McKenzie Wark on Sun, 23 Sep 2001 21:02:41 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> from hypertext to codework |
Thanks to Paul for his remarks, but i think, as they say, that i want to break it down... >the problem with the digital media scene - it is SUPER > WHITEBREAD - there is alot more going on.... Yes, but when it comes to entities like antiorp or jodi, is it all that useful to pose things in this old identity-bound language? >think about precedents for theater and spectacle outside of the >normal discourse that goes on... Yes, but i don't quite have the freedom of movement that you do, Paul. As an artist, you can cut and mix in a way that one can't in scholarship. Its not the medium, its the genre. >this is a Mcluhan refraction of the old inner > ear/eye thing, but with a little bit more of a technical twist. Always been skeptical about that aspect of McLuhan, but I think Ong is useful here. He talks of 'secondary orality', which is the orality that arises within a literate culture, but i think there is also now a 'secondary literacy', the literacy that arises within an electro-oral world.... > Artaud was the fellow who invented the term "virtual reality" Oh really? Where? [scholar mode] "We must awaken the Gods that sleep in museums." Yes, Artaud is a good handle for understanding the global media event. My first book already covers all this. > this in itself is one of the major developments of 20th > century culture: the ability not just to accept the linguistic > regulations of a situation (again, Debord meets Grand Master > Flash...) - but to constantly change them. This is one of the major > issues that Henry Louis Gates wrote about in his "Signifying > Monkey" essay a long while ago Yes, i once wrote an essay on Gates' signifying monkey and Skooly D, who has a great rap about the monkey, the faggot and the fat-assed pimp. Needless to say i couldn't get it published... > Alan Sondheim is > perhaps the equivalent of an MC for Nettime Alan posts to a lot of lists and does a lot of other stuff besides, so i don't think he would want anyone to see his stuff here as representative. But i think that's a nice take on it. Sondheim as an MC of sense, of affect, cutting and mixing the letter to that effect. Everything Alan does is a proposition about how to read. >but again, the field > could and should be expanded at this point. Its your job to think like that, Paul, some of us have to work in a different kind of time. Its not about slow or fast, but about rhythms (all rhythms are the same speed as they all get you there in the end). Its about being untimely. Mixing past and present is another kind of mix. Blake and Integer. What is in that edit? I don't see it as invalidated by the other edits it passes over in silence. > 1) multi-cultural variations in language You're an American, Paul, to whom 'multicultural' means multi-racial. That's fine, but it is not the definition of multiplicity with which the rest of the world necessarily works. I'm not so keen on the compression of difference down to this narrow plane so as to squeeze it into American bandwidth. The celebration of multiplicity going on right now is a frightening reminder of just how narrow conceptions of difference are in the United States. > multi cultural takes on this are alot more fun... Well they would be, but American multiculturalism isn't much of a multiplicity. I find it tone-deaf to 'patois' that isn't minted locally. And look at the basis on which other kinds of multiplicity are annexed to its needs: the appropriation of postcolonialism, the Black Atlantic and so on. All well and good, but in the long run just variations on the self image of America in the world. So: there's a problem with the multicultural scene, its SUPER-AMERICA N. But, again, its not a criticism of you, Paul, but just indiciative of the difficulty of working in this place and time. Its hard to see the context, and how the context shapes the discourse. Thanks for the urls, which i'm looking at and learning from. cheers ken _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold