[-empyre-] evocative objects + zach's project @rhizome
Margaret Rhee
mrhee at berkeley.edu
Wed Jun 20 13:10:28 EST 2012
dearest all,
Thanks everyone for the very interesting and provocative posts, I've been
trying to follow along and I'm looking forward to reengaging and rereading
the generative posts and conversations by Lauren, Jack, Patricia, Michael,
Jacob, Homay, and all. It's been great to see the topics mutate and by the
end may transform into forms we don't anticipate, which is always the fun
of working through these sets of concerns via the internet, i suppose.
There is more I'd like to write but want to reread carefully some of the
emails already sent. At this point, I do wish for printed out versions of
all the posts... Or if we could all be in the same room, I'm sure we could
spend days on end just discussing the questions at hand and it would be so
pleasurable. I loved being at UCHRI's seminar on experimental theory last
summer for the first time, and I was pleasantly surprised at how the time
of 9 - 5 critical theory went by so fast, and how lovely it was to be in a
room full of engaged scholars and artists with theoretical and creative
conversations lasting well into the night. It was a supportive space and I
appreciate the dialogue that is occurring here and Micha and Zach's
organizing the conversation(s) which is a form of queering new media too,
I would argue.
Some texts to include to the conversation on objects/affect. It may be
generative to include Sherry Turkle's Evocative Objects, an edited
collection in which various scholars, artists, scientists etc. shared
personal essays on objects they love, that evoke intimate ties and
affection. The quote from the book helps sums up the power, connections,
and love for objects, not only transitional but the objects of our
everyday: "We think with the objects we love; we love the objects we think
with." I fell in love with this collection which made me rethink objects
in my life, shoes, picture frames, and yes, stuffed animals.
http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11121
Along with Turkle's work on evocative objects, Mel Chen's recent article
in GLQ on Toxic Animacies, Inanimate Affections may be of interest,
particularly how Mel rethinks the couch as a queer object by way of the
first person. It's an incredibly beautiful + provocative essay and I hope
everyone can read at some point.
http://glq.dukejournals.org/content/17/2-3/265.abstract
Finally, while it's not scholarly, Im feeling Ronaldo V. Wilson's
extraordinary collection of experimental poetry, The Poetry of the Black
Object provides poetic provocations on thinking about the object, race,
and queerness. ie taking on the "black object" as in the "black object's
deportment."
"One object waits for the other to form a mouth: it sees pink lips shape to
blow waste. A black object, realizing it is being watched, would normally
hold a
lug in, until the corner.
Lazy lidded eyes vanish into a head. The black object thinks, for its
spit, it
is met with both expectation and disdain. But one black wanted it from the
other.
Should spit more often, it thinks."
http://www.poetrynet.org/month/archive2/wilson/poem3.html
http://www.futurepoem.com/bookpages/blackobject.html
Thinking about smelly objects, disgusting objects, and evocative objects.
On a somewhat different but related note, I was thinking about the form of
the listserve and how it functions, my frusteration of missing emails and
wishing I had more time to read through all the posts. But also thinking
about how great it has been to receive messages via empyre and the
political potential of listserves. and how special it is to have such a
conversation on queer new media art and queering new media in this space.
In my experience as a grad student, queering new media studies is
typically quite silenced and obscured. I think many emerging scholars/grad
students can also prob attest that queering new media studies is not
centered or even perhaps marginalized or suspect in respective depts. But
being suspect sometimes is fun. & meeting and working with miscreants of
all kinds across depts, campuses, institutions, etc. relates to forms of
knowledge and questions from the space of what fred moten and stefano
harney write of the
'undercommons' sources of support and convergences then, when it happens,
is so very special.
In thinking about this empyre listserve, new media and activism, I was
thinking about Rhizome and how it began as a listserve started by Mark
Tribe? Maybe Jacob and Zach maybe you both can help shed more light on how
Rhizome began? Think itll be inspiring for people to learn. I've always
held onto the story and cherished it because I just loved the story very
much. And it demonstrates the potentiality of new media as a form of
support and mutate into something possibly really dynamic, like the vital
institution Rhizome has became. I'm a huge fan of Rhizome and Zach's work
too and wanted to revisit the amazing project Zach is working on, that
also relates to Amanda's exciting dissertation work on faces.
Zach's project is up for the online commission at Rhizome and Im thinking
it would be great if folks here, (who is here, I wonder?) can help support
the project by voting online. The deadline is June 30th but you can vote
now and as we've seen from the previous posts and conversations (which I
still want to respond to) it's such a provocative and exciting project the
Facial Weaponization Suite. I've include the information below. I just
voted and it's quite easy, esp if you are a member and if you are not, I
hope you can become one to support Rhizome as well.
http://rhizome.org/commissions/proposal/2666/
In any case, I've heard from some folks via backchannel, which has been
really lovely to meet because otherwise i would not know/who is
here/actually I still do not know really who is here/And since I am still
in Seoul, it's different to want to know/unless we hear from people here.
yours,
Margaret
--------------------
Facial Weaponization Suite
http://rhizome.org/commissions/proposal/2666/
Queerness is always in tension with identification and recognition. There
are numerous modulations of a queer politics centering around gaining
visibility through recognition, just think of current debates around
same-sex marriage in the US or the “It Gets Better Project” in response to
LGBT youth suicide. These calls to visibility typically coincide with a
desire for recognition from the state or a longing to be validated by our
neoliberal order. There is also another queer politics that could be said
to be concerned with the non-recognizable, a politics that is
anti-identity, anti-state, anti-recognition; let’s call it a politics of
escape.
A recent study of facial recognition and sexual orientation presents the
face as a mode of capture to escape. The Journal of Experimental Social
Psychology recently published a 2008 study conducted at Tufts University
that tested people’s ability to identify homosexual men from photos of
their faces. Ninety faces were shown to ninety participants, and those
tested proved remarkably accurate in their ability to recognize faces that
had been classified as homosexual, even when exposed to the face for only
50 milliseconds. What could be the benefits of proving to the world that
such a recognition apparatus exists? Does it not only further confirm and
scientifically validate one of the processes of LGBTIQ stereotyping, such
as “gay face” and “fag face”? This study parses us into categories that
will be used against us, gives us a visibility that only controls us, and
makes us easily knowable to those in power. Gilles Deleuze and Félix
Guattari taught us not so long ago: “to the point that if human beings
have a destiny, it is rather to escape the face, to dismantle the face and
facializations, to become imperceptible, to become clandestine [...] by
strange true becomings that [...] make faciality traits themselves finally
elude the organization of the face.” Yet, we must know the organizations
of the face before dismantling: “Know them, know your faces; it is the
only way you will be able to dismantle them and draw your lines of
flight.”
How do we flee this visibility into the fog of a queerness that refuses to
be recognized? We can start by making faces our weapons. We can learn many
faces and wear them interchangeably. A face is like being armed. Think of
the female Algerian freedom fighters in Gillo Pontecorvo’s 1966 film The
Battle of Algiers; they break into occupied territory of the colonizers,
in part, by wearing their oppressors’ faces, or the Zapatistas who hide
their faces so that they may be seen.
In response to these emerging studies that link successfully determining
sexual orientation through rapid facial recognition techniques, I am
developing a Facial Weaponization Suite with my Queer Technologies
platform. The suite provides sets of masks and other cloaking devices for
public protest, such as “collective masks” that allow you to wear the
faces of many with a single mask. One mask, The Fag Face Collective Mask,
is generated from the biometric facial data of many gay men’s faces. When
this facial data is brought together in 3D modeling software, the result
is a mutated, alien facial mask that cannot be read or parsed by universal
standards of identification. Like the black bloc, The Fag Face Collective
Mask uses collectivity to evade individual detection, refusing to abide by
biometric facial identification and withdrawing from the “calculated and
quantifiable being” that has become all too knowable in cybernetic
capitalism.
The first uses of the Facial Weaponization Suite will be a mask-making
workshop and public intervention in Los Angeles during the fall of 2012 as
well as at the Liverpool Biennial.
> You're welcome Tim.
> Now that we're talking about affect and transitional objects I thought I
> would link to this new talk from the always wonderful Steven Connor:
> http://www.stevenconnor.com/feelingthings/
>
> It concludes: "Let me say again what I have said with as little
> circumstance as possible: we need things, because only things can
> guarantee for us the sovereign status of the no-thing we are and wish to
> be. And, precisely because that relation is a need, a matter of life and
> death, and not a mere abstract congruence, it hums with passion and
> pathos. Our relation with the world, which only the things of the world
> can keep alive, is a daredevil, do or die, midair thing, full of rapture,
> peril and unexpected comforts. So our dependence on objects is not one
> source of emotion among others – it is emotion (= ‘moving out’) itself.
> Things bear our weight, the weight they accord to us. They take the
> strain".
> Michael.
>
>
>
>
> --- On Tue, 19/6/12, Timothy Morton <timothymorton303 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> From: Timothy Morton <timothymorton303 at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [-empyre-] Smelly Objects
> To: "soft_skinned_space" <empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au>
> Date: Tuesday, 19 June, 2012, 5:46
>
> Wow Jack that is amazing.
> Michael I didn't thank you yet for introducing me to Christina McPhee.
> Tim
>
> http://www.ecologywithoutnature.blogspot.com
> On Jun 18, 2012, at 7:46 PM, Judith Halberstam <halberst at usc.edu> wrote:
>
> Lauren:
> I have read your post several times, watched the video by Jennifer
> Montgomery, read some Winnicott and also looked again at Alison Bechdel's
> graphic novel memoir, Are You My Mother? which contains several episodes
> revolving around her readings of Winnicott and even has a chapter titled
> "Transitional Objects." Homay mentioned Bechdel last week also.
> So, here are my short comments in response, I won't go on since this is
> not even my week but i loved your post and found that it opened up lots of
> new doors...
> 1. Bechdel's book is brilliant and each chapter begins with a dream and
> then uses material from her endless conversations with her mother to make
> sense of the dream. In the book's opening sequence for example, she dreams
> that she has trapped herself in her house's cellar while doing a home
> improvement project. She escapes through a small window and then jumps
> into a deep brook to try to find her way home again. This dream about
> being trapped and then getting lost recurs throughout.
> After the dream, there is a mesmerizing cinematic sequence within which
> Bechdel is driving in heavy traffic and having a conversation with her
> mother. The panels tightly frame her upper body behind the wheel of the
> car and then slowly pull back until by the fourth panel we see that the
> passenger seat is empty. She has been rehearsing a conversation with her
> mother but in this scene the mother is (and she remains throughout the
> book) absent. This is a stunning illustration of what Lauren calls "the
> generative potential of withdrawn objects" and like the dreams that do not
> resolve, the absent mother keeps things moving throughout the memoir.
> Bechdel seems to offer a way into the thinking about the queerness of the
> object - partly because she uses the comic/graphic novel format (the
> book's subtitle is A Comic Drama) and therefore makes the connection to
> the infantile in form as well as content and offers the cartoon itself as
> a transitional object. but Bechdel's queerness emerges out of her own
> transitional identity - the slippage she herself represents between male
> and female, son and daughter. Her gender ambiguity, she thinks, makes her
> unloveable to the mother and so she goes on a hunt for the good enough
> mother who will accept her transitional self. In the process she develops
> a series of (queer) relations with things...this is where she and the
> child in Montgomery's video overlap.
>
> 2. In the video by Montgomery, I was sort of amused by this passage from
> Winnicott:
> "The transitional object may, because of an anal erotic organization,
> stand for faeces (but it is not for this reason that it may become smelly
> or remain unwashed)."
> There is something about the use of the word "smelly" there that is
> disgusting but also humorous. Of course the stuffed animal is a kind of
> sponge (bob) in that it soaks up the child - his/her fluids - tears, milk,
> puke, slobber. It becomes an olefactory record of the child's misery and
> abjection. This is a history that smells.
> When the object becomes smelly is its dirtiness part of its liveliness? is
> the washed object something else entirely? what is the relationship
> between the smelly and the loved?
> Second, in the relationship between the two voices in the video, the
> adult, Jennifer, who surgically cuts up stuffed animals with a razor blade
> and then sews them back to together again in hybrid forms, hardly
> acknowledges the rambling but compelling narration of the little girl:
> Girl: "what is this?...no face...a teddy bear...with two hands...hands up
> in the sky....whatttt, no face..."Jennifer M: "no face"Girl: "why? did the
> face go away? what did it look like? what did it look like? a bear?"JM: no
> answerGirl: "what like this? this is silly? an elephant and a bunny.
> that's a monkey!"JM: "really"Girl: "yeah, look, it is also a bunny and a
> cat, a dog and a monkey, a lion. a little bit a cat, a little bit a lion,
> what else? that's all"JM: "uh huh."Girl: "a little bit a person...that's
> all...a person and a little bit a cat."
> The little girl is trying to find something she recognizes in the hybrid
> forms that the Jennifer character makes, sort of sadistically, and so she
> ends up looking at one of the monstrosities (and I say this with much
> approval of the monstrous object) and calling it "a little bit a person
> and a little bit a cat."
> Finding herself reflected in the hybridity of the altered object, the girl
> fashions a kind of identification with monstrosity...this way queerness
> lies. Perhaps we are little bit person and little bit cat/monkey/camel,
> donkey/dog etc...Lauren called us "cats" as in "Hey Cats"...
> The girl, like Bechdel, finding herself blocked out somehow by the mother
> figure, begins to craft an intimacy with the object. It is this intimacy
> that might be the basis for access to the realm of what Lauren calls the
> "interobjective."
> Anyone else watch the video? thanks for posting this and your comments
> Lauren...Jack
>
>
> On Jun 18, 2012, at 4:52 AM, lauren.berlant at gmail.com wrote:
>
>
> Hi cats! I have
> been trying to figure out how to respond to so much of this without
> dilating in
> bloated paragraphs that become unreadable. I will try therefore to stick
> to the genre of the prompt (as opposed to genres of exegesis) so that we
> can
> always point to outsides with which we can read/relate and therefore
> continue
> talk later.
>
>
> I am also going to introduce this week artists I would like to bring into
> the conversation--Doug
>
> Ischar, Tina Takemoto, and today Jennifer Montgomery, in case watching
> their
> work might clarify some questions, e.g. make them more questionable.
> Here is thebackground for today's prompt: Jennifer Montgomery's
> brilliant Transitional
> Objects (from which the title to my post is
> taken). http://vimeo.com/21270312
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> 11. The structural zeitgeist: Patricia points out that we're undergoing a
> transformation in the ways we think about structure,
> and as Zach and Jacob will attest, I've been going around for the past
> year saying this too, and the first sentence of my next book is "This book
> offers a concept of structure for transitional times. All times are
> transitional, but at some times, like this one, politics is defined by the
> collective struggle to determine the terms of a transition in relation to
> collective social existence." This is how I have long understood the
> OOO discussion as a prompt for thinking not just being but for a new
> structural understanding of relation from which worlds can be described.
> Interobjectivity replacing intersubjectivity as the new
> ethical/political/analytical scene. I think Christina McFee’s work is
> extraordinary in this way, an aesthetics of attention dedicated to an
> analytic of modeling that never subtracts from itself a scenicness for
> sensual
> absorption.
>
>
> 22. Laplanchean psychoanalysis, which props relationality on the
> impersonal intimacy of beings passing their enigmatic
> signifiers (affects of the encounter that is not an event) between each
> other, I have
> long thought, has something to contribute to the image of the withdrawn
> object
> whose very resistance to a sufficient coding can open up dark, maybe even
> queer, passages of relating and mutual extension (that might even be
> thriving).
>
>
>
> 34. The idea of a transitional environment for the relating
> that always involves losing the habit that appears to be sovereign, for
> producing change without the melodrama of a trauma that appears to be a
> sufficient coding, is what Jennifer’s piece is about: making. Winnicott:
> “In
> relation to the transitional object the infant passes from magical
> omnipotent
> control to control by manipulation involving muscle eroticism and
> coordination
> pleasure.” He doesn’t sound too different
> from Ian.
>
>
>
> 4. 4. Is the “object” in (imaginative) psychoanalysis
> the same as the “object” in OOO? Neither
> external nor internal, but holding up an environment/world? In my work the
> object
> has nothing to do with that which is held together by the apparent skin of
> a
> thing but it’s a cluster of investments, of attention and attunements,
> that
> make a scene (an affectively overwhelming situation) that demands an
> aesthetic/coding.
>
>
>
> 5. 5 What’s queer about all this? In our first weeks
> of discussion “queer” seemed a name for the erotically invested
> non-normative
> procedure or orientation. Is that sufficient? What’s the fantasy
> investment in
> calling the appearance of a withdrawn thing queer? My second post will
> focus on the play of
> security/insecurity re this, but I’d love to hear from the subjects who
> wrote
> towards/from the queer.
>
>
>
> Bye! LB
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Lauren Berlant
>
>
>
> George M. Pullman
> Professor
>
>
>
> Department of English
>
>
>
> University of Chicago
>
>
>
> Walker Museum 413
>
>
>
> 1115 E. 58th. St.
>
>
>
> Chicago IL 60637
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
>
>
> From: Clough, Patricia <PClough at gc.cuny.edu>
>
>
> To: soft_skinned_space <empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au>
>
>
> Sent: Sun, Jun 17, 2012 1:15 pm
>
>
> Subject: Re: [-empyre-] the real and reality in speculative realism and
> OOO/P
>
>
>
> I have just finished
> reading a piece by Latour on big data for
> a paper I am
>
>
>
> writing with three students (Josh Scannell, Benjamin Haber and Karen
> Gregory
>
>
>
> who are lurking on the
> site). One of Latour's points is that
> the two level
>
>
>
> analysis carried on in
> sociology (but everywhere else as well)
> of individual
>
>
>
> and structure are the
> result of technologies for navigating sets of data. He
>
>
>
> also proposes that
> digital technologies--the way they collect and circulate data
>
>
>
> or the way they navigate
> data sets-- is eating away at both elements of a two
>
>
>
> level analysis allowing for another way for
> understanding social order. Of
>
>
>
> course Latour has in mind
> his own ANT approach and something close to a flat
>
>
>
> ontology But I am really interested in what his
> proposal makes us think about
>
>
>
> the concepts we have
> been using like individual and
> structure and how they are
>
>
>
> an effect of or a
> compensation for the ways we "do
> data," including
>
>
>
> narrative, performance
> but cinema television--or writing technologies generally
>
>
>
> speaking and carrying a
> bit of Derrida along here as to the sensibilities coming
>
>
>
> with his use of
> Writing. I have been thinking that when
> there is noise
>
>
>
> produced in
> philosophical circles (especially when it produces an aporia between
>
>
>
> epistemology and
> ontology as noise probably always does) like OOO/SR is making
>
>
>
> but which
> poststructuralism also made (still makes) it is because technology is
>
>
>
> giving another way of
> doing data. And when I say we have to
> know how that is
>
>
>
> working in order to
> critique it, I mean we will have to
> critique it in the
>
>
>
> terms of the constraints
> and freedoms of that very technology. I
> don't believe
>
>
>
> there can be another
> ontology then the one that arrives with a technology, our
>
>
>
> differences in how to
> articulate it notwithstanding .(so that is how I read
>
>
>
> Combes on Simondon)
> Indeed I think ethics or politics
> comes with inserting
>
>
>
> noise in the aporia
> produced by the provisions for data navigation given with a
>
>
>
> technology and that
> the differences between us --- how we
> are articulating
>
>
>
> ontology ethics etc.
> are already noise. I am not sure
> those differences
>
>
>
> should be so easily
> resolved but taken as widening contrasts
> at any moment.
>
>
>
> So when I take up OOO/SR
> in my work I also use poetic form or
> sound scapes to
>
>
>
> contrast with
> OOO/SR as some of the poetry is
> autobiographic performing
>
>
>
> something close to a
> confessional subject some quite
> Deleuzian more a body
>
>
>
> without organs some
> psychoanalytic. very much a body and queer. I don't
>
>
>
> believe these things are
> compatible and if I were just making an
> argument they
>
>
>
> could not all be in one
> piece But when composed artistically they can be near
>
>
>
> each other and
> become contrasts. What holds the
> pieces together is the
>
>
>
> modulation of affect
> that the composition hopes to be its effect.
> I think the
>
>
>
> current interest in
> affect is about digital technology in that it is asking us
>
>
>
> to rethink these two levels of individual and
> structure and asking us to think
>
>
>
> about how we present our
> thoughts or ideas how we compose them.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Also the way technologies shape the way we do data
> is not just a matter of
>
>
>
> method or analysis, it is at the same time about governance and economy
> and
>
>
>
> I think these words are
> changing what they refer to and what
> they can do when
>
>
>
> we use them as new ways of navigating data are arising. And so too what
> we
>
>
>
> mean by life. I love Eugene Thacker's book After Life just to show the
> many
>
>
>
> ways (all impossible) we
> have tried to define life in
> relationship to living
>
>
>
> starting with
> theology. Eugene writes such a book
> just at a time when the
>
>
>
> definition of life
> is undergoing a change in relationship to living.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________________
>
>
>
> From: empyre-bounces at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
> [empyre-bounces at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au]
>
>
>
> On Behalf Of frederic
> neyrat [fneyrat at gmail.com]
>
>
>
> Sent: Sunday, June 17,
> 2012 4:02 AM
>
>
>
> To: soft_skinned_space
>
>
>
> Subject: Re: [-empyre-]
> the real and reality in speculative realism and OOO/P
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi Patricia,
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> 1/ You wrote: "They
> are lively before or without human consciousness.
>
>
>
> I think this arouses more respect for the
> environment and the cosmos
>
>
>
> not to mention human
> beings and other living things":
>
>
>
> I'm not sure about that.
> I would like, but I'm note sure. I'm just
>
>
>
> thinking about the
> hunter killing the living prey. Or about Sade in
>
>
>
> his dark castle. I think
> it's not possible to pass directly from
>
>
>
> ontology to ethics or
> politics. It depends a/ not only on the
>
>
>
> definition of life
> (first problem: if everything is alive, who cares
>
>
>
> about life? because if
> Yellowstone trees die, no problems, there still
>
>
>
> will be stones, yellow
> and washing machine) but b/ on the politics
>
>
>
> built on this
> definition.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> 2/ may you explain this
> sentence: "If those technosciences we worry
>
>
>
> about are doing what
> they are doing that worries us we need
> to
>
>
>
> imagine an ontology that
> meets their capacity in order to think the
>
>
>
> possibilities of
> politics". Because I was thinking: maybe the
>
>
>
> technosciences ontology
> is wrong. Maybe - for example - life is not
>
>
>
> only a pure matter on
> which I can put a patent. Maybe - as Muriel
>
>
>
> Combes says in "La
> vie inséparée" - a living being cannot be separated
>
>
>
> from its form. Maybe we
> need absolutely another ontology to fight this
>
>
>
> one.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Best,
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Frederic Neyrat
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> 2012/6/17 Clough,
> Patricia <PClough at gc.cuny.edu>:
>
>
>
>> I am not sure this
> got through since I am also missing
> some of Tim's I
>
>
>
> think but I will put it here below but first. Just to say that objects
> in OOO
>
>
>
> are not
> objectifications or mere things or
> commodities. A turn to ontology
>
>
>
> (whether OOO or feminist
> queer ones) is to give us a sense that objects differ
>
>
>
> from themselves; they
> exude temporality. They are lively
> before or without
>
>
>
> human
> consciousness. I think this arouses
> more respect for the environment and
>
>
>
> the cosmos not to
> mention human beings and other living things.
> This seems
>
>
>
> especially important in
> raising questions about the boundary between species and
>
>
>
> organic and
> nonorganic. If those technosciences we
> worry about are doing what
>
>
>
> they are doing that
> worries us we need to imagine an
> ontology that meets their
>
>
>
> capacity in order to
> think the possibilities of politics.
> But of course
>
>
>
> OOO/SR isn't everything
> that is needed. And so I am interested
> in how we write
>
>
>
> or argue or
> philosophize We need poetry a
>
>
>
>> nd
> artistry so we can have hesitancy
> and allusion where causality is
>
>
>
> alluring.... And so the reference by Michael ( I
> think) to transitional
>
>
>
> objects is something I
> want to take up. I prefer Bollas's transformational
>
>
>
> objects that Lauren
> Berlant makes such good use of in her
> work recently again
>
>
>
> in Cruel Optimism. Patricia
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> (repeat maybye )
>
>
>
>> Well starting off
> in the last week is difficult. So much
> going on over the
>
>
>
> last three weeks. Thanks to Zach and Micha for the invite
> and to everyone
>
>
>
> else offering some great
> thoughts to ponder.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> As for discussion
> around feminism, queer and OOO/ SR There
> are (still/even
>
>
>
> more) worrisome issues of oppression, exploitation and
> repression that come
>
>
>
> to mind with queer,
> feminist, postcolonial, anti-race, debility
>
>
>
> theoretical/political
> formations but there also are troubles
> which are before
>
>
>
> us, feminist neoliberalism or pink washing and queer, for examples.
>
>
>
> Politically,
> institutional arrangements are much more complicated than identity
>
>
>
> politics sometimes
> presented itself as being in the demand
> for subject
>
>
>
> recognition which led to decades of debate on the truth
> of representation and
>
>
>
> the deconstruction
> of the authority of discourse with a
> hesitancy to reference
>
>
>
> the real in
> support. Here a certain
> Althusserian/Lacanianism played a weighty
>
>
>
> part and then add
> Derrida Spivak Butler Foucault
> Berlant, Sedgwick and
>
>
>
> more. For many of us
> this work has been a go to intellectual and political
>
>
>
> resource for some
> time. Clearly these authors put philosophy intimately i
>
>
>
>> n play with a politics (often Marxism, and then Marxism plus) that was
>
>
>
> easily felt in their
> work. In OOO/SR , this tight connection is less
> obvious
>
>
>
> if there at all. What I do not want to overlook however is
> that OOO/SR came
>
>
>
> when the former (not
> necessarily the thinkers themselves) was not easily working
>
>
>
> as an intellectual
> resource in the face of several issues:
> what to be said
>
>
>
> about political economy
> except to say again and again neoliberalism or even
>
>
>
> biopolitics (even though
> I keep saying those); what is to be said
> about
>
>
>
> subjectivity and the
> unconscious after deconstruction and along with a profound
>
>
>
> transformation in social
> media; what is to be said about the
> human, the
>
>
>
> organism as figure of
> life, about matter after posthumanism
> and with the
>
>
>
> development of various
> technologies we should call biotechnologies (but now all
>
>
>
> technology seems to have
> always been) or even more incredible nanotechnologies?
>
>
>
> What to say about the
> persistence but varied forms of racism oppre
>
>
>
>> ssion exploitation? How to let all this feed back to rethinking
> our
>
>
>
> philosophical
> assumptions?
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> I think that for
> some of us OOO/SR made us think again about the intellectual
>
>
>
> resources for our work
> and how to address some of the questions I just raised by
>
>
>
> turning us to
> ontological issues beyond constructivism asking us to critically
>
>
>
> address the assimilating
> act of human consciousness embedded in most of our
>
>
>
> materialisms (thus the
> new materialisms and a recent paper by
> Liz Grosz on
>
>
>
> matter and life is
> exquisite here) . This new materialisms comes in part as a
>
>
>
> response to recent
> developments in technoscience and as a
> social scientist (of
>
>
>
> sorts) I am so aware
> that social science leans on scientific assumptions if not
>
>
>
> ideals that need
> updating to say the least. But I think this is the case for
>
>
>
> many of our
> materialisms. This rethinking of technoscience including digital
>
>
>
> technologies has in part
> raised interest in OOO/SR and that is the case for
>
>
>
> me. But I am not sure that the elective affinity between digital
>
>
>
> technologies, the growth of computational studies and al
>
>
>
>> gorithm studies etc. and OOO/SR yet has been well stated. I do not
>> think
>
>
>
> that all OOO/SR thinkers
> find this to be central while some
> do. Debates
>
>
>
> around OOO/SR with which
> Steven Shaviro is involved usually speak to digital
>
>
>
> technology (and Bogost of course) All this to say that the 'affect'
> that I
>
>
>
> have most written about
> is the Spinoza Deleuze Whitehead Masssumi
> Parisi
>
>
>
> version (although I want
> to talk more about feelings and emotions this week).
>
>
>
> The Spinoza Deleuze
> Whitehead Masssumi Parisi version of
> affect I believe has
>
>
>
> always required an
> ontological shift (which is central to the Affective Turn
>
>
>
> volume). That ontological shift has everything to do with
> the way affect is
>
>
>
> experienced through a
> technological intensification since it
> is otherwise
>
>
>
> preconscious if not
> nonconscious and a-social While
> language generally is an
>
>
>
> intensifier I have been more interested in intensifications
> that did not
>
>
>
> necessarily raise to
> consciousness but simply intensified experience
>
>
>
>> inciting resonances rhythmicities oscillations etc. and which then
>> could
>
>
>
> be about bodies other
> than human ones or organic ones--queering body.
> This
>
>
>
> seemed to require an
> ontological shift, one involving
> matter. I have been
>
>
>
> arguing for some time
> that matter is affective or informational (well maybe we
>
>
>
> should just say energy)
> and this led me to OOO/SR. But before checking out
>
>
>
> OOO/SR I was much indebted to Deleuze and the
> others and since
> studying
>
>
>
> OOO/SR I feel the noteworthy tension between Deleuzians and OOO/SR
> (although
>
>
>
> there are those trying
> to negotiate the tension as I am).
> During the next week
>
>
>
> I want to offer some
> thoughts (and can't wait for response and interventions)
>
>
>
> about this tension in relationship to affect. I hope we can discussion
> more
>
>
>
> the recent focus on
> aesthetics which has enabled me to think in the tension
>
>
>
> rather than against
> it and find a way as well to dwell in rather than simply
>
>
>
> put an end to the aporia between ontology and ep
>
>
>
>> istemology that affect and non-human
> perception produces. I think
>
>
>
> aesthetics and the turn
> to Whitehead's rereading of Kant points to a way to
>
>
>
> engage the liveliness
> of what Eugene Thacker calls a world
> without us or not
>
>
>
> for us.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Finally, during the first week I much enjoyed all the sites to which I
>> was
>
>
>
> sent and all the efforts
> to make stuff, queer stuff, with digital
> technology as
>
>
>
> well as with other
> technologies. This doing along with
> thinking (crude way of
>
>
>
> putting it) seems
> important to a critical engagement with what we once would
>
>
>
> have called knowledge production. Looking forward to ongoing
> conversation(s)
>
>
>
> Patricia
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> ________________________________________
>
>
>
>> From: empyre-bounces at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
> [empyre-bounces at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au]
>
>
>
> On Behalf Of Michael
> O'Rourke [tranquilised_icon at yahoo.com]
>
>
>
>> Sent: Saturday,
> June 16, 2012 7:40 PM
>
>
>
>> To:
> soft_skinned_space
>
>
>
>> Subject: Re:
> [-empyre-] the real and reality in speculative realism and OOO/P
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Hi Tim! Cheers for
> your thoughts. Take a look at Christina's work here:
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> http://www.christinamcphee.net/
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> I think it
> resonates in many ways with yours.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> M.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> --- On Sat, 16/6/12,
> Timothy Morton <timothymorton303 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> From: Timothy
> Morton <timothymorton303 at gmail.com>
>
>
>
>> Subject: Re:
> [-empyre-] the real and reality in speculative realism and OOO/P
>
>
>
>> To: empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
>
>
>
>> Date: Saturday, 16
> June, 2012, 23:25
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Hi Everyone,
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> This is my first
> (or possibly second if the other got through) message to the
>
>
>
> list, and I'm responding
> to a brief discussion of the notion of flat ontology
>
>
>
> initiated by Michael
> O'Rourke (hi Michael!) and Frederic Neyrat.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> OOO comes in
> various flavors and is not necessarily flat. Mine and Graham
>
>
>
> Harman's has two levels.
> Levi Bryant's and Ian Bogost's have one, but differ in
>
>
>
> how that one level
> works.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Other forms of
> realism such as Manuel De Landa's are flat, or flatter, than
>
>
>
> OOO.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Frederic I'm a
> Derridean and the idea of the singularity is my idea of the
>
>
>
> strange stranger, which
> is Derrida's arrivant.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Just apply this
> notion of arrivant to non-life and you get the OOO "object."
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> You can have all
> the singularities you want in a non-all and by definition
>
>
>
> non-hierarchical set,
> which is the OOO universe.
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Yours, Tim
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> --
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> Ecology without
> Nature<http://ecologywithoutnature.blogspot.com/>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>> -----Inline
> Attachment Follows-----
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
> _______________________________________________
>
>
>
>> empyre forum
>
>
>
>> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au</mc/compose?to=empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au>
>
>
>
>> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
>
>
>
>>
>
>
>
>>
> _______________________________________________
>
>
>
>> empyre forum
>
>
>
>> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
>
>
>
>> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
>
>
>
> empyre forum
>
>
>
> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
>
>
>
> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
>
>
>
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>
>
>
> empyre forum
>
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> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
>
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>
> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
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>
>
>
>
>
>
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>
> _______________________________________________
> empyre forum
> empyre at lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
> http://www.subtle.net/empyre
> _______________________________________________
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