse
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