Matthew Fuller on Thu, 26 Nov 1998 20:12:16 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Howard Slater: post-media operators: "sovereign & vague" |
POST-MEDIA OPERATORS: "SOVEREIGN & VAGUE" (Why Theory?) We have to dispense with the idea that theorising occurs after the creative event; that a poem or a track or a text is made and then, as part of its process of dissemination, there follows the theorising of the piece. Such a theorising is normally attributed to those known variously as critics, reviewers and essayists. However, what actually occurs is that theorising goes on at the same time as the creative event is being worked upon. It is complementary to the event and, more importantly, it is the continuous precondition for the event. There is always this theoretical supplement to any activity: a carpenter fits cupboards into an alcove and there is this ongoing process about the nature of the material, a questioning of the next step, and how it is best to overcome those obstacles, such as the unevenness of the wall, that present themselves. Similarly, when producers make a track there is a similar theorisation going on: what sounds to use, how they fit in to other sounds, how they relate to expectation, how best to structure the track. This theoretical component to any activity is denied because theory is normally attributed to a textual product, and like the role of the critic, this comes to exercise the effect upon creative producers that their activity is somehow 'below' this level of theoretical process. However, if there wasn't this 'auto-theorisation', which always includes context and recipocrity and which defies the division of labour and its instating of various dualities such as that between perception and conception, then there could be no next creative event as the process is always giving rise to tangents and possible ideas for the next poem, text or track. There is a thinking and an engaging with materials at the same time. Praxis. Process. Bearings that, in the slipstream of the creative event, offer an inkling of objectives, limitations and, crucially, autonomy. To deny this ever-present and constant theoretical activity, these re-orientations that include memory, interpretation and renewed possibility, is to conform to a definition of theory that is imposed: "it is forgotten that experience can inform theory, that theory is in itself a form of experience, that there is such a thing as a theoretical practice" (1). Perhaps a theorising that neglects such aspects could be termed 'discourse' and that this form of theoretical activity is so often hermetic, self-referencing and exclusory is maybe because it seeks to resolve problems 'once-and-for-all' within a text rather than filtering these through an activity that is constantly posing these problems anew. Yet, to re-create what is meant by 'theorising', to refuse to differentiate it from 'everyday' activity, experience and experiment is to be engaged in a process of de-conditioning. A process that does not confine problems to discourse nor seek to compress them within formal, specialised restraints is one that is engaged in 'elucidation'. The former approach is, in part, what the situationists meant by 'drifting': a reflective activity is not solely a matter of a 'large table and piles of books' but is as much a matter of the social-interaction of 'walking' (2). This situationist take on auto-theorisation, which relates to the Marxist sense of critique as opposed to criticism, was partly employed to differentiate their activity from academia and, if today this auto-theoretical dimension has been supplanted by the discursive, making this dimension invisible to practitioners who in some senses deny its existence to themselves, it is sadly sought and reconvened in the pages and sites of the media, where it falls to journalists to articulate our activity for us. (Media Pimps?) But flight from the academic and discursive towards the 'free space' of the reputedly popular not only reveals the still "clinging folds of the gown", but it does hardly anything to resuscitate and encourage auto-theorisation. Disciplining structures are still operative. The exchange of one set of exigencies for another reveals that the choice between academia and the media is one which requires, at best, an acute negotiation between dissemination and compromise and, at worst, a blind innocence bordering on unconscious collusion. Yet the increasing merging of these two markets (whose flagships currently seem to be post-rave culture studies and cybermania) can be seen in their cancelling each other out in a neutralising blur of middle-ground and failed promise. As with academic eulogies to creativity, when the mainstream media discusses creative processes it is normally couched in terms of what makes a poem, text or track 'better' than someone elses. That the 'Harvard System' of annotation is replaced by the interview situation does not diminish the degree of reverence. The canonical and the popular still resound to the familiar ring of 'genius' but in the media things are maybe worse in that a premature acclaim or interest in a creative producer can work to sap auto-theorisation by making the processes that inform the creativity into the motor of a production line: famous for a product; that product is replicated. Often creative producers can almost be heard to be in the thrall of the mediatised situation, where, with the interviewer engaged in the techniques of ego-activation, he or she is hardly going to take the opportunity to talk in general terms that could offer encouragement to others. If this does occur, if there is talk of context and an interplay of relations, if there is a straying from the specific subject at hand, then what occurs is the journalistic editing process that selects statements or maybe even, if the contents of the discussion are too eclectic and tangential and hence veer towards the 'political', drops the feature altogether. The most successful manipulators of the media are those who know that they are dealing with the promotion of their own product (themselves) and, rather than preempt a critic's review and move out from the unspoken confines of the interview situation, they choose, in many ways, to meet media censorship with self-censorship. But, crucially, one of the primary elements of auto-theorisation is the fact that it is dependent on being flawed and tentative. It is a space where mistakes play a vital role. The media space is, however, by and large, one of celebration, one where 'success' and the finalisation of product are reified into something that is unchanging. It is at this point, when the creative producer is immersed in 'promotional time', that the media comes to exercise its seductive and its parasitical prowess. The media has itself created this 'promotional time' and in conformity to it the creative producer comes to take time out, has a vacation in the media, so to speak, and discusses and pontificates on his latest book, album or exhibition. This media space requires that its subjects, obedient and pliable in the flush of acclaim and attention, suspend the self-critical faculties to the point that enthusiasm can be wrought into unadulterated jubilance. This celebratory context of promotion, censored and certain, can make most people who enter this framework come across as no less arrogant and self-contained than the discursive products of the academy. However, if the latter have citations and references to instil an idea of collaboration the media has very little time for 'movements' or the tracing of nebulous and enigmatic social networks and because alot of creative producers are in a state of 'denial' about the immediate influences of their peer group (scene) what is normally cited are the standardised historic reference points that best express the ambition of their particular situation. As all this creative activity is based on self-theorisation and is informed by the daily exchange of practice, concepts and techniques as a means of testing these theories amongst those developed by the self-theoristation of others, it is this component that the media is quick to edit-out and it is aided in this by the creative producer who, even if he or she wants to, doesn't get the time to broach this aspect. The elementary social factor becomes off-limits. This media censorship of mistakes, its obfuscation of the frustrations of the auto-theorising process and its sacrifice of the collective aspect of creativity is what makes it function to deny the existence of struggle, uncertainty and collaboration: "Origin in something else counts as an objection, as casting a doubt on value" (3). For the media everything has to be unique and complete and its casting of the creative producer as "the first" is achieved by denying the presence of precursors or allies. Instantaneity creates its own value. The media can't celebrate process or becoming. That would be to begin to suppress itself and, at the end of that fine day, it would return the creative product to its prosaic reality, bring it down from the reified air of its planned future posterity. And so, an air of unreality ensues. Everyone begins to expect a non-existent perfection and, awaiting their turn in the spotlight, are unable to address each other without the glare of this fictive mirror. Comparison, the benchmark of media quality control, begins to infect a scene and, abandoning its idiosyncratic drive it begins to compare and then to reproduce the norm only to find it is too early or too late. For this divisive simulation to catch us in its thrall it is necessary for the "invisible structures" of the media to remain absent. Journalistic construction is dependent on many elements, processes, that do not find their way into finalised articles or reviews. There is the selection of subjects, which elevates some at the expense of others (reinforcing hierarchy, individualism and competitiveness) and which is, more often than not, carried out in relation to readership-expectation: a fictive, self-perpetuating and generalising factor, that itself continually passes through discussions with editors and sub-editors. Perhaps at this stage there is consideration of factors such as the ease of access to subjects; the discussion of what is currently being supplied to pose as demand; the need for exclusivity, to be the first. These are factors that establish a media mind-set where, above all, a kind of narcissistic investment in 'profession' is mistaken for objectivity: the media not only 'constructs' the popular, as if the 'popular' pre-existed its journalistic mediation, but it then adheres to this definition of the 'popular' and thus perpetuates it. Access to the media then becomes a slow trickle because introjection of the 'new' has to be couched in terms of the already pre-existing. That there is a constant obedience to these exigencies of the profession via editors and that this obedience effects a journalist's modes of perception and communication means that even when research is carried out it cannot be turned into a 'processual' endeavour, a means of extending self-theorisation, but must be directed towards the final piece whose outcome is, before even being written, somehow already expected. This relates to the journalistic trade in "symbolic capital" where, in order to increase assignments (and assignments vary in prestige), there is a sense that whatever is said in an interview situation is subject to its being filtered via the journalists own agenda: an agenda that may encompass... subservience to an editor to ensure the status of regular contributor... to the seeking-out of subjects and material that fits neatly into the tenor of a long-term approach which aims at a book contract. In this instance, the pay-off is that the journalist enters into an exchange with the subject whereby the latter is offered the promise of diffusion because the journalist is structurally placed as a gatekeeper permitting access to a means of mass distribution and potential popularity. This latter point is itself problematic. Not only do journalists promise more than their actual access can deliver but, the whole idea of the popular becomes a fear of being unpopular and, like a child who seeks approval, we are witness to one means by which the media induces infantilism: there is a rush to conform to the proscribed limits of behaviour and thought, to seek not to be marked out, to never say or encourage anything contentious.But, there is another aspect of these "invisible structures" that are left unspoken and edited-out: cronyism. Here a meeting between a creative producer and a journalist is one that is mutually complimentary rather than one that constitutes an interrogative opposition. Both know the score and both use each other. Like any professionalism, adaptation to such "invisible structures" is an easily acquired virtue, because quite simply, conformity is dependent on the continuing acceptance of what is (4). They are seen as 'virtues' because, in relying on the suspension of auto-theorising and adhering to the job specification, they are socially-adaptive. (Media Whores?) Everyone knows a media-whore when they see one. It's pointless making a list because most people have their own. They're the ones that crop up everywhere and at every available opportunity. It's not so much that they are acclaimed by many or that their persisting visibility is a mark of 'quality'. No. The media whore is a grafter in more ways than one. A grifter and a grafter. It is a question of professionalism meeting professionalism, of slotting into the requirements with all the smoothness of a pixel-splicer. Deadlines can be met. Appointments adhered to. Soundbites well rehearsed. There will be no time wasting debates. The media whore won't rock the boat by complaining about how s/he is to be represented because representation itself is all that is wanted and the more prisms of representation to refract through then the more the hall of mirrors reflects, rather than distorts, the face of the media-whore. This is the "circularity of circulation" in which the media whore is caught. But it's a nice trap. For being visible attracts more visibility because visibility is not seen as the empty modus operandi of the media but as a mark of commendation. Not knowing, as no-one can, the full extent of an activity the media-whore springs to mind as the delegate of that activity and is endlessly invited to appear, perform and contribute by people hoping to attract enough of an audience to justify the grant. The media-whore, as a onetime creative producer, has seen through one process of auto theorisation and has now stopped to historify himself; for the more the product is seen and reported, the more it becomes increasingly predictable and, being repeatable, the academics come to view the output as having the necessary consistency to merit coverage in overviews. Having become generalised through the never ending circulation of a manufactured repute, the media-whore then generalises those who are deemed to be proximate and contaminates them in turn. (Recuperating The Media?) The episode of the media-whore reveals one major facet of the media: its selection of subjects and its continual presentation of them allows people to be witness to the way that the media constructs the narrow dimensions of its ever-expanding circle. Whatsmore, if one of the functions of the media has been a kind of A&R, the elevation of certain subjects that are supposed to merit attention, then, in a post-media scene the effect is reversed. Here, the need to avoid being overloaded by options and choices, comes to be filtered via the media in that the choices and options it offers are, on the whole, rejected. The media is used as a guide of what to avoid for, if a subject has successfully passed through the filter mechanisms, then it is probable that the product, sharing or overlapping with the media mind-set, is similarly charged with the consensus inducing properties of the well adjusted. But, a post-media attitude is not an anti-media attitude. We are begrudgingly attentive to the media because, living in the real world, its effects cannot be escaped from and, more positively, it is through the media that capitalism articulates itself. The media, a negative injunction, instates the social with an updated set of contradictions that are always in the process of being played out and if these processes are not highlighted by the media they can be covered and articulated in post media contexts. Jean Baudrillard expresses a facet of this contradiction when he asks "Are the mass media on the side of power in the manipulation of the masses, or are they on the side of the masses in the liquidation of meaning, in the violence done to meaning?" (5). Baudrillard's playful question points to the question of subjective agency and whether this should speak for itself or have others speak for it; whether it should seize the media apparatus or rejoice in the "devolution" of choice and responsibility. This points to contrasting political strategies that can, in a post-media context, exist side by side. There is the recognisably 'political' position of constituting ourselves as "subjects, to liberate, to express ourselves at any price" and the position of the obstinate and truculent 'mass', the object to which the media messages are aimed and which involves "the refusal of meaning and the refusal of speech... the hyperconformist simulation of the very mechanisms of the system, which is another form of refusal by overacceptance". Whereas Baudrillard is trying to refute the thesis that the 'mass' is manipulated by the media and that it requires 'enlightened' intellectuals to show it the way towards liberation he is maybe, by adhering to the cumbersome and undifferentiated concept of 'mass', not going far enough in imbricating these two positions. The post-media operators, as those that function in the space-between 'media' and 'academy', do not identify as being either intellectual or mass, and being both authors and punters, composers and listeners, artists and spectators their position is constantly shifting. This is what makes it an autonomous practice and being one that is unrestricted by the paradigms of 'feature' and 'thesis' it can be free to articulate the findings of its own transversality. For instance, if an increase in information marks the present times and if this increase is producing "uncertainty", a confusing array of choices and strategies, then this uncertainty can be recuperated by post-media operators to effect each pole of Baudrillard's playful dichotomy: we are no longer certain of being political subjects identified as working class or communist, but we are also no longer resting assured in our refusal to speak and answer back. We are no longer cadre or mass, and this is where the auto-theorising component comes into it, for, as post-media practitioners, we are continually engaged in elucidating the nuances of context and situation and the theorising, in many ways a nonverbal theorising in that it includes gesture, image and sound, is propelled by the particular exigencies of varying situations. If we are always working class and militant then our reactions come to be predictable but, even so, we cannot allow this dimension to disappear completely, implying as it does a resistance to the monopoly of the means of distribution. If in a situation we remain silent our silence is read as a legitimating compliance and, yet, this same silence can maybe make a supposed quietude pregnant with obstinate incredulity whilst also allowing 'transference' to take place: the media, in the rush to say anything, reveals itself and draws our prognosis. This chameleon-like activity is maybe a post-media recuperation of journalistic practice but unlike the bounded professionalism of journalists that demands hypocrisy, by becoming de-subjectified and replete, a personality and a cipher at the same time, we inadvertently merge Baudrillard's two strategies, and make theory and practice become co-incidental. This form of becoming, of never having remained, of being a "lingering residuum", may in fact have been spurred-on by the media's collusion with the constant overproduction of an acculturating capitalism, but a further post-media recuperation of it, allows us to be dispersed rather than localisable, just as power is itself