McKenzie Wark on Sun, 12 Jan 97 09:31 MET |
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nettime: Everybody knows |
There's a song by Leonard Cohen that goes something like: "Everybody knows the dice are load. Everyone keeps their fingers crossed." It strikes me as an apt way of talking about criticism in this post critical age. I want to add a few thoughts to the discussion of English, but first, i think its appropriate to say something about criticism, since misunderstandings usually start with questions of genre. Let's be blunt: i think criticism is useless. Finished. And a bad idea in the first place. But what do we mean by criticism, in this context? I mean the practice of critical *negation*, the undoing of seemingly self evident statements, and the revealing of a repressed or hidden other, lurking within those statements. The other of class, power, phallocentrism, repressed desire. Criticism requires that the critic stand somewhere else, outside of the veil of language where these errors are going to be rooted out. AS is well known, criticism is in crisis. Most of the attempts to ground it in some other place, some unmediated, uncontaminated zone from which it can do its critical, negative work have failed. So many such attempts have failed, that nobody has much faith in those that remain as yet unrefuted. That criticism is also a veil, a false consciousness, is becoming clearer and clearer. This is the signficiance of the turn to Nietzsche -- the last critic. The one who rooted out the rather twisted other lurking in criticism itself. Its *resentment*. Its refusal of responsibility for itself. Criticism is dead. We can all laugh about it now. Dance about on its grave. Only criticism does not yet *know* that it is dead. Its the ghost that walks and can never die. It is the spectre haunting Europe, the spectre of the false consciousness of criticism. Should we mourn for the death of criticism? I don't think so. After all, everybody knows. It has very little to tell us any more. Everybody knows capitalism is fucked. Everybody knows the state is a monster. Everybody knows minorities get a bum deal. Everybody knows the very sign and word 'woman' is the site/sight/cite of endless double dealings. Everybody knows. And yet... what's the result? Hard hearted militants -- and hard headed ones too. God knows, they have their uses. And yet -- would you really want them to *win*? We all know just how easily militant oppositions become the state they once opposed, and oh so easily. Either by seizing it in its moment of crisis, or most likely, by easing into it by a process of osmosis, becoming part of it. Like the invasion of the body snatchers. Yet miltants are a damn good thing to have around. To keep the state on its toes. To remind everybody of what everybody knows -- but keeps forgetting. To give intelelctuals and artists a hard time whenever they/we pretend that doing whatever it is we feel like doing is also 'political'. But the strange thing is that while everybody knows, nobdoy really does much about it. Its what Peter Sloterdijk called 'cynical reason' and 'enlightened false consciousness'. Everybody knows -- and yet divides the part of themselves that knows from the part that goes on being a good boy/girl, being 'productive' at work and at play. Criticism has become the secular ideology of the educated classes. No longer made to feel guilty by religious, now we have criticism instead. Everyone makes a pious little genuflection in its direction. Buys the latest critical book -- and leaves it conspicuously displayed on the coffee table. Criticism produces this divided self, because criticism is nothing but the negative relation to the other. No longer able to ground itself in any one secure vantage point, from which to see everything as other, as a false double or copy of the true, criticism has become free floating, relative, pervasive. It is everywhere and no where. Its the nagging, self defeating, echo of every attempt to make something happen. Whatever you do, you've excluded or repressed or erased or silenced something or someone. Whatever you do, someone will see in it the shadow of some other in it. Everything is made to revolve around these phantom others. Others who are always spoken for by criticism, which never quite seem to get to speak for themselves. No longer anchored to a positive project -- the revolution against the state, against repression of desire, against the exploitation of the workers, against the imperial domination of the '3rd world', against patriarchy and phallocentrism (make that phallogocentrism) -- criticism becomes merely negative, a kind of free floating moral trump card that anyone can play, either by speaking as if one where the aggreived other, or by an act of self laceration, beating one'se self up for its sins. Then of course, business as usual: the other half of one's divided self goes out and works for its own advantage -- as everybody knows. Now, there are of course lots of real grievances that people may have. The world's fucked. We all know that. Criticism likes to blackmail us into thinking that if we don't think critically and negatively all the time then we must be evil bastards and sell outs. Criticism has effectively slandered every other way of thinking. If you aren't a critic, then you must be a utopian. Or you must be a determinist. Or you must be an agent of the state/capital, etc. Two things can be said, not against this -- what's the point of answering slander? -- but as a way of simply ignoring criticism and starting somewhere else. There are other, perhaps better ways, of speaking out of the cramped spaces of poverty and oppression. There are reasons to think that critical thinking is best defence power ever had. I'll take that last point first, because it seems so counter intuitive. But think about it. What does criticism say about power? It says: capital is merciless, the state is a behemoth, the patriarchs have the power of gods. Criticism is a long poem written on the inevitability of power. Not in praise of power, obviously. These are modern times, times when everybody knows, etc. People see through that. But criticism -- that's the best ornament power ever had. It *looks* like it is opposed to power, and indeed it thinks it is. (Fools!) Yet criticism talks about nothing but the invincible strength of its other. One waits without baited breath for the moment when the 'transitional' states, somewhere between the power of bureucracy and the bureaucracy of power, to grasp this simple thing that both sides in the cold war knew so well. Keep a few critics on the payroll as an ornament. In the east, these sometimes ended up in jail or the asylum; in the west, they suffered the less threatening prospect of losing their newspaper columns and teaching jobs. There is no comparison between the industrial conditions of employment of critics between the two regimes. But their role in relation to the state was nevertheless the same. In this age of generalsied, unanchored, freefloating criticism, criticism no longer has much of a positive alternative to the status quo. Criticism usually agitates *in favour* of the stated ideals of state and capital -- only more so. Democracy, freedom, equality, a fair go for minorities -- these are all official ideologies in the overdeveloped world. These are the state's own stated beliefs. Criticism mostly is just asking for more of the state, or for the state to be more like itself, more self-similar. The state perfected. Now, as I said, there is another way of speaking, of thinking, of being. That of saying something else, thinking otherwise, becoming otherwise. Forget about the Big Bad Other. Making a fetish of it will only bring you down. Rather than think only of what one lacks: i lack power (because of the other) i am alienated form my desires (because of the other). In place of this other, in which one only comes to exist critically, negatively, as what the other lacks. Something else. So far, of course, this is a criticism of criticism. All i have done is talk about what *criticism* lacks. But from where am i speaking? How can i ground this, other than in negativivity? I don't want to cringe and snivel in the shadow of criticism. I want to dance on its grave! The good news is: its not hard. Take a situation. Any situation. One's situation in language. One's situation in space. One's situation in a particular body. One's situation in 'culture'. One's situation in time. Those are some of the main ones. ASk yourself: what are the powers, what are the *potentials* of this situation? With what other situations can in combine, combine in a way that adds to the range of potentials. Not just 'my' potentials, and the other's potentials, not even 'our' combined potentials. Just *these* potentials. Or don't think about it, just do it. Experiment. Rearrange the furniture. Try not to get too romantic about it. We're talking about practical things here. What happens if i plug this particular idea together with that piece of flesh and this modem here and that phone socket and this little bit of my time and that little bit of somebody else's money... Now, there's a certain kind of ethic that goes with this. Not the self-lacerating moralism of criticism, where everybody gets up on the cross on sunday and goes back t the office on monday. An ethic that makes no apologies for its powers. On the contrary, which celebrates them. But which recognises that the revolution that matters is the one that makes it possible for any-every situation to organise its relations with any-every other situation, as mutually desired. Now, one does not bring that about through criticism, which simply opposes oppressive power, mirroriing it, until it becomes what it beholds. Rather than drawing a line in the sand, on one side stands power, on the other, moral right. One draws quite a differnt line. The line of escape, maybe -- out into open country. Or the subtle line, the little difference nobody sees, unless they are part of the quiet little situation that makes and remakes it. >From what are situations made? Wrong question. Situations are a making, a process not a thing. Sometimes they are very, very slow. Rome wasn't destroyed in a day. Sometimes one doesn't know where the free zone is where a situation might get going until it gets going. Things always seem to start in the middle. Take a situation like language: all i wanted to say about English on the net is that i think i see a crack in it. Its becoming a situation. Its changing, proliferating. People are just getting in there and doing things with it. Who cares who's language it used to be? Soon, it will be out of control. Like it *always was*. And this is the one thing i can say, as a native speaker, who loves this language almost as much as my own life. I can say what it is in my power to say: When criticism says this language was *always and only* an imperial lanaguage, something invincible, inevitable, a great machine that contaminates all it touches -- that's a paranoid fantasy. Its a fanasy of power, an ornamament to the very real dangers of lingusitic conformity. English is an imperial language. I'm not denying it. I sympathisse with anyone who finds it oppressive. I find American English pretty oppressive myself. Nothing i can do about that. Every day a little bit of *my* language disappears. Australian English. Going, going, gone. So what? Bring on the hearts and flowers. But enough of this -- criticism. let's do something real. let's talk about the situation that opens up in this space of global language. Alright, so my language is 'contaminated' -- god, what a paranoid thought that is! But its true. Just today i caught myself saying 'sidewalk' instead of 'footpath' and in the restaurant i said 'check please!' rather than 'can i have the bill please'. I'm having a hard time remaining who i thought i was. My language makes me someone else, as bit by bit it becomes someone else's language. But enough already! There's a situation opening up here, and i'm going to connect to it. Rather than make this knowledge i have, of what's going on here, into a negation, i'm going to affirm it. I'm going to jump tongue first into 'Netlish', the English of the net. And look what's going on here: the whole language is out of control. People *dare* to write it every where way. Great! Rather a great babel of English, in which my English is lost, than a universe of Mirriam-Webster speak. Do you know something? English has a secret history. All situations do. The secret history of English is that it was always like this. It was always out of control. It was always a babel of foreign accents. Practically everybody who ever wrote it -- who wrote anything worth reading in it -- found it a struggle. The exception is this period from the turn of the century to the present. A generation after the Education act of 1870, a unified speech appeared (much later than in Germany, at least according to Kittler). The first dictionary, produced privately by Dr Johnson, is also a factor here. Then of course, the two empires of english, which one can think of as the British Empire and Pax Americana, or as the Radio Empire and the Television Empire. Which brought RP, 'recieved pronunciation' to the world. But that's an exceptional moment. And of course the result is already prefigured, in Caliban's reply to Prospero, in Shakespeare's The Tempest -- that testament from the very beginnings of the English adventures in power and the sea: "You taught me language; and my profit on't Is, I know how to curse. The red plague rid you For learning me your language!" Now, this could be the beginning of otherness, of postcolonial criticism. Of the great homage postcolonial writers decided to pay their old masters in reverse. Or soemthing else. The beginning of what Deleuze calls a 'minor language'. Now, like most deleuzespeak in English, its a bad term. Too many associations. Better to speak, as Deleuze does, of writing in a 'cramped space'. He had in mind Kafka writing in German. What he couldn't know is that it applies to Shakespeare writing an English learned in the countryside of Straford, a bastard, contaminated language, at the crossroads where several of its situations met. It also applies to Joyce, writing with 'silence, exile and cunning' in a language he knew very well, but which still belonged to an enemy. Or to Salman Rusdhdie, one of the first great exponents of English as a transnational situation. In all these cases, the cramped space of writing is what makes it work. Language escapes its own borders, wilfully contaminates itself. Language hooks itself into things beyind itself, into politics, the desires of whole peoples. Joyce is the no longer so secret weapon of the Irish *within* the language of the oppressor. But more important than these 'great' instances, which after all get recaptured by 'English Literature' NO CARRIER -- fuck, i hate it when that happens! All i want tis (a) a machine that will run PPP, Eudora and an ISP that doesn't just quit when it feels like it! Ah well, there's always limitations. One always lacks for something. So i went down to the cafe and had some lunch. The woman next to me was reading a volume of Bruce Chatwin that i didn't recognise, so i asked her to show it to me. _Traumsfade, it was, and i laughed out loud. A German translation of an Englishman's attempt to understand the landscape of communication that is the Australian desert, as Aboriginal cultures have practiced it for centuries. I'd call it the stone age internet, only that would be demeaning. It always worked much better. And still does. Chatwin seems apropo. Now there was a writer who found a cramped space or two, and who was not affraid to fail. Like little Roy Eldridge, reaching for that high-C on his trumpet, not caring if he made it, knowing that you'd hear the empty space where the note ought to be -- and much more -- if he blew in that direction. But to wind up this rather circumlocutory netletter: Netcriticism is what one would call a portmanteau word. The first half is a new thing, the second half an old thing. In the light of the new part, the old part has to go. I'm not sure what one would put in its place. Net[.......] What's prompting me to embark on all this is an excellent essay of Geert's that's coming. A sort of geneaology of nettime. Its not important whether i agree or disagree with it. Dialogue is an overrated form of discourse. It always folds you back into the borders of yourself. Singular writing, collective writing, and the plotting of coordinates where writing passed other writing by. Now those things make sense. But dialogue? So this is not a criticism of Geert, or anybody. Its a trajectory that crosses some lines with some other lines, that's all. And an attempt to take certain lines further. Beyond the criticism of media criticism, out of a desire to see it replaced with something other than netcriticism. To see instead what's already here, this net[.....] Of course, the net is more than writing, and much more than English writing. Nettimes in Dutch, German, Inuit! And nettexts on this nettime list in any and every language. Please don't stop posting here in Dutch and German, folks. All of this is mean as examples of situations, productive, creative, self-organising situations -- and of the planes of consistency upon which they can occur. The vectors of the net, the telesthesia of media, the babel of language. The tight spots where those planes burst into life with situations: where the going gets difficult, where language seems strange, even to itself. One can name such moments from the past: Kafka, Joyce -- but those are only proper names, too easily captured by things like Literature or Art. (The reader is encouraged at this point to spit). What stands behind those names are cramped spaces, collective productions -- 'minimal situations'. McKenzie Wark Netletter #8 A sunday afternoon on a warm sunny day in Sydney, 1997 __________________________________________ "We no longer have roots, we have aerials." http://www.mcs.mq.edu.au/~mwark -- McKenzie Wark -- * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets * more info: majordomo@is.in-berlin.de and "info nettime" in the msg body * URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@is.in-berlin.de