Károly Tóth on Wed, 20 Mar 2002 14:14:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> avant.garde - transfigured or dead? |
dear duna, list i can not find the original post, duna maver have replied to can somebody please post it to me this original article thanx & grtnx k'roy __________________________________________ zero g artlab & cultural engineering rotterdam Károly Tóth karoly.toth@xs4all.nl www.xs4all.nl/~are __________________________________________ zero g artlab rotterdam is an independent art-lab. The lab is in an evolving process of exchage with initiatives of individuals and institutions, based on mutual sympathy. __________________________________________ ----- Original Message ----- From: "duna maver" <dunamaver@yahoo.com> To: <nettime-l@bbs.thing.net> Sent: Tuesday, March 19, 2002 10:06 PM Subject: <nettime> 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 pręt 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/ > > # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission > # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, > # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets > # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body > # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net > _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold