Showing posts with label hostile objects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hostile objects. Show all posts

Two events in LA: Hostile Objects and CAUA Book Launch


Off of a minor circuit, at all points of which people should feel free to track me down if you live in these spots: NYC for a week for Historical Materialism NYC to give a joint-talk with Alberto on Italian Long 70s film, then to LA for a  two-part talk of sorts spread over two nights, a double-header what I hope will not be lectures as such but rather conversations.

NIGHT ONE: THE WORLD IS OUT TO GET US


Saturday evening, on the earlier end of things, a set of thoughts on hostile objects, winding through Stalinist gremlins, hoarding, ruined silk, demonic steam-presses, Tati and Keaton, comedy and horror, property damage, dangerous modernist sculpture, shipwreckers, and more.  This combined with a screening of one of my favorite anti-work films, The Man in the White Suit.  To be followed by talking, drinking, etc.


NIGHT TWO: THE WORLD IS OUT TO GET ITSELF

Sunday night, the Mandrake, where I spoke about zombies in the Contra Mundum series last year.  This is a launch of Combined and Uneven Apocalypse, which I'll take as an occasion less to read aloud what could be read on the page and more to offer a coda to the book, which includes the death of salvagepunk at the hands of a child, 1920s animation,  collapse and conspiracy, devalued currency, earthquakes, a defense of pessimism, and a scattershot passage through things that do not look like "apocalyptic" in the era when that description has become a baggy catch-all.  Plus, to cap it, I'll be showing the film to whose antagonists the book is dedicated: Wolfen, Michael Wadleigh's 1981 tale of superwolves defending an abandoned urban zone as their hunting ground and getting mistaken for communist extremists.

Spread the word to any and all and come join me for the two night spree.

... but the shitty flashlight we carry through those woods, the kicking-back chainsaws we wield to take them down


 News from the hostile objects / sabotage / malevolent commodity front:

 first, my piece on said topic for Mute is up.  Given space limitations, it's halfway between a skeleton and a sprint.  Hence consider it a gesture to be followed out from there (perhaps into a book-shaped thing), in part by me, especially on a few fronts: in the elaboration of the theory of alienated labor and commodification underpinning this, on the "sabotage relation" as double/inverse of the exchange relation, on how I am not kidding whatsoever when I write that claim that we literally live surrounded by the crystallized hostility of dead labor and time wasted, and on the way in which a perhaps not small part of 20th century cultural production has been marked by these questions). And, I hope, in part by others who pick it up from there.



second, and on that note, Giovanni - who was a significant help and influence on this work -  has already done so, preemptively, taking on a deeply strange insurance commercial, the injunction Love your stuff, and, more broadly, on the hostile edges of "mediated memory", where "subjectivity doesn’t coalesce according to orderly and normative patterns of behaviour but rather explodes into a fitful incoherence."

The Cussedness of Objects: Saturday the 22

UPDATE: Space is all filled up.  We have a waiting list in case anyone cancels, so feel free to write regarding this, but we're overpacked as is...


AT XERO, KLINE & COMA

The Cussedness of Objects is part of an ongoing dialogue between Evan Calder Williams of Socialism and/or Barbarism and Marina Vishmidt, writer and researcher at Queen Mary University, that started with hostile objects and has since opened more broadly onto commodity fetishism from the perspective of the commodity, recodings and "misuses" of the city (from occupations to barricades), reification theory, socialist animism, and, above all, the strange fates and promises of a built world alternately murderous, feeble, and indifferent.
The discussion will be followed by a screening of The Man in the White Suit.

Places are very limited so, R.S.V.P. to participate and for links to relevant reading.

The Coyote, having torn through the picture plane, hangs over the abyss, next to a ruined painting


Beside the everything going wrong in order that it may go wrongly on again,

beside the dejected drooping limp dick snout,

beside the transvestite come-ons (see the recurrent moment when the coyote dresses up in a blonde wig to urge the Road Runner to slow down and get busy a minute, which, given the relatively incoherent gendering of the Road Runner, makes it not only queer but, more relevantly, interspecies fucking, and one that crosses all the instinct wires of eat or run),

beside the question of expanding credit that lingers behind it (as prediction of times to come, how else does he afford all these things which he uses to ensure the reproduction of his labor, and the consequence that the Roadrunner has nothing to do with sustenance),

beside the Roadrunner being our last century's finest figure of pure Drive, always seething forward, even as the space cannot be mapped, progress cannot be figured, there is no forward, and the urge to catch it is a latching onto its inconstant appearance in the realm of supposed coherence,

beside the question that it therefore isn't about hunger but about a project of recovering species being via technological apparatuses (the freezing and extension of the body into a set of dispensable products, somewhere there is an Acme graveyard with Acme tombstones for all the combusted, shattered ex-Acme products),



beside the fact that it is the cultural consideration of hostile objects par excellence, in which every commodity works wrongly but you never stop to consider stepping outside of the commodity, of making your own quick-drying cement or knives or bombs rather than relying on the technical ineptitude of the budget-rate Acme, 

beside the fact that his failure is just that of being a non-virtuosic consumer,

besides all that,

Zobacz więcej na www.streemo.pl
[start this at 3:00]

recall that moment, in all its permutations, when Coyote paints a canvas of a road continuing straight ahead and puts it, tipped vertically, to match a real road that is but which ends in a sheer cliff, and the Roadrunner speeds blithely into the illusion, and then a truck comes from it and flattens Coyote, and he suddenly suspends belief in materiality or a clear division between representation and what's the case, and he runs full speed into the canvas, tearing through, a tattered sabotage of the work and its purpose, now failed twice (to prevent a viewer from engaging with it fully, first, and then from allowing a viewer to do so), and Coyote hangs in the air, somewhere behind the torn curtain and the busted picture plane, and there is no ground beneath his feet?


That's modernism.


Not some cool overcoming of the rules of the game, not a theoretical enterprise, not a rigorous examination of the conditions of visibility, but a last-ditch effort to have it be the case that those rules ever were and ever stayed the same.  That would prove that you could control it all along, and that the taking apart of the rules would inaugurate a new set, stronger all the more for having been negated, like the burning of a king to bring back his sovereignty without the constraints of a figured body.  That there could be Modernism, not a sloppy tangle of incoherent differing operations whose rules do not cohere.

If anything, the selection of the term "situation" by the SI gets something of this right, even if not for this reason: closer to Debord's love of strategic thinking, particularly of the military variety, the point is not that one constructs situations but that "situations" are all that there ever are, a variegated set of inconstant responses to a universal law of value but one which never makes itself manifest twice the same way and which registers the previous engagement with it: the capacity of one to have engaged, when such engagement is witnessed and marked by another, thereby means that such engagement cannot be repeated.  And with each instance, the canvas or film or piece of rock is torn and stretched, shattered through or thicker for all its absorption and perforation, til it swells and and rips and droops and gapes, til all that can be seen are the holes, a ragged lace to be stood in front of for 17.0 to 2 to 29.2 to 32.5 seconds.


More simply...

His paintings are those of versimillitude and trompe l'oeil, but they are so only in order to produce an encounter that will irreparably violate both the principle and the feathered body that enacts it.
And they are so only in terms of a failure, not an Adornian one, but one as follows, via a set of assumptions:
a) that there could be something coherent enough as a general Modernism (which would assure  the constancy of the art in question,  i.e. how it should work, such that two bodies engaging with it will have roughly the same experience, and the general disenchanting of its role, such that one who has "seen behind the curtain"/puts the paint on the wall can now see its potentially instrumental, and not aesthetic, role)

b) that not everyone has got the word about this new game in town, and, as such, still engages with it according to the old rules of the game

c) that there has not be a total clearing away of previous modes of art practice (there is still plenty of non-modernist stuff out there, and it's therefore reasonable for even the canny to expect that

d) that the tricking of the intellect leads to a necessary tricking of the body, such that the body will run up against harmful material conditions which the head did not adequately grasp, not being adequately up with the times

e) that you can disbelieve in the integrity of viewing and yet still use it to other ends, that you can correctly determine when and where one remains at the level of the painting as trompe l'oeil: that you can know better than yet still figure out how those who don't know will interact with the painting


On each ground, though, this comes entirely undone:


a) one engages deeply with the work while another is stopped up short, and the fact that one knows that it is, in fact, a trick to bring about a desired end does not guarantee that the work can and will function in this manner, for anyone other than the trickster, and only then in a negative dysfunctionality

[in addition, the very promise of a "general modernism" is a tricky one, given that part of its self-definition is the general coming undone, via particular interrogations of the limits of particular media, of a supposedly general set of conditions by which people engaged with aesthetic experiences.  But, of course, it helps to decide that there were a coherent set of rules to start, and it's pretty clear that regimes of vision and aggregate modes of engagement aside, it takes something like a rhetoric of modernism to declare that there was a stable, however messy, pile of Art Before The Fall]

[the Roadrunner speeds through an idyllic setting]

b) Sure, there are those Roadrunners who don't get it, who seem to plow blindly ahead through the pain, but this one "gets it" in a very convenient, perverse, and  cunning way, gets that modernism has nothing to do with a monolithic new rule of perception (if it's a painting, it is a material incident, it is not a space of vision to be entered), that it's an uneven set of borrowing, deploying, dcclaring, and revising, all those things that you supposedly had to wait for a post prefix to give you

c)  Such a version of the continued persistence of "pre-modernist" modes assumes that on each occasion, the ones who don't know any better will interact with it in the manner correct to its object, that they will treat modernist things like modernists (perhaps scratch their heads and refer to the capacity of their children to paint that) and unmodernist things as un-modernists (they will run straight at an illusion as if it's real).  This has never been the case. As if there's something incommensurable between recognizing the materiality of a painting and engaging with it as a field of vision, as if you couldn't realize that the widening of the terrain of potential operations didn't just mean that you can rip the canvas when you need to, just as much as you can get lost in it when that's the better option.  As if vision was ever an unthinking

d) Yes, you cannot stop, but there are calibrations, subtle, quick, a tensing up, a knowledge wired into the wheeling tendons that knows nothing other than a deftness of how to slip through holes and make them when need be.  Moreover, consider the four permutations, and the missing last one:


the head knows and the body knows (the Roadrunner "gets" that it's a painting and stops dead in front of it, to be potentially eaten, or, more likely, it gets nowhere near it, it forecloses the potential of such an experience)

the head knows and the body does not know (the Roadrunner recognizes, as it surges forward, that what it faces is not a real road but a painting of one, that's to say, a modernist painting that cannot be engaged, and it crashes through the canvas, falls to the canyon, to be potentially eaten)

the head does not know and the body knows (the Roadrunner wants to treat the painting like it is not a painting, that's to say, a pre-modernist painting that can be engaged as not art but experience, but there is an instinctual holding back, a skittering, perhaps to be potentially eaten or maybe the body finds something fiercer and finally puts those powerful legs to use disemboweling that saddest of predators)

the head does not know and the body does not know (the Roadrunner penetrates fully into the space of the painting and is not potentially eaten, although

If the scheme of Coyote is predicated, endlessly, upon the imagined ignorance of the Roadrunner, it turns out, in fact, that it is just this ignorance which is the saving grace.  Or rather, not from a master's perspective, the simulation of ignorance, of the possession of unknown capacities not beholden to the normal ordering of the world.

e) That misrecognition of Coyote - yes, this will work because, not in spite of, the mental and corporal non-knowledge of the Roadrunner - is an extension of a deep fantasy of thought's capacity of approximate stupidity, that you can rationally determine a response that is not based on reason.  Against this, we know that: thought needs to get dumb (that is, think itself to the point of its dissolution, but not remotely in order to give primacy to some "knowledge of the body," which is an idiocy of a different, and more dangerous, order) and that this dumbness must impel a recognition that a correlation between what ought to be the case and what tends to be the case has never, ever existed.

---


In each case, in these five modernist fuck-ups, a similar doubt, staved off for, lies at root: namely, that the canvas might not be constant.  (It is in this precise way, more than others, that art mirrors the commodity form: it cries out for the originary stasis, and non-decay, that the principle and moment of exchange demands, a freezing of a thing into an object that will be used, handled, torn, ruined, but that at the moment of the contractual, expected interface, it will be as it should be, and the only thing that might change is your perception of it, if it will be a wise investment, if it is or is not a clever neo-expressionist reworking of Rococo elements.)


