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VF 94 (Program)

The surviving shell of the 1994 Virtual Futures program, useful as evidence of how the event framed cyberculture as a live public formation.

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Archive condition

The current extracted text is too thin or too damaged for robust quotation. This page preserves provenance, section routing, and contextual notes without pretending the surviving wording is sufficient.

What survives here

Even in damaged form, the program points to Virtual Futures as a staging ground where philosophy, media theory, art, and technoculture could be assembled into a temporary public scene. The schedule itself functioned as an argument about what counted as emergent thought.

Program documents work infrastructurally. Speaker lists, panel titles, and event branding do the work of connecting otherwise separate practices into a para-academic platform.

That matters because scene formation depended on interfaces as much as essays. A program can show how an intellectual field announces itself before its later histories have stabilized it.

Reading note

Use the metadata and surrounding cross-links first. The current extraction is too thin to support a fully quotable reading, but the title and provenance still matter.

Read this alongside the later Virtual Futures materials, which preserve the event logic more fully and make the public framing easier to reconstruct.

Representative extracts

No safe representative extracts are available from the current extracted text.

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