duna maver on Tue, 19 Mar 2002 22:07:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] avant.garde - transfigured or dead? |
This is a belated reply to Eric Kluitenberg’s ‘Transfiguration of the Avant-Garde/The Negative Dialectics of the Net,’ posted on nettime two months ago. Mladen Stilinovic, Croatian artist, once said it is good to be lazy, not just in art but in life. I am in fundamental agreement with Eric’s position: the disturbance of the apparently seamless surface of the digital media universe by groups like RTMark is indeed a transfiguration of the dialectic of the old avant-garde. But rather than seeing this as a sign of their challenge to the logic of the network society, to my mind, it is the mark of their obsolescence. Actually, this is not much of a reply since it engages with Eric’s post only indirectly by evoking the same three terms – dialectics, the avant-garde, and the net – though they’re walking down a different road. What follows is the last piece of a longer book, Twilight of the Idols. Hello. < 1 > The specter of the avant-gardes haunts the revolutionary imagination. The powers of the left once entered into unholy alliance with the forces of the right to exorcise this specter: the czar of Bolshevism and the pope of Fascism, the PCF and Charles de Gaulle. Pronounced a simultaneous threat and a nothing, a tragic farce of bourgeois individualism and political ineptitude reduced to monumental ineffectiveness, the specter is hastily written out of the pages of serious history. During more than a century of small triumphs and triumphant defeats, the monopoly over the production of this history has been protected and defended by the guard dogs of Marxism. What’s behind the desire to write a manifesto, one that would trump Marx by mimicking the gestures of a beginning that returns to the same point of departure, invoking one or another specter who haunts the contemporary landscape and who will inherit the truth of a still imperceptible becoming? The manifesto is a performance, it summons an apparition that does not yet possess clear contours, it calls its object into being through an invocation, a magic ritual. The manifesto is no mere representation, it is itself the action it demands, uniting the ‘we’ of a new group through the proclamation of new laws. The church manifestoes of the 1640s denounced those who deviated from the light, summoning the bearers of the truth of God. The communist manifesto abolished the false god of the market in the name of the truth of a new group in fusion who would inherit the legacy of state power. Manifestoes may negate, but only as a means to the affirmation of a new truth; they are essentially positive, programmatic, constitutional. Sure of themselves, they are always written in a declarative mode. We are, we say, we want. It is through the laws and proclamations of their manifestoes that the various avant-gardes instituted themselves as micro-nations, states in miniature. Surrealism launched itself in 1924 in the form of a dictionary definition: ‘Surrealism, noun. Psychic automatism in its pure state.’ It proclaimed the purity and truth of its uncorrupted desire and declared openly that it proposed to institute itself as a totality over the fallen world and ‘solve all the principal problems of life.’ Surrealism and the SI were only the most rabid forms of the avant-garde’s identification with ideological discourse, which is simultaneously the logic of territoriality – it lists negations and abolitions, affirms goals in advance, demarcates borders that separate the outside from the inside, and denounces enemies and ideas that exceed the limits of its own system. The will to excommunication and the juridical tone of these movements was not a deviation, some last tragic gasp of the avant-gardes in decline, it was present in the act of their founding. < avant.NET > The life of the avant-gardes has become a virtual geography. Manifestoes invoking the arrival of new forms of immaterial, liquiescent subversion assume that after the stagnation of the conservative eighties, the previous movements of the left, including the radical avant-gardes, have de-materialized from the streets to the ‘rhizomatic’ universe of the net. Critical Art Ensemble announce the disappearance of visible power: the power which was once incarnated in the body of the king or in the architecture of castles and parliament houses has vanished under the simultaneous compression of space and time. Becoming liquid, power seeps through cyberspace, an elusive entity that nomadically wanders the globe, a body without borders that changes shape as it moves. In vain would the war machines of subversion run after it on the streets. Vacated of the symbols and materiality of power, the streets are dead and not worth fighting for and defending – it is the control of information that has become the terrain of battle, and the name of resistance whispered in every enthusiastic ear is infowar, the appropriation of ‘data and/or means of communication.’ The net, in all its beauty and terror fulfills the promise of the radical impulses of earlier generations. The revolutionary vision lives, transfigured. As Eric Kluitenberg has said, ‘The strategies, the conceptual tools, the tactics of intervention in the new digital hypersphere are highly familiar. They draw on the legacy and experience of the avant-garde movements.’ The affirmation of the origins of tactical media <communication guerilla // infowar // hacktivism // . . .> in the gestures of the old avant-gardes is invoked by artists and digerati alike; the arsenal of the future is constructed out of the ruins of the past: Duchamp, Berlin Dada, Breton, the irreproachable Situationists. According to the new mythology, is only the geography of the gestures – their location in physical space – that has become obsolete. But which gestures, which avant-garde? < cyber terrorism > CAE has implied that cyber terrorism is impossible: ‘How can terror happen in virtual space, that is in a space with no people – only information?’ But people are not only their material bodies, but their relations, their accumulation of knowledge and skills, the information others have accumulated about them – and a manipulation of information can be experienced as a concrete threat. Some have called Netochka Nezvanova, the online entity who has ‘destroyed’ several mailing lists by unleashing a wave of panic over ‘spams’ against their citizens, the ‘great terror of the net.’ Just on a formal level, the resemblance between this particular form of ‘spamming’ and terrorism may not be so far off the mark. For the Social Revolutionary terrorists in Russia during the 1880s an assassination meant the direct removal of the cause of repression; after the 1890s, terrorism became indirect. The ‘propaganda of the deed’ of fin de siecle terrorism in France attacked an oppressive power by random violence against those ruled, against ‘citizens’ who were guilty for applauding the current order. An initial panic ensues; State functionaries, under the pretext of protecting citizens impose increasingly rigid and intolerant rules which actually restrict their freedoms. The ultimate aim of the second phase of terrorism is to reveal the State as the real terrorist, in the hope that citizens will eventually shift the blame to those who rule. Historically this reversal has almost never worked. Except maybe on the Syndicate list. The 10-20 average daily mails that NN sent to the mailboxes of the netizens were frequently in the form of attacks against the oppressors who were administrating the list or against the others who commanded some form of power and respect as the leaders of net activism. Pit Shultz, Geert Lovink, Tilman Baumgaertel were called ‘inkompetent pop.tart male imbeciles … whose m9nd aktivity resembles that of a housefly - only understand the trivial hence the state of things . . . following refuse - i.e. each other.’ Andreas Broeckmann: one of the ‘neu media kr!!ket dictators,’ ‘dezt!tut korporat.fasc!zt bagatela’ who makes ‘a total !mbez!l ov h!mzelv + h!z teror!zt anzeztrz.’ Mark Tribe and Alex Galloway of Rhizome: ‘laughable + destitute’ Thing.net: bunch of ‘inkompetent marionetten … invalids + posers.’ Syndicate: an ‘ART>MAFIA … DUMB + DEAD.’ In the Syndicate debacle that followed, NN succeeded in derailing the discussions and forcing the citizens of the list to take sides – either for NN, thus supposedly on the side of freedom of speech and ‘democracy,’ or against her, in other words, siding with the totalitarian, fascist, dictator administrators of the list. For a moment the tactic succeeded in inverting the blame. After the administrators kicked NN of the list in secrecy, a wave of protests and accusations of fascism and totalitarianism followed, NN was re-s*bscribed and the admins quit the list taking a lot of the long term members with them in a wave of mass-uns*bscription. Ostensibly power vacated its seat, and the list was re-occupied in another name – in the name of freedom, as the story might be written in the pages of history. Alexei Shulgin once said of NN, there’s nothing new here, we’ve seen it all before. Legacy of the avant-garde? ‘da.da da + da.’ Excommunication and terrorism were the twin faces of the avant-garde, excommunication as the form the internal relations among the group eventually took, and terrorism against bourgeois institutions as their tactic of external relation to their social context. The prudence of history would criticize the reprehensible excommunications but celebrate the hijacks and pranks against the establishment as strokes of brilliance. Bravo, epater le bourgeoisie, slap in the face of public taste. But both are driven by the same impulse, by a dogmatism convinced of the truth of its own theory and vision, and an intolerant dismissal of everyone else. The Surrealists hijacked a bourgeois dinner party with the same sleigh of hand as Breton later expelled Artaud, Bataille, Vitrac, Souppault and many others from the group ‘by reason of their occupation and character.’ The Lettrists hijacked a press conference given by Charlie Chaplin <‘you've identified yourself with the weak and the oppressed . . . but in the shadow of your rattan cane some could already see the nightstick of a cop . . . Go to sleep, you fascist insect . . . We pray that your latest film will truly be your last’> with the same ardor as the Situationists later expelled whole nations from their International. NN is the anti-climax of the avant-garde’s hysterical nightmare of persecution: everyone is guilty save herself, all the names of net.history who pretend to be revolutionaries are in fact reactionary cops and corporate fascists, all abuse her, steal from her, terrorize her, ban her from lists, deny the expression of her freedom. She is the only one in possession of truth and virtue in this war of words, which is above all a war of righteousness: David Zicarelli - cycling@sirius.com typed >>We have removed the user ‘netochka nezvanova’ >Truth - The `estimable` + `fashionable` [permit someone to roll the eye >komponents + faint theatrically] David Zicarelli has removed and blocked++ >Netochka Nezvanova from the MAX forum because she has posted >a brief excerpt from an internal Cycling74 communication which >David Zicarelli transmitted to all Cycling74 employees. >>‘she’ intiated what could best be described as a terror campaign >Absolute nonsense. Tell the truth. >>that included spam to anyone who posted to the Max list, denial of service attacks, >Absolute nonsense. Tell the truth. >>and threatening and slanderous e-mail sent to random individuals at McGill. >Absolute nonsense. Tell the truth. >>I didn't see any point to subjecting myself and my co-workers to this type of harrassment. >Tell the truth liar. trrruth. This first NN flame war on the list for MAX users <a graphic programming environment for audio and video manipulation from multiple sources; NN’s own software Nato 0+55 extended the capabilities of MAX> began after NN initiated a lawsuit against the MAX developers, Cycling ’74. After being thrown off the MAX list, NN retaliated against the list admin by creating a site in his tribute: ‘There were Web pages all over the place with swastikas and my name on it.’ This first list war revealed the personal motives behind the attacks. Katharine Mieszkowski recently speculated that power and money were behind the seemingly idle net.pranks; when criticized in the past, NN has revoked her clients’ software licence (which was already paid for), a veritable monopoly, she can afford to control the game and freedom of expression does not cut both ways. NN’s brand of ‘terror’ is just excommunication in reverse, and the people who rushed to her defense on the Syndicate were defending what they accused the list administrators of: a self-certain righteousness that is capable only of crushing dissent. And vice versa, by kicking her off the list, the admins were stooping to the tactics they claimed she used and they deplored, especially since the expulsion was decided off the list rather than publicly by consensus. The excuses given later were desperate at best, shamefully paternalist at worst: ‘nn promised to Syndicate admin to behave herself. it went fine in the first weeks / months. unfortunately, she lost control of herself again.’ It seems, on the contrary, that NN was very much in control of herself and the situation, and in the panic that ensued on the list netizens and rulers alike played into her hands. For or against, the choice itself was a choice in choicelessness, and things could have played out differently. Many of NN’s earlier posts, those that were not so abusive and self-serving, were provocative and amusing. It’s a pity that they were so overshadowed by the empty accusations and cheap insults which became so repetitive, adolescent, and full of ressentiment – but this was a decision to be made by individual members. The flood of emails were not such a ‘great terror’; the insults were extremely superficial and lacking in substantive analysis <fascist or nazi is the easiest form of character attack; saying nothing, it relies purely on hyper-emotional reaction> and it is an exaggeration to say they could have wounded anyone’s reputation. From a certain perspective, NN was by far the best performance on a list that had and become a string of announcements with little discussion. August 2001, when all the kitsch about democracy and totalitarianism hit the fan, was the list’s most lively and interesting month, as much for what was said as for what remained unspoken. >From a certain other perspective, this could be seen as just the business of art as usual. Older avant-gardes and classical terrorist cells alike were driven by a supreme cause, by the vision of an absolute theory – which was the source of their heroism and of their tragedy. In the contemporary theater, no cause is important enough to die or kill for, nothing is ‘transcendent,’ and immanence has become the order of a night in which all cows appear black. The absence of a cause and the adoption of a nameless identity could be a promise of liberation or the shadow of a catastrophe. Nameless Nobody, self-proclaimed body without border, wandering purposelessly from one mailing list to another, black listing all the names of power in the not so general economy of the net. Ultimately the cause behind all the covert tactics and agitations is sui generis, NN is its own cause, terrorizing lists through seemingly random flames and character assassinations as a form of self-advertisement. The third time, history repeats itself as innocuous farce, without substance. Terrorism in abstract form, void of content, aestheticized and mute. The image without image <or the nameless name> manufactures a myth that can be filled by anything, as rumors escalate and speculation feeds on itself. One person with multiple identities? A female New Zealander artist? A male Icelander musician? An Eastern European collective conspiracy? For some, the advertisement is seductive, promising something-I-know-not-what, the secret of the commodity that can be apprehended only as a fetish. Darling of the net who everyone loves, or loves to hate. Either way, all propaganda is propaganda. ‘Mysterious. Inapprehensible. Elusive.’ ‘Brilliant deconstruction, A1 quality. Intelligent, cool’ ‘Geographical deconstruction. Gender deconstruction. Identity corruption.’ ‘NN's reputation is based on mouth 2 mouth adverti.cement. When something is very well konstruckted and designed with a degree of integrity it stands on its own ... All the cool girls wear NN.’ Everything is made and unmade in the mirror image of consumption. You are either with us or you are uncool. The ultimate terror is that of being out of fashion with the times + + symbolically dead. < detournement? > Detourne: a verb used, among other things, to describe the hijacking of a plane. The SI may have come up with the name detournement, but the practice was first stumbled upon by the previous era of the avant-gardes. In 1919 Johannes Baader, Berlin Oberdada, interrupted a meeting of the Weimar National Assembly and threw fliers from the balcony onto the heads of the statesmen below announcing his candidacy for the presidency of the world. The press reported that the country’s leading politicians had been publicly insulted. Probably they had been insulted before on many occasions, but this one was not in the form of ideological discourse they were familiar with. No assertions or rebuttals. Was it political speech? Was it theater? It was an answer to politics but not from the ‘inside’ by using the same language or adopting the same presuppositions. It was not dialectical – dialectics negates only what is irrational, inconsistent, or dogmatic in the system, ultimately to perfect and strengthen it. <Marx may have criticized the irrationality of capitalism - the theft of surplus, the spawning of alienation, the degradation and misery of those who were deprived of the fruits of their labor – but preserved the values and presuppositions of its ‘rational’ kernel – the valorization of production, the goal of continuously expanding productive forces, the instrumental use of technology. By preserving the forms but altering the content (putting it in the hands of the proletariat) the whole system can be transformed from the inside, made more rational, more democratic, more productive; eventually the form itself would change and repressive institutions would wither away. By the 1960s and 1970s it first dawned on the ex-Marxist left <Castoriadis, later Baudrillard and Deleuze> that dialectics never gets ‘outside’ what it criticizes – its negation is already prefigured by the logic of the system itself. Actually Bakunin had made this same criticism a century before, after being thrown out of the First International by Marx and Engels.> Baader’s detourned negation made no overt criticism, and put forward no demand for the transformation of the content of the Assembly’s program – his demand for world presidency was a prank, making a joke out of politics rather than engaging in it on its own terms. He did not seek to take over the National Assembly in the name of a new movement. The politicians and press who answered the gesture did not know what to make of it. It was not the kind of kind of thing they were used to, its power to disrupt was precisely that it was unexpected. Detournement, in updated jargon, has become communication guerilla, cultural jamming, aesthetic sabotage, infowar - but are the gestures so unexpected almost a century later? The most interesting thing about RTMark is the illusion of the real – for a moment some unsuspecting visitors who entered their fake WTO or Bush or other sites and read the inverted messages of their pages did not know what to make of it since they believed them to be genuine sites. For these sites RTMark simply copied the layout, graphics and images from the originals, and altered the content. The fake WTO site <www.gatt.org, named after the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade> doesn’t celebrate global free trade but criticizes the WTO’s lack of socio-environmental responsibility, replacing WTO documents with counter-documents of groups protesting globalization. And maybe it should be stressed that it is an *unsuspecting few* visitors who are fooled. The sites got millions of hits after the story broke in the mainstream press, and those rushing to check them out already knew they were ‘fake’ sites. Surprisingly, some bewildered few still stumble upon them and continue to be fooled. The fact that RTMark has gotten invited to speak as real representatives of the WTO ‘by mistake’ and that their hilarious performances as impostors of the real went unquestioned by the audience members is perhaps only a testimony to the incredible stupidity of the liquiescence of power. The then presidential-hopeful GWBush protested against the fake RTMark site <which accused him of hypocrisy and drug use> by denouncing it as a form of routine negative campaigning. In a sense, it could be said that the politicians and the press did not know what to make of it because it was an unexpected thing and they didn’t recognize its language or its aims. But to give some credit to Bush’s gullibility, RTMark’s form of tactical media uses the same language and the same strategy as political ads. The gullible are confused because the similarity is too close. And maybe it is the similar *form* of this strategy and the desire to be mistaken for the real thing which should be questioned. RTMark videos and websites, which dwell by choice in the language of corporate advertising, attempting to use the height of banality against itself, seem stuck by necessity in the mire of this same banality. RTMark productions are an occupation of the form <of media and capitalism in simultaneity, as corporate advertising> with an inversion of its content. When Daniel Cohn-Bendit once proposed making a leftist western by just changing the soundtrack, Debord answered that the homogenous, unbroken form of the western would preserve the ideology behind it, offering a complacent, facile consumption. Preserving the form and just changing the content was insufficient, especially a change of content in the form of a reversal. ‘Detournement by simple reversal is always the most direct and the least effective. The Black Mass . . . merely reverses – and thus simultaneously conserves – the value of that metaphysics.’ Satanism may be heretical, but it’s still a religion, the whole field of ritual and subordination before a superior power is preserved in it. Baader may not have aspired to become a real politician, but Breton did when founded a ‘Bureau’ of surrealist research and modeled the organization of the group on the French Communist Party. The Situationists held real congresses and aspired to become an International <modeled after the first one> with altered demands. As a practice detournement reflected a contradiction at the level of theory between the recognition that fighting on the same terrain and wanting to be taken for the real thing is a seductive but inevitable trap, and the desire <expressed in the hijacking metaphor> to occupy the old buildings of power under a new name, with new demands. Detournement was a momentary line of flight out of dialectics, and also a reterritorialization on familiar ground. Alex Burns from Disinformation remarked that RTMark uses ‘dialectical reasoning’ – they prefer ‘to subvert the system from within’ in contrast to other acts of resistance which want to ‘dismantle the corporate system altogether.’ This is not a criticism by Burns, who celebrates RTMark’s dialectical ingenuity; the only danger he foresees is the external one of being recuperated by corporations <who can ‘steal’ their tactics>, rather than a problem with the choice of dialectical method itself. As a dialectical gesture, RTMark is an inversion of corporatism from within, an identification with the corporate image in order to reveal and oppose its abuses. In legal terms, RTMark is a real corporation, selling mutual funds, even if they are mutual funds for corporate sabotage. The detourned content is amusing, and the issue they raise is significant: corporations have aggregated powers under the law of limited liability that are technically illegal for persons: corporations have only rights, but no responsibility. But RTMark proudly admit to using the same legal form of limited liability as a protection against the potential risk of prosecution for their sabotage activities – they depend on what they denounce as an abuse when used by ‘real’ corporations. Using the same graphics and language of the Internet brokerage sites of the late 1990s, RTMark mirrors the Internet stock corporation. Using the same tactics of exaggeration and spin as mass media, RTMark mirrors the banality of media scandals. Mark Amerika has noted that especially in the Toywar campaign RTMark’s press releases were ‘skewed in a way that essentially mimics the way corporate press releases are skewed, complete with sound-bite blurbs, website addresses for further information, and self-reflexive advertisements for RTMARK art products (projects).’ Taking the logic of corporate advertising to its limit, RTMark is not above skewing information to enhance its own image. Some of the projects which they claim under their own sponsorship and direction are Toywar <which was a very large collective effort>, FloodNet <which was developed by EDT, who never got any money for project development from RTMark> and the idea of prêt a revolter <colorful clothing that is ready to revolt, made of resistant parts of water bottles, complete with micro-cameras hidden in fake breasts – created for anti-globalization protests in Barcelona last summer by several different designers, though the project itself was initiated by the Spanish group Las Agencias>. RTMark may include real individuals, but is just an abstraction, a shell, the mirror image of a boss appropriating the work done by many workers in the struggles against corporatism. RTMark is a corporation in reverse, a corporation with an alternative message that mimics the same mode of operation as their opposition. As with any corporation, the aim is the maximization of profit, and profit is always counted in numbers. RTMark define their most successful projects as those that ‘got the most press’ and in the battle for press coverage ‘Quality is less important than quantity, I guess you could say, we spend a lot less time fretting about the gemlike qualities of projects than about their effectiveness. Just let them keep coming, and faster and faster!’ The quantity of articles and mentions in the press housed in the archive of symbolic capital on RTMark website is indeed impressive. Over 650 press items, including NY Times, Time Magazine, Wall Street Journal, CNN, Village Voice, Wired, Playboy, Fringeware, Suck, Slashdot, Telepolis, ArtNetWeb, ArtByte; hundreds of mentions in foreign press: Spain, France, Britain, Germany, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland, Netherlands, Finland, Norway, Sweden, China, Japan, South Africa. In this battle over the control of the media by its own means of manipulation to promote the RTMark corporate image as a veritable monopoly of subversion, the most important victory is the accumulation of images. < infowar > The legal battle at the end of 1999 between the billion dollar toy dot.com eToys and the European art group etoy was one of the important events in the history of the Internet, since it was precisely the possible use, legality, and future direction of the net that were at stake. The facts of the case were that etoy had existed and had its domain name first; the demand by eToys that etoy change its domain on the grounds that the similarity of the names was confusing eToys’ customers and hurting its business was spurious and the legal injunction it obtained against etoy was bordering on illegality – this all served as a realtime demonstration that money determines the rights to operate in cyberspace and is behind the so-called impartiality of the justice system. But the myth of this epic battle suffered from its own exaggerations. RTMark credited the campaign which they directed with crippling the eToy servers and with the eventual ‘70% decline in the value of eToys stock.’ The numbers on the Toywar site are even more impressive as are attributions of the causes and effects: ‘result: within 2 months the eToys Inc. stock (NASDAQ: ETYS) dropped from $67 (the day the battle started) to $15 (the day eToys Inc. finally dropped the case). TOYWAR was the most expensive performance in art history: $4.5 billion dollars.’ Reinhold Grether, one of the key players in the campaign, portrayed the war as ‘a conflict between two lifestyles, one consumerist, giving absolute priority to acquisition, in this case, a domain, and the other artistic, declaring the exhibition of complex social practices, rather than art objects, as the object of art.’ But was the war between eToys and etoy a conflict between consumerism and the purity of anti-corporate art as the social construction of an alternative style of life, or was it a conflict between different market segments of consumerism? After all, as etoy has insisted over and again ‘We are not anti-corporate. That's something people don't understand. We are an overdrive corporation with surreal goals. We sell nothing except ourselves. We don't promise any revenue, except excitement and maybe a little bit of confusion.’ Etoy sells itself, it barters its image. As Geri Wittig remarked to etoy in an interview, ‘Your look and your stance exudes a very stylish, militaristic quick response tactic.’ This stylish militarism also depends on wearing the same uniform, looking alike, and giving the impression of the interchangeability of toy soldiers (or members of a gang). As Etoy confessed, ‘it makes it impossible for women to enter the group, or for black people to enter the group, because it would destroy the concept’ of its uniformity. The Toywar campaign helped to boost sales not only of etoy.shares, but of the image of subversion which was on demand by an increasingly large consumer public: ‘we give about five interviews a day in America at the moment.’ After the victory, the toywar.shop became more specialized, selling not only standard etoy.shares, but offering the consumer the option to ‘customize your purchase’ by adding ‘T-SHIRTS and CD'S to your basket.’ CDs were a bargain at $20. ‘please check the amount of articles as well as the total amount in USD before the final submission.’ The many support sites that sprang up during Toywar capitalized on an incredibly puerile image of warfare, an image capable of seducing only adolescent boys, even if its target audience proved to be older. The Toywar UK site under the direction of ‘Captain Smithers’ launched its own internet offensive against eToys as a sign of support. The site featured e*bombs in the forms of alternative news service and mailing lists. ‘The e*bomb blast radius was global and it rendered eToys.com powerless. VIVA la e*bomb! Thousands of friendly fire e*bombs detonated, and no one hurt! Pure 21st century FIRE POWER!’ In this postmodern fantasy of revolution the jargon of righteous war has become more timid and cautious, eliminating the risk of action through a detour of rhetoric, bowing, in the end, to political correctness. The image of war is sexy not just in the popular imaginary of television, but among the more refined tastes of the militant left and the radical art crowd. The indiscriminate forms of its rhetoric and gestures are legion, though the mask as a symbol of the terrorist or the guerilla stands out as one of the new trends of identification, from the multitude who gather in the street borrowing the checkered mask of a Palestinian holy war, to RTMark, who don the pantyhose of the bank robber in their videos, and Ricardo Dominguez who performs the story of electronic civil disobedience in an EZLN mask, as a gesture of identification with the cause of the Zapatistas. The context of the performances are to evoke the Zapatistas’ Mayan technology which differentiates their tactics (offering a rose or a poem or an unanswerable gesture as an answer to military power) from those of guerilla struggle of the twentieth century. The Zapatistas say they use masks so that people won’t be beguiled by their beauty but pay attention to the power of their words. But in this EDT performance, it is the power of the words that speak of the different form of struggle of the Zapatistas that is obscured as the audience identifies with the image of the mask. The mask is the identity, the words are secondary, and the identity of the mask is prefigured in advance by the associations it has in the contemporary stage of the media. The media spectacle needs a boogey of opposition to the righteous war of democracy and the right to consume, and after the collapse of the big other of ‘Eastern Europe,’ the image of a man dressed in black wearing a mask has now become the mass medias perfect fantasy, the face against which it can define its own values. Whatever may be behind the mask of the militant, the media will capitalize upon it in reverse for the sake of the ideology it serves. Making a fetish of the image of the terrorist or guerilla has become both pious and stupid, even in the aestheticized form of the avant-gardes, as the theatricalization of some nameless revolution. The identification with the logic of warfare was always the worst militant aspect of the avant-gardes. If, the avant-gardes were a momentary instantiation of a great promise, speaking in a different language outside the banality of organized politics, they were simultaneously the ridiculous quarrels over names and concepts, vicious arguments about ideological correctness, exclusions of deviations, puerile antics, and the inflated machismo of warfare. The desire to proclaim the avant-garde an unfinished project – something triumphant that still lives and inevitably returns to fulfill a secret history – preserves all these characteristics. Above all, it preserves the militarism inherent in the metaphor of the ‘avant-garde’ – the avant-garde as an elite group, organized by strict military discipline, going out first and paving the way for the attack, perhaps sacrificing itself in the end so the army can finally advance the cause of its righteous war. If this metaphor started out as a blank parody, it became real with the march of history. The avant-gardes, for all their dress rehearsals and posturings became, in their relations to each other and to the opponent they claimed to despise, nothing more than the magical face of the double, its inverted mirror. Drawing upon their strategies, conceptual tools, and tactics of intervention summons not the specter haunting a new epoch, but a corpse in absolute decomposition. Someone once said a long time ago ‘The most urgent expression of freedom is the destruction of idols, especially when they claim to speak in the name of freedom.’ It is true that the destruction of idols itself can speak in the name of a freedom that is just as illusory, including the destructions of the present. But the wisdom of silence is the most difficult thing to attain, since it does not reveal itself in the image of consumption. < opposition > Electronic civil disobedience is neither terrorism nor acts of cultural jamming, detournement, or media pranks. CAE define the manipulation of the media in the service of an alternative message as a losing battle; any subversive message is lost in the flood of information or is itself detourned through spin. If there is such a thing as infowar, maybe it should be understood as the war against information rather than a war of counter-information. Denying the power of propaganda, CAE praise the effectiveness of a direct battle with power. Simple trespass and blockage of data and their conduits can force the state or the military or corporations to make policy changes because it may prove cheaper for them than the threat of the loss of profits from information. As people joined together to physically blockade the entrances to the opponent’s house of power in earlier forms of civil disobedience, participants in electronic civil disobedience can join a virtual sit-in from anywhere there is access to the internet in order to block access to the opponent’s website. If the promise of ECD remained a theory until 1998 for CAE, the faction of the group which took the name Electronic Disturbance Theater actualized it in the form of FloodNet, a software which sends reload commands to the targeted site’s server every few seconds. When enough participants are simultaneously pointing the FloodNet URL toward an opponent’s site <Mexican government, Pentagon, Frankfurt Stock Exchange, eToys, EMF> a critical mass of users can prevent access to the site because there are too many requests to be accommodated – in theory, at least, since these kinds of sites can sustain millions of hits without a problem. But is the direct intervention of ECD about bringing power to the bargaining table and getting concessions in the form of policy change? If the aim were simple trespass and blockage, a single hack would be more efficient in bringing down a server and blocking information. The point of the virtual sit-ins is to get across how widespread the protest is rather than the denial of access to data or their conduits. The aim seems to be not trespass and blockage but gaining a critical mass. A policy negotiation is a closed form, an exchange of threats between a vanguard of activists and the functionaries of power; the form and effect of a virtual sit-in is something very different – a kind of contagion, a movement of outward expansion, the feeling of participating in something, even though its contours may be vague. And this vague feeling of participating in something that escapes the dialectic of global capital is often hijacked by being turned into the declaration of a war of opposition. When the ‘multitude’ come together in a virtual-sit-in <in opposition to one or another particular website> or on the street in a show of power against the forces of capitalism, they don’t escape its dialectic. The form assumed by the association and linkage of individuals is based and mediated by the cause it is opposing, rather than on the desires and aspirations of the participants, and on their interests in each other. To subordinate the process of fusion to the goal of a coalition – driven by a single cause, one that is negative, directed against conquering some small concessions from power – is not a collaborative construction of a new form of being, as much as it is a formal repetition of a cycle of enslavement and retribution. Opposition misses the mark, though it is very successful in the media. When tactical media seek to smash the code, to disrupt the seamless surface of digital mediation, of corporate power, of whatever abstract form the boogey of opposition takes, they are determined by their enemy. They oppose the false, ideological shell of their enemy with counter-statements made from a counter-perspective - a perspective they never question, because it is self-evident. The energy and source of their self-valuation derives from their act of negation. Negation can be a splendid thing, a source of exhilaration and an experience of increased power, as the limits imposed artificially on the self by the myriad forms of micro-oppressions are temporarily transcended, transgressed. But this is a potentially endless cycle of negation ad infinitum, unto death; the satisfaction of negation is only temporary, its hunger renewed again. The coalition of activists who swarm through the network may not be the best form for constructing a new entity in fusion; support for a cause, especially in the form of opposition to an abstract enemy, is easy to get for a few hours online and requires little commitment, but a collaboration based on trust and reciprocal interest in other people is more difficult. This kind of collaboration works best in an encounter that doesn’t measure success in terms of numbers, speed, or the corporate logic of the network society, which always subordinates the present to the demand for a future goal and profit. Last year a number of individuals and small groups came together <including Ricardo Dominguez, who did not come as a representative of EDT> to try to establish a loose form of association between different net.culture clubs and media centers. This association was not a coalition, because there was no common goal or interest or ideological uniformity among participants from the different regions - Europe, east and west, America, north and south - and because there was no overall plan which could be imparted to different ‘sections’ of some would-be international. One of the criticisms this meeting received was that the thing in fusion it invoked had no real cause for being, that it lacked a definitive reason for making the association in the first place, other than some vague aspiration to share what each group had in resources and experience with each other or a seemingly banal desire to travel and meet with others to participate in and learn about the process each had started in their own location. The absence of a cause can sometimes be the shadow of catastrophe or the promise of liberation. < 0 > In a correspondence that was neither private nor public, Sebastian Luetgert wrote ‘it is the network - not empire - that is materializing before our very own eyes, and the multitudes are part of it. their only threat to the regimes of control is that they will be their mirror . . . the enemy of the network is not the activist, but the passivist. passivists don't surf: they have learned to wait, and they know that when crossing a desert there is no need for a powerbook, a gps phone or a press tent.’ But maybe this is a false dilemma, the swing of a pendulum across the clockface of dead time. The activist in its familiar militant pose is a creature that should be abandoned to a museum of relics – the activist determined by a war against an oppressive power, engaged in a fight which consumes all his energy in reverse, convinced of the absolute virtue of his cause and of the correctness of his theory <a theory correct in inverse proportion to its practice> and, since possessing the correct ideas, endowed with the supreme calling of teaching them to others, especially to those who have not had the privilege of being schooled in the classroom of advanced capitalism. But invoking the passivist risks being construed for a celebration of the silent majority of consumers, secretly active in their absolute stasis. There are forms of action that are neither activist nor passivist. Somewhere, where the location is unimportant, there’s a group of people who started a club <social center is not the right word, but sometimes the search for names is also unimportant> not out of a desire to be in opposition to any of the dominant art or cultural institutions, but because they wanted to create a scene that did not yet exist. While inside, everyone uses a form invented currency. Some members of the group who are graphic designers make posters for restaurants and bars in town in exchange for free vouchers so they have places to take their friends. They don’t make any claims to the space they have in their own name but invite others to take temporary possession of it: artists, musicians, some local people from a half-way house for those considered mentally ill, even political theorists and sociologists. They make a lot of actions, but when added together their sum is not activism. No theory is constructed, no manifesto written that proclaims this form of life as the model of the coming revolution. There is no gospel and no disciples. The critics of the institutionalized left might perhaps snicker at this flimsy example, concluding that it changes absolutely nothing, that it will not ‘overthrow’ capitalism <overthrow = desire to rule, to become master>, that it doesn’t conform to their vision of utopia <utopia = waiting until the conditions are ripe, negating the present in anticipation of a future whose past has already been glimpsed>. Zhivago once fled with his lover to the interminable snow plains across the barren landscape of revolutionary Russia. Reaching a place that most resembled the center of nowhere, they stopped. The Bolshevik police followed on their heels, moving at a different speed, chasing a desire that escaped their comprehension. They knocked at the door, asking, what is your agenda, what are you plotting against us, what do you plan to do here? Live, he answered, just live. If understood slowly, this is not the fatality of hopelessness or a sign of passive acquiescence in the face of an obscene demand. And if it is an insurrection, it is not the insurrection proclaimed loudly on the center stage of capital cities whose success is measured by how many times the police beats it to the ground. Knowing when to disappear, it does not ask to be represented. Although there are many who live it today, outside the speed of the media spectacle, their names would only be invoked in vain, as the idols of yet another manifesto thrown on the rubble-heap of history. Dialectics never died. It lives every time another tired exhibit of the relics of dada or situationism opens at the houses of culture across the world. It lives when the hackers who haunt the net repeat the slogans and gestures of the dead and then congratulate themselves when they are finally inducted into the halls of power of the Venice Biennale or Ars Electronica. It lives when the theorists and cartographers of new deterritorialized flows of desire sell their interests by entering a classroom to become functionaries of the empire of production, offering packaged knowledge to students who eagerly produce whatever stupidity is asked of them in exchange for the general equivalent of a grade. It lives when the anti-globalization ‘multitude’ faithfully ascend to the stage of negation to recite their memorized roles, proudly displaying the garments of an ideology that long ago betrayed its exhaustion. Dialectics consumes the desire of life as it beats its wings against the limits of the impossible. As Tzara once said, dialectics kills – it lives by producing corpses, which lie strewn across an empty field where the wind has ceased to blow. The field only reveals its own folly and despair; and victory is the illusion of philosophers and fools. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Sports - live college hoops coverage http://sports.yahoo.com/ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold