Benjamin Geer on 15 Nov 2000 19:17:48 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> Cellphones and the Cancer of Cellspace |
On Wed, Nov 15, 2000 at 07:58:44AM +0000, axel vogelsang wrote: > therefore, all the things you describe like people trying to provide > the expected reaction happens in 'real life' as well, not only on > the mobile. Yes, the mobile is simply the most recent manifestation of a very widespread phenomenon. > because, as i said, communication is mainly not about transferring > information but about makeing social commitments and reassuring your > status in a social group. I agree that `information' (a ghastly word) has little to do with communication. However, your description reminds me of sort of vacuous, competitive social interaction that Proust satirised in his account of aristocratic social circles. Far from disappearing with the decline of the aristocracy, this type of `nothingness' (as he called it) has become nearly universal. > i would even say it is more about transferring emotions than > anything else. That would be the ideal. I would love to live in a society in which people actually expressed their emotions in ordinary situations. However, I haven't found any such society. Most of the Western world appears to match Stjepan Mestrovic's characterisation in his book _Postemotional Society_: since the expression of real, personal emotions is taboo, we are reduced to miming certain stereotyped, watered-down emotions, principally `niceness' and, occasionally, curdled indignation. > i don't believe, that people in earlier 'better' days had more > interesting talks than people today. Perhaps not more interesting in an intellectual sense, but probably more frank and more emotional, in certain places and at certain times. Mestrovic offers some evidence as far as the U.S. is concerned. I have only the anecdotal evidence of, for example, friends who emigrated from Russia and Romania to the U.S., and who had a great deal of difficulty adjusting to the false `niceness' and emotional blandness of Americans, compared with the emotional intensity and effusiveness of their compatriots. In _Semantics, Culture, and Cognition_, Anna Wierzbicka points out, tellingly, that English speakers think of themselves as being composed of a `mind' (which is thought of as primarily intellectual) and a `body'; this leaves no room for the emotions. In Russian, on the other hand, `dusha' encompasses not only psychological and intellectual life, but also the idea that people need to, and ought to, freely express what is in their *dusha*; the behaviour of the Russians I've known certainly seems to corroborate Wierzbicka's analysis. If I remember correctly, Eva Hoffman's book _Lost in Translation_ (an account of her emigration from Poland to Canada, and subsequent difficulties) also touches on this issue. The American Indian narrative _Black Elk Speaks_ also strikes me as relevant: Sioux society involved, among other things, a certain implicit trust among individuals (as expressed, for example, in the value attached to one's word), which seems largely absent in North America today. Before anyone chastises me for idealising bygone cultures, I should hasten to add that I'm not trying to make any such generalisations. One could argue, for example, that certain kinds of intimacy are possible today (e.g. between writers and readers, thanks to the way in which literature has developed) which were not possible in the distant past. But certainly a great deal has been lost. In _A People's History of England_, A. L. Morton argues that the history of the thousand years following the arrival of Celtic tribes in Britain can largely be understood as the gradual weakening and breaking up of their tribal society, which was based on membership in close-knit kinship groups that practiced a sort of primitive communism. This process was accelerated by industrialisation, which uprooted people from villages and farmland, and piled them into cities as anonymous factory workers. Now, with no history, and nothing to belong to except the marketing industry's groups of targeted consumers, it's no wonder that people are desperate for anything (e.g. mobile phones, the false solidarity of football supporters, or the politics of the extreme right) that allows them to maintain some semblance of a connection with others. Such pseudo-intimacy remains unsatisfying because it is always mediated by a dehumanising authority, whether it be that of the culture industry and its campaigns of indimidation, or that of Nazism. It remains for us to reject this authority, to reclaim public spaces for frank, human, emotional interaction, and to develop relationships that are based on cooperation and understanding rather than on conformism and on competition for status. In their 1960 cinéma-vérité film, _Chronicle of a Summer_, Jean Rouch and Edgar Morin asked strangers on the street the question: `Excuse me Sir/Madam, are you happy?' Nobody wanted to answer. They then found a few people who were willing to tell their own stories in response to this question: a student, a factory worker, a fashion model, a Holocaust survivor, an Algerian, an Italian girl on a journey to the end of the night. But they didn't simply interview them; they confronted them with one another, and brought them together in various spaces and contexts, so that the participants began to form their own social group, focused on exploring the reasons for their unhappiness and the possibilities for happiness. Each learned surprising things about whole sections of human experience that they had previously been ignorant of (e.g. the Algerian had known nothing about the concentration camps). Relationships were formed that lasted beyond the shooting of the film. In his 1999 film, _La Commune_, Peter Watkins took this idea a good deal further, by having his cast of 200 non-actors reenact the 1871 rebellion which took control of Paris and attempted to run it as a socialist experiment (before being brutally crushed). The Communards created workers' collectives and women's groups, in which, for the first time, they had frank public discussions about the real problems they faced in their daily lives. During the filming, the actors were encouraged to bring these discussions into the context of their own lives in 1999. The real subjects of the film are thus the development of frankness and solidarity among the actors, and the maturing of their own political and social consciousness, as they grappled with the real problems of creating a democratic society. I personally know several of these people, and it's clear that many of them were transformed by the experience. When I talk about reclaiming public space for human purposes, this is the sort of thing I have in mind. It doesn't require a camera; it needs only a space, and a group of people willing to take the risk of telling the truth. -- Benjamin Geer http://www.btinternet.com/~amisuk/bg _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold