jo on 4 Dec 2000 13:04:31 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] What a Waste! (part 2) |
Tourism The caravan or “sleurhut”, preferably filled with peanut butter and time-tested potatoes in the trunk has long been the emblem of Dutch mass tourism. It is no coincidence that the ANWB, the Dutch General Union of Motorists and Tourists is by far the biggest union of the Netherlands. I would say therefore that today’s emblem of Dutch tourism is the Internationale Reis- en Kredietbrief, which promises to solve any problem you may encounter while on the road. Dutch love insurances. Just as the Dutch grow up controlling water, they are raised to control money. The world record savings in banks and especially the pension funds are the financial parallel of the polders and the dykes. The fortresses of course being the banks, the locks the pension funds. That’s what made this country rich. That is the dynamic of hard core main stream Dutchness. So what would our collective identity, what would national pride gain by tourism to e.g. the Dutch Waterline? Here we have to try and distinguish between native tourism, the voyage or the pilgrimage into this heart of Dutchness on the one hand, and exotic tourism: luring strangers into visiting our shrines of engineering genius, taking in the message of Dutch greatness and making sure that they pay in solid Euro’s to finance the trip. Because that’s the only reason and purpose of the above mentioned policy paper: to create a win-win situation. Include all, fight no one and keep the dykes tight. So what am I to win, when I jump on my bicycle or my skates and ride along sightseeing the Dutch water line? Now like I said tourism is a tricky business in itself. I was told that tourism is the 4th major business sector world wide by now. That’s right after drugs, guns and tomatoes. Talking about Dutch greatness. Anyway the trick of tourism, and especially of seeing sites of Cultural heritage is the game it plays with real and counterfeit, authentic and fake. Every tourists who visits the grave of a great man knows that the man was not REALLY great, that he was never actually BURIED here, and that probably as a tourist he or she doesn’t actually SEE anything, but rather takes snapshot, video-footage or a web cam, added by replica’s, souvenirs and fraudulent frames called histories consisting of legends, lies and odder liberties. I visited once the quite new and extremely modern museum In Flanders’ Fields in Ypers, West-Flanders. Here you are confronted with a radical representation of the First World War, with its endless trenches, chemical warfare and the human interest aspects of poetry, letters to lovers and mutual Christmas greetings from the opposing sides. If you’re into that kind of thing you can choose to weep with the widows or die in a trench. It’s an experience, a re-enactment and you know it, and you’ll like it. If only because you know you have to leave the battle field at closing time. It’s a tribute to human misery and senseless war waging, but also a politically correct attempt at reconciliation between the former enemies geared now to constitute the new greater Europe. But for the people living in this town of Ypers it is hard to visit this museum. The sheer power of representation steals their private memories, and their indignation of what happened and what followed, what they were left it. It threatens their identity. Aggravating the very post modern syndrome of loss of self, loss of identity. That’s what I like about this museum, it forces you to realize that identity is identical with loss. If history and it’s representation are shifting constructs, so is identity, and collective or national identity is fake to the extreme. And that is exactly the tricky thing about native tourism, of making a trip into your own collective soul, there where it can hurt most. It has to be a success, this trip, because once you’ve been there you cannot just walk out and never come back. Because it’s your own, your own history, your own land, to which you are attached. Seeing your own cultural heritage as designed by architects, artists, historians and environmentalist can seriously damage your mental health! I therefore don’t propose exactly, but rather recommend assigning teams of psychologists specialized in early intervention to the various sights. They should be there for the native tourists with a latent identity complex who expose themselves to this risk. Because cultural heritage is of course today a playground, or a battlefield for a variety of mass mediators and cultural entrepreneurs. And so be it! Now the difference between the battlefields of the First World war and the Dutch waterline, is that the Dutch water line was fake from the start. It was a non-battle field, it was lying their waiting to fulfill it’s destiny of heroic victory or defeat (that’s irrelevant at this point). But nothing ever really happened around there, but for a lot of digging an dragging on. So I would say that it’s the perfect environment for finally and of course virtually realizing it’s destiny: a battleground where every one can compete and fight with all means necessary to impose his or her own interpretation and representation of history, identity, or whatever comes to mind. Landscape surgery? Cool! Attraction Parc? By all means ! The final inundation experience? Whenever you want it! We can even stage another civil war between defenders of the holy shrines and the free fields of fire, supported by local conservationists entrenched in petty nostalgia proclaiming the site untouchable, pitched against a coalition of visionary artists and entertainment industrialist like Steven Spielberg and Joop van den Ende who would like to re-edit the complete environment into a DVD offering you the ultimate experience of Total Recall and Jurassic Park in a typical Dutch dressing. But then again that would be another fake war, because they don’t exclude each other. But what has a stranger to win from experiencing the Dutch water line? Nothing much I’m afraid. As a Dutchman I can’t imagine that a stranger would get turned on by visiting these sites, unless of course we re-develop it in such a way that it becomes completely and absolutely unrecognizable for the natives. Which might not be a bad idea at all, now that I come to think of it. Also tourists, travelers and other strangers passing through can derive some identity from the host territory they visit. And yes, that can lead to cultural collision. And yes, we are curious to hear from others how they see us. So let us ask about the feelings of the pilots from the Luftwaffe, when they crossed the water lines. And do let’s ask the two young men from Ba Hu a village in the Chinese province Fujian. They are the two who survived the container transport to Dover on the 18th of June this year. A transport of illegal immigrants organized in Holland. Let’s ask how their identity was reshaped after passing through the Netherlands. How do they interpret a Dutch hand, when we know that it was a Dutch hand who closed the shutter of the container, which then led to the other 58 travellers dying of suffocation. Are we capable of putting ourselves in their position, the position of the enemy, of the invader, the intruder. Maybe not, because the Dutch are good in evading conflict, in looking away when things get high-explosive. They would rather drown their land and give up half of their territory than fight for it. They prefer to go in hiding, hiding their identity, disappearing into anonymity, accommodating to evil. And that’s cool. It’s the art of disappearance. Of not showing who you really are. It’s a way of being left alone, not having to bother, keep trouble at a distance. And that’s exactly what this Dutch waterline is al about: making the profile of the land invisible. So we can do two things to reveal this essence of Dutchness: - we force or seduce strangers to go through the experience of ultimate Dutchness offering them an intensive course of grondverzet (earth dragging), pneumonia and saving cattle from drowning, to kill the boredom of waiting for an enemy that will never show up - or we declare the whole environment of the Dutch waterline holy and untouchable, no access for strangers, no trespassing of any kind. A no-go-area. To keep it a secret. I’m afraid though that this second option would be the hit of the century. Because any tourist agent will jump on this golden opportunity to organize clandestine tours of the forbidden line. Dutch first of course. So this leaves us with only one option, the ultimate win-win: we close this wonderful environment for all Dutch citizens and reserve it for the peace keepers from out there. Because it will be mine field forever. “Het einde is het begin”, the end is the beginning, that is the mysterious title of one of the chapters of this Belvedere Nota. This revealing lapsus into mythical discourse, the discourse of the eternal circle of life, the never ending story of re-inventing something that you never had, nor missed nor lost was only three days ago exemplified by Research International, in an international image-research report commissioned by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. They tried but couldn’t find a site with sufficient sex-appeal to attract enough foreign visitors. They express the need for an architectural symbol of modern, liberal Dutchness. But all they found was windmills and all that jazz. So they decided that the real appeal of the Netherlands is its people, for being multi-cultural, reliable and helpful. What a tremendous disillusion! Really find this almost humiliating. The Dutch people, the most boring nation in the world! When we have our Water line! What a waste! © Jo van der Spek -- Jo van der Spek, journalist, program maker & tactical media consultant H. Seghersstraat 46 1072 LZ Amsterdam tel. +31.20.6718027 mob. +6.51069318 www.xs4all.nl/~jo ************************************** better a complex identity than an identity complex _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold