postopolization
heya, since this is the best thing happening in NYC right now, I thought I’d drop it in.
The lineup for the storefront for art and architecture’s Postopolis ‘conference’ are the heavy-hitters of all the brilliantblogosphere, including BLDGLG, Wigley, Rupture, Abe Burmeister, and a lot of what else I think is good to read/see via rss, and engage with via social soft and hardware.
It is a remarkable chance to actually hear and see these mysterious entities of reportage and criticism in one place.
(fyi, it rumors are flowing that the saturday night closing/party will have N-RON on the dj decks, alongside of the multitasking dj/rupture)
doing a country
Once, while passing through Seville, I came upon a pair of backpacking college students.
We stopped at a bar inside the train station, shared some bread and jamon and wine, and chatted while waiting for our connections.
“What have you been doing in Europe?” I inquired. I recall that I was genuinely curious (after all, backpackers must have many tales and adventures– from hostels to trains to strange encounters with foreign lands).
One of the two, a pony tailed woman named Julie from Texas, was very outspoken and jumped right in.
“Well, first we did Austria, then we did Prague, then we did France, which was fun, and then we are gonna do Morocco!”
Something struck me as strangely perfect as our chat was interrupted by the loudspeaker calling their train:
What does it mean to do a country?
Can you consume a country?
Can you consume your own country? Or just Others?
Is experience quantifiable?
Over the years, I have had asked these questions many different ways to many different friends, and always been impressed how difficult they are to address.
Generally, there are 2 main sides to the argument for Knowledge as Consumption.
1. Time is limited, so to “do” a place or culture means to see and experience particular aspects of that place or culture in order to know and understand it. Experience is therefore aligned with knowledge of culture or place as an object. A subject knows this object as discreet set of boundaries understandable and finite, as a thing.
Experience = knowing, knowing as consuming.
In other words, it seems that countries, in a sense, like any experience, can be consumed at the great fast food joint of life.
All the Marxist talk of Mcdonaldization seems to apply here:
“McDonaldization seems to equally involve commodification and rationalization, to commodify food production and to rationalize its production and consumption so as to increase profitability.” [Douglas Kellner]
To follow this, we could say, the commodification of experience allows it to be compared for exchange, such that we could easily imagine Julie saying “I’d trade Paris for Barcelona, or Morocco for Prague.”
But what, then, in the consumption of a country, is the profit? What do we “get” when we “do” a country? Is experience (or anything that takes place over time) inevitably instrumentalized into exchange value?
Doing a country means that you are a tourist, a global flaneur walking through the arcades. As Benjamin has pointed out, capitalism has expanded the privilege of the flaneur to a growing middle consumer class, and normalized this privilege to the point of extinction of category itself. This leveling of the role of the flaneur into a middle class has been discussed (ad nauseum?). In a sense, the playing field of experience has been reduced to a shopping mall. Just as, at least in the United States, almost all middle income people can think about getting a Macchiato from Starbucks, so too can the tourist prefer their churros over croissants. The flaneur, the dandy, is gone, and as the tourist impulse has created a new globe-traveling middle class in the 20th century (and now the 21st), so too has the privilege of the dandy tourist been evacuated.
However, a real question is, if the seeer-as-knower-as-consumer is “getting” something, what is the “profit?” Perhaps the profit is the ability to consume and see more as an individual. In this model, individual experience as quantifiable knowledge is seen as a good thing, to enable the exchange of ideas in a marketplace of determined and instrumentalized experience-objects. “My trip to Paris was better than my trip to California. I want more Paris and less California.” On the one hand, this quantification allows for a certain kind of judgment of epistemological claims based upon empiricism. We find this problem as the quintessential modern debates about aesthetics and experience (al la Greenberg and others), and it certainly cannot be addressed adequately here.
However, we can say that there is some kind of judgment that can result from this leveling-out, both of the playing field of the flaneur as traveler as well as the knower-as-consumer. One can judge experience as “better”, “worse” etc. based on specific individual criteria, usually based on a language of implicit mono-cultural understanding: “the food was bad, but the weather was great” or “the people were cold, but the music was fantastic” are example phrases of cultural comparisons based on such travel-experience.
2. The second argument dovetails with the first. Is this quantification ‘bad’? As Brett once pointed out, he prefers a “pleasurable” online experience with a better product (browser) than to one, which does not provide a “rich” and “enjoyable” experience.
The critical points of interjection seem to float around three very broad and difficult terms:
1. Experience
2. Judgment
3. Knowledge
Is it wrong for me to judge my knowing of Paris against my Knowing of Barcelona? By what criteria should we reduce experience in order to know it? I am plagued by these questions as I struggle to come up with a language for articulating sound. I struggle with these issues as I come up with the sounds for language. I struggle with sounds. The sounds of struggle seem to everywhere these days.
I do know that when I hear that someone “does a country”, the sounds of struggle seems to be missing from my ears. Can experience be fungible, and is this desire for the fungability of experience a desire to repress or sublimate struggle? Does the plasticine sheen of the exchange commodity of consumed experience level the field, or are we again forced to acknowledge the combined and uneven development of experience, that some have and some don’t.
This is, it seems, the precarious zone that post-structural critique leaves us in, the area of relativism. Does judgment itself fail to do its job? Has judgment been hijacked for the purposes of better exchange?
Maybe a visit to the Whitney ISP show up now at Artist’s Space will help, or the curatorial program exhibit on coming up at CUNY grad center, called “The Price of Everything…perspectives on the art market” will point some new directions. However, for now, I have to confess, the trend seems to point to complete branding of the bodies of experience as both inevitable and largely accepted by both the left and the right. Freedom of choice is equated to the starbucksification of nation-states? Experience as consumption. Consumption as pleasure. Pleasure as freedom.
benefit societies
Tuesday May 15th 2007, 10:43 am
Filed under:
words
This week, DJ N-RON HUBBARD will be benefitting societies:
Eyebeam: n-ron will be there, and yes, that’s a big lineup including Lawrence Lessig, Yes Men and dj spooky that not so subliminal kid. No word yet on how much it costs, but rumor has it that after 9 it is less…

and on saturday, the real party always starts in GAZA:

here’s a DJ N-RON an exclusive (and unreleased) remix of
shadetek’s brooklyn anthem on sound-ink records

analys d'amour by magabo (n-ron remix):
Play Now |
Play in Popup |
Download (48)
utopia maps: more vs. myspace
Wednesday May 02nd 2007, 7:18 pm
Filed under:
words
I was struck just now by the myspace/social software map I just saw…

as rupert murdoch attempts to overtake dow jones inc. for 5 billion,
as free-market ideology becomes the synonmous with freedom and a sort of utopian fantasy of hyperindividualization, as digg nation becomes synonomous with protection of community of nerds and hackers, as money=time=enclosing space, I couldn’t help but note that in the Myspace Map, it seems to me, the freemarket social software zones are bordered, frightening, perhaps more medieval in their style. Some might be inclined to link it’s aesthetic to Middle Earth or Dungeons and Dragons, a dangerous forbidden zone bordered by defined “nations”.
Thomas More’s utopia map of the 1516

More’s Utopia, as the quote notes, is bordered as well, but homogenous. The dangerous seas are somehow much less inviting than the castles and towns, the Haussmann-like inner ring directing traffic to the centralized zones of power. Is utopia combined and unevenly developed, like Myspace map? It seems not, in fact, to be medieval, but somehow more evenly laid out, protected but open via its channels, inhabited but isolated, alone but shared. We see the “nations,” but nature forms their borders.
It seems to me that the critical defining characteristic of the two maps is scale.
The first map, following social software’s sophmoric (grade school?) tendency towards popularity as determining factor of success, notes that each nation-state size is defined by “estimated number of users”. This is of course consistent with the general notion of the attention economy: freemarket power being generated by ad revenue, ad revenue being an indicator of power, power being = users’ time spent (unique visitors and unique page views).
The second, More’s map, shows a land of possibility, where scale is difficult to determine (the ship being an sign of mercantile narrative-force, personilzing the story for the reader). But we do know that the inner ring, surrounded by water, holds the most structures, and that symmetry (symbolic, perhaps, of order) seems to predominate the island.
The wild, freemarket medieval map seems to pale in comparison with more’s dreams. Perhaps the social freeforall should be reconsidered…