Ed Phillips on Fri, 9 May 1997 00:18:49 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Tenure as Asbestos, colonizing the Avant-Garde |
Nettime Assay #1: Composting, Colonizing, and Criticism After reading Mckenzie Wark's review of the October issue on the Situationist movement, I went in search of the magazine. I finally found it in a bookstore. Instead of stealing it as Mckenzie recommended, I read it standing in the bookstore, downloaded it into my brain inbetween glances at the influx of browsing half-customers on random purchasing forays through the mall-bookstore stacks, all of us dancing on the limen between buying and stealing. I was sufficiently interested in the subject to ignore the manic movement, the floating world without inside our outside that some might call postmodern: the constant flow of shoppers, the panoptic vision of the ubiquitious surveillance cameras, the stares of the employees and lower management, and the sounds emitted by seamlessly rotating stacks of cds. I was struck by how boring the issue was. No wonder Mckenzie was so disappointed. The compost of an old radical movement was ready for use as PHD fertilizer. Neat and clean nerds were parsing up the corpse of a recent guerilla art attack on sobriety and the "normal." My slightly different reaction (not disappointment), however, was the sneaking suspicion that these would-be scholars, although "breaking new ground" and colonizing the "altered," were not in any danger. Even though Mckenzie warned that these scholars were in danger, they are in no danger. No matter that further downtown an avant-garde is still wildly flourishing. Our contemporary avant-garde is as far away from our October "scholars" as late nineteenth century Paris. The distance and the chasm between the space of our avante-garde and the advance guard of colonizing, straight scholars is as great in four-dimensional cultural space-time as the more commonly represented distance of a century. I'll leave off conjecturing about what that distance "is" for another post. Let me just propose here that it exists: a buffer, an asbestos, a handy side effect of the nominalism and atomisation of an accelerated, advanced money economy. If , in this cultural space-time, the distance between the composting of scholarship-criticism and the "oppositional" practices of radical movements is the invariant it seems to be, if the Academy is alway safe, then the most flamboyant and radical of academics and critics are just so many advance scouts for the culture industry. This sneaking suspicion, which we'd like to not even give the dignity of calling a thought because it follows us like an afterimage left on our retinas as we move from one discrete domain to another, this suspicion is so familiar and so oft repeated that it would not deserve mention if we were not all frustrated rubes, dupes of the many ruses of the "cultural logic of late capitalism." And it would not deserve mention if the forms of this vicious logic did not forever take such underhanded, ever new and twisting, turns. An image for this "cultural logic:" Antonin Artaud's rubber band held at the throat and pulled out-away from the tender wind pipe only to come thwacking back with all the fury of a material existence. I bring up the hackneyed "ruse of history" because I want to mention T. J. Clark. T. J. was one of the young radicals that Guy Debord kicked out of the Situationist movement. Mckenzie mentions him. Kicked out of the avant-garde and into the Academy, T. J. has gone on to write some of the most provocative Art History of the 80's and 90's, provocative in a safe-for-scholars-and-Sotheby sort of way, but at least provocative enough for him to pull out and away from most of his colleagues. Watch for the returning thwack. We can hear a dull thud coming from October. This latest dupe of the "ruse" is quite a historian of the "cunning of history" himself. T.J. writes some cunning prose, but not cunning enough to escape the logic of his "class" position as conference circuit star and compost turner; Mckenzie called him a corpse fucker, some would call him a leftist scholar. At a star turn he made, along with Baudrillard, at a conference in Vancouver in September 1986 called "Hot Paint for Cold War," T. J. prodded his colleagues and the assorted aspiring leagues of wannabes with a story about cunning "cultural logic." The wearied dissappointment in his voice was muted by the pleasant afterglow of strolling around lovely Vancouver, a good night's rest in a fine hotel, a nice restaurant. Not suffering too badly, no longer scrambling like Guy and Co. to come up with enough money to stay fed on the squatting fringe, T.J. was ready to prod and provoke. All the cunning twists and tactical turns, the street ready adroitness of an "actual" leftist movement were still in his limbs and gestures, and his words and analyses, so much more daring and fearless than the assembled gaggle of scholars who have known nothing but grant money and class schedules, brought a frisson into the room T.J. stuck it to them. Mentioning some Vogue photographs of fashion models taken in front of Jackson Pollock paintings, Clark says that "the Vogue photographs matter because they bring to mind the most depressing of all suspicions we might have about modern art: the bad dream of modernism, I shall call it. The modernist exploration of the Other to bourgeois experience--its dream of discovering the 'outside'--more and more seems a part of a general policing of spaces hitherto useless, and therefore uncharted, but which capital now thinks it can profit from and wants brought into the realm of representation." Frisson. "A kind of softening-up process: art prepares the ground for the real, ruthless appropriation of all those marginal and underdeveloped states which was to be effected, in the end, by the central organs of bourgeois culture itself." Drum roll. What we might call the bad dream of postmodernism: criticism and theory now prepare the ground. It might be as depressing Clark says it is if it weren't so obvious and so irrelevant. So what if T.J. is an advance scout for the culture industry, training his finest students to be clever compost turners and the lesser lights to be Sotheby's worker bees? T.J. is not my quarry, this latest dupe of the ruse, nor am I angry at October magazine. I want to ask what the use value might be of this latest example of "cultural logic." What is our particular, contemporary cultural moment; who and what is leftist criticism today? Can a street savvy, squatting on the fringe, subsistence scrabbler, net criticism return a favor or two to the upper-middle class, Lingua Franca reading, University as Mall, contemporary leftist scholar? T.J. has gone from one discrete domain to another and brought something of use from the other side. Can I reverse his trajectory? In this post at least? In his Vancouver talk he said that the "search for an 'outside' of bourgeois consciousness has sometimes gone hand in hand with an immanent critique of established forms of representation, and has been effective in a limited way." Flash forward to the latest October. No immanent critique of established forms here; the journal is laid out like a financial or a foreign policy quarterly, no squatting graphics, no riotous typefaces, nor even odd sentences. Solid, boring tenure-seeking missile prose. Cut and paste boilerplate to add to a cv pumping list of publications, they'll call it cutting edge and raise enough grant money to create a conference. Enough with October. If you want an interesting historical write-up on the Situationists, a street-ready one, ask Mckenzie to write one. And if you want a criticism that includes an innovation on and a critique of established forms of discourse, don't look to your friends in the tenured big house to do it for you, do it yourself. They are in no danger, they are light years away, in a safely sealed if cynically disappointed place. One more thing about T.J. which will lead into my next post: Mckenzie mentioned that Clark wrote some interesting stuff on late nineteenth century Paris and painting; he made his name as a writer, in fact, from this work. I think it would be worthwhile to reverse his trajectory again and make a tour of his writing on Paris, taking note of Benjamin's edgier forays into a history of Baudelaire and Haussmann's Paris. On Modernism and Scholarship, On Flatness and Representation, From Melancholy to Mania. --another subsistence scrabbler on the squatting fringe. --- # 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