McKenzie Wark on Wed, 15 May 2002 05:31:20 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Tactical Media and the Tectical Intellectual 3/4 |
Tactical Media and the Tectical Intellectual version 3 part 3/4 Mckenzie Wark 3. Vectors and antipodes A word on this word vector. I've adapted it from the writings of Paul Virilio. It describes the aspect of the development of technology that interests him most and the style of writing he employs to capture that aspect. It is a term from geometry meaning a line of fixed length and direction but having no fixed position. Virilio employs it to mean any trajectory along which bodies, information or warheads can potentially pass. The satellite technology used to beam images from Afghanistan to America can be thought of as a vector. This technology could link almost any two such sites, and relay video and audio information of a certain quality along those points at a given speed and at a certain cost. It could just have easily linked Copenhagen to Chiapas, or quite a few other combinations of points. Yet in each case the speed of transmission and its quality could be essentially the same. (That it often is not points to the politics and economics that shape the infrastructure of the vector field, but which it in turn also shapes). This is the sense in which any particular media technology can be thought of as a vector. Media vectors have fixed properties, like the length of a line in the geometric concept of vector. Yet that vector has no necessary position: it can link almost any points together. This is the paradox of the media vector. The technical properties are hard and fast and fixed, but it can connect enormously vast and vaguely defined spaces together and move images, and sounds, words and furies between them. In every weird global media event, new dimensions to the vector field are 'discovered', and new technical properties of the vector implemented. After September 11, the Western world discovered --as if for the first time -- the significance of al-Jazeera satellite television. During the Gulf War, most of the Middle East was more or less effectively contained within state controlled national media envelopes, at least as far as television was concerned. Al-Jazeera changed all that. Or to take a more poignant instance: it seems that while people all over the world knew that one of the WTC towers had collapsed, the firefighters in the other tower did not know it, as the vectors along which information might pass to them was disrupted by the collapse of the tower itself. Telesthesia failed at the point where it was most pressingly required. In the analysis of the weird global media event, a theoretical approach that highlights the technical, such as the concept of the vector, is crucial, but must be handled as a critical tool. Everyone marvels at what the latest media technologies make possible in the moment of the event. It is one of the most immediate ways of constructing a narrative for it. But then the material means by which the space in which the event happens is constructed tends to be pushed to the background. The knowledge of the vector that the event highlights passes imperceptibly into an unacknowledged part of the information landscape we take for granted. Victor Shklovsky one said that the real reveals itself in culture in much the same way as gravity reveals itself to the inhabitants of a structure when its ceiling caves in on them. That might stand as a good emblem for the event. It is not only media technologies that have this vectoral aspect. The highjacked 767s were also a vector. So too are the bombs and missiles rained down on Afghanistan in what Ali calls the "lightly disguised war of revenge." All if these vectors had certain fixed technical properties: payload, range and accuracy. Yet they could be launched at any point within a given radius. On the other hand, one could think of the entire US invasion force that mobilized for what President Bush initially called Operation Infinite Justice as a vector too. The fixed properties here have to do with the length of time it takes to deploy a force of a given size. Yet that force could be deployed almost anywhere. Indeed, in an age of proliferating media vectors, perhaps the public spectacle of a threat to the interests of imperial powers will provoke the deployment of this other kind of vector. The alternative, something we also saw on TV during the war in Afghanistan, is the vector of diplomacy: diplomats can shuttle between any series of points negotiating an apparently limitless range of demands with seemingly limited results. The time pressures introduced by the military and media vectors pose a serious problem for the tactful tempo of diplomacy. The beauty of Virilio's concept of vector is that it grasps the dynamic, historical tendency of weird global media events, but it is not a concept limited to media technologies alone. It also provides a way of thinking about the other aspects of such events. Virilio homes in on the apparent tendencies that seem to result from the relentless, competitive development of vectors. For instance, the tendency towards a homogenization of the space of the globe. Its tendency to become an abstract, geometric space across which powerful vectors can play freely, producing new differentials of Wedom and Theydom. Virilio grasps the novel kinds of crisis this seems to engender: "An imperceptible movement on a computer keyboard, or one made by a 'skyjacker' brandishing a cookie box covered with masking tape, can lead to catastrophic chains of events that until recently were inconceivable. We are too willing to ignore the threat of proliferation resulting from the acquisition of nuclear explosives by irresponsible parties. We are even more willing to ignore the proliferating threat resulting from the vectors that cause those who own or borrow them to become just as irresponsible." There is a limit to the way Virilio conceptualizes the vector, in that he doesn't distinguish the vectors of telesthesia, which move information, from those that move bodies and things, labor and commodities, subjects and objects. Thus he loses focus on the way telesthesia creates a space for the logistical tracking of objects and subjects in movement, and for ordering that movement. The second nature of labor and commodities, of work and leisure, of private and public worlds, is traversed by an emergent space composed of vectors capable of moving information more quickly than people or things can move. Just as second nature is built out of the historical transformation of the raw materials of nature, so too a third nature arise, built out of the historical transformation of second nature by the vectors of telesthesia. Perhaps it is worth hitting the video pause-button at this point in the replay, just as the image of the 767 hitting the WTC comes into view. Here we have a vector of second nature, the ubiquitous passage of the 767 through the skies, which is only made possible by the existence of a third nature, of radio and radar and global positioning technology. And here we have the rerouting of the aircraft, using that same technology of telesthesia, to new coordinates, bringing about an event in the most built up part of second nature, New York city, which in turn disrupts the third nature of the news media. What bears critical attention is the way telesthesia is part and parcel of what killed people in both New York and subsequently in Afghanistan. The event takes place at the level of the physical vector and the media vector conjointly. In terms of vectoral power in general, the media are part of the problem of power, not merely a separate space of reportage or critique of emergent forms of power that exist elsewhere. Needless to say, this essay too is a part of that problematic, and does not exist outside, in a neutral space. It is in the worst of all possible worlds: within the regime of power created by the media vector, but relatively powerless there, within. What is indeed stupefying is that the ability to think critically about the event depends on the same vectoral power that produces its violence. Reading the critical coverage of September 11 and the subsequent war in Afghanistan in journals such as The Nation, I am struck firstly by the double bind its correspondents found themselves in, and secondly by the curious way that the critical response to imperial power nevertheless participated in the same way of seeing the world. As Michel Feher notes, the leftist response to such events is caught between two desires. One desire is to oppose American imperial power, in which case it can appear to lend support to dictatorial anti-western regimes. The other desire is to overturn tyranny in dictatorial anti-western regimes, in which case it ends up lending support to American imperial power. Either way, the rhetorical structure of Wedom versus Theydom is reproduced, without really addressing the vectoral power that underlies the production of their relation in the first place. The massive presence in the media flow of American stories, images, faces, voices, is sometimes all that stabilizes the flow of meaning in third nature. Take away America’s imaginary domination and the domination of the imaginary of America, and meaning would drift and eddy, caught in impossible turbulence and glide. Not only the instant media coverage, but also the critical coverage relies on this stabilization of the referents, either positively or negatively. The frightening paradox of September 11 is how this attack on actual human lives in New York and Afghanistan is at the same time merely an attack on abstract signifiers of Wedom and Theydom. The trick, if this is not to stupefy us, is to look for a way of displacing the terms within which the event is understood. 4. Nightly Chimeras By starting with the appearance of the vector in everyday life, we can trace it back to a general problematic of the velocity of power. The 'departure lounge' for this is not some abstract concept of everyday life in general, not the life of others, under the microscope, but this life, these events. A vectoral writing strategy considers the production of events within the media as the primary process that nevertheless gives the appearance of merely reflecting 'naturally occurring' moments outside all such apparatus. This may sound a little counter-intuitive, since we all tend to take it for granted that regardless of how much the media constructs a particular view of an event the media still reports something outside of itself. While not disputing the fact that violent and momentous conjunctures arise whether the media report them or not, once the media takes up such conjunctures they assume a quite different character. A vectoral approach looks at movements of information transgressing the boundaries between what were once historically distinct sites. It looks at the effect of this movement on the outcomes of conjunctures. It looks at the event as a peculiar and historically emergent form of communication — or rather of non-communication. In writing about September 11 as an event happening in a network of global vectors, which made it that much more instant, that much more deadly, writing struggles to recall that we are not just spectators. The whole thing about the media vector is that its tendency is towards implicating the entire globe. Its historic tendency is towards making any and every point a possible connection — everyone and everything is a potential object and/or subject of a mediated relation, realized instantly. In September 11, to see it was to be implicated in it. There is no safe haven from which to observe, unaffected. Nor is there a synoptic vantage point, above and beyond the whole process for looking on in a detached and studious manner. We are all, always, already — there, in third nature. As the possibility of an extensive war of revenge increased, the media's role changed, ever so imperceptibly. No longer did it exist in a relation to an audience assumed to be a mass of consumers or a public to be educated. The event turns the media into part of a feedback loop connecting the spectator to the action via the vagaries of 'opinion' and the pressures of the popular on political elites. The media user becomes a vague and quixotic, unpredictable yet manipulatory 'delay' in the circuit of power. This is the curious thing about telesthesia. It can make events that connect the most disparate sites of public action appear simultaneously as a private drama filled with familiar characters and moving stories. The vector blurs the thin line between political crisis and media sensation; it eclipses the geographical barriers separating distinct cultural and political entities; and it transgresses the borders between public and private spheres both on the home front and the front line. There is no longer a clear distinction between public and private spaces, now that the vector transgresses the boundaries of the private sphere. As Donna Haraway suggests, "we are all chimeras, theorized and fabricated hybrid of machine and organism." Our chimerical confusion may result from the dissolution of the spaces which kept aspects of the social order separate. Indeed, one of the defining characteristics of the event is that it exposes the ironic ability of the vector to disrupt all seemingly stable distributions of space and the more or less water- tight vessels that used to contain meaning in space and time. As September 11 unfolded, the hallowed ground bled into the profane domain — of media. One keeps the sense of what it means to be in public life as opposed to private life by keeping them spatially separate. The horror of bodies jumping from the towers -- a rare image, quickly edited out -- has a layer to it which draws on the horror of the separate and excluded part reappearing in the everyday sphere of 'normality.' The reasons why these interpretations should spring to mind stems from another sense of separation, the separation of such things off from Wedom and their projection into an other. Yet here they are, returned to haunt us, in an uncontrollable way. Here they are in everyday life, intersected by the rays of the screen. To adapt a line from William Burroughs, in an incongruous yet strikingly apt context: "These things were revealed to me in the Interzone, where East meets West coming around the other way." The interzone is this space where chimerical and monstrous images become a part of everyday life. The interzone is the experience, in everyday life, of the ironizing impact of the event. The media weave a Wedom and a vast map of Theydoms together as the light and dark strands of a narrative distinction within the event as it of threads its way across these other kinds of border. In breaking down solid old boundaries, the vector creates new distinctions. Flexible distinctions airily flow through the story-time realm of information. They selectively replace the heavy walls and barriers that compartmentalized information in days when vectors were less rapid and less effective. This cruder narrative structure can be applied to more sudden and diverse events to produce the same effect of apparent narrative seamlessness. The application by the media of simple temporal structures, in a flexible fashion, produces more rigid and uniform stories about events. There are many analyses of these war-time bed-time stories that expose the interests of capital and empire that lie behind them. What matters is telling convincing stories, which show others ways to account for the facts -- and for the way facts are produced. Or persuasive stories, which help as many people as possible to credit this version of the event over other ones. The democratic forces that want to rewrite this event as a chapter in the story of, say, American imperialism or Orientalist racism, must learn the tools and the tricks of the story trade — and prevail. But as the technology of persuasion grows more complex, the art of telling stories in the wake of events grows both more complex and more instantaneous. If this essay is less concerned with telling these alternative stories it is not because such things are not important. It is because it is also important to understand the nature of weird global media events and the power field of the vector. This is the field of becoming within which a certain kind of power is immanent. A field in which democratic forces need to speak, and attempt at least to make good sense, for and with, the many against the few. But the tools for doing so may have less to do with the hypocritical ernestness of Wedom and more to do with pushing the ironic spatial and temporal displacements of vectors to the limit. _________________________________________________________________ Join the world’s largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail. http://www.hotmail.com # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net