Toshiya Ueno (by way of Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl>) on Tue, 23 Mar 1999 21:27:18 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> The Situation and Idea of an "Inter-East" |
[Text of a talk given at the Inter-East Forum at the Next 5 Minutes 3 conference, Amsterdam, Sunday, 14 March 1999.] The Situation and Idea of an "Inter-East" Toshiya Ueno Terms like "pacific Asia" and "inter-Asia" are so popular key terms for projects in publishing and academic conferences all around the world. But the future imagination and new vision of Asia should not be restricted and projected onto the mere geographic (or geopolitical) perspective. Certainly, the term "Asia" is catchy and easy to understand; but there are other views, some long established, some recent, which are not based on "Orientalist" discourses. The time has come to free ourselves from simplistic geographical hand-me-downs that perpetuate various forms of exoticism. A good example of how deep this tendency reaches is the common use of terms such as "trance" throughout most of the Westernized world (notably including Eastern Europe) to describe certain new phenomena--types of techno music, rave cultures, and/or computer-generated animations. One sees not this term but this kind of gesture throughout much wider circles like cultural studies and leftists thinking. Now, the interrelations between Europe--again, certainly including Eastern Europe--and East Asia have a history that is long and varied, so this kind of linguistic appropriation doesn't take place in a vaccum. In fact, this history is complex enough to cast doubt even on the use of terms like "East Asia" or "Asia Pacific" in this context, because these relations have involved hegemonic competitions between nation-state formations in these regions. I would like to suggest the term "inter-East," which conveys this broader awareness. In my view, the term includes not just "Asia" or the "Pacific regions" but also East and South Asia and even Eastern Europe. In the present context--that is, discussions on Tactical and Independent media and spaces--such an awareness is important. Unlike earlier terminology, it can refer both to the past relations but also the future ones as well. Another interesting term might be "cyberdiaspora" or "digital diaspora"--not in the sense of human lives or bodies "disappearing" into or onto the net. Rather, I mean a diaspora through the net--within it, across it, by means of it. Historically speaking, diaspora cultures have traveled around the world; these travels were accompanied by--and not always from or to the same places--material circulations cultural circulations: ideas, lifestyles, food, art, music, and so on. Some theoreticians of this subject have used terms that sound very familiar to us in a "digital" or "cyber" context, for example, Paul Gilroy's idea of the "diaspora web." Now, though, this kind of terminology is no longer a metaphor; rather, it is a sort of an allegory of reality itself. The rise of network technologies have presented us with "cyberspaces," and not merely through the use of computers radio and telephones, for example, have brought about kinds of "spaces" that alter the spaces we live in, in ways similar or analogous to the sea. My intent isn't to emphasize the power of the Internet; rather, I simply want to point out that there are refugee and diaspora groups that maintain cohesion and communication--culture--by means of video distribution, computer networks, and other electronic technologies. For example, there are the Croatian and Macednian communities in Perth, Australia, who rely heavily on videos to maintain connections to their origins; or the independent media in Amsterdam in support of people coming from former Yugoslavia. There's no question that information technogies and telecomunications have allowed diasporas to develop in new direction. Of course, diaspora strictly speaking almost invariably involves migrations imposed by power relations, whether economic, political, religious, and so on. But there are also looser though no less real aspects of diasporas--dreadlocks, T-shirts, music, and so on--which we might refer to as "cultural diasporas," or at least think about these phenomena in those terms. Certainly, diaspora always means a sort of cultural traveling; but we should take care not to confuse these transmissions, disseminations, and circulations with the effects of globalization or with a generic "postmodern" pastiche-eclecticism based on an "anything goes" aesthetic. The boundary isn't a clear one, and it's becoming even less so: there are no easy way to distinguish between real refugees, illegal migrants, asylum-seekers, "suffering diasporas," and rave or "hooligan" travelers, various forms of tourism, and "cultural diasporas," between forced settlement and voluntary migrations. To return to my initial remarks, terms such as "Pacific Asia," "Pacific rim," and "Asia" in general are especially significant for the purposes of thinking about "cyberdiaspora culture." These areas have long and rich histories of displacements, refugees, and diasporas. This, in part, accounts for the influence that Asian--or perhaps Inter-Asian cultures have on the imagination and the actuality of cultural diaspora through electronic technology and cyberspace. For example, musical styles such as "Bangra" and "Ragamuffin" as elaborated by blacks in the UK are connected to East Asian cultures, as is the so-called "psychedelic trance" style of techno music, born in Goa, India. These newer diffusions are hypermodernized "tribal" cultures--I use that word cautiously--in an effort to grasp "Oriental" phenomena in the information age. In film and animation, too--for example, Japanese Anime--Pacific Asian landscapes and cultural elements play an important and sometimes subtle role. But is is important to recognize that even the "originary" material being "appropriated" isn't single or monolithic. Just as it may now derive from a combination of older traditions and newer technologies--many of them, of course, facilitated by electronics legendary for being "made in Japan," "made in China," "made in Korea," and so on--the older traditions themselves are combinations. These combinations and recombinations can be a very clear expression of what I mean by "inter-East": one melody can be heard as something Indian, something Japanese, and something Bosnian, which in turn will have roots in Asia Minor, now "Turkey," and the rhythms may derive from somewhere else. These hybrids, with many meanings, are not merely "postmodern eclecticism" based on ethnic origins. They often have an entire other set of origins as well: raves, for example, are closely connected with green movements or other new social movements, movements resisting global capital. In this regard, we can think of these hybridizations as "tactical syncretism" and distinguish them from mere pastiche. The fact that these cultural hybridizations aren't limited to one aspect or register of a "trend" would support this, I think. Thus we see an "Asian" influence on record sleeve and flyer design as well. Some, of course, are simply fakes or simulations, arbitrary choices made within a "postmodern" visual superstore; but others are not. I don't want to overemphasize the details of subcultures: "cultural studies" does not mean a theory of subculture or a critical discourse on cultural ephemera. But it is important to be aware of these strata, and to be open to what they might offer us as we think about the functions of subcultural diaspora in a translocal context. We cannot lose sight of the fact that refugees, travelers, and illegal or smilegal migrants travel around the world from in rave parties and club circuits. A detail here or a person there may not be so significant; but the trajectories they trace--for example, a DJ playing in Taipei, then Tokyo, then Sydney--is not reducible to "globalization." In the wake of these movements, we may find new types of solidarity of urban tribes or alternative public sphere which happen to be elaborated through music. In the context of cultural diasporas established or propagated through worldwide networks, dichotomies such as local/global begin to lose their original meaning--in other words, they change their meanings, maybe to the point of uselessness. Generally, "peripheries" (which I distinguish from liminalities) can appear at the "center" not only theoretically but also substantially; or they can become terminal, an end. Under the circumstances, we must reconsider the relationship between the universal (or the world) and the native (or the indigenous). For example, in thinking about the East as an orientation and an indication, Asia can mean "far east," "south east," "middle east," and so on--posited for or against the West but, at the same time, somehow inside Europe, since "former socialist regions" are represented politically as well as geographically as "the East." In this regard, the very idea of "globalism," or of a "global standpoint," becomes problematic as a way to form positions: it too is still deeply based on "civilizationalism in the West" and is not sufficient for understanding the workings of global tribalization and so on. Unless we adopt a newer, better-suited conceptual framework--for example, "translocal," which is neither global nor local--our positions will fall into the same transversal traps that ideas like "the East" do. "Translocal," on the other hand, no longer essentializes "the East" as "Asia" or "former communist areas"; it does not speak of any necessary direction. This, the orient(ation) itself becomes multiplied, hybridized, and divergent. It should come as no surprise, then, that I would prefer the term "Inter-east" over "Inter-Asia," because it can speak of the same phenomena without falling prey to programmatic or projected in geographical and geopolitical imaginations. Terms like "Pacific rim" and especially "Pacific era" are similarly problematic; the latter term is especially so, because it remaps spatial projections onto temporal ones--since the alternative is, of course, an "Atlantic era." In the framework of globalization and transnationalism within Asia or Pacific, it seems strange or paradoxical--but undeniable an effect--that one nation or one country-state or one continent should always be considered a center for global capitalism and historical prestige. This is still a developing discourse. Notion such as "Asia" and " Pacific Rim" have served at various points as "strategic" imagery to help deconstruct the Western "core." These and other ideas allowed people to decenter and recenter the world--to Taiwan, say, or Australia or Japan. However, the troublesome gesture of establishing a center and a homogeneous field remains: "Asia" and "Pacific Rim" still very much impose ethnocentrisms or state-nationalisms on "Asian" countries. For example, the term "Pacific rim" is not quite new; not surprisingly, this idea has a history. During the World War II, in particular, the idea of a "Great East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere" ("Dai Toa Kyouei Ken") was promoted by the Japanese fascist-militarist regime as an imperialist vision in which a peaceful order among Asian areas would be led and enlightened by Japan. And, of course, this idea too had a history as well; the alternative world that it assumes, in which Asian areas were not led or enlightened by Japan, speaks of a less stable or homogeneous image of these areas, divided by economy, culture, ideology, and so on. Thus wee see that it ideas about "Asia" and so on are not at all uniquely "American," "European," or "Orientalist" in their origin or effect. More specifically, during the Edo period, Japan adhered to a policy of "isolation" and took account of the West in two primary ways: as an object of intellectual curiosity, and as a military threat. On the one hand, Japan have tried to detach itself from its immediately neighboring area and, on the other, it responded to Western world domination in political and diplomatic ways. In doing so, it destroyed the Chinese imperial order and brought a new order to East Asia. It was in this period that the previosuly mentioned "Asian" notion of "Asia" was developed as a way to counter the West's hegemony and to diminish any China-centric ideas of what a more native hegemony must be. In this sense and in others, Japan has served as a sort of "interface" between the Western civilizations and Asian ones. This kind of classificatory complexity and depth is very much present in discourses about "Orientalism" in general. Historically speaking, for the West "the Orient" has most often meant the "middle east"; consquenetly, Orientalist discourses have tended to address ideologies involving those regions and areas. But as "Techno-Orientalism" has become a crucial factor for Western cultures--indeed, for all cultures--Orientalist discourses have shifted to include or even focus on Japan, India, Taiwan, Australia, and so on. Naoki Sakai highlights this point nicely: The Orient is neither a cultural, religious or linguistic unity. The principle of its identity lies outside itself: what endows it with some vague sense of unity is that Orient is that which is excluded and objectified by the West, in the service of its historical progress. From the outset the Orient is a shadow of the West. It should be clear, then, why I am so skeptical about geographical definitions and distinctions: they obscure the tremendously complex and subtle histories that have led up to the "global" age. It's for these reasons that a more subtle and complex term--I advocate "inter-East"--seems much more fruitful. Such a term invites us to recognize without totalizing the oriental melodies in Trance-Techno-music as played by a Croatian DJ, and to discuss in a more nuanced way the many apsects of VCR network within the Macedonian and Croatian refugees and exiles in Australia (see, for example, Dona Kolar-Panov, "Video, War, and the Diasporic Imagination," Routledge, 1997). And, of course, it allows us to analyze the effects and influence of Japanese subculture throughout other Asian area's contexts or to research the active development of "Bollywood" film industry in Mumbai, India. Such a view invites us to think about Techno-Orientalism as both an ideology and a tool of critical thinking--not just about "Asia" or the "Orient" but also about the complex interrelations and interactions of many cultures. And surely what we should consider in an inter-East forum is not just cultural ephemera but also many kinds of media activisms and social movements and their artuclations. Needless to say, there are many cultural and political differences between East Asia and Eastern Europe; we cannot overlook or underestimate them. But each of these regions is similarly home to enormous cultural and political differences. These differences invite careful observation and regard for the variety of practice of making free space, using the net and radio, organizing sociability, and so on. And in this regard, "inter-East" is very helpful too: not only does it free us from needless geographical assumptions, but it opens up into newer virtual "spaces," psychogeographic "spaces," and so on. And this, in turn, allows us to use concepts involving the "translocal" more fluidly, which sidesteps the obsolete dichotomy between "local" and "global." Despite this promising vision, it will be difficult to move beyond regionally specific diffrences. It is hard to "invent" translocal imaginations in many inter-Eastern areas. But there are histories and efforts that are related, some of them decades old: free radio movements, pirate and gay TV in Malaysia, fre space and free media movements in Seoul, the free radio and anti-wiretap movements in Japan, independent Internet activities in other areas, and so on. These might be a good place to start as we try to elaborate new critical theories relevant and adequate to the inter-East and translocal phenomena. --- # 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@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl