Kermit Snelson on Sun, 10 Nov 2002 17:50:04 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> From Tactical Media to Digital Multitudes |
"How do you argue with a network?" -- Michael Hardt [1] Only a few minutes after I noticed Brian saying it's "just ridiculous" to equate the word "multitudes" with "mob", I was very amused to discover elsewhere that the title of Howard Rheingold's new book happens to be "Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution" [2]. Of course, the whole point of my last post was to argue precisely that mobs _aren't_ smart and _aren't_ revolutionary. I'm not too surprised to find myself in direct disagreement with Rheingold, especially since he features prominently on the back cover of Geert's own new book, _Dark Fiber_. But I am comforted to know that at least Rheingold and I agree on the proper universe of discourse. But back to Brian. As usual, he gets all personal and ad hominem on me and asks if I've ever done any political organizing. I have, in fact. Enough to know that the kind of people who really need activism and advocacy tend _not_ to be intellectuals who whinge in their manifestos that '89-era new media artists have been locked out of the art world mainstream because '68-era baby boomers control all of the museum curatorships and university chairs. Arise, ye wretched of the earth! Instead of that brand of activism, I prefer social movements like those led by Rosa Parks. She's the courageous African American domestic worker who refused to vacate a "whites only" seat on an Alabama bus back in 1955, thereby igniting the great US civil rights movement. I prefer leaders like Martin Luther King, who said simply "I have a dream." Those are the kinds of Americans with "a clear sense of self, sharply honed critical faculties, a good background knowledge of all the issues, sound moral reflexes and a sense of coherency in their actions" I was talking about, Brian. And theirs was exactly the kind of "marginal moral protest" that Geert and Florian, in point I.4 of their post, say they want to "liquidate." Brian writes that Geert and Florian are simply "trying to give fairly large numbers of people a possible way into political life." I don't doubt that for a minute. (I do disagree vehemently with what Brian says in the next half of the sentence, namely that "a riot or a hacker attack" is a form of debate, but that's another discussion.) But how does saying things like "encode and decode the algorithms of its singularity, nonconformity and non-confoundability; to invent, refresh and update the narratives and images of a truly global connectivity" really achieve that? Wasn't "I have a dream" a bit more inclusive and effective? And how much respect for the world's dispossessed is really exhibited by a concept of "swarm intelligence" (or "general intellect", if you prefer Negri's terminology to Rheingold's) that credits people with exactly the same kind of creative _potentia_ as an ant colony's? Especially when this "swarm intelligence" concept, adding injury to insult, depends on the recent availability of video cameras, PCs, Internet, cell phones, SMS messaging, GPS and other advanced telematic tackle? Now let's move on, with Brian, from "general intellect" to IP law and the "vector class". I think it's pretty clear that Geert and Florian's problems with intellectual property concern the word "intellectual", not the word "property". I adduce as evidence the whinging mentioned above concerning the generational control of art world institutions by "traditional" intellectuals; their apparent solidarity with the indigenous IPR movement within some sectors of Australian academia, and Geert's declaration in _Dark Fiber_ that "Culture wants to be paid" [3]. Geert even follows this up shortly with a swipe at Richard Stallman's "free" philosophy, implying that it's simply more dreck characteristic of that favorite whipping boy, the hated American "cyber-libertarian ideology." All of this is mere guesswork, from the outside and based only on published texts. I hope I'll be corrected if I've misunderstood. But based on reading alone, I don't see how one can avoid the conclusion that most of Geert and Florian text isn't really about improving the lot of the dispossessed. Their choice of words makes it seem to people who don't know them personally as if they're really more interested in improving their own lot as activists and new media artists. About, in Geert's words, "content workers rights to get properly paid" [4]. About breaking into the art establishment. About taking away control of the Internet from accountants and engineers and giving it to -- who else? -- "artists and cultural critics" [5]. Not that there's anything wrong with such a power play, even if that's what it is. As Geert has written elsewhere, altruism vs. selfishness is a false dichotomy. All I'm saying is that there's actually little textual evidence in what Geert and Florian published to support Brian's contention that it's about giving "fairly large numbers of people a possible way into political life," unless that means content workers and not the world's dispossessed. And I agree with Brian in his section 4 that simply calling everybody in the world a "hacker" or "intellectual laborer" or "lay scientist" or indeed an "expert" isn't the way out. Even if they're riding on the Expertbase bus. But that was exactly the point of my own post, wasn't it? One thing really does bother me, however. It concerns the "mass psychology" point of my earlier post that Brian didn't address. In his book _Dark Fiber_, Geert proposes a new field of studies called "mass psychology of the net" [6] based on the discipline "established by Gustav LeBon with his famous _Psychology of the Masses_ (1895)" [7] and "re-vitalized and applied to the Internet." [8] Well, Gustav LeBon also proved to be a great inspiration to Lenin, Hitler and Mussolini. But that's not in itself a cause for great concern, is it? Guilt by association died out a long time ago. But there's more. Earlier in the book, Geert argues for the displacement of "American authors" by the "valuable knowledge, ready to be rediscovered, recycled, and mutated" that currently lies fallow in a "German media theory" whose founders he names as including Martin Heidegger, Carl Schmitt and Ernst Jünger. He goes on to acknowledge the "fascist past" of these authors, but tells his readers "don't laugh" at their "totalitarian heritage," saying that they are still "taken very seriously" because "secret or unconscious fascination for authoritarian models" and "elitist disdain over the rituals of parliamentary democracy" still resonate as "fatal European passions" that the Cold War (which presumably means Americans) failed to "freeze-dry." [9] Geert then goes on to say "War is the father of all media", and advises us to "Combine all these elements and you have an impressive and productive research program for decades to come." [10] OK, that's too much to swallow. Especially as the world now appears to be heading into World War 3 precisely because the USA's Right has finally convinced the electorate that a new Holocaust is imminent, due to supposed Islamist collaboration with the Left and with what they also claim are "fatal European passions" that haven't yet been "freeze-dried." Why give Americans something in writing they can easily point to as justification for their paranoia? There's a lot of textual evidence, both on nettime and in print, that could easily lead an uninitiated American outsider like myself to conclude that "net criticism" advanced by Geert and Florian simply heralds the return of a nihilistic, amoral, technocratic theory of power, a theory of how the Internet can be used to do what searchlights and loudspeakers did in 1930's Nuremberg. Let me be clear. I am charging Geert and Florian with nothing more than publishing misleading language and treating hideous historical allusions with a theoretical and moral casualness that has perhaps not been thought through very well. I am not accusing them or anybody else of hidden agendas. All I'm saying is that as activists in an environment of ever-increasing repression, we owe it to ourselves and what we believe in to declare as clearly as we can, both to our opponents and to the multitudes that we claim to advocate, that our cause is freedom, not power; that our motivation is justice, not nihilism; that our methods involve community and dialogue, not warfare and agonism, and that our message is hope, not despair. Kermit Snelson Notes: [1] http://lola.d-a-s-h.org/paper/paper6.pdf, p.5 [2] http://www.smartmobs.com/book/index.html [3] Lovink, _Dark Fiber_, MIT, 2002, p.365 [4] Lovink, _ibid._, p.366 [5] Lovink, _ibid._, front flap [6] Lovink, _ibid._, p.137 [7] Lovink, _ibid._, p.139 [8] Lovink, _ibid._, p.137 [9] Lovink, _ibid._, p.25 [10] Lovink, _ibid._, p.27 _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold