1. A manifesto of manifestos

    Wherein I enumerate the elusive qualities of brilliant manifestos.

    1. They are clarifying and mysterious at the same time.

    2. They are inconclusive.

    3. They leave thready holes into which the reader’s imagination can spin its own connections. Like good fiction, they leave much unstated. Like seduction, like flirtation, they contain a suggestion without a promise.

    4. None of this amounts to obfuscation.

    5. They are lyrical.

    6. Their propositions are vague and untestable; a manifesto is not a positivist exercise.

    7. They are passionate about a set of details not previously subject to passion, at least not in the particular assembly gathered into the manifesto at hand.

    8. They make their authors seem both crackpots and seers in equal measure.

    9. They require a touch of naiveté, of dreaming, to maintain sincerity against the cynicism inherent in critique.

    10. They contain hints of the process by which they were derived; they refuse to conceal the tumultuous history that led one proposition to be linked to another.

    11. They are proclamations without prescriptions, offering a way of thought, not a solution to a problem.

     

    tags:  ma  manifestos 

  2. The Cult of Done Manifesto (old but good)

    I wrote this with Bre Pettis in 20 minutes because we only had 20 minutes to get it done.

    The Cult of Done Manifesto

    1. There are three states of being. Not knowing, action and completion.
    2. Accept that everything is a draft. It helps to get it done.
    3. There is no editing stage.
    4. Pretending you know what you’re doing is almost the same as knowing what you are doing, so just accept that you know what you’re doing even if you don’t and do it.
    5. Banish procrastination. If you wait more than a week to get an idea done, abandon it.
    6. The point of being done is not to finish but to get other things done.
    7. Once you’re done you can throw it away.
    8. Laugh at perfection. It’s boring and keeps you from being done.
    9. People without dirty hands are wrong. Doing something makes you right.
    10. Failure counts as done. So do mistakes.
    11. Destruction is a variant of done.
    12. If you have an idea and publish it on the internet, that counts as a ghost of done.
    13. Done is the engine of more.
     

    tags:  manifestos 

I'm Kio Stark. I write fiction, I write about strangers, and I teach geeks about ideas at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program. My first novel, Follow Me Down, was published in June 2011 by Red Lemonade. I'm currently working on a handbook for independent learning called Don't Go Back to School.

More here: Kio Stark

@kiostark

Contact: [mywholename] [at] gmail

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