dispersed and not present in any one space. The media is recuperated at every turn. From the aping of a record review that imbues this promotional form with an intensity and a social meaning to the establishment of web-sites as nodes of research that are independent from the media and the academy, the post-media practice learns from "the exteriority of its vicinity" (6). Both connected to and autonomous from the media, it is like Marx's proletariat who, on the receiving end of the capitalist mode of production in the factories and workspaces, know instinctively the meaning of the methods that are employed on it: manipulation may be met with silence but it casts back a disgust at the barefacedness of the manipulator, a disgust that accumulates and draws others into the orbit of conflict. Whereas a workforce, organised into unions, may too often have fought sectional battles, the creative producers of the post-media scene are disorganised to the extent that their sectional interests, becoming transversal, see points of contact and unification in their shared dismay of the methods, form and content of the media (7). So just as a vicinity to the media makes for an over familiarisation that effects a withdrawal of interest and the establishment of alternative media spaces, the media's persisting misrepresentation of activity leads to the recuperation of misrepresentation as a device to manipulate the media. In all cases vicinity breeds a contempt that increases to the degree that, as with wage-labour, a connectedness lays the grounds of an ever threatened disconnectedness. Just as an increasing exposure to exploitation at the workplace provokes the development of means to subvert the exigencies of the workplace by means of petty theft, absenteeism, brewing-up etc. so too are media messages recuperated by a choosing and filtering these messages: Throbbing Gristle used to recommend turning the sound of the TV down and playing music but there are a myriad of other possible detournements that can range from consciously using the media's banalities as a way of 'switching-off' through to using it as a means to activate the energy of disgust. What occurs throughout is that the media's power is negotiated and post-media operators are, in a sense, manipulating their own manipulation. Not only does this reveal the power of the media it also brings into focus the power of the post-media operators themselves, a power that, because it has diversified the levels at which it can place itself, achieves an imperviousness to power: by means of the "exteriority of its vicinity" it is empowered enough to be overpowered and, as a result, is sensitized to the dispersion of power which is not solely conducted through the channels of the media. (Pure & Elitist?) Auto-theorisation allows us to inhabit such contradictory spaces without having to synthesise them or choose between them. Activity is not the outcome of a discursive resolution, which would only lead to another discourse, but is the process that allows contradictions to be pushed in the direction of enigmas and provocative alloys. It allows for experimental positions without co-ordinates, it drifts off the map, flees from forced identification and takes with it the masks and tools that would enslave it. And so, auto-theorisation is a constant vigilance, a controlled loss, a permutability of the rational and the unconscious. Being both screen and projector, being the margins of a centre that doesn't exist it occupies a liminal position that, in continually being dispersed, coincides and overlaps with a post-media practice whose rhythms are broader. Being a no-space, being illegitimate, means that the academy can be plundered and the media copied, but rather than ape these and look for a 'new' that fits into the criteria, post-media operations, by reclaiming the auto-theoretical dimension, affirm those subjects and projects that are omitted: there is a place for history as opposed to nostalgia, for autobiography rather than biography, for militancy rather than quietism, for continuity rather than immediacy, for dirty timbre rather than slickness. And yet, the barbed response to these activities in the media, with its accusations of "purity" and "elitism", are begrudgingly and revealingly reticent when it comes to the question of its own static position of compromise. Ignoring the elitism of their own selection process they uphold a notion of the 'popular', itself determined in concordance with the owners of the media apparatus and provoked by manufactured demand, as the only criterion of 'worth' and value. This media craving after the 'popular' not only functions as a crutch-come-yardstick, it also reveals its adherents to be made-up of those who have never been in a crowd. And so, having been cushioned by a middle-class upbringing and by higher education they throw their lot in with this mythic 'popular', and by keeping abreast of the latest fads are made to feel that they belong. Of course, they then feel that everyone else wants to belong to the same club too and when they see this meeting with incredulity and dismay they bandy about their accusations of elitism rather than realise that there are people who do not want to belong with them and be judged by their criteria. Post-media operators intuit that this form of the 'popular' functions as a norm and that their refusal to follow such a consensus will be seen as anything varying from vanity through to elitism, but they also know that this is a risk that it is most necessary to take. Bearing-up under the common accusations, influenced by the media, of pretentiousness and wilful obscurity the post-media operators, being attracted to process via auto-theorisation, are drawn to those cultural products that are conducive to propelling the process of discovery they are already engaged in. In brief these are products that are critical of consensus and which draw attention to the determining "invisible structures"; they are, to a certain degree, free of being overencumbered by prior interpretation and in this way can function as sites for a "practice of freedom": a freedom of thought, a freedom of language and a freedom of sound. Practices that could not be pursued through the media or the academy. This thumbnail description may sound reminiscent of the avant-garde, yet just as there is a definite coincidence, fuelled by a historical inquisitiveness denied them in the media, the post-media operators, not being aligned to any strict categories, would enter into the same relation to the avant-garde as it does the media: one of "exterior vicinity". A common objection to post-media practice is that by not following the 'popular' route, by not conforming to an expectation of boundaries, it is not only difficult to locate but it is difficult to understand. Such accusations are themselves indicative of a desire to maintain the status quo for if a cultural product becomes too easily digestible, if it is too readily understood, then any thought of participating in the production of meaning is left on the shelf. By accepting what is already present, by becoming overawed or enervated by it, we are closing down the possible areas where the "social can be enacted", as it is the nuances of our own positions, their idiosyncrasies, that can be a spur towards action. This is precisely what the media denies. Its immediacy, the instantaneity of its communication, creates "a climate hostile to action whose effect is only visible over time" (8). Such generalised conditions of impatience that the media induces throughout society becomes translatable as a reluctance to take the time to understand and participate in anything. This in turn, in another turn of "circular circulation", becomes the reason that familiar forms, familiar sounds and familiar language are always invoked. However, it is maybe a case that we 'understand' too much and that really what is absent, and what the post-media operators are intent on providing, is a sense of radical imagination that is spurred on by using desire as the method. Free to go anywhere. Free to draw on anything. Free to say anything. Unmoored and without vested interest. Howard Slater Break/Flow (October 1998) 89 Vernon Road Stratford London E15 4DQ Notes. Title draws from two chapter headings in Adilkno's book "Media Archive" [Autonomedia, 1998]. Text spurred on by Bordieu's "On Television and the Media" [Pluto, 1998]. (1) Jean Laplanche: New Foundations of Psychoanalysis [Blackwell, 1989]. (2) Nietzsche, in retorting to Gustave Flaubert's contention that "one can only think and write when sitting down", replies by saying "only ideas won by walking have any value". (3) Nietzsche: Twilight of the Idols [Penguin Classics, 1974]. (4) c.f. Nietzsche: "What is, does not become; what becomes, is not... Now they all believe... in that which is". (5) Jean Baudrillard: 'The Masses' in Baudrillard Reader [Blackwell, 1988]. (6) Foucault: The Archeology of Knowledge [Routledge,1995]. (7)Each 'scene' seems to be served by its 'own' media - music, art, cyberart, literature, film etc - and whilst this isn't the place to go into this ghettoization that results from the division of labour expressed in the form of specialisation it is worth pointing out that post-media is a practice that cuts across the ghettos and rejects such such categorical divisions of knowledge and vocabulary. Interestingly the renewed attention to the 'conceptual art' of the late 60s and early 70s can itself be seen as part of a post-media awareness. The practice of artists like Kosuth, Baldessari, Buren, Latham etc with their "acceptance of the multiplicity of non-art subject matter" and their de-materialisation of art was indicative of an auto-theorising dimension that segues into that of the early Situationists and Fluxus. Autonomous publishing was an important facet of all these groups and took in such activities as the production of journals as well as the making of conceptual artworks that were dependent on buying space in the media. Praxis makes imperfect. (8) Pierre Bordieu: On Television and the Media [Pluto, 1998]. --- # 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@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl