The last few years have been marked by an inverted
millenarianism in which premonitions of the future, catastrophic
or redemptive, have been replaced by senses of the end of
this or that (the end of ideology, art, or social class; the
"crisis" of Leninism, social democracy, or the welfare
state, etc., etc.); taken together, all of these perhaps constitute
what is increasingly called postmodernism. The case for its
existence depends on the hypothesis of some radical break
or coupure, generally traced back to the end of the 1950s
or the early 1960s.
As the word itself suggests, this break is
most often related to notions of the waning or extinction
of the hundred-year-old modern movement (or to its ideological
or aesthetic repudiation). Thus abstract expressionism in
painting, existentialism in philosophy, the final forms of
representation in the novel, the films of the great auteurs,
or the modernist school of poetry (as institutionalized and
canonized in the works of Wallace Stevens) all are now seen
as the final, extraordinary flowering of a high-modernist
impulse which is spent and exhausted with them. The enumeration
of what follows, then, at once becomes empirical, chaotic,
and heterogeneous: Andy Warhol and pop art, but also photorealism,
and beyond it, the "new expressionism"; the moment,
in music, of John Cage, but also the synthesis of classical
and "popular" styles found in composers like Phil
Glass and Terry Riley, and also punk and new wave rock (the
Beatles and the Stones now standing as the high-modernist
moment of that more recent and rapidly evolving tradition);
in film, Godard, post-Godard, and experimental cinema and
video, but also a whole new type of commercial film (about
which more below); Burroughs, Pynchon, or Ishmael Reed, on
the one hand, and the French nouveau roman and its succession,
on the other, along with alarming new kinds of literary criticism
based on some new aesthetic of textuality or ecriture . .
. The list might be extended indefinitely; but does it imply
any more fundamental change or break than the periodic style
and fashion changes determined by an older high-modernist
imperative of stylistic innovation?
It is in the realm of architecture, however,
that modifications in aesthetic production are most dramatically
visible, and that their theoretical problems have been most
centrally raised and articulated; it was indeed from architectural
debates that my own conception of postmodernism--as it will
be outlined in the following pages--initially began to emerge.
More decisively than in the other arts or media, postmodernist
positions in architecture have been inseparable from an Implacable
critique of architectural high modernism and of Frank Lloyd
Wright or the so-called international style (Le
Corbusier, Mies, etc), where formal criticism and analysis
(of the high-modernist transformation of the building into
a virtual sculpture, or monumental "duck;" as Robert
Venturi puts it)1 are at one with reconsiderations on the
level of urbanism and of the aesthetic institution. High modernism
is thus credited with the destruction of the fabric of the
traditional city and its older neighborhood culture (by way
of the radical disjunction of the new Utopian high-modernist
building from its surrounding context), while the prophetic
elitism and authoritarianism of the modern movement are remorselessly
identified in the imperious gesture of the charismatic Master.
Postmodernism in architecture will then logically
enough stage itself as a kind of aesthetic populism, as the
very title of Venturi’s influential manifesto, Learning
from Las Vegas, suggests. However we may ultimately wish
to evaluate this populist rhetoric,2 it has at least the merit of drawing our
attention to one fundamental feature of all the postmodernisms
enumerated above: namely, the effacement in them of the older
(essentially high-modernist) frontier between high culture
and so-called mass or commercial culture, and the emergence
of new kinds of texts infused with the forms, categories,
and contents of that very culture industry so passionately
denounced by all the ideologues of the modern, from Leavis
and the American New Criticism all the way to Adorno and the
Frankfurt School. The postmodernisms have, in fact, been fascinated
precisely by this whole "degraded" landscape of
schlock and kitsch, of TV series and Reader’s Digest culture,
of advertising and motels, of the late show and the grade-B
Hollywood film, of so-called paraliterature, with its airport
paperback categories of the gothic and the romance, the popular
biography, the murder mystery, and the science fiction or
fantasy novel: materials they no longer simply "quote;"
as a Joyce or a Mahler might have done, but incorporate into
their very substance.
Nor should the break in question be thought
of as a purely cultural affair: indeed, theories of the postmodern--whether
celebratory or couched in the language of moral revulsion
and denunciation--bear a strong family resemblance to all
those more ambitious sociological generalizations which, at
much the same time, bring us the news of the arrival and inauguration
of a whole new type of society, most famously baptized "postindustrial
society" (Daniel Bell) but often also designated consumer
society, media society, information society, electronic society
or high tech, and the like. Such theories have the obvious
ideological mission of demonstrating, to their own relief,
that the new social formation in question no longer obeys
the laws of classical capitalism, namely, the primacy of industrial
production and the omnipresence of class struggle. The Marxist
tradition has therefore resisted them with vehemence, with
the signal exception of the economist Ernest Mandel, whose
book Late Capitalism sets out not merely to anatomize
the historic originality of this new society (which he sees
as a third stage or moment in the evolution of capital) but
also to demonstrate that it is, if anything, a purer stage
of capitalism than any of the moments that preceded it. I
will return to this argument later; suffice it for the moment
to anticipate a point that will be argued in chapter 2, namely,
that every position on postmodernism in culture--whether apologia
or stigmatization--is also at one and the same time, and necessarily,
an implicitly or explicitly political stance on the nature
of multinational capitalism today.
A last preliminary word on method: what follows
is not to be read as stylistic description, as the account
of one cultural style or movement among others. I have rather
meant to offer a periodizing hypothesis, and that at a moment
in which the very conception of historical periodization has
come to seem most problematical indeed. I have argued elsewhere
that all isolated or discrete cultural analysis always involves
a buried or repressed theory of historical periodization;
in any case, the conception of the "genealogy" largely
lays to rest traditional theoretical worries about so-called
linear history, theories of "stages;" and teleological
historiography. In the present context, however, lengthier
theoretical discussion of such (very real) issues can perhaps
be replaced by a few substantive remarks.
One of the concerns frequently aroused by periodizing
hypotheses is that these tend to obliterate difference and
to project an idea of the historical period as massive homogeneity
(bounded on either side by inexplicable chronological metamorphoses
and punctuation marks). This is, however, precisely why it
seems to me essential to grasp postmodernism not as a style
but rather as a cultural dominant: a conception which allows
for the presence and coexistence of a range of very different,
yet subordinate, features.
Consider, for example, the powerful alternative
position that post-modernism is itself little more than one
more stage of modernism proper (if not, indeed, of the even
older romanticism); it may indeed be conceded that all the
features of postmodernism I am about to enumerate can be detected,
full-blown, in this or that preceding modernism (including
such astonishing genealogical precursors as Gertrude Stein,
Raymond Roussel, or Marcel Duchamp, who may be considered
outright postmodernists, avant la lettre). What has not been
taken into account by this view, however, is the social position
of the older modernism, or better still, its passionate repudiation
by an older Victorian and post-Victorian bourgeoisie for whom
its forms and ethos are received as being variously ugly,
dissonant, obscure, scandalous, immoral, subversive, and generally
"antisocial." It will be argued here, however, that
a mutation in the sphere of culture has rendered such attitudes
archaic. Not only are Picasso and Joyce no longer ugly; they
now strike us, on the whole, as rather "realistic,"
and this is the result of a canonization and academic institutionalization
of the modern movement generally that can be traced to the
late 1950s. This is surely one of the most plausible explanations
for the emergence of postmodernism itself, since the younger
generation of the 1960s will now confront the formerly oppositional
modern movement as a set of dead classics, which "weigh
like a nightmare on the brains of the living;" as Marx
once said in a different context. As for the postmodern revolt
against all that, however, it must equally be stressed that
its own offensive features-from obscurity and sexually explicit
material to psychological squalor and overt expressions of
social and political defiance, which transcend anything that
might have been imagined at the most extreme moments of high
modernism-no longer scandalize anyone and are not only received
with the greatest complacency but have themselves become institutionalized
and are at one with the official or public culture of Western
society.
