David Teh on 7 Nov 2000 00:17:16 -0000 |
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dear nettimers, what follows is an excerpt (Chapter 3) from my thesis of 1999 entitled "postmodern apocalypse" and can loosely be described as an analysis of <'writing' after e-mail> or <discourse after Derrida's "The Postcard">. to put it in context: Chapter 1 was a reading of Arthur Danto's End of Art thesis, carrying the suggestion that he unwittingly employed the apocalyptic tone - 'pluralism as apocalypse'. Chapter 2 was an analysis of Fredric Jameson's Postmodernism, which similarly proposed that an apocalyptic structure underwrote his aesthetics of writing after 'globalisation'. I would welcome any comments and feedback. many thanks to Geert for his perspective. +++++++ In the latter half of his astounding demystification of the apocalyptic tone, Derrida takes up a range of motifs first elaborated in the "Envois" of his book The Post Card. While not ostensibly an apocalyptic text, this book might be said to support all of the author's eschatological oeuvre in a unique fashion. The candour of the "Envois", a catalogue of Derrida's correspondence with an unspecified addressee, derives from their mostly being unedited excerpts from an apparently private discourse. Inspired by a post card encountered in Oxford's Bodleian Library, which depicts Plato standing behind a seated Socrates who writes, The Post Card is primarily concerned with challenges to the governing communicative order of any restricted economy of knowledge, like that raised by the puzzling reversal of the Platonic genealogy seen in the card. The post card in the context of the traditional monopoly of posts represents for Derrida an embodiment of precisely this sort of challenge. By abandoning the formalities of the letter - the concealment of the envelope; the absence of the sender's identity and address; and its not being 'private' - the postcard signifies all that is "haphazard", "marginal" and thereby irregulable in the system of ordered postal communication. In thus flouting its conventions, the post card threatens the system, it ignores the "rules of address". In his later essay on the apocalyptic tone, Derrida specifically accords to the common, even endemic variations of tone in humanist discourse, a certain disruptive function within the process of exchange which constitutes academic communication. So the apocalyptic voice, as a prime example of this 'detoning' , undermines the restricted classical economy of discourse, that is, the common rationality of knowledge cherished by Kant. The parliament of faculties is therefore itself directly challenged by all unconventional tones: By its very tone, the mixing of voices, genres and codes, apocalyptic discourse can also, in dislocating destinations, dismantle the dominant contract or concordat. It is a challenge to the established receivability of messages and to the policing of destinations, in short to the postal police or monopoly of posts. This "established receivability", which Derrida also calls the "assurance of destination" , is characterized first and foremost by certainty in who is speaking, a certainty ordinarily secured by the system's laws of address - in discourse the laws of publication, academic quotation and footnoting carry this burden. A unity of tone, which one presumes is now all but impossible, would therefore be tantamount to a guarantee of identity; at any rate, it finds its antithesis in the use of the poetic, mystagogic language of apocalypse, which by its very nature 'detones', assuming forms - such as the imperative voice of "Come" , Derrida's apocalyptic injunction par excellence - which defy any specificity in their transmission and reception, thus concealing authorship. That this differentially proliferating division of voices and tones , equally endemic to both 'discourse' and 'communication ' , is thus an eminently apocalyptic structure should bear very serious consequences for any analysis of recent developments in telecommunications technology. While it may seem rather unusual to conclude a reading of two aesthetic theorists with an examination of the internet, a new technology, and its properly unfathomable implications for theory generally, it should be clear enough from my discussion of Jameson's pluralist postmodernism (chapter two) that recent advances by this communicative tool, and the mass media with which the concept of this technology is becoming coextensive, are inseparable, both formally and historically, from accounts of recent cultural (or aesthetic) transformations. For the 'medium' is the primary instrumental agent in the progressive acculturation of the economic sphere; or in other words (Jameson's), it must be recognized that the mode of aesthetic production is becoming impossible to differentiate from the mode of economic production proper, from the very mechanisms of wealth accumulation and capital transaction. I would therefore like to re-examine these phenomena in light of the burdensome implications raised by Derrida's figures of apocalyptic exchange. It cannot have escaped the contemporary reader of this deconstruction that the questionable receivability (of the post card or apocalyptic utterance) which so beguiles Derrida has proliferated wildly in the context of the recent digitization of communication. I shall now offer a brief description of what I take to be the paradigmatic model of communication yielded by the so-called "internet revolution" or "internet age", particularly the ascendant mode of interpersonal, commercial and intra-corporate exchange that has come to be known as 'electronic mail' (e-mail). It is not my intention to attempt to theorize it comprehensively, or 'map' this system as any sort of totality; rather, I will try to reveal a few of its structural characteristics, and to isolate and highlight some aesthetic ones, as a summary 'case-in-point' for the Derridean analysis of tone. In the course of this summary I hope it will become quite clear that, firstly, the internet is a prodigiously, and perhaps uniquely pluralistic space; secondly, that the information economy, and its internal economy of quasi-postal exchange, are governed by an apocalyptic structure which exemplifies Derrida's system of 'dislocated destination'; and finally that this medium, as it has been understood, represented and sold (as technology) in the Western and global market, surely constitutes the most articulate expression to date of both a pluralist apocalypse and an apocalyptic pluralism. The internet is the pluralist mechanism par excellence. Cyberspace, in furnishing the subject with a hyper-abundance of 'information', is itself a product constructed in large part on the basis of a limitless promise, an infinite autonomy and an unconditional hospitality , not to mention an indefinite freedom and seductive (though properly 'virtual') anonymity. Not only is everything allowed, but everything is possible. Under the guarantee of the latest technology, the most recent version, or the ultimate connectivity, some sort of 'everything' is instantly accessible and always simultaneously available. From the first moment it is presented to us, even in its formative years, before it has come to encompass the entire sphere of production, even (and perhaps particularly) to the computer-illiterate debutante unable to discern its real limits, it is given in its possessive totality. It has everything. Its freedom is the absence of prohibition and the infinite abundance of possibilities. In a realm where anything is possible (no rules), 'everything' (that is, what is promised, but not 'each and every thing') becomes impossible. The internet is thus the only realm we know in which both everything and nothing are possible. You can do anything but you cannot do everything. The prospect of 'anything' which it offers is a freedom, a freedom which, in a peculiar and restricted sense, is available. But this universal digital pluralism also offers all of itself, or 'everything', up for consumption at the same time, as a graspable totality or a do-able whole. To this extent it lies, because choice, even an infinite choice, is not tantamount to freedom, (just as the act of voting does not amount to self-determination). The promise of cyberspace is thus false and illusory, insofar as it is a promise of everything. All of which may be summarized in an observation of the difference between "everything" and "every thing". Amongst the more graspable of the absolutes it offers is the ability to transcend geographical hurdles, not the least of which is distance itself. Perhaps more instrumental are the mercantile perks: the idea of 'business hours' becomes redundant, new consumers can be engaged around the globe "24/7", and the threat of censorship all but dissipates, since the internet also allegedly transcends the geo-political and regulatory barriers - where the jurisdictions of each and every state may be so fleetingly visited, practically none are engaged; it would be impossible for each sovereignty to be observed or exercised without unfathomable depths of confusion. All of which is to say that the law of cyberspace is the law of the market, the lowest common denominator of this international cacophony of regulatory agendas, the mere grunt of an ultimate accession to the logic of capital. Yet I should pause here to remark that even in the superficial sense, as I write, it is not yet everything. As the extension of and replacement for the telephone, and its conflation with television, its ascendance is not yet complete. As the becoming of a total world market, the pot of gold that has always driven the expansion of capital, it has not yet even properly won the fidelity of trade. But while it is not yet everything and does not yet have everything, this has not stopped it being packaged, presented and heralded as total and fully articulated plurality/multiplicity, as an endlessness of combinatory possibility that finally transcends the unity of reception, and of Being, the singularity of the subject and the coherence of man. That it will eventually achieve these ultimate expansions seems inevitable to many though horrific to some. Now given the conflation of ideological agendas uncovered in Danto's model of pluralism, it will not come as a surprise that the pluralism of the internet, promising to transcend all these barriers at once, is very often mistaken for democracy itself, for the idyllic space of an unfettered free speech. The truth of the matter is of course far more complex. A message transmitted by e-mail undertakes a complex but sometimes instantaneous journey ; its route includes multiple translations and any number of intermediary computers, and thus comprises an indeterminate sequence of 'acts of transmission'. Along the way it may be transcoded into the language of a different computer operating system, or may silently cross any number of national or geographic boundaries completely unchecked. In some instances it will be received and interpreted by an intended addressee almost instantaneously, in others it might lie dormant in a nodal transfer system before its passage is complete - but in every case, it leaves a trace of itself at every juncture: it replicates itself and undergoes démultiplication at every stage of its journey; and this fractious replication is in some sense the impost upon its carriage: it will inevitably and without exception be accessible (if not always immediately legible) to an unknowable succession of interceptors. So the anonymity, the cloak under which an unprecedented explosion of transgressive communication (of correspondence as well as imagery) has taken place, turns out to be illusory. If there is protection for the individual in this medium, it is only that afforded by a sheer inundation, and not a liquidation, of identity. Far from affording anonymity, the internet creates a new depth of identity, inscribed with an absolute 'traceability'. In the traditional postal system of imperial capitalism invoked by Derrida, there were always only three entities that were a party to any communication - the sender, the receiver and the 'monopoly of posts' (usually the 'state'). In throwing its content open to the eyes of all who came in contact with it at any stage of this transmission, the postcard scuttled the predictable economy of this system, threatening the monopoly which was discharged of its primary function, the maintenance of privacy and authorial specificity. In the era of multinational capital , then, it is perhaps to be expected that postal monopoly will confront its nemesis: the supra-national network of e-mail, in which virtually every transmission is a post card. So to return to The Post Card, where Derrida himself did so, both 'discourse ' and the 'postal principle' are destabilized, and perhaps surpassed, in the same fashion. For omitted from the "Envois" was a bundle of fragments of the same corpus, which by chance were hidden until after its publication, and which make up a piece entitled "Telepathy". It is here that the ramifications of the apocalyptic structure upon how we communicate in the present digital age are eerily and presciently exposed, even in 1988: I am not putting forward the hypothesis of a letter which would be the external occasion, in some sense, of an encounter between two identifiable subjects - and who would already be determined. No, but of a letter which after the event seems to have been launched towards some unknown addressee at the moment of its writing, an addressee unknown to himself or herself if one can say that, and who is determined . . .on receipt of the letter; this is then quite another thing than the transfer of a message. Its content and its end no longer precede it. So then, you identify yourself and you commit your life to the program of the letter, or rather of a postcard, of a letter which is open, divisible, at once transparent and encrypted. Hence, we have seen that the apocalyptic tone, at once diagnosed and practiced by Derrida, may be present in every act of communication, from the once rigid disciplinary realms of academic discourse to the intricate and hidden movements of the information economy. If it has in fact been embedded in even the most 'rational' forms of writing, if only on the level of linguistic structures, it would nevertheless seem to be now encroaching upon the very means of communication themselves, creating a system of exchange in which some intimation of the end, and with it an entirely questionable authorship, attach to every single transaction of meaning or 'information'. In marketing itself as an infinite plurality, the new medium realizes, in itself, an apocalypse of knowledge. In the era of the internet, not only does every utterance say the end of correspondence, but the system itself is both an exemplary model of apocalyptic mystagogy, and a sign of the end. david teh, 1999. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold