j bosma on Mon, 27 Jan 97 09:17 MET |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
nettime: het stuk |
stuk [het]= *(aandeel)share, security *(staaltje)een stout stukje: a bold feat*(aantrekkelijk persoon) male: hunk, stud. female: piece*(geschrift) document, article. by Paulien van Mourik Broekman and Josephine Bosma Neither of us were there when Nettime was born, but we think we are close enough to the source to know its radiation, its personality almost. Nettime can nearly be treated as a character. Its loose form and the firm but loving embrace of its participants give it a different feel then do its descendants or its copycats. However, there is still something uncomfortable about it, which we will try to get as close as possible to in the following text. What is most striking about Nettime is its wish for close personal contact. Nettime-meetings have been organised under the banner of conferences like Next5Minutes or Metaforum, and a big one which truly shows Nettime's sweet face is the meeting planned for May 97 which will be held in three different cities in former Yugoslavia: Ljubljana, Zagreb and a searesort. Nettime seems to be an island of humanity in the mediated world of the net and its periphery. Anybody can send anything at anytime to its open list. Though, for a discussion mailing list, this is in itself not unusual, combined with the very human and personal treatment of its members, it means that Nettime could be a fertile breeding ground for new writing talents, a free space to experiment with styles and thoughts for artists or theorists or what is most interesting: it could be a place for non-writers in the extreme sense of the word to vent their opinions on highly philosofical matters, a place where professional intellectuals and illiterate mediaworkers communicate. And this is where something seems to go wrong. Nettime has a lot of members. The issues that pass the revue titillate many minds . Yet only a very small part of its members 'open fire', even when the battle is practically in their own backyard. We have heard someone say he is afraid to write. Why is that? Speaking in public is not easy, most of us know that, with the exception of the natural performers. But is that the only problem? From many sides the same remarks about Nettime are heard over and over again. The texts, the announcements and the world that seems to be hidden behind them are found extremely interesting, but there is this enormous treshhold fear to react. And it seems to have something to do with these same good texts. At conferences the way an idea is communicated is a mixture of that of the objective, learned scholar/professional and that of the masterspeaker, the politician, the salesman. Theories are presented and discussions are initiated in the oldfashioned manner of the college, where knowledge was a clearly shaped object of power, with a beginning and an end and, perhaps, guards flanking its sides. Even the audience seems to submit to these rules of polite respect for the erect manner of speaking that also dominates the universities and political meetings. The way texts and knowledge is spread and treated through new media might not just offer new possibilities, but it might be a revolution which even academies will have to deal with. New media are not just effecting old media like books, tv or radio. It also effects institutions. Their heritage needs to be dealt with and transformed. It is not so that we mean to say that what comes out of this heritage, like styles of writing and thinking, is wrong or needs to be dumped. It just feels a bit uncomfortable. Fortunately Nettime does not pay its contributors for their efforts. This saves us from endless plowing through the long, highly abstract theoretical pieces of the professional macho theorists who like their masturbative seeds to choke the throats of the doubting student, the searching poet or the wacko artist. Many writers still have these sharp, fast pens though, which they learned to hold so well during their professional careers. And only the wackos seem to have the (unconscious?) guts to reply to them. What happens instead of the shared tought trains often is the safer but less effective private mail exchanges, the whispering at the backdoor, which takes the sting out of the debate. The only way to fight this syndrome without losing the credibility or impact of net.criticism is probably to work with an awareness of how textual critical authority, maybe invisible to its producer, can simultaneously encourage and suppress the introduction of new voices/communications. The metaphor of the academy can also be used in a more positive way though, as - though invisible due to the same characteristics that make the net such fertile ground for gender switching etc. - the range of ages, professional and personal experiences of those who subscribe to Nettime is no doubt vast. The email communicated thinking, feeling and being that make up Nettime's shared persona touches on the very slippery areas where practice, personal experience and theory (for want of a better word) intersect. In fact, don't they in most social interactions? Distinctions made here between these categories are, by necessity, crude. Given that this is what we have to play with, the fact remains that some postings will seem more relevant to some than others, for reasons that go beyond simple qualitative criteria. Some postings that may seem like so much "noise" to 'seniors' concerned with their own particular patch of high-theoretical discussion, may link in more directly with the lives and lifestyles of other subscribers. Yet conversely, those self-same subscribers (and we say this from experience) learn much from even the shortest exchange on topics they may not be intimately familiar with. A more personal inflection on otherwise theoretical postings manages to communicate the really valuable experience gleaned from working in an area over a long period of time. The issue of noise does clearly connect with Alexei Shulgin's plea for avoiding professionalism in favor of freedom for development and experimentation, which he seems to have meant for the art-side of Nettime mostly. This is applicable to the whole of Nettime's working field though. The tempting and sometimes threatening idea of separating the art-hemisphere from supposedly more practical workingfields seems completely out of place in the context of the experimentation workers in new media are inevitably obliged to engage in. Of course this broadening of discussion can also slide into a situation where... 'plus ca change': the 'lurkers' feel privileged to listen to the masterspeakers, not just in the lecture hall as before, but in the newly-opened private spaces of the gents' loo and the corner of the professors' refectory. It is a pity that some interesting professional writers whom we know must have eye and heart for helping to find a solution to this problem are too busy being professional elsewhere. Of course, not everyone has the tireless energy of the few one-man broadcasting houses that push Nettime forward (thanks) so perhaps it wouldn't be a bad thing if some others circulating in the technoculture circuit would every now and then step down from their pedestal and be among the crowds again, not just at conferences, that seem to be like holiday camps to them and where of course personal exchanges of ideas and inspiration are limited to small groups of people only. We have to say that eventhough these mechanisms that we have described above are in our opinion the major reason why the Nettime platform does not work to its fullest possibilities, there have also been a few little incidents on Nettime that have created the impression that one has to be careful with postings. A few times people have been thrown of the list for reasons that were not always clear to everybody, but seemed to have to do with certain not clearly visible *rules*. Not everybody has the chance to ask the moderators face to face what is going on and to discuss it. For this reason it seems necessary that after such an incident, and hopefully we will not have too many, a warm and inspiring invitation to doubters and searchers is spread, which could maybe also function as a kind of basic, userfriendly Nettime manifesto. Nettime is a social entity; above all else its energy comes from its community-oriented nature. The above is not meant as a dead-end complaint. It is more a response to a slightly troubling and seemingly contradictory tendency within the discussions of nettime that have discouraged certain interesting subscribers to participate. In the long run this may create problems, nobody likes being an unintentional lurker. The network of subscribers is a valuable one for all of us, and loosing good but in the world of theorywriting inexperienced people due to inaccessability would be a damn shame. If we are to avoid building with institutionalised male dominated structures of theoretical discourse that existed within the academy of old, which profitted from specialisms, narrowing the gaze and heading for one clear goal, and we reflect now, in practice, the diversity of this list, the threads of this tendency might need to be unpicked and rewoven. Paulien= editor of Mute mute@easynet.co.uk/ W: www.metamute.co.uk London Josephine = radio-maker Radio Patapoe 97.2FM ptp@desk.nl Amsterdam * -- * 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