Deregulation, - 15 hit points

Odd cross-over: amongst flurry of things to do and be done, I'm teaching a section for a class on international cyberpunk as well as part of a reading group on the lineages and roots of the current credit crisis.


And here we have their brilliant point of contact: a deregulated MMORPG economy and massive online inflation.

Not sure if this led to rampant foreclosures on magic caves and repossessions of swords of dark summoning, but one can imagine. (And sub-prime loans on dragon shields for those who have shown themselves unlikely to conquer enough elf-mage tribes, or whatever the hell they're called, in order to repay their virtual banks.)

The Laibox©

Anyone who knows investors that want to support auto-détournement projects to leak onto the market? Because I want to introduce...


the Laibox©! Take the hip-hop industry's current obsession with auto-tuners (i.e. "robot voice"). What the Laibox© does is to take any vocal input and make it sound like Laibach vocals, heavy, guttural, Slovenian-accented, mining-of-totalitarian-history vocals.

And better, the Laibox© can be hooked up to any source. Wolf Blitzer on CNN? Now he sounds like a militant, power-drunk barbarian revolutionary with "third world hunger." Jane Austen audiobook? Banal "experimental" poetry readings? Body-wash ads?

Like Laibach promised in "Hell:Symmetry," with the Laibox©, I really can "speak your language" and make it mine, "clear-cut and crude."


The Laibox©... bringing Balkan defamiliarization and historical discomfort to the masses.

Between kvlt and nü


Oh, this makes me alarmingly happy.

Christian filth



In case anyone was harboring fantasies that the Obama administration would represent even a nominal turn toward the resecularization of American politics, think again and check out the rather staggeringly religious structure in which his inauguration has unfolded.

(Particularly notable is Rick Warren's polyglot hailing of variant names for the almighty. We're getting closer to the Senate debating via speech in tongues and snake handling.)

Bronson!

This looks quite promising. A secular Hulk film, if you will, gene-spliced with Thompson's The Killer Inside Me? This is, in some form, a bio-pic of British prisoner Charles Bronson, master of hostage-taking and riot starting and solitary fitness and cartooning and donating money to children's animal charities.

And so, following Dark Knight, we're looking to get another installment in films that refuse to assign a logic to anarchic violence, retreating neither to psychological disturbance (at least not in any immediately definable way) nor to some concrete family background trauma as the singular reason (recall the Joker's ever-shifting backstory as to how he "got these scars," essentially mocking those who think they'd know how to deal with him if they knew the originary site of his disturbance).

Past blood, new hunger (and/or love beyond marital...)

This is the poem Elizabeth Alexander read for Obama's inauguration. It is an enormous, steaming pile of tripe. And sadly, it demonstrates an alarming number of elements common to what passes for popular/"populist" poetry in American these days. My comments inserted in italics below.

Praise song for the day.

Right off the bat, we know we have a winner. Not only does it evoke our current hodgepodge of neo-New Ager "praise" (albeit inflected slightly differently here, given the evangelical rhetorical overtones of Obama's speech), it also can't help itself from calling itself something other than a poem. A poem? Oh no, this is a praise song.

Each day we go about our business, walking past each other, catching each others' eyes or not, about to speak or speaking. All about us is noise. All about us is noise and bramble, thorn and din, each one of our ancestors on our tongues. Someone is stitching up a hem, darning a hole in a uniform, patching a tire, repairing the things in need of repair.

One of my biggest pet peeves in poetry, and one that signals a much deeper problem, is the overuse of the "someone/something" trope. (i.e. "not love but something like it", "and we felt it there, something like the silence of a day", etc). Supposedly it means that these are honest poets, struggling with the fundamentally imprecision of language to grasp those things that are "more important" than names. Really it means that you're a fucking lazy hack.

Someone is trying to make music somewhere with a pair of wooden spoons on an oil drum with cello, boom box, harmonica, voice.

Maybe my favorite part. I get that she is trying for a sort of pluralism, uniting poor, ramshackle musicians and their ubiquitous empty oil drums (which might now be a sign of wealth for the traces of precious crude within) with the rich, school cellists, not to mention the "urban" boombox. Or at least a version of postmodern global tribal mashup. But mostly, it sounds to me like an actual band that I'd like to hear. Called the John Brown Harper's Ferry (Blues) Explosion.

A woman and her son wait for the bus.

A farmer considers the changing sky; A teacher says, "Take out your pencils. Begin."

We encounter each other in words, words spiny or smooth, whispered or declaimed; words to consider, reconsider.

OK, so all is noise and bramble, that apparently tears holes in tires and uniforms. Yet we encounter each other in words. What then is this mysterious noise and bramble if not language? This is quite typical of the American cult of authenticity and suspicion of artifice, the idea that if we could just get past that noise of failed communication, all would be right. It achieves the remarkable unity of being attentive neither to the brute material facts of money and buildings and blood and history nor to the fact that there is nothing beyond miscommunication. Our misspeech is not just the best that we've got, it is the only thing that gives constancy to desires and hopes and all those other properly inauguration day themes.

We cross dirt roads and highways that mark the will of someone and then others who said, "I need to see what's on the other side; I know there's something better down the road."

We need to find a place where we are safe; We walk into that which we cannot yet see.

Say it plain, that many have died for this day. Sing the names of the dead who brought us here, who laid the train tracks, raised the bridges, picked the cotton and the lettuce, built brick by brick the glittering edifices they would then keep clean and work inside of.

This, for me, is just pure cynicism, even if (or precisely because of being) well-intentioned. To speak of the names of the dead (without actually speaking their names, just the promise that one is doing "something" like that) who did this work, clearly coded as slave work, at the inauguration of someone who is nothing if not the best defense of global capitalism available today, is rather sick. I have no urge to deny the racial significance of Obama's election. But what this achieves here is a horrific narrative of progress, as if we needed those people to slave and toil and die in order for some small consolation now. This is a discontinuous history, one that cannot be retrofitted because of a slow increase in tolerability. It serves only to flatten and iron out, rather than elevating past blood into new fever and hunger.

They did not die for this day. The died because of imperialism. They died for no good reason whatsoever, other than the ceaseless cycling of capital.

Praise song for struggle; praise song for the day. Praise song for every hand-lettered sign; The figuring it out at kitchen tables.

Some live by "Love thy neighbor as thy self."

Others by first do no harm, or take no more than you need.

All well and good, but what we need is the cold assessment that few live this way. And saying that it's time for change is word, not deed (given that the Democratic party isn't exactly the union of theory and praxis we envisioned, this opposition stands here).

What if the mightiest word is love, love beyond marital, filial, national. Love that casts a widening pool of light. Love with no need to preempt grievance.

Ah, so we need love beyond marital. There's a word for that. It's called "extramarital love." And while it might be "mighty" fun, last time we crossed that with a president, he got himself impeached.

In today's sharp sparkle, this winter air, anything can be made, any sentence begun.

On the brink, on the brim, on the cusp -- praise song for walking forward in that light.

I think I'll just answer this with an image, not a poem:



This is Gaza, ad infinitum + 1 + 1 + 1...


I was sent this by a collective I know, and I put this up first as just an image, to let it stand alone. But CR let me know that this is in fact from Israel's 2006 attacks on Lebanon.

And now I'm struck even more by my mistake here, by something like this which remains a sort of singularity but which is made not commensurable but one in a series. To borrow from Badiou here, we might think of these instances (that which might be Lebanon, that which might be Gaza, that which can never be part of the kind of death exchange calculus Israel wishes for) as + 1's that never manage to expand the set. Or at the least, we should guard them as such, holding off their inclusion into calculations of "acceptable loss."

Wolv(erin)es of Blood & Iron

In case anyone was wondering what the ideal type is for black metal covers, Finland's Satanic Warmaster (whose name is pretty flawless as well), a BM horde consisting of only one member (Satanic Tyrant Werewolf), nails it all the way through the spectrum.

From the terroristic stance replete with weapons (although not nostalgic spears, meaning that we've moved beyond early 90's Satyricon releases), Nazi-echo names (though Mr. Werewolf denies any NS leanings, he just enjoys mining the bleak depths of European history, à la Laibach), obligatory inverted crosses, black and white photography, and indiscernible nationalistic-seeming eagle resting on... that's right, a black nimbus encircling the balaclava-clad hed of our protagonist...


... to your standard heavily inscribed logo with a photo of Werewolf in the BM equivalent of bling (nail sleeves and an inverted-cross chain) in his corpse-painted glory in, where else, a dark forest to...


... to a wolverine behind a tree. I love the sincerity of this (and his tongue poking out, presumably at the decaying hull of the Christian faith). Wolverines are cold-dwelling nasty creatures capable of waging war on you. Apparently, this little fellow is capable not only of biting your shins, but of doing so as a satanic warmaster of the night.

X avec Y


New blog of mine, one that will be generated by things sent to me by you.

Let them throw cake


This came my way via Retort - an update on the situation.

A vivid note from Athens to a friend in Ithaca, NY: The government still hasn't realized this is an overwhelming protest by the people verging on an insurrection. But never mind. They will leave sooner or later. Two things. One important and one just funny. At the boy's funeral his class mates read a letter out addressed to us. It was a great J'Accuse of our generation and how we have stripped youth of dreams, values, aspirations, how they feel ashamed of us but would like to be proud of us only all we do is buy and sell. "You don't dream any more, you don't fall in love, all you do is buy and sell and we are ashamed of you." It was really a great text. I shall find it somewhere and translate it for you. Now the funny one. Scuffles and skirmishes are continuing all over the city and at one of these yesterday where the cops were harassing some school kids, people in the cafes near by (oldies on the whole) dashed out and started throwing the sandwiches and cakes they had been eating at the cops! It's a lovely scene. Oh, and we (the Greek state if that is 'we' of course) have run out of tear gas. I don't know just how many tons have been used. Final bit, a banner that read "Money for the banks and bullets for the kids". More later.

Which many could indeed call cynicism




To Giorgio Agamben
16 February 1990
Dear Giorgio:


I send you a copy of my Italian preface from 1979. I have marked in it the various passages that, to me, best express the meaning of the book. And thus my consistency, which many could indeed call cynicism. This depends on the values that they accept and the vocabulary that they use. If in passing you evoke this preface in your preface, this would sufficiently compensate for its absence from this kind of collection of my writings about the spectacle, which would otherwise risk being noted and perhaps interpreted badly.

We were charmed to meet you, and I propose that we dine together as soon as you communicate to me the moment of your return here.

Amicably,
Guy

White marble and slipstream chrome, immortal crystal and burnished bronze



Behind me, the illuminated city. Searchlights swept the sky for the sheer joy of it. I imagined them thronging the plazas of white marble, orderly and alert, their bright eyes shining with enthusiasm for their floodlit avenues and silver cars.

It had all the sinister fruitiness of Hitler Youth propaganda
.

(from William Gibson's "The Gernsback Continuum")

A much needed money shot

You thought the housing bubble was bad.


Just wait until the porn bubble collapses. Southern California will actually implode, the weight of silicone, fake tanner, and bodily fluids creating a vortex that will swallow us all.

So please, Congress, do the honorable thing.

Tragically moral


murder is not allowed, it is an absolute and unpardonable sin; it ‘may’ not, but yet it ‘must’ be committed. Elsewhere in the same book he sees, not the justification (that is impossible) but the ultimate moral basis of the terrorist’s act as the sacrifice for his brethren, not only of his life, but also of his purity, his morals, his very soul. In other words, only he who acknowledges unflinchingly and without any reservations that murder is under no circumstances to be sanctioned can commit the murderous deed that is truly — and tragically — moral. To express this sense of the most profound human tragedy in the incomparably beautiful words of Hebbel’s Judith: ‘Even if God had placed sin between me and the deed enjoined upon me — who am I to be able to escape it?’

- Boris Savinkov

It is a light that goes out in my mouth


Reading Trakl again and was startled by this poem.


De Profundis

It is a stubble field, where a black rain is falling.
It is a brown tree, that stands alone.
It is a hissing wind, that encircles empty houses.
How melancholy the evening is.

A while later,
The soft orphan garners the sparse ears of corn.
Her eyes graze, round and golden, in the twilight
And her womb awaits the heavenly bridegroom.

On the way home
The shepherd found the sweet body
Decayed in a bush of thorns.

I am a shadow far from darkening villages.
I drank the silence of God
Out of the stream in the trees.

Cold metal walks on my forehead.
Spiders search for my heart.
It is a light that goes out in my mouth.

At night, I found myself on a pasture,
Covered with rubbish and the dust of stars.
In a hazel thicket
Angels of crystal rang out once more.

Straight-blade razors and failed uprisings


Back after a hiatus from here with merely a public service announcement of sorts. All of you really should get your hands on Andrez Zulawki's 1972 film The Devil. Utterly stunning, bleak as hell, political-allegory horror pic.


It is a delirious, haunted mess of a film, that for me reads as a fellow traveler of Bellochio's Pugni in tasca (given the vision of decaying aristocracy and schizoid families) with the brutality of Fulci, pervision of Pasolini at his best. (In addition, its conception of "the Devil" or a low level emissary of Satan is remarkably secular, critical, and bleak. More on this in my next post on the Luciferian turn.)


And the whole thing shot through with an apocalyptic fury and sadness. It draws its inspiration from the repression of anti-censorship movements (and hence got itself banned for a number of years), but at the heart of it, it is a film about a failed revolution in a failed world, petty betrayals and blood-soaked snow. Like von Trier's Europa trilogy and Malaparte's Kaputt, The Devil is, at its core, a dazed stare into a Europe that perhaps can never bury its dead properly, a filthy map whose lines are getting no clearer with distance from the war.

Resolute toward a new year


Something is in the air, and we need to be resolute enough to bring it to bear on itself, to draw out its logic and all its necessary consequences.

So this year, we should train.

To run, toward and away.

To burn, to see what that looks like again.

To make things, old forms repeated, repurposed, made unlike themselves.

To burn this thing while it still runs.

To make our running feel like burning.

To run this whole burning thing.

"We are all Gazans" - الحرية لفلسطين


Israel is now considering a 'humanitarian pause' in its unjustifiable massacre of Palestinians in Gaza.

This is the most pathetic, cynical response I can fathom, that they "consider" this after four straight days of bombing and now readying the tanks.

In the airport yesterday, I watched the Israeli ambassador to the U.S. entirely dodge the obvious fact that the attacks are in no way targeted to attack Hamas terrorists. Instead, all he could say was that what Israel is doing is defense and that what Hamas does is terrorism directed toward innocents. I don't condone Hamas's attacks in the least, but to justify Israel's attack on Gaza via this false opposition is shameful. Shed blood can
perhaps never be part of an equivalency, of so many deaths here versus so many others there, but the disparity in this case of the scalce, mode, and claimed legitimacy is unmistakable.

Any international support of these actions of Israel should be understood as entirely unconscionable. Particularly from the U.S., as Obama obediently gets in line with the standard unthinking American support of Israeli tactics.

We need to refuse and reject any politicians who won't break rank with their expected support of Israel in this instance. There is no excuse for not doing so.

It's hard out here for an unkillable extraterrestrial manager of a funeral home...

So before I say anything else about Don Coscarelli's Phantasm (1979), I need to get this out of the way.

The haircuts. My god the haircuts.


And from the back...


And on another note, forget the ear in Blue Velvet. Along with Orlac's knife-throwing killer hands in Mad Love, Phantasm has probably the best partial object/automated-morcellated-body-extension moment ever (imagine this thing wriggling around, gently straightening itself, etc) in "blood" that looks suspiciously like lemon custard:


What actually interests me about this film (which is rather a blast, although it's darker and nastier than one might think) is how it thinks about two things: the degree to which spaces of death should look analogous to "white cube" minimalist-modernist design (apparently, quite a lot but with the necessary accents of neo-classicism and materials that imply stone-like duration); and what it might look like for evil to be neither infinite nor finite, but to be limited yet transhistorical across a human time scale (apparently wearing suits that are too small for you and grimacing a fair amount).

More, what that evil is busy doing if we subtract out the idea that the villain just enjoys doing this. Because in Phantasm, we get the smile of the killer (the Tall Man, the undertaker who collects and works on producing corpses), but it is a weary smile, the smile of someone who has to put on a good face at his job of... turning dead bodies into zombie dwarf slaves for an alien planet. Phantasm is, in this odd manner, a film about work, about the minor pleasures and the larger inconveniences that come from never really getting a day off.


The film is split between two locations: the suburban town (and its peripheries, roads, etc), and the funeral home/mausoleum. This mausoleum is visually split between two poles of reference. First, the ancient temple necropolis, with cold, fine marble, somewhat arbitrary busts, and this hanging relief of what may be the Greek pantheon:


So we are coded, initially, to read this as a sort of timeless space, the house of death where life does not belong and where there the intrusion of the living is what cannot be tolerated. And indeed, the hulking, primitive dwarfs in their druid-like hooded robes seem to support this: like a subspecies that missed the evolutionary train, now and always held in the sway of a figure of ultimate evil (the Tall Man).

However...

To think of the film in this way - in the mode of viewing it first invites us to adopt before deflecting those expectations - is to miss Phantasm's stranger constructions.

And one of those constructions is death via what is essentially a large paperweight, albeit one that floats, extends knives, and drills out brains.







Hooded evil zombie dwarves ("they've been squashed") made from the corpses collected by the Tall Man, on the one hand, unnecessary sleek futuristic objects, on the other.

This is the opposition that structures the world of the funeral home, the world of the Tall Man: the unaging relics of the past and its primeval secrets, as opposed to the present that wants to be a dream of the future.

The real site of this second tendency is the room over whose door hangs the pantheon relief. As such, an expected ancient site, one that belongs neither to the suburban town nor to the supposed efficiency and secular dignity of a funeral home that's been in business for quite a while.

But when we enter, we get the following:



Those barrels are the large "dwarf jars": inside each is a squashed corpse. And to be sure, there is a sort of ancient tomb echo here, of jars of organs or precious objects in Egyptian tombs, for example. But when the camera pans right to the "gate", the tone shifts radically, and in doing so, rewrites those jars. We are basically in a 70's minimalist installation, something between the illuminated spaces of Nauman, a Tony Smith piece gone more sinister, and Wolfgang Laib reliquary-esque objects made of industrial materials rather than wax. The particular references aren't of much importance, though, because what this room really does is stand in for what we think futuristic should look like: cold, sterile, ordered, unmarked, filled with objects whose interface we don't understand, a space designed for those in the know, a group of which we are definitively not a part. A space of alien technology and human design, at least insofar as we get that it is supposed to look like something from our future. Something quite different from the archaic ancient space of the mausoleum.

As with much of Phantasm, the fact that what we expected (a space of ancient, timeless evil) isn't the case does not negate this option, as it is a template for a sort of narrative excess that I've been detecting in a lot of horror films, particularly those from the 70's and 80's: in short, it is indeed the case that this site does not belong, yet the fact that it does not belong in the manner we expected it to fit wrongly (i.e. it is wrong for the wrong reason) does not undo the initial "false" way of making meaning about the events offered to us by the film. Instead, these "wrong" readings persist, not as possibilities that might have been, but as actual currents, directions, and techniques within the film.

The choice is a non-choice: the excess of possible meaning is not cleanly excised from the film. What we have, then, is a film of overdetermination, one in which what should be mutually contradictory instead becomes mutually dependent, knotted together in the figure and labor of the Tall Man.

However, what strikes me about this construction of Phantasm is that there is no "third term," as it were: there is simply the mute repetition of a labor without end.


For as we discover, the reason that he turns the corpses into dwarf zombies is to send them through the gate to work as slaves on what we presume to be his planet.

But is it necessarily his planet? And is he necessarily "evil"?

This fact, which superficially is supposed to function as final proof of his diabolical nature, has quite the opposite effect. It undoes the entire mythos of the funeral home and of his alleged evil. He is, to be sure, a rather grouchy and nasty figure. But...

As a villain, he isn't very far up the totem pole. For what does his labor consist of? He is not the one orchestrating the labor on the distant planet: he is basically a skilled laborer, someone who knows how to turn human corpses into zombie dwarves. And while he keeps a few around to protect his business, they are not there to serve him. They exist to be sent to another labor "market."

More crucially is the fact that while we get the occasional death caused by him (the corpses produced then turned into a dwarf), he actually doesn't interfere with the town's operations. He waits for people to die, a low-level harvester who provides a necessary service and, in a true entrepreneurial spirit, has discovered how to make something of use out of that which is no longer of value to anyone else. In the later films, we get an impression of him moving from town to town, but here, he really is a mortician of sorts, doing a job that needs to be done and that few people want to do. And on top of that...



He's been doing it for a damn long time (as we learn in the photo from the antique shop that reveals him as a "timeless" being). Perhaps, then, his nastiness comes less from an innate evil and more from the fact that this must get old, a being of apparently great power stuck in a dead-end job in a town where he can't have friends, waiting for people to die but not killing too many because it would raise suspicion. He may be unkillable and somewhat immortal, but his weariness tells us that he sure isn't eternal, just that he's been here for longer than he might like to be.

What Phantasm gives us, finally, is a sense of how the circuits of production and accumulation hinges upon two types of excess that we'd really rather not know about. There are the waste products of life (the corpses) remobilized, taken care of by someone. And as long as we aren't confronted directly with the fact of their reanimation, literal or figurative, as long as we don't have to accept the fact that our parents may in fact now be zombie dwarf slaves working on another planet, we accept this, because we know all the same that this redeployment, this thawing of frozen, dead capital is necessary for the functioning of the system.

And the other type of excess? The Tall Man, the part who doesn't belong to any whole: separated from his planet, wherever that may be, outside of the normal cycles of human time but forced to function in his labor according to the rhythms unnatural to him (the life-span of the humans whose corpses he works on). The Tall Man is just another worker, caught between two worlds of time, alien not because he bleeds thick yellow matter but because, like most of the world, his time is not his own.