Radical Software

Radical Software was the name used for an early video journal started in 1970 in New York City; at the time this referred to the content of information. The founders of Radical Software video journal were Phyllis Gershuny and Beryl Korot.

The video journal was begun with a questionnaire sent to a wide variety of interested people. The first issue was a creative editing of the answers to the questionnaire plus some additional special articles. The most outstanding element of Radical Software video journal was the style and emphasis used in editing. The content itself was a call to pay attention to the way information itself is disseminated. And it was a call to encourage a grassroots involvement in creating an information environment exclusive of broadcast and corporate media. It became immediately important and popular as it grasped fully what a lot of people had been concerned with and thinking about; giving its introduction a synchronicity of the ideas of the day.

Its editing was ultimately taken over by its original publisher, Raindance Corporation,[1] a loosely formed group of like-minded videographers: some with a philosophical bent, painters, and an aspiring Hollywood producer. Not all members of Raindance were involved with Radical Software. Ira Schneider was added to its founders list as his importance in maintaining a mailing list and some helpful suggestions were recognized. Schneider did not edit any of the original issues. He and Korot went on to be the editors after the third issue had begun. There was a split at that time in the editorial direction and the original vision was altered to comply with that, causing a fissure and Gershuny's untimely departure. Several subsequent issues were farmed out to other groups and the format and direction shifted yet again.

Radical Software's focus on early politically and socially concerned videos gave way to video art, which is where it remains today.

The current website of Radical Software was created by Schneider and Davidson Gigliotti. Neither Korot nor Segura (Gershuny) had any input, nor gave any permissions, or viewed the website, prior to its being published online. All so-called 'historic' information offered therein is strictly the view of Schneider and Gigliotti and does not represent any authenticity regarding events that occurred during the original publication. Reader beware.

References

  1. ^ Melanson. "Radical Software" in: Downing, John, editor (2011), Encyclopedia of social movement media, Thousand Oaks, Calif: SAGE Publications, Inc., http://openlibrary.org/books/OL24438261M/Encyclopedia_of_social_movement_media 

External links