McKenzie Wark on Tue, 4 Nov 1997 20:55:46 +0100 (MET) |
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<nettime> The Virtual Republic |
The Virtual Republic a paper for the Research Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences University of Sydney by McKenzie Wark "There is a witch hunt on United States campuses. Its not being run by hard-left radicals hounding their conservative opponents, as reported. It is the other way around. Conservatives are accusing the left of being 'politically correct', and PC is being used as an excuse to silence debate. The US media have been only too happy to amplify such charges. Australian media are beginning to pick up and repeat these beat-ups without questioning the evidence."1 Questioning the evidence is what I went on to do, writing in the Australian, back in 1992. Not that it did any good. 'Political correctness' became a key term in the 'culture wars' of the 1990s, even figuring in the federal election campaign of 1996. Here was a first lesson in the way what some call the public sphere, what I call the virtual republic, actually works. The term 'political correctness' does not actually represent any pre-existing state of affairs. Rather, it expresses a certain configuration of the passions that only comes into effect after the term circulates. What's more, it would be pointless for me to try and represent to you what the term means, for it has no necessary range of meaning. A search of a database of trade journals reveals that the term has been applied to everything from financial planning to shoes. If I can't expose the gap between the representation (in this instance 'political correctness') and what it claims to represent, then critique is useless. The best I can do is use it to call into existence a different configuration of possible desires. I can differentiate the term from itself, but I can't eradicate it. Uttering a statement on the virtual republic is a matter of affirming a difference in the way a term is expressed. It is not a matter of negating a representation in the name of the (mis)represented. This is a process of empirical investigation. I observe some things going on in the virtual republic. I write something about it in the Australian, the experimental zone that is open to me within the virtual republic. Then I observe what takes place after what I write appears, including what happens in the radio interviews that sometimes follow. I'm coming around to the view that media and cultural studies has to be more inductive and experimental. For many years media studies has been mostly deductive and critical. Media studies approaches the media as a reservoir of images and stories from which to select those bits that conform to a hypothesis formed independently of it. Media studies constructs the media in its own image. Media studies now has a very detailed knowledge of this object of its own construction. A knowledge that is useful for many things, but not for actually making media. I was involved in an experiment about this once. My colleague Catharine Lumby and I asked leading media and cultural studies practitioners to say what it is that they do, for a story for the Sydney Morning Herald. The result was that, while most of my colleagues seem to have a very good understanding of what a soundbite is and what is wrong with soundbites, very few can actually produce one. The conclusion: media studies is not necessarily helpful in actually making media. Now, I'm not about to embark on a critique of media and cultural studies. As should be clear by now, I'm sceptical about the value of critique. All I want to say is that there are parts of media and cultural studies that I didn't find useful in my work. I'm interested in producing a new kind of media and cultural studies alongside the existing ones. The canny listener might object at this point that there is nothing empirical about the way I arrived at a concept of the way a term circulates in the media. The idea of communication as the expression of differences rather than a representation of similarity is a sort of soundbite version of Deleuze's essay 'Plato and the Simulacrum'. What happened was this: five years ago I read Paul Johnson's attack on political correctness in the Australian. I also read Gilles Deleuze's essay. The combination of both reading events contributed to a writing event that includes both my column in the Australian, my book, The Virtual Republic, and this paper I am giving now. Or in other words, I'm refusing a hierarchy of reading experiences, where one kind is called 'theory' and the other 'research', or 'practice'. In my work, there are only textual events, experiences of reading and writing, and very heterogeneous ones at that. Every day I go to the newsagent and read all the headlines and straplines. Every week I go to Gleebooks and read all the back covers of all the new books. Every month I check out current serials at Fisher library. I make selections from this inductive sampling. These selections are not based on an a priori theory, but on the experience of previous iterations of the inductive sampling. The hypothesis emerges out of, and is continually modified by, the ongoing experiment of reading and writing. Doing this for the last five years, two emergent patterns struck me as interesting: the culture wars fought out in the newspapers; and the rise of Deleuzo-guattarian theory in the academic publishing world. This explains why I happen to be using Deleuze's book on Hume as a starting point for understanding the culture wars.2 There may be something quite arbitrary about this. But critical theories of media and culture are equally arbitrary. Why do we quote Walter Benjamin when writing about TV sitcoms as if this were the most natural thing in the world? While the critical method and my method may be equally arbitrary, at least my method produces results that differ over time, whereas critical methods tend always to find the same thing. 'Those who are my followers are not my followers', as Zarathustra says. While I'm grateful to those who have explicated what Deleuze thought, I'm more interested in how one might think differently, after Deleuze. So while the Virtual Republic doesn't use much of the terminology of the current Deleuzianism, it is deeply indebted to his work. My interest was in how his ways of thinking might be otherwise productive. Deleuze argues that Hume had a distinctive theory of public institutions. The idea of the social contract conceives of the institution as a limit on social energies that might otherwise prove destructive. In this tradition, government is always at best a necessary evil. The new left and the economic rationalist right share common roots in this idea. The state is a limit on the expression of individualistic self interest to the right, or on the identities of different communities to the left. Deleuze says Hume had another idea. Institutions are not a limit to the passions, but a way of combining and orchestrating them. Hume is sceptical about whether 'human nature' can be known, let alone reformed. He had a modestly practical approach to the shaping of institutions that might facilitate the extension of sympathies groups of people might feel for those close to them to a wider, more abstract community. Human nature is an emergent property, something produced by the assembling of bodies and institutions. It is always a second nature. Hume's politics was, as Oakeshott says, a politics of scepticism, not a politics of faith.3 Hume, and for that matter Oakeshott, are most usually read thesedays by high minded Tories, but I think they are recoverable for a social democratic project of widening public sympathy and understanding through the incremental and experimental creation of institutions. Institutions create entitlements. Entitlements to space, to time, to language, to appearances. Entitlements to a future, to the present, to various pasts. There are all kinds of entitlements. When they come into conflict, there is often no way of adjudicating between them. This I learned, not just from reading Hume, but also from reading Arendt and Lyotard, who come back to this problem of judgement after Kant.4 I also learned it through clipping story after story from the papers about Mabo and Wik. Among the many entitlements that require constant renegotiation involve those of speaking. Who can say what, when and in what manner? Who owns the past? Or the future? Or at least, who is entitled to speak of it? Questions that arise, not just in the discourse of theory, but in the discourse of media, under the heading of 'political correctness', for instance. Entitlement, it appears to me, is one of the fundamental shifting points at work in the textual events of the culture wars. Who is entitled, in the world of speaking and writing, to a fair go? What kind of thinks get said, and what kinds of relations hold between the things that get said? In Virtual Republic I explored this by following four of what I now call textual events, and by intervening experimentally in them. I won't go into all that now. Some of you will have read my columns on Demidenko and Manning Clark and Pauline Hanson and Christopher Koch. You won't have read me on David Williamson. The paper refused to run it out of fear that Williamson might sue. That in itself is an interesting story to do with entitlement and the fair go, but its in the book, so I won't reiterate it. What I want to do here is describe a concept emerging in my mind about what the hell I was doing. When I read Habermas on how the public sphere ought to work, I discover a very humane and plural understanding of what is good in the space of public discourse. But I don't get any sense of the time of public discourse. One of the things that happens in media and cultural studies is that experience of events is reified and separated off from the temporality in which it occurs. Talking about things as 'texts' facilitates this. One ends up in an intertextual space, divorced from the lived time of their intensity. The trouble with public discourse is that it has no respect for the tempo of academic work. It completely disregards the pattern of teaching and semester breaks, not to mention the temporality of study leave and research grants. So its not surprising that researchers want to refashion these unruly events into texts, which can be displaced from one tempo to another. But I thought it might be interesting to reverse the process, and write my research according to the tempo of the media, rather than vice versa. Or perhaps: rather than flattening out the multitude of tempos according to which textual events unfold, might we not read and write across a heterogeneous range of tempos? Or, another way of talking about the same issue. It seems to me that very often the form of media discourse becomes the content of academic discourse. This results in a twofold problem. Only media discourse gets critiqued at the level of form. Academic discourse proceeds as usual. The second problem is that attention to the form of media discourse enables its deconstruction and reconstruction in another form, in academic discourse. But because the process is incomplete, it provides no clues as to how to deconstruct and reconstruct academic discourse back into media discourse. The result is a media studies that, for all its ambitions to be a critical discourse plainly isn't. It has exempted itself criticism as a form of media more broadly speaking. By working across several tempos and styles of writing, I want to produce a version of media studies that in principle at least enables transcoding between any and every register. This is not the same thing as fictocriticism or other attempts to deconstruct the differences between genres. I see those as having a lamentable tendency to collapse everything back into academic discourse. The academy becomes a black hole that swallows every kind of speech but from which no utterance ever escapes. In publishing Virtual Republic as a trade paperback, I was trying to create a different kind of textual event. The problem with any empirical approach to the media is that it confronts a great ever proliferating mass of information. One seems greatly disadvantaged relative to theoretical approaches which have preset filters blocking out the vast bulk of media experiences from consideration. Here Deleuze proves useful again. His work explores the way difference produces itself out of itself, without any reference to an essence or limit. Differences can be captured and contained, turned into repetition. But difference always proliferates across some kind of zone. The way difference differentiates across a zone is the main thing. The blockages and captures of it are something secondary. Identities, be they nation and self or being and other, are only repetitions, points at which difference is captured and contained. This is a rather crude rendering of what is always a far more elegant metaphysical diagram in Deleuze. But I think its good enough to do the job at hand, which is to put it alongside one's experience of the media. Now, its not just that I think this concept explains the experience of the media. Its that I also think the concept of the media explains Deleuze. 'Explains' in the quite restricted sense that one can port a diagram from one field to another and watch it connect things up. According to Andrew Riemer, in his Sydney Morning Herald review of The Virtual Republic, "Wark spends considerable space discussing what he calls 'vectors', leading him to meditate on the cultural implications of republicanism, and so coming to rest on an essentially Sydney-style concept of pluralism."5 Riemer doesn't quite seem to get what these vectors are. Perhaps I've just never been clear on this. To me, a vector is any movement across a zone that has a particular speed and intensity, but has no fixed position. It might traverse its zone this way or that way -- its still the same vector. Vectors occur only in a zone that enables a certain freedom of movement. Have you seen those ads for the Telstra privatisation? Phones just ring, eveywhere, calling people with the news of the privatisation. Among other things, its a nice illustration of the vector field that is telephony. Teltra's telephone network is a vector field. A phone call has certain properties of speed and intensity, but in principle Telstra's phone network can connect any point ti any other point. I think Deleuze understands the movement of thought in a parallel way to how I've been explaining communication. Thoughts are vectors of a certain kind of intensity and speed that traverse a zone. In thought, as in communication, we only glimpse this zone of potential movement through the actual movements that occur. Beyond the observation of actual movements is the concept of the virtual zone of potential movements. A zone which, moreover, may change with each and every actual movement. This might be an expression of what happens when thinking thinks; this might be an expression of what happens when media mediate. I happen to think these are aspects of one and the same thing. The virtual republic is the limitless set of instances of what might possibly traverse a transubjective world of sense. This is the process by which a public comes to know itself and to produce itself. Or rather, the virtual republic is the zone of imminence that enables productions of public-ness and private-ness, collective identities and self identities -- as points of capture and repetition. The virtual republic cannot be studied as a thing apart. Our individuality is something co-produced alongside its public- ness. This is why we have to proceed experimentally. I cannot distinguish my private self as a space that is separate from the public world. But I can distinguish between two iterations of my relation to the public world. I can examine the change in myself from time to time. The virtual republic has an historical form. Its current form is that the vector field that creates the potential for vectors of sense is a matrix of institutions dominated by what I call a 'third nature'. That is to say, dominated by the media vectors of television, telephony and radio. I call this a third nature because there seems to me to be a property of this construction of the field of culture that is fundamentally different from its predecessors. Since the telegraph, information has moved faster than the movement of people or things. Since the telegraph, information has permeated formerly distinct public and private worlds, creating quite different relations between the spaces and times of culture. So among the institutions that produce, among other things, the extension of sympathy that characterises culture are these very new, very different and very strange institutions of the media -- from the telephone to television to the telecommunications of the internet. We know very little as yet about any of this. I was on Lateline a couple of weeks ago. Totally terrifying experience. Nick Minchin, Howard's special minister of state was in the Canberra studio. So too was Mark McKenna, the historian. Tim Costello, the Uniting Church minister, was in the Melbourne Studio. I was in Sydney with the show's host, Maxine McHugh. Now, the weird part was that while Maxine and I were about ten feet apart, I couldn't see her. I was facing in another direction, looking at her face projected on a glass screen, behind which was a camera -- its a simple trick for getting you to look at the camera when speaking. The distracting part was that I heard her and the other guests and the floor manager through an earpiece, but I could also hear Maxine's voice from somewhere out of vision to my right. The space in which we existed was almost entirely one of third nature, except for this nagging echo of Maxine's voice from across the floor. The topic was the constitutional convention. It took all three of us amateurs, Costello, McKenna and I, but I think we scored a point or two off Minchin, who is a real political and media pro. But what struck me about it was how much the whole impression have that Australia exists at all is an effect of a matrix of vectors, a vector field, called the ABC. This impression was reinforced by doing interview after interview about Virtual Republic, with ABC radio hosts from Geraldton, Darwin, Perth and Toowoomba, all from the comfort of a 'Tardis booth' at ABC radio in Ultimo. The Tardis booths are aptly named, for like Doctor Who's Tardis. they are bigger on the inside than the outside. In the second nature of the built environment, they are about eight feet square; in the third nature of radio, they a zone that can aurally contain any part of Australia. I mention all this to reinforce just how scary it is that this government attempted to lobotmise the ABC. And right at a moment when the vector field of the national media is more and more an extension of a global network of vectors. We no longer have roots, we have aerials. Someday we may no longer have aerials either. Now, this raises several interesting problems. Without a process of producing itself out of itself, the national culture simply doesn't exist. Third nature is what synchronises that process. The national culture is not much more than a particular tempo at which certain kinds of difference proliferate and dissipate across the surface of third nature. The culture wars, for example. A dispersal of ideas about what it is emerges at a synchronised tempo, as a host of media vectors distribute the same images and terms at the same time, but to wildly proliferating and differentiating effects. The media do not homogenise culture in space, they synchornise it in time. So what matters, for example, about the constitutional convention is that it has a certain temporarily as a textual event, rippling across the surface of the media. A temporality in which the national culture produces itself as a dispersal of differences. The res publica, the 'public thing', or 'public reality' is that common sign that circulates in its difference. The virtual republic is that zone in which circulate the unknowable set of potential things that the public thing might become. The idea of 'republic' itself, for example, is a public thing that circulates. It produces a difference in people. They become for it, or against it, or even indifferent to it. But either way, synchronised by it. The idea of the republic gets captured from time to time. It gets captured in the adversarial structure of media discourse. To be 'republican' means to want an Australian to be head of state, which is necessarily opposed to being a monarchist, which is the desire to retain the English monarch in said role. But sometimes the public thing escapes from capture, which is what happened for a moment or two on Lateline. Minchin and McHugh got stuck in a dialectic of opposites. The three remaining talking heads tried to prise the term 'republic' loose, make it proliferate, make it mean otherwise. Experimental media studies, as I conceive it, is more like an art than a science. It is about experimenting with the way that media vectors might carry significations that proceed otherwise. It is about that which might escape from representation and its critique. It is also about what might escape from the dialectic of representation opposed by counter representation. There was a great joke on Frontline once, where the Executive Producer wanted to find a psychologist to comment on air, and his Production Assistant could only find a psychology student. The EP was unimpressed, until the PA said that he might only be a psychology student, but he's got a beard. I mention this by way of expressing a problem I discovered over the course of this experiment. Who am I when I conduct such an experiment? Is that a matter of experiment too? Or is it decided in advance? The words experiment and experience have, after all, the same root. To be in peril: to undergo a trial or a test. There are particular roles for 'experts' in the media. One gets drafted according to one's speciality, one's 'expertise'. But what if one's expertise is in experimenting with this experience itself? One curious property of 'media expertise' is the odd way in which competence creates its own authority. Socrates proved that while the reciter of Homer is expert in reciting, he is not for all that an expert in subjects to which the verses refer. He may know nothing of the art of war, for example, or the geography of Troy. Likewise, Maxine McHugh's expertise is in asking questions about things, not in the things about which the questions are asked. The media expert is the one experienced in condensing a complex matter into a small set of abstract signs. The soundbite is a form of poetry. The experiment with the expertise of the media that is perhaps most interesting to conduct in the media itself concerns the expansion of the boundaries of this most condensed poetics. In particular, it seems urgent to me to explore alternatives to the 'call and response' pattern of the poetry of current affairs media. Everything is always a dialectic, in which each position both depends on, and negates the other. If totalitarian communication is about the rhythmic repetition of one cluster of signs, then democratic communication all too often reduces itself to the repetition of two clusters. At least there is change in this, although change of a somewhat predictable kind. The attacks on political correctness and postmodernism during the rightward opening moves of the culture wars created the space from which an answering voice could assuming a speaking position. Mark Davis did this most successfully in his book Ganglands. But one can observe some ill effects of this kind of media discourse, too. I think the failure of the rhetorics of social democracy in the Keating years had to do with the way they identified minorities dialectically, in opposition to an other, in opposition to an Anglo-Celtic majority. The perils of Pauline may very well be something summoned up by social democratic media strategies themselves. What Hanson spoke for was everything that for a good few years had been so loudly spoken against. Social democracy created the dialectical possibility of its own negation. The experiment of multiculturalism ran into difficulties, not because it tried to legitimise cultural differences. Rather, because it did not open the way for differentiation enough. It posited differences against a dominant and allegedly hegemonic other. The other articulated itself from the very locus where it had been projected. So its tempting, particularly for Labor, to abandon the whole rhetoric of the minority and join the jostling crowd of political populists angling for some alleged 'mainstream'. But I think a better solution is to head in the other direction altogether. To think of all Australians as different, and differently entitled, to make a claim on public affairs. My own modest contribution to disagregating majority is, in Virtual Republic, to open my own little crack in this monster 'Anglo-Celtic' culture. A term that would make my Scots ancestors turn in their graves. The Virtual Republic is a book that is not shy about speaking to the whole of Australian culture. I believe everyone who belongs to it has that right. What needs be more modest, I think is the authority of speaking from the whole of it. That is what needs particularising, for those of us with easy access to a majoritarian voice as much for those without. There is a past that marks one, that is the scar of history. There is the past one makes, that one tattoos by choice on the surfaces of everyday life. I wanted to create an outline of a tradition to which I could belong. This is, I think, an underestimated problem at present. In 1985 Meaghan Morris gave me a very good piece of advice. Don't 'Oedipalise' your relationship with your predecessors, she said. Don't treat them as intellectual fathers and mothers -- to be killed so you can take their place. Ten years later, in 1995, I discovered a whole band of would- be intellectual parent figures to the nation who were trying to kill off their own children. Helen Garner thinks we need smothering with mothering. Seeing that we have succumbed to a 'culture of forgetting', Robert Manne offered to go on carrying the burden of remembering for us. This was one of the more bizarre sides to the culture wars. As you might expect, the demonising of a generation as victims of an evil postmodernism creates the speaking position from which a range of voices have replied, from the Phillip Adam's collection Retreat from Tolerance to Mark Davis' Ganglands to Catharine Lumby's Bad Girls to Jenna Mead's new book Bodyjamming, to Tony Moore's ABC TV documentary Bohemian Rhapsody, which screens on December 3rd. I couldn't resist the urge to play this game, of participating in a re-evaluation of what is living and what is dead in the legacy of the 60s. But like Tony Moore, I wanted also to construct a possible past, perhaps just a myth of the past, that might sustain a way of working in the present. And so, in Virtual Republic, I wrote about the continuities between Sydney freethought, Sydney libertarianism and Sydney postmodernism, from 1927 to 1997. Seventy years of thinking and arguing and disagreeing about the politics of difference and the culture of autonomy. Whether initiated by moralists from Melbourne or the member for Oxley, whenever there are attacks on the plurality of ways of claiming an entitlement to speak, it comforts me to think that there is a tradition of responding to those attacks that has not only deep roots but a whole dense crabgrass network of tendrils, right here in Sydney. So while Virtual Republic unavoidably buys into the dialectic of the culture wars, it also tries to escape from it. The down side is that these experiments in writing otherwise are hurting my sales. The up side is that its still possible for such a thing to circulate at all. 1 McKenzie Wark, 'Hunted Are Hunters in PC Beat-Up', Australian, 15th April 1992 2 Gilles Deleuze, Empiricism and Subjectivity, Columbia University Press, 1991 3 Michael Oakeshott, The Politics of Faith and the Politics of Scepticism, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1996 4 See Kimberly Hutchings, Kant, Critique and Politics, Routledge, London, 1996 5 Andrew Riemer, 'The Cultural War Has Broken Out Again. Which Gang Are You In?', Sydney Morning Herald, 18th October, 1997 McKenzie Wark lectures in media studies at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia Mckenzie.Wark@mq.edu.au The Virtual Republic is published by Allen & Unwin http://www.allen-unwin.com.au frontdesk@allen-unwin.com.au --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de