Kevin Magee on Fri, 18 Apr 2003 08:54:15 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Digital Lucidities |
Forwarded, the following text, to this list, has been, not only for its timeliness in the contemporary context of the latest war, but also for to enter it into the digital commons of the nettime archive. The author died of cancer before his writings could develop in the direction declared here, State critique from with the formal language-discipline of the Poetic. This particular text appeared in its time three times on paper, the book cited here, a literary magazine that itself appeared three times before disappearing, and a posthumous collection, Rome: A Mobile Home. Works on paper that enter the rare book room. Many and minute typographical edits exist among the three printed versions, though the Poet wrote before a database could collect the detritus of self-doubt and intimidation before language and the world of power called culture. Volume without depth. The crisis of the present conjuncture? So this text is offered also as a reminder of the depth that is the labor of the language-discipline of the Poetic. SUPPLEMENT TO LIBYA In the already historical American news accounts of the bombing of Tripoli, at least as the news could be understood in the hours after the initial pictures, as both video taped and wire service still photographs, of the partly bombed residential districts of the Libyan capital were released, it was suggested, in the interviews culled primarily from American navy pilots presumably questioned in news conferences fresh after combat--sound of carrier seawind mingling, sometimes to the dissonant disadvantage of the pilot's laconic if nevertheless vivid rendition of the urban devastation which their A6 attack bombers had inflicted--that the explanation, in their point of view,--although hurtling, sometimes not more than a hundred yards above the city streets, at a speed making for an uncertain sequence of unrelenting perceptions, thus accounting for the perhaps still unproven accuracy of their reports,--for the seeming damage relevant to the unmilitary nature of the results gained, sites such as Libyan barber shops, restaurants, the two story apartments of the Libyan bourgeoisie--was related to the incompetency of technical failure of Soviet surface to air missiles which, being fired directly straight up at the escaping American warplanes, succumbed to the inevitable gravitational incline: that is, unfortunately, the Libyans own weapons blasted what lay below them, e.g. the nonmilitary targets of their capital. However, in subsequent interviews with Vietnam combat veterans--vets of equally intense, if the comparison lies in the physicality of eluding such missiles, combats--it was expertly pointed out that Soviet missiles do, regardless of the first angle of their earth blast off, in doubling the speed of sound, adjust to the often frantic swerving of US bombers by being programmed to know, not reflexively, unless those who design the numerous digital lucidities of such warfares do project a nearly archtypical human theater of confrontation upon such oppositions--albeit what is known is instantaneous with its reflection of course, or decision--at what precise moment to explode, that is, at the point when the enemy begins to succeed in his evasion. In the early 1970s, one heard reports of the poet, Robert Duncan, expressing his distress that the field theory was so similar to the American Air Force use of weapons like Puff the Magic Dragon which could put a bullet every so many square inches of rice paddy. That is, in a composition drafted upon such awareness, there is only now the presence of a critique that will at least play the witness to an analogy become uniform. But there is an inescapable capacity, a feint of burning past the limit of such explosive contact, which explodes equally the missiles enacting their capacity to "read." So we hustle an alternate domino game, yet I find myself looking minimal in regard to a documentary concerned with how the U.S. was defeated in Vietnam. On an abandoned military airport at Pleiku one sees, spaced equidistant, forming an infinite line, or a terribly finite rhyme, blackish field boxes cemented to this devastated field, the refrigerated anguish of 'autonomous' forms. They are too discrete, these identical American refrigerators paradoxically become the scale of an indeterminacy . . . Shop signs and vacant stores for rent in an abandoned, except for the nostalgia, Barbary Coast, the feeling of wholeness in order to convey the corporate wholeness, desired meaning, all encompassing, logos or logotype, the symbolic relationship to the production system, calm signals of one being contained by the Universe: you get what you project into it? Or you get it like dictation repeats instructions on newly erased tapes to hand over the war to intercept the announced revenge? So a gloss becomes a survivor, and the persistent equivalents of formal negation paint the image with a similitude no different than certain Renaissance meditations concerning perspective and other, equally repetitive, enactments of similitude. Jerry Estrin, COLD HEAVEN (La Laguna--Islas Canarias, Zasterle Press, 1990). ["Of an edition of three hundred copies this is No. 133"]. -- http://hypobololemaioi.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