Jordan Crandall on Wed, 22 Jun 2005 00:13:42 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> precision-landcapes of desire |
war, desire, and the "state of readiness" jordan crandall (short summary of presentation for "Cinema, War, and a Society of Spectacle," University of Cambridge, UK, 8-9 June 2005) My work deals with spectacle in our present-day culture of security and military globalization. I want to contribute to the development of a new media theory, which is able to deal with emerging forms of mobility, attention, and control, and new patterns of locationing. By "spectacle" I want to build on Debord's theorization -- where the term not only indicates an apparatus of optical stimulation, but a machinery of separation: an apparatus of individuation, immobilization, and disempowerment, bound up in the production of commodity and acquisitory desire. My approach to spectacular culture is through the axis of military history, which generates a complementary perspective to that of market-oriented analyses. For it places defense alongside attraction, conflict alongside commodification. >From this perspective, I want to suggest that what we are witnessing today is the emergence of a new modality of spectacle, characterized by a potent combination of the agonistic and the acquisitory. It is characterized by a shift toward real time engagements and continuous, heightened states of alertness and preparedness, in such a way as to generate a state of extreme readiness for both conflict and libidinous consumption. It blends combat and commodity, and functions as a link between war and consumerism. At groundlevel, we can everywhere witness such a "state of readiness." It is a kind of proto-active state, operating at the level of both perception and corporeality, which involves ever-smaller intervals of preparedness. A state of heightened attention and arousal, poised at the cusp of action. A condensation of potential motion, in which the sensorial body is restrained, which produces an illusory sense of movement. A micro-accumulation at the threshold of action, which offers, but does not deliver upon, the promise of release. To sketch this new modality of spectacle, and the structures of knowledge and power that have organized its fields of attention and readiness, we could trace two apparatuses of engagement, emerging out of the mid-century political economy of warfare. These are the real time tracking interface and the distributed interactive simulation. In taking such an archeological approach, it is important to look at these apparatuses not only in terms of technological history, but in terms of assumptions, beliefs, orientations, and "mind-sets" -- to understand them as both symbolic and material, functioning at the level of language, practice, and belief. These apparatuses have played an important role in the development of new economies of organization, optimization, and vigilance. They are products of the drive to augment and automate human capabilities; to develop new human-machine composites; to shorten time and space intervals; and to eliminate gaps between symbol and event. They have contributed to an ideal of integrated control and panoptic oversight, where reality is seen as "manageable" through the manipulation of data, and where space is produced according to the logics of the database and the organizational supply chain. It is often thought that these apparatuses have contributed to the evacuation of geographical space, overriding the vagaries of place and distance. However, what I want to suggest is that they have simultaneously contributed to the resurgence of locational specificity: a precision-landscape where communication is tagged with position, movement-flows are quantified, and new location-aware relationships are generated among actors, objects, and spaces. In other words, these apparatuses have not only propelled a one-way delocalization or deterritorialization, as is often suggested, but rather a volatile combination of the diffused and the positioned, or the placeless and the place-coded. The key words in this journey are: attention, agency, and arousal. For as I mentioned, in this emerging spectacular mechanism of conflict and desire, the production of a "state of readiness" -- whether for conflict or acquisition -- is key. It is a state that operates at the level of both perception and corporeality, where one is not only cognitively but affectively engaged. A form of alertness on the edge of action, where the vigilant and optimized machine-body is roused and poised to act. In order to articulate this state, we must avoid concentrating solely on signification and linguistic meaning, and instead rely equally on an axis of intensity. We require materialist, rather than idealist, understandings. # 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