Director, Emily Hicks, Ph.D.
Administrative Coordinator, Eunice Estrada
Technical Support, Matt



The Institute is associated with the Musica sin Fronteras archive, 
an archive of interviews with musicians who have performed at events 
sponsored by the institute, the journal SNL (Studies in Nonlinearity), 
a book series, Multiple Positions, a Monograph Series in Nonlinear Studies 
and the new graduate program in the Department of Chicana/o Studies 
at San Diego State University, where it is currently located.  We are seeking official recognition within either the College of Arts and Letters or the Division of Undergraduate Studies. 
The first translation project will be a translation of Julian Carrillo's Teoria de 
la musica, followed by an artists' book by  M. Kasper that will be used to exemplify 
several literary and experimental traditions central to the mission of BIAS-NES.

SNL Editorial Board

Harry Polkinhorn	
Larry McCaffery 	  	 
Marguerite Waller

Advisory Board

Stuart C. Aitken				
Alberto Blanco					
Greg Booth						
Richard Griswold del Castillo		
John Chalmers					
Chili Charles					
Jose B. Cuellar					
Tom Davies						
Abbe Don						
Ricardo Dominguez
Felipe Ehrenberg							
Lorne Falk						
Ken Friedman					
M. Kaspar
Doug Kellner
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer
Peter McLaren
Antonio Muntadas
Isidro Ortiz
Andrew Ross
Gustavo Segade
Brett Stalbaum
Allucquere Roseanne Stone
Sergio Waisman
Marguerite Waller
Ernesto Solis-Winkler

Mission

Our mission:  
to accommodate the growing undergraduate population at SDSU and at the same time 
encourage research and writing components with the support of GTAs;  
to establish and to provide research support for the new MA program in 
Chicana and Chicano Studies;  
to bridge the gap between border studies in the arts and literature, on the one hand 
and the social sciences, economics, policy studies, criminal justice, etc.  on  the other hand;  
to build community links to educational institutions and human rights organizations in the region;  
to create international links to our research, particularly that research being produced in 
Pacific Rim, in Europe and in Latin America;  
to support and to expand upon the commitment of many educators to "critical thinking" 
to include various traditions:   the Frankfurt tradition, particularly the work of Adorno, 
the Situationist tradition, the Deleuzo-Guattarian tradition, and other related traditions;  
to promote studies in non-linear thinking and studies in non-linearity at both the 
undergraduate and graduate level, and to incorporate the arts as a way of developing this curriculum.

Our practical plan: 
We will continue to work with pICT and the new Qualcomm-supported institute.
We hope to attract interest from graduate students in the departments of English and Comparative Literature,  
LAS, MALAS, Women's Studies, Music and Art to work with BIAS-NES-associated faculty on the 
topics related to those listed below.  In 2002, we offered a Special Topics Course 
(595) ( Fall 2002).  This 500-level course may be taken by both undergraduate majors and graduates.  
For several years, we offered an Expansion Module version of CCS 310, which was been revised to include 
wide-ranging research possibilities for advanced students and basic skills in research design 
(writing of a research proposal, review of the literature, statement of methodology, use of the library 
and Internet) for less advanced students.  We are now incorporating gaming theory and open source computing into the curriculum

Research areas
A-K
Adorno
Al-Fudul
Alternate Notational Systems (music)
Animation
Artists's Books
Art Collectives
Bataille
BAW-TAF
The Body, Sexuality
Border Theory
Border Studies
Borges
Anthony Braxton
Event/eventos
John Cage
Caribbean Music
Category Theory
Julian Carrillo
Chicana literature
Chicana/o studies
Corrido
Critical Analysis of Graphics Software
Critical Pedagogy
Cuban Music
Deleuze
Ecology
Ethnomusicology
Extended Vocal and Instrumental Techniques
Feminist Musicology
Film
Film Theory
Fluxus
Jazz
Jazz and Animation
Holography
Interactive Telecommunications
Kabbalah
Kabbalah and Literature
Kabbalah and Semiotics

L-Z
Latin American Studies
Las Comadres
Los Maclovios
Leadership and design
Leibniz
Mental Health
Mental Health and Ethnicity
Mental Health and Diagnosis
Mexican Music
Microtonal music
Multiculturalism
Multicultural Education
Negri
New Religious Movements
Nietzsche
Neo-grafica
Harry Partch
Peace Movements
Performance
Performance Theory
Postcolonial Studies
Psychoanalytic Literary Approaches
Psychology
Pythagorean Theory
Queer Theory
Rights Discourse
Ritual
Rock en espanol
Set theory
Semiotics
Situationists
Small press publications
Spoken Word
Spinoza
Stereoscopic imagery
Schoenberg
Stockhausen
Sumerian Culture
3-D
Translation Studies
Translation Theory
Women's Studies
Visual Poetry
Zapatistas
Zen and Art

Researchers Affiliated with the Institute and/or
Associated with Related Projects

Stanley Aronowitz, CUNY Grad Center
Arturo Arias, Latin American Studies at the University of Redlands
Greg Booth, Senior Lecturer in Ethnomusicology and
Deputy Director, School of Creative and Performing Arts
Auckland University 
Angelo Corlett, Department of Philosophy, San Diego State University
D. Chaffin, Department of Philosophy, San Diego State University
Victor Clark, human rights activist, Tijuana, also associated with San Diego State University
Ricardo Dominguez, Calit2, UCSD
Cesar Espinosa, Mexico, D.F.
Ken Friedman, Associate Professor, Leadership and Strategic Design, Norwegian School of Management, Oslo  
Ricardo Griswold del Castillo, Chicana/o Studies, 
San Diego State University 
Michelle Habell-Pallan, Department of Spanish, University of Washington
Michael Hardt, Duke University
Linda Holler, Department of Religious Studies, San Diego State University
Judith Hoffberg, art critic, Los Angeles
Joan Hugo, art critic, Los Angeles
Ulysses Jenkins, Department of Art, University of California, Irvine
Doug Kellner, UCLA
George Lewis, Professor, Department of Music, University of California, San Diego
Roberto Martinez, human rights activist, retired from American Friends Service Committee
Brian Massumi, Department of English.  State Univesity of New York, Albany
Peter McLaren, Education, University of California, Los Angeles
Rene Nunez, Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies, San Diego State University
Isidro Ortiz, Professor, Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies, San Diego State University
Clemente Padin, Uruguay
Harry Polkinhorn, English and Comparative Literature, San Diego State University 
Jose "Pepe" Villarino, Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies, San Diego State University
Gustavo Segade, Professor emeritus, Department of Spanish, San Diego State University
Owen F. Smith, Professor, Art History, Unversity of Maine, Orono
Sergio Waisman, George Washington University
Marguerite Waller, Professor, Department of Women's Studies, University of California, Riverside
Patricia Washington, Activist and Educator

Artists, Musicians, Composers and Writers

Lisle Ellis
Felipe Ehrenberg
Teresa Gunn
Tim Hodgkinson
George Lewis
Aaron Magnan
Joe Monzo
Paul Flores
Stelarc
ThaiMex
Rachel Rosenthal
TES602 (Students in English 602 Spring 2001)
Trummerflora
Tiana Uribe
Bill Wesley
Paul WilliamsJ
Ray Zone
ZIA

Cultural Institutions
Chicano Federation
Centro Cultural de la Raza, San Diego
Spruce St. Forum, San Diego
University of California, San Diego, Civic Collaborative

University Publishers 
San Diego State University Press

Academic Journals
Social Text
Differentia
Fiction International

Art Journals
Umbrella

Bookstores/Record Stores
Mtheory
3004 Juniper St.
(Golden Hill)


Moe's Books
2476 Telegraph Avenue
Berkeley, CA  94704


Professional Organizations
MLA (Art and Literature Section)

Thanks to Our Supporters

The institute would like to express thanks to Paul Strand, Dean, College of Arts and Letters, 
San Diego State University, for providing funds to pay a GTA for the CCS 310 class to be taught in Spring 2000.  
We would also like to thank the GTA who was hired, Francisco Bustos, for his past work on this project, 
which includes working with Isidro Ortiz to select and purchase CDs for the archive Musica Sin Fronteras, 
and for assisting Colette Gannaway, administrative coordinator in establishing this institute.  
A microgrant made it possible for Isidro Ortiz and Hicks  to create the archive, for which we are also grateful.  
We appreciate the work of Joan Godwin in continuing to meet the bilingual challenge:  the task of 
cataloguing rock en espanol in the archive that is currently available to all graduate and undergraduate 
students and faculty in the Media Center.  We would also like to thank Ricardo Griswold del Castillo, Chair, 
Chicana and Chicano Studies, for his support of both the archive and the Institute.  
We would like to thank Colette Gannaway, without whom BIAS-NES would not have come into existence.  And finally, we would like to thank Eunice Estrada for linking the activities of pICT, the curriculum at both the undergraduate and graduate level and the institute.

FAQs

1.Why are we creating an institute of nonlinear studies?
An example of a nonlinear paradigm is that of the border itself.  We hope to engaged 
in provocative rethinkings of hybridity, cross-fertilization, assimilation, the border as cage, 
etc.  in order to develop nonlinear paradigms.  We would like to bridge the gap between 
border studies in the arts and literature, on the one hand and the social sciences, economics, 
policy studies, law enforcement and criminal justice, etc.  on the other hand.  It is our view 
that by working with researchers in a variety of academic fields, carefully and narrowly selected 
not only because they are working in border regions, but more specifically, because they are 
working with non-linear paradigms, we will be able to produce more socially-relevant research.  
We might find ourselves learning from researchers in ecology and studying the paradigms they use 
(such as "seed ball").  One exercise the students will be given reminded the Director of her 
undergraduate education in the sciences at UC Berkeley.  It is drawn from a Fluxus artist George Brecht:  
Consider an object.  Call what is not the object the other.  Add to the object from the other another 
object to form a new object and a new other.  Repeat until there is no more other.  Non-linear studies 
can include the work of Deleuze on Leibniz in which the relationship between time and space is examined.  
We will look at Deleuze's "objectile" (object and projectile).  An ethical concern is central:  
how to talk about rights in border regions?  

2.What will you be doing and how will you be doing it?
Immediate plans include setting up the website for the institute, submitting a Special Topics 
course proposal and attending Curriculum Committee meetings in the Department of CCS in order to 
integrate the institute into the long-term plans for establishing a technology focus within the new graduate program in CCS.   
We will also be:   
1) working with the Advisory Board members to identify, locate and contact scholars around the world 
doing similar research;  
2) creating a national presence by presenting some of this research and information about 
the Institute at the Modern Language Association.  In 2002, the director was invited to perform the Literature and Performance Section.  In 2005, the director presented research related to the institute at the Conference for New Directions in the Humanities at Cambridge University.   
 
3.Who will be doing it?
At this point, the Director, Emily Hicks, will be working closely with the Advisory Board members. 
to identify, locate and contact scholars around the world doing similar research.  A website designer is needed to develop the website.  The Director will be assisted by Eunice Estrada, the administrative coordinator in CCS.  We are also working closely with Rudy Jacobo.  

4.How will you publicize the project outside of academe?
We plan to make information about BIAS-NES available for downloading  through the website by building 
a list of organizations and individuals who might be interested and contacting them.  The Director hopes 
to use the local media outlets to bring attention to the project.  In 2005, the director participated on a panel moderated by Ricardo Dominguez (Calit2/UCSD) at the Delete the Borders Conference held at the Sherman Heights Community Center.
5.How can one get involved?
 Students, researchers and all interested will be encouraged to participate.  
BIAS-NES will be sponsoring cultural events in order to showcase the work of local, Tijuana and Southern 
California artists, musicians, composers and writers.  Support of these events will be welcome.

Links:

Director's Bio

Emily Hicks received a Ph.D. from UC San Diego after completing studies at the San Francisco Art Institute 
and UC Berkeley. She is currently Professor at San Diego State University with a joint-appointment in 
Chicana/o Studies and English and Comparative Literature and a member of the editorial board of the 
SDSU Press.   Hicks has presented theoryperformance, performance art and installations nationally, in 
New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles, and internationally in Mexico, Canada, Finland, Germany, Italy 
and Uruguay.   She was a member of BAW-TAF and Las Comadres.  She directed the Border Residency at 
Banff Centre for  the Arts.  Hicks is the author of Border Writing (University of Minnesota) and 
Ninety-five Languages (Lang) and is completing a book on rights discourse.  Her areas of research 
interests include Latin American literature, Chicana literature, Border theory, Literary theory, 
Critical  Pedgagoy, Rights discourse, Ethnomusicology, Microtonal music, Electronica, Sound as 
installation art, Performance and boundaries between theory and performance, Interactive 
telecommunications and Holography. 

Bios on Selected Advisory Board Members

Ricardo Dominguez, our newest member, teaches at UC San Diego.

Felipe Ehrenberg, artist, currently resides in Brazil. where he is Cultural Attache at  the Mexican Embassy 
working with the Mexican Ambassador to Brazil CecĂ­lia Soto.

Antonio Muntadas was born in Spain and has been based in New York and Barcelona since 1971.  He teaches at MIT.  
Antonio Muntadas' artworks take form in video, multi-media and  installation.  In the past three years, 
his projects have been presented in New York, Tokyo, Stuttgart, Jerusalem, Winnipeg, Helsinki, and many other 
cities world-wide. He recently completed a ten year video study of the art world system entitled "Between 
the Frames:  The Forum" which was presented in 1994 at CAPC (Bordeaux, France) and the Wexner Center for the 
Arts (Columbus, OH). He teaches and lectures world-wide; in 1994 he was an artist-in-residence at the Ecole 
des Beaux Arts (Paris) and Arteleku  (San Sebastian, Spain). In addition to helping maintain The File Room 
(opened May 1994).  He recently completed a project on translation.

Abbe Don received an MFA from New York University, Interactive Telecommunications Program.  She has consulted 
on projects for The Disney Channel, Apple Computer, Inc., Netscape, Sun Microsystems and Hewlett Packard.  
She specializes in Interface Design, Information Architecture, Digital Storytelling, and Virtual Community 
Development for Interactive Multimedia.
 
Allucquere Roseanne Stone received her Ph.D. is History of Consciousness at UC Santa Cruz.  She 
is currently Associate Professor in Department of Radio-Television-Film, University of Texas at Austin 
and Wolfgang Kohler Professor of New Media and Performance, The European Graduate School, Hamburg, Germany 
and Saas-Fee, Switzerland.  She is Senior Artist, The Banff Centre for the Arts.  Stone is the author of 
The War of Desire and Technology at the Close of the Mechanical Age (MIT) and numerous articles in her 
areas of specialization, which include Convergent Media;  Performance and the boundaries between theory and 
performance;  Interface;  Sound as installation art;  Phenomenology of communication;  Science and Technology;  
Transgender;  Body, sexuality and representation;  Film, video, and music production and Science Fiction.

Ernesto Solis-Winkler.  Humanidades, La  Division de Ensenanza Media Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios 
Superiores de Monterrey Campus Toluca.  He is currently translating Julian Carrillo's Teoria de la musica 
from Spanish to English.  This will be the institute's first project.

Jose B. Cuellar.  La Raza Studies.  San Francisco State University.
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