For, in this episode, as in the episode we might call modernist painting, which is nothing but a series of potential and disjointed encounters, yet which do share a common abstraction beneath them (or rather, a common drive toward abstraction, conveniently - though perhaps not casually - in the period in which the global spread real subsumption of labor put abstraction of a more dominant order on the map everywhere), in this episode, there are two subterranean, unwanted possibilites: the canvas is marked by each encounter (not because the material magically absorbs its interlocutors, but because your awareness of others having passed this way before, who've had a certain kind of experience to it, conditions your own), or, opposed yet simultaneous, the canvas is not constant and never had any rules to ensure a common experience.  At most, it is a fixed, albeit scarred, center of stable focus around which a seething storm of different factors turn, and there was nothing specific about it, in terms of intention or of form, other than the historical specificity of its instance.

In other words, what the Coyote's fall spells out, beyond a nicely crystallized and over-literal "rupturing of the picture plane", is the way in which such an instance - a painting, a political moment - may be structurally determined, and as such, deserves to be constant across time, yet which nevertheless is informed by the actions of those who watch those who have gone before, and in trying to repeat, to do the same thing, to assume that the breaking of the rules that have just occurred have therefore reset the rules, such that if one body passes into the painting, so too all others which follow. 

That just because you broke with perspective, one can have perspective no longer.  That the exceptional and inconstant happen only once per ruling order, and only in order to solidify the next order according to which things add up and paintings are either looked at or run into.


What, though, of this practice, of Coyote doing what does look a hell of a lot like a trajectory of modernism writ in minor:

figurative painting intended as an extension of the space and ordered in which it exists (Coyote paints a road, producing an imaginary wholeness over a rupture in that space, the road looks like it belongs, it is verisimilitude)

a questioning of the relation between a perspectival field and the material surface on which it exists (the Roadrunner breaks the rules by pointing out a fundamental contradiction between the flat, impermeability of the canvas, and the three-dimensional space that it both portrays and in which it really exists: by penetrating into the imagined space, the Roadrunner also penetrates past the two-dimensionality of the painting)

a material rupture that takes to its full limit the logic of that question, physically enacting that critique, and extension of the space of viewership to the entire space in which the work is situated (Coyote runs at the canvas and tears a whole in it)

a revision of what constitutes the work of art, such that the entire process of questioning, investigation, revision, and failure to reinscribe a non-critical surety becomes the work itself, recorded across time
(the Coyote, having torn through the picture plane, hangs over the abyss, next to a ruined canvas)

I leave for an entire other time the instance of the text behind the torn painting, such that all which remains after the "failed encounter" is a new tradition, one that documents process, a conceptual work in which the viewer stands to the side of the work, and sees only the vanished artist, the ruined work, blasted through with a body as if with a wound, the words emerging in the ephemeral detritus picked up on the approach toward the canvas:


Were he an artist, he's got loads of possibilities: a lumpen Futurist of the Southwest with equal parts technological excitement and dejection, a Land Artist who specializes in procedural work involving dynamite and the unintended consequences of the drive toward accumulate on the landscape (an Eco Crusader producing and documenting the scarred and charred rocks, marked with one too many blasts of misfiring Acme TNT).  At his best, the one who doesn't enter the illusionistic space but busts through the material frame, who finds perspective to be a tearable barrier, just a flimsy stop before the canyon, he'd be a cut-rate mash-up of Luciano Fontana


with Pino Pascali, 

 

and an emphasis on the Povera of the later, not in starting from the humble materials of rope and straw, but from the real material of the poor, the bargain technologies doomed to poison, jam, sticking, and take your hand off.

But because he's supposedly not an artist, and not interested in selling his busted canvases, or seeing them as producing significant advances away from figuration or anything, but only in sinking teeth into that dry, lean, meatless little hunk of the Real, he can sees his paintings as means to an other end, just one more failed technology to join the junkyard.

Of course, the concern is not the consumption of the bird but the circulation of capital engendered by its pursuit (it's an excuse for the technology, for the purchasing of Acme, the motivation in the name of primary consumption - caloric energy - that allows for the total froth and frenzy of mail-order shopping, to order up death on an installment plan).  And as such, if he got smarter, he would just let the Roadrunner enter the painting and burn it like the Dadaist he never let himself be, trapping the Road Runner in some other episode, walled inside a pile of ash and a perspective going nowhere.

Two final instances.
First.




[start this at 3:10]

The condition of entrance - that is, of engagement - is not belief.  It is the framing of an other watcher, of us, of those for whom the painting is just an encounter inside a wider one, a frame one step beyond the Coyote.

painting 
    I
    I
    I
Roadrunner (painting as aesthetic experience to be engaged or as trap to be avoided)
   I
   I
   I
Coyote (painting as aesthetic experience for Roadrunner, as trap to be set, and as thing which has now been engaged and violated by Roadrunner)
   I
   I
   I
us as viewers (painting as aesthetic experience for Roadrunner, as trap to be set, and as thing which has now been engaged and violated by Roadrunner, and failure of Coyote to have a successful aesthetic encounter: all of which constitutes for us the cultural experience of the cartoon as a whole)

Watching closely, the sequence - and the "camera," if one can speak of the position of the camera in animation -  is organized in accordance with and entirely these levels. 

When the Roadrunner sprints through, we are facing the painted tunnel straight on, such that it recedes into the painting.  The Roadrunner enters it as our sight does.
Then Coyote decides to make a charge at it.  As he does, the camera is framed to the side:


With this the accidental anamorphosis, as we see it skewed from the side, the rendering impossible of the illusion from our perspective brings about the same condition for him.  The complicity of the third party, a triangulation, breaks down the prospect of engaging "naively," for Coyote has been performing for us, setting up the gag, demanding the moves of the camera.  But...



After his smashing into the rock, the camera/drawing reframes, again facing the rock straight on, the only condition by which the roadrunner can exit once more, its day absorbed into the museum finished.

That's to say: the experience of the Roadrunner isn't just impossible for Coyote because he's witnessed both it and his own experience of producing the illusion.  It's because both experiences, all experiences, fall beneath the shadow of another set of eyes, that sees our seeing, that we cower beneath, nervous about the right and cool way to do things, about what's naive and what's knowing, about being a sucker or not.  And as we stand there waiting, debating, something roars out from within and blindsides us.  That something is history, which comes when our back is turned, which kicks us when we're down, which gives us a reason to storm the walls, that comes out only and ever from what we thought was closed to us.

Second.  A final instance such that seems to countervene all that has gone before, of the basic problem of Coyote is that he's a disciple of some bad Enlightenment, who can't shake off his realism enough to dare to win, who isn't a fanatic, such that when he charges point blank at the painted stone wall, he knows how stupid this is and that this won't work, that the rules do not persist, that the truck or train blasting out of it into him is no confirmation that the perspectival space will remain porous.

For there is this:





[start this at 4:00]

There is this, this jaw-drop, when Coyote finds a stretch of "normal" road and erects a canvas on which he paints a scene of a broken bridge over a chasm that isn't there.  His previous paintings have depicted - and given the Roadrunner's use of them, actually brought about - a new functionality to an exhausted, abandoned landscape.  Roads where old ones crumble away!  Railway lines cutting through the mountains to get you to the families and jobs that do not exist!  Coyote paints this break-down and waits for the Roadrunner, who sprints straight through it and the illusion.  Frustrated, Coyote chases after him, expecting the painting to treat him as he's treated them all along, as flat surfaces set up on walls and in front of voids, something to be passed through with little resistance.  And indeed, he encounters none, but wrongly.  He runs into the painting and off the rails.

A few things of this.

If anything, this is first a recognition, a witnessing, of the previous encounters.  He knows that the way the Roadrunner engages with art is to participate with it so fully as to pass into it, or at least to treat it not as representation but as a continuous portion of the visual field.  He'll halt before it, becoming potentially edible once more.  Or, better, he'll hurl himself into and off, lost where he can be neither buried nor eaten, where all this can end once and for all.

Insofar as belief relates at all, it is here the disbelief - that cherished disbelief of the knowing painter - that makes this bursting through possible.  More than that, more at dusk, remains the possibility that it is a mortal leap of not caring, a suicidal indifference.  Like the Wendigo who cannot stop even as his feet burn, the Roadrunner is driven ahead.  The double-bind of the painting could just be the emergency exit, the tricking of drive into plummeting.  But this cunning -  I will use the fact that I know it is just a painting to allow me to not stop and therefore enter the painting - makes the belief impossible.  He passes through, his death taken from him.  And Coyote, as before, forgetting that an exception does not an order establish, believes in reverse, believes that it's just painting.  For the first time, this belief confirmed: every time before, his knowledge of "just a painting" was countervened by the Roadrunner.  This time that belief is confirmed, and it is at that moment, a moment of belief without object, that vulnerable moment of assuming the world to accord with judgment, that he strays into the danger of that aesthetic experience he's held off for so long.


Coyote has become a real modernist painter, once and for all,  by becoming a realist painter.  He's now painting ruin, he's filling the landscape with a representation both of what it looks like (busted, dangerous, worthless) and of the value and social relations on which it runs and which it enable (busted, dangerous, worthless).  

He recognizes the breakdown of coherency, of what should be the case (there should be roads, birds should not fly into painted spaces), and presents that, finding in that stupid impossibility a subject worth painting and an experience that will be shared at its harshest: you, you who believe, you may not get caught and eaten, but you will participate in the wreckage of art.  I may have been the one to paint this break, chasm, but you, you bring about the real wreckage: a hole in a painting of a hole.  

That will not be filled, which reveals the world on the other side, on this side, the limitless map of all that is without value, that has no edges, that is a dessicated ocean, to be part and parcel of this hole.  A volume in which this feeble trompe l'oeil was alone an anchor.

Gremlins from the Kremlin, in the land of inflated rent and bong resin



If curiosity strikes any in the SC region, I'll be speaking tomorrow, with a number of friends and collaborators.  I'll give a version of the talk I gave in London last week, on hostile objects, sabotage, comedy, hoarding, gremlins, evil steam presses, spoiled soup, and frozen exchange.  A number of very sharp people will be talking - Erik's thinking on behaviorism alone is worth the trip.

Aesthetic Revolutions: Workshop and Symposium

Saturday, November 20 9AM-6:30PM
Cowell Conference Room

This workshop is associated with a collaborative book in progress comparing different historical moments and national / linguistic / cultural contexts of aesthetic revolutions.  As we define it, an “aesthetic revolution” designates a particular sort of historical formation in which radical artistic and political agendas converge, with both being conflated in a holistic utopian vision or project.  As key examples of heteronomous art movements reaching beyond the confines of the institution of art we are considering Italian Futurism, Surrealism, Russian post-October avant-garde, Situationist International, American culture of the sixties, the Neue Slowenische Kunst movement in Slovenia, and recent Chinese art.  The co-authored book will seek to analyze these avant-garde phenomena historically and critically, revealing common characteristics and the situations and processes underlying them. This is the third of  three workgroup meetings, following meetings in Koper, Slovenia in June 2010 and Beijing in August 2010.  The draft papers for the workgroup sessions are available in advance; please request via email from tyrus@ucsc.edu.  The oral presentations cover additional topics related to the theme of aesthetic revolutions.


9:00 Introductory remarks


Morning workshop sessions (short presentations and discussion of papers circulated in advance):

9:15-10:15: Aleš Erjavec (Ljubljana) "Introduction: Aesthetic Revolutions"
10:15-11:15:Sascha Bru (Leuven), “From Book to Party: The Futurist Re-Definition of Art” (via videoconference)

11:15-11:45:  coffee break

11:45-12: 45: Raymond Spiteri (Wellington), “The Automatic Message: Surrealism and the Limits of Aesthetic Revolution”

12:45-1:45: Lunch

Afternoon workshop session (short presentations and discussion of papers circulated in advance):

1:45-2:45:  Tyrus Miller (Santa Cruz), “All Along the Watchtower: Aesthetic Revolution in the United States during the 1960s”

2:45-3:15: Coffee break

Oral presentations: 3:15-5:45

Session 1: 3:15-4:30
Evan Calder Williams (Santa Cruz), "Hostile Objects"
Kelly Anne Brown (Santa Cruz), "Balanced Tension: The sculpture and performance of Alexander Calder's Circus"
Discussion

Session 2: 4:30-5:45
Erik Bachman (Santa Cruz), "How to Misbehave as a Behaviorist (If You're Wyndham Lewis)"
Hunter Bivens (Santa Cruz), "From the Crisis of the Novel to Socialist Realism--an Aesthetic Counterrevolution?"
Discussion


Tick tock

The collaboration of the alarm, trigger, bullet, blade, rope, and stone, all unified against wood that wanted to be boy.

The rat, too, will be crushed

Relationship problems


No, everything is fine, honey.  Other than the slo-mo gasp of welds coming apart at a deadlock, that is.

 (two masochists go for a ride)



What's real mean isn't the scalding.  It's that you have to learn to tip it in reverse to get anything to come out.

(a masochist - not because the pain, but because it is an active decision to allow the sadistic spill - pours some coffee for one)

The drowning life preserver (hostile object theory)

In Keaton's Steamboat Bill, Jr., after prodigal son Bill Jr. is de-dandified (i.e. mustache removed, beret taken off, and "work clothes" put on), he comes onto his father's ship for gainful employ. And to get the designation: not Bill Jr., but Steamboat Bill Jr. Already with the title of the film, he's a thing man, and a second-order one at that, the labored attempt to measure up to the man defined by his laboring object. The arc of the film, in one way, simply traces this: coming to deserve the Jr. by coming to be a steamboat Bill, the master of steamboating in this town.

But the objects aren't having it.  Moments after stepping onto the ship, Bill's turned around and backs into the railing, knocking the life preserver ring off into the river below, where it's expect to bob and drift, cheerily buoyant.  But at which point the life preserver sinks immediately.  Like a stone.  Dragging itself, and the phantom body it's supposed to hold aloft, to the muddy cold of the riverbed.


There have been hints before of an object-world at odds with those who, as a species, make those objects and, as individuals, try to make them work for them.  (The ceaseless series of possible hats incapable of pleasing both father and son.  And when compromise is found/forced onto the younger, the wind snatches it away.  Wasted time and judgment, spent money, and lost thing.)  But there persisted the sense of minor, vitalizing inconveniences: how else do you develop a bit of gumption and character, or that shy smile, without tussling with a resistant order of things?  You gotta learn that the wind is a bastard, just like our competitors, and they will steal that hat right away from you.  Self-reliance on a gusty day.

This is something different.  A fundamental wrongness of objects.  After the ring plummets through the water, Bill steps back in shock, bumps his head.  A stunned, sudden unmaking of the ground: things are not as they seem.  He staggers tentatively, reaching out to touch the ship, now utterly uncertain what it is, the correlation between the purpose of a thing and its murderous purposiveness shattered in the fall of a single object.  What is a steamboat when a life preserver isn't just sub-par at preserving life but reveals itself as the promise of the termination of life?  A stone life terminator ring.  A ghost ship of sharp edges and weight, inertia and speed and obstinacy.  And beyond that, borne out in what follows, a world barely held together.  We touch it gingerly, never knowing what will break and what will break us, thoughtlessly.

This is an instance of what I'll call, and build out from here, hostile object theory: a conviction that objects aren't just indifferent to us, aren't just coherent beyond our intentions, aren't just darkly resistant to correlating with the world as it is for us.  Far worse for us, when we can glimpse even a shadow of how they are not for us, they reveal themselves, with a faceless sneer, as fundamentally hostile, uncertain, dangerous, and incommensurable with the purpose for which they were designed.  This isn't to speak of nature per se, not an Algernon Blackwood-esque thought of a savage animism (or rather, an agential, often anthropomorphic- even as it tries to disavows the humanness of what it depicts - monstrous nature).  This, rather, is the bastard child of a unified theory of what the world is without us, a thought instead of how the world we build to help us navigate the dark woods is already without us while we're still here, when we're clinging to it desperately.  A sword with no handle, we grip it all the same.  It's an unnaturphilosophie, concerned not with humanless ecologies but the self-sabotaging, crumbling, poison-flooded inhumanity of the very possibility of the economic.  (That is, the management, ordering, shaping, and instrumental use of resources, in the house of the human.)

There is the cold neutrality of that which needs us not a whit.  And then there's that which would not exist without us, and hates us for this fact, hates its dependence, loathes the fact of its existence.  This isn't to ascribe a magical subjectivity to things, not to imagine them as independent in themselves in a way that simply mirrors our gaze upon them, as if we're willing to trade a look of scorn and rage back in order to have any look back, to not have to stare at the dusky nothing of what is.

Rather, a basic fact, or at least insofar as we believe that capitalism is predicated on antagonism.  Not produced necessarily as an after-effect of disequilibrium and exploutation, not bottled up, tenuously, lest the proles learn to negate all at once.  Antagonism - to be plainer: hatred, loathing, rage, desolation, shame, abjection, envy - is what drives capital, drags it forward, to profit and to collapse.  It's the seething, constant fire that burns all it's fed and courses the steam through the channels of the engine.  The basic hatred of self, for being complicit, and others, for letting us be complicit, that makes us need commodities and money, makes us hunger for whatever isn't human (why would we want to be reminded of that?), those inhuman things that, through our consumptive destruction and possessive withdrawal from circulation of them,  alone remains capable of grounding each of us as better than the rest.


(The fundamental misanthropy of the individual's reproduction of capital: its triumph is the temporary secession from a mass of actors all trying to do the same damn thing, everyone fleeing the same shameful us they wanted no part in, the same us produced in the very act of trying to gain the means to leave it behind.)  En masse the species withdraws from itself, only to find the exits suffocatingly packed with others who had the same idea.

How, then, can this not be embedded in these things, these boats, cars, knives, life preservers, gears, houses, screens, loaves, bowls, drills?  If, following Marx, the machine (or rather, the assemblage consisting of literal machines, the workers using them/being used by them, and the relations of production crystallized by the whole thing) is an instantiation of the general intellect, we say: all commodities are instantiations of the general hostility.  They are built records of a labor that wishes it did not exist.  That abhors the conditions that demand it and which, conversely, it demands as the guarantee of a continued recognition that this labor meant something.  That all wasn't for naught, for the nothing it seeks perversely against its own preservation.


If salvagepunk presents a possible version of anti-capitalist reification (via the analogical translation of the object relations underpinning salvage onto a communist practice of building from scrap and disaster), this is a related call, but toward a bleaker, snarling inhuman anti-reification that swallows not only its inherent value but also its basic utility.  An urging that we don't go far enough.  Commonly, we assume that the "solution" is to stop treating objects as subjects, to stop endowing them with the character of social relations.  Things are just things, they won't make you a better person, they have no inherent value, destruction of property isn't really violence...  But to do this is simply to parse them off as not us, without recognizing that they are the material organization of the hatred that went into them, all that thwarted agency, that clenched fist that keeps pulling its punches and punching its clocks.  As such, anti-reification for a different reason, not because we should just see things as they really are, but because "reification" implies that there's a category error, socially necessary but a fallacy all the same, something's gone wrong in cognition.  But it hasn't.  Something has gone wrong in the organization, production, and maintenance of things.  This is no pathetic fallacy.  It's a volition without a subject, a darkness without transparency, an agency without agent, a loathing without a name, a hatred without an end, a general hostility without reason.

And it's everywhere.


The sinking of that life preserver is just the beginning, a minor presaging of the storm to come.  The actual unbinding of the built world, a nightmare of decoherence.  It is wind, sure, it's the "force of nature," but that doesn't explain anything of how it feels, how it looks.  It's the town - and with the local instance, the very presupposition of a grounded life settled and the alignment of things with with how we want them to be - coming apart, peeling back, falling down.  Total warfare via the only means the objects have: the sabotage of utility in the name of threatening its inhabitants, its makers, its dwellers.  Bill flees the roofless hospital toward the shelter of the library.  Slowly, obscenely, sleepily, its columns tilt all at once, tortuously close to him. (Again and again, he's saved through a combination of his quickness and his already belonging to that world, his being a thing man, permanently befuddled and quietly pissed off, gloomy behind the dry non-smile, about having to participate in the charade of social existence.  If anything, his continued existence as a living human is due to the fact that he never was particularly good at being one.) Collapsing in on itself, without body, without reason, without care.  


And with that, the end of interiority, of protected, delimited zones, of safe spaces away from the fury of what we made finally learning to unmake itself.  An exterior wall rips away, and the outside pours in.  Or worse, the inside falls out and nearly takes us with it.




The window, that brief cut between the inside and the outside, between the security of the enclosed and the threat without, the window itself a threat (what could come in, what could join me in my secession and withdrawal, beyond the pleasantness of sunlight, there are bad people out there...).  The cut alone saves, the opposite of the life preserver ring: unlike the window, the point of which is not the hole, but what surrounds it, that material that should be buoyant, that switched teams without telling anyone, never tested until it's too late.  And this we can't leave, behind or for elsewhere.

A life preserver that will distinctly not preserve your life.  A falling-apart world that will drag you down with it.  Until then, nothing to do but to break more windows where none existed, to drag our feet.  To build a fire or raise a riot, to stand steady in that torn-open inside.  To detect where our laughter ends and where that hostile wind blows from, up from the drowned and undrownable, on and on and on.