What has happened is that aesthetic production
today has become integrated into commodity production generally:
the frantic economic urgency of producing fresh waves of ever
more novel-seeming goods (from clothing to airplanes), at
ever greater rates of turnover, now assigns an increasingly
essential structural function and position to aesthetic innovation
and experimentation. Such economic necessities then find recognition
in the varied kinds of institutional support available for
the newer art, from foundations and grants to museums and
other forms of patronage. Of all the arts, architecture is
the closest constitutively to the economic, with which, in
the form of commissions and land values, it has a virtually
unmediated relationship. It will therefore not be surprising
to find the extraordinary flowering of the new postmodern
architecture grounded in the patronage of multinational business,
whose expansion and development is strictly contemporaneous
with it. Later I will suggest that these two new phenomena
have an even deeper dialectical interrelationship than the
simple one-to-one financing of this or that individual project.
Yet this is the point at which I must remind the reader of
the obvious; namely, that this whole global, yet American,
postmodern culture is the internal and superstructural expression
of a whole new wave of American military and economic domination
throughout the world: in this sense, as throughout class history,
the underside of culture is blood, torture, death, and terror.
The first point to be made about the conception
of periodization in dominance, therefore, is that even if
all the constitutive features of post-modernism were identical
with and coterminous to those of an older modernism--a position
I feel to be demonstrably erroneous but which only an even
lengthier analysis of modernism proper could dispel--the two
phenomena would still remain utterly distinct in their meaning
and social function, owing to the very different positioning
of postmodernism in the economic system of late capital and,
beyond that, to the transformation of the very sphere of culture
in contemporary society.
This point will be further discussed at the
conclusion of this book. I must now briefly address a different
kind of objection to periodization, a concern about its possible
obliteration of heterogeneity, one most often expressed by
the Left. And it is certain that there is a strange quasi-Sartrean
irony--a "winner loses" logic--which tends to surround
any effort to describe a "system;" a totalizing
dynamic, as these are detected in the movement of contemporary
society. What happens is that the more powerful the vision
of some increasingly total system or logic--the Foucault of
the prisons book is the obvious example--the more powerless
the reader comes to feel. Insofar as the theorist wins, therefore,
by constructing an increasingly closed and terrifying machine,
to that very degree he loses, since the critical capacity
of his work is thereby paralyzed, and the impulses of negation
and revolt, not to speak of those of social transformation,
are increasingly perceived as vain and trivial in the face
of the model itself.
I have felt, however, that it was only in the
light of some conception of a dominant cultural logic or hegemonic
norm that genuine difference could he measured and assessed.
I am very far from feeling that all cultural production today
is "postmodern" in the broad sense I will be conferring
on this term. The postmodern is, however, the force field
in which very different kinds of cultural impulses--what Raymond
Williams has usefully termed "residual" and "emergent"
forms of cultural production--must make their way. If we do
not achieve some general sense of a cultural dominant, then
we fall back into a view of present history as sheer heterogeneity,
random difference, a coexistence of a host of distinct forces
whose effectivity is undecidable. At any rate, this has been
the political spirit in which the following analysis was devised:
to project some conception of a new systematic cultural norm
and its reproduction in order to reflect more adequately on
the most effective forms of any radical cultural politics
today.
The exposition will take up in turn the following
constitutive features of the postmodern: a new depthlessness,
which finds its prolongation both in contemporary "theory"
and in a whole new culture of the image or the simulacrum;
a consequent weakening of historicity, both in our relationship
to public History and in the new forms of our private temporality,
whose "schizophrenic" structure (following Lacan)
will determine new types of syntax or syntagmatic relationships
in the more temporal arts; a whole new type of emotional ground
tone--what I will call "intensities"--which can
best be grasped by a return to older theories of the sublime;
the deep constitutive relationships of all this to a whole
new technology, which is itself a figure for a whole new economic
world system; and, after a brief account of postmodernist
mutations in the lived experience of built space itself, some
reflections on the mission of political art in the bewildering
new world space of late or multinatibnal capital.
I
We will begin with one of the canonical works
of high modernism in visual art, Van Gogh’s well-known
painting
of the peasant shoes, an example which, as you can imagine,
has not been innocently or randomly chosen. I want to propose
two ways of reading this painting, both of which in some fashion
reconstruct the reception of the work in a two-stage or double-level
process.
I first want to suggest that if this copiously
reproduced image is not to sink to the level of sheer decoration,
it requires us to reconstruct some initial situation out of
which the finished work emerges. Unless that situation--which
has vanished into the past--is somehow mentally restored,
the painting will remain an inert object, a reified end product
impossible to grasp as a symbolic act in its own right, as
praxis and as production.
This last term suggests that one way of reconstructing
the initial situation to which the work is somehow a response
is by stressing the raw materials, the initial content, which
it confronts and reworks, transforms, and appropriates. In
Van Gogh that content, those initial raw materials, are, I
will suggest, to be grasped simply as the whole object world
of agricultural misery, of stark rural poverty, and the whole
rudimentary human world of backbreaking peasant toil, a world
reduced to its most brutal and menaced, primitive and marginalized
state.
Fruit trees in this world are ancient and exhausted
sticks coming out of poor soil; the people of the village
are worn down to their skulls, caricatures of some ultimate
grotesque typology of basic human feature types. How is it,
then, that in Van Gogh such things as apple trees explode
into a hallucinatory surface of color, while his village stereotypes
are suddenly and garishly overlaid with hues of red and green?
I will briefly suggest, in this first interpretative option,
that the willed and violent transformation of a drab peasant
object world into the most glorious materialization of pure
color in oil paint is to be seen as a Utopian gesture, an
act of compensation which ends up producing a whole new Utopian
realm of the senses, or at least of that supreme sense-sight,
the visual, the eye-which it now reconstitutes for us as a
semiautonomous space in its own right, a part of some new
division of labor in the body of capital, some new fragmentation
of the emergent sensorium which replicates the specializations
and divisions of capitalist life at the same time that it
seeks in precisely such fragmentation a desperate Utopian
compensation for them.
There is, to be sure, a second reading of Van
Gogh which can hardly be ignored when we gaze at this particular
painting, and that is Heidegger’s central analysis in
Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes, which is organized around
the idea that the work of art emerges within the gap between
Earth and World, or what I would prefer to translate as the
meaningless materiality of the body and nature and the meaning
endowment of history and of the social. We will return to
that particular gap or rift later on; suffice it here to recall
some of the famous phrases that model the process whereby
these henceforth illustrious peasant shoes slowly re-create
about themselves the whole missing object world which was
once their lived context. "In them;" says Heidegger,
"there vibrates the silent call of the earth, its quiet
gift of ripening corn and its enigmatic self-refusal in the
fallow desolation of the wintry field." "This equipment,"
he goes on, "belongs to the earth, and it is protected
in the world of the peasant woman. . . . Van Gogh’s
painting is the disclosure of what the equipment, the pair
of peasant shoes, is in truth. . . . This entity emerges into
the unconcealment of its being;’3
by way of the mediation of the work of art, which draws the
whole absent world and earth into revelation around itself,
along with the heavy tread of the peasant woman, the loneliness
of the field path, the hut in the clearing, the worn and broken
instruments of labor in the furrows and at the hearth Heidegger’s
account needs to be completed by insistence on the renewed
materiality of the work, on the transformation of one form
of materiality--the earth itself and its paths and physical
objects--into that other materiality of oil paint affirmed
and foregrounded in its own right and for its own visual pleasures,
but nonetheless it has a satisfying plausibility. At any rate,
both readings may be described as hermeneutical, in the sense
in which the work in its inert, objectal form is taken as
a clue or symptom for some vaster reality which replaces it
as its ultimate truth Now we need to look at some shoes of
a different kind, and it is pleasant to be able to draw for
such an image on the recent work of the central figure in
contemporary visual art. Andy Warhol's Diamond
Dust Shoes evidently no longer speaks to us with any of
the immediacy of Var Gogh’s footgear; indeed, I am tempted
to say that it does not really speak to us at all. Nothing
in this painting organizes even a minimal place for the viewer,
who confronts it at the turning of a museum corridor or gallery
with all the contingency of some inexplicable natural object.
Or the level of the content, we have to do with what are now
far more clearly fetishes, in both the Freudian and the Marxian
senses (Derrida remarks, somewhere, about the Heideggerian
Paar Bauernschuhe, that the Van Gogh footgear are a
heterosexual pair, which allows neither for perversion nor
for fetishization). Here, however, we have a random collection
of dead objects hanging together on the canvas like so many
turnips, as shorn of their earlier life world as the pile
of shoes left over from Auschwitz or the remainders and tokens
of some incomprehensible and tragic fire in a packed dance
hall. There is therefore in Warhol no way to complete the
hermeneutic gesture and restore to these oddments that whole
larger lived context of the dance hall or the ball, the world
of jetset fashion or glamour magazines. Yet this is even more
paradoxical in the light of biographical infomration: Warhol
began is artistic career as a commercial illustrator for shoe
fashions and a designer of display windows in which various
pumps and slippers figured prominently. Indeed, one is tempted
to raise here--far too prematurely--one of the central issues
about postmodernism itself and its possible political dimensions:
Andy Warhol’s work in fact turns centrally around commodification,
and the great billboard images of the Coca-Cola bottle or
the Campbell’s soup can, which explicitly foreground
the commodity fetishism of a transition to late capital, ought
to be powerful and critical political statements. If they
are not that, then one would surely want to know why, and
one would want to begin to wonder a little more seriously
about the possibilities of political or critical art in the
postmodern period of late capital.
But there are some other significant differences
between the high-modernist and the postmodernist moment, between
the shoes of Van Gogh and the shoes of Andy Warhol, on which
we must now very briefly dwell. The first and most evident
is the emergence of a new kind of flatness or depthlessness,
a new kind of superficiality in the most literal sense, perhaps
the supreme formal feature of all the postmodernisms to which
we will have occasion to return in a number of other contexts.
Then we must surely come to terms with the role of photography
and the photographic negative in contemporary art of this
kind; and it is this, indeed, which confers its deathly quality
to the Warhol image, whose glaced X-ray elegance mortifies
the reified eye of the viewer in a way that would seem to
have nothing to do with death or the death obsession or the
death anxiety on the level of content. It is indeed as though
we had here to do with the inversion of Van Gogh’s Utopian
gesture: in the earlier work a stricken world is by some Nietzschean
fiat and act of the will transformed into the stridency of
Utopian color. Here, on the contrary, it is as though the
external and colored surface of things--debased and contaminated
in advance by their assimilation to glossy advertising images--has
been stripped away to reveal the deathly black-and-white substratum
of the photographic negative which subtends them. Although
this kind of death of the world of appearance becomes thematized
in certain of Warhol’s pieces, most notably the traffic
accidents or the electric chair series, this is not, I think,
a matter of content any longer but of some more fundamental
mutation both in the object world itself-now become a set
of texts or simulacra-and in the disposition of the subject.
All of which brings me to a third feature to
be developed here, what I will call the waning of affect in
postmodern culture. Of course, it would be inaccurate to suggest
that all affect, all feeling or emotion, all subjectivity,
has vanished from the newer image. Indeed, there is a kind
of return of the repressed in Diamond Dust Shoes, a
strange, compensatory, decorative exhilaration, explicitly
designated by the title itself, which is, of course, the glitter
of gold dust, the spangling of gilt sand that seals the surface
of the painting and yet continues to glint at us. Think, however,
of Rimbaud’s magical flowers "that look back at
you," or of the august premonitory eye flashes of Rilke’s
archaic Greek torso which warn the bourgeois subject to change
his life; nothing of that sort here in the gratuitous frivolity
of this final decorative overlay. In an interesting review
of the Italian version of this essay,4
Remo Ceserani expands this foot fetishism into a fourfold
image which adds to the gaping "modernist" expressivity
of the Van Gogh-Heidegger shoes the "realist" pathos
of Walker
Evans and James Agee (strange that pathos should thus
require a team!); while what looked like a random assortment
of yesteryear’s fashions in Warhol takes on, in Magritte,
the carnal reality of the human member itself, now more phantasmic
than the leather it is printed on. Magritte, unique among
the surrealists, survived the sea change from the modern to
its sequel, becoming in the process something of a postmodern
emblem: the uncanny, Lacanian foreclusion, without expression.
The ideal schizophrenic, indeed, is easy enough to please
provided only an eternal present is thrust before the eyes,
which gaze with equal fascination on an old shoe or the tenaciously
growing organic mystery of the human toenail. Ceserani thereby
deserves a semiotic cube of his own:
The waning of affect is, however, perhaps best
initially approached by way of the human figure, and it is
obvious that what we have said about the commodification of
objects holds as strongly for Warhol’s human subjects:
stars--like Marilyn Monroe--who are themselves commodified
and transformed into their own images. And here too a certain
brutal return to the older period of high modernism offers
a dramatic shorthand parable of the transformation in question.
Edward Munch’s painting The
Scream is, of course, a canonical expression of the
great modernist thematics of alienation, anomie, solitude,
social fragmentation, and isolation, a virtually programmatic
emblem of what used to be called the age of anxiety. It will
here be read as an embodiment not merely of the expression
of that kind of affect but, even more, as a virtual deconstruction
of the very aesthetic of expression itself, which seems to
have dominated much of what we call high modernism but to
have vanished away--for both practical and theoretical reasons--in
the world of the postmodern. The very concept of expression
presupposes indeed some separation within the subject, and
along with that a whole metaphysics of the inside and outside,
of the wordless pain within the monad and the moment in which,
often cathartically, that "emotion" is then projected
out and externalized, as gesture or cry, as desperate communication
and the outward dramatization of inward feeling.
This is perhaps the moment to say something
about contemporary theory, which has, among other things,
been committed to the mission of criticizing and discrediting
this very hermeneutic model of the inside and the outside
and of stigmatizing such models as ideological and metaphysical.
But what is today called contemporary theory--or better still,
theoretical discourse--is also, I want to argue, itself very
precisely a postmodernist phenomenon. It would therefore be
inconsistent to defend the truth of its theoretical insights
in a situation in which the very concept of "truth"
itself is part of the metaphysical baggage which poststructuralism
seeks to abandon. What we can at least suggest is that the
poststructuralist critique of the hermeneutic, of what I will
shortly call the depth model, is useful for us as a very significant
symptom of the very postmodernist culture which is our subject
here.
Overhastily, we can say that besides the hermeneutic
model of inside and outside which Munch’s painting develops,
at least four other fundamental depth models have generally
been repudiated in contemporary theory: (1) the dialectical
one of essence and appearance (along with a whole range of
concepts of ideology or false consciousness which tend to
accompany it); (2) the Freudian model of latent and manifest,
or of repression (which is, of course, the target of Michel
Foucault’s programmatic and symptomatic pamphlet La
Volante de savoir [The history of Sexuality]);
(3) the existential model of authenticity and inauthenticity
whose heroic or tragic thematics are closely related to that
other great opposition between alienation and disalienation,
itself equally a casualty of the poststructural or postmodern
period; and (4) most recently, the great semiotic opposition
between signifier and signified, which was itself rapidly
unraveled and deconstructed during its brief heyday in the
1960s and 1970s. What replaces these various depth models
is for the most part a conception of practices, discourses,
and textual play, whose new syntagmatic structures we will
examine later on; let it suffice now to observe that here
too depth is replaced by surface, or by multiple surfaces
(what if often called intertextuality is in that sense no
longer a matter of depth).
Nor is this depthlessness merely metaphorical:
it can be experienced physically and "literally"
by anyone who, mounting what used to be Raymond Chandler’s
Bunker Hill from the great Chicano markets on Broadway and
Fourth Street in downtown Los Angeles, suddenly confronts
the great free-standing wall of Wells
Fargo Court (Skidmore, Owings and Merrill)--a surface
which seems to be unsupported by any volume, or whose putative
volume (rectangular? trapezoidal?) is ocularly quite undecidable.
This great sheet of windows, with its gravity-defying two-dimensionality,
momentarily transforms the solid ground on which we stand
into the contents of a stereopticon, pasteboard shapes profiling
themselves here and there around us. The visual effect is
the same from all sides: as fateful as the great monolith
in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001 which confronts its
viewers like an enigmatic destiny, a call to evolutionary
mutation. If this new multinational downtown effectively abolished
the older ruined city fabric which is violently replaced,
cannot something similar be said about the way in which this
strange new surface in its own peremptory way renders our
older systems of perception of the city somehow archaic and
aimless, without offering another in their place?
Returning now for one last moment to Munch's
painting, it seems evident that The Scream subtly but
elaborately disconnects its own aesthetic of expression, all
the while remaining imprisoned within it. Its gestural content
already underscores its own failure, since the realm of the
sonorous, the cry, the raw vibrations of the human throat,
are incompatible with its medium (something underscored within
the work by the homunculus’s lack of ears). Yet the
absent scream returns, as it were, in a dialectic of loops
and spirals, circling ever more closely toward that even more
absent experience of atrocious solitude and anxiety which
the scream was itself to "express." Such loops inscribe
themselves on the painted surface in the form of those great
concentric circles in which sonorous vibration becomes ultimately
visible, as on the surface of a sheet of water, in an infinite
regress which fans out from the sufferer to become the very
geography of a universe in which pain itself now speaks and
vibrates through the material sunset and landscape. The visible
world now becomes the wall of the monad on which this "scream
running through nature" (Munch’s words)5
is recorded and transcribed: one thinks of that character
of Lautreamont who, growing up inside a sealed and silent
membrane, ruptures it with his own scream on catching sight
of the monstrousness of the deity and thereby rejoins the
world of sound and suffering.
All of which suggests some more general historical
hypothesis: namely, that concepts such as anxiety and alienation
(and the experiences to which they correspond, as in The
Scream) are no longer appropriate in the world of the
postmodern. The great Warhol figures--Marilyn herself or Edie
Sedgewick--the notorious cases of burnout and self-destruction
of the ending 1960s, and the great dominant experiences of
drugs and schizophrenia, would seem to have little enough
in common any more either with the hysterics and neurotics
of Freud’s own day or with those canonical experiences
of radical isolation and solitude, anomie, private revolt,
Van Gogh-type madness, which dominated the period of high
modernism. This shift in the dynamics of cultural pathology
can be characterized as one in which the alienation of the
subject is displaced by the latter’s fragmentation.
Such terms inevitably recall one of the more
fashionable themes in contemporary theory, that of the "death"
of the subject itself--the end of the autonomous bourgeois
monad or ego or individual--and the accompanying stress, whether
as some new moral ideal or as empirical description, on the
decentering of that formerly centered subject or psyche.
(Of the two possible formulations of this notion--the historicist
one, that a once-existing centered subject, in the period
of classical capitalism and the nuclear family, has today
in the world of organizational bureaucracy dissolved; and
the more radical poststructuralist position, for which such
a subject never existed in the first place but constituted
something like an ideological mirage--I obviously incline
toward the former; the latter must in any case take into account
something like a "reality of the appearance.")
We must however add that the problem of expression
is itself closely linked to some conception of the subject
as a monadlike container, within which things felt are then
expressed by projection outward. What we must now stress,
however, is the degree to which the high-modernist conception
of a unique style, along with the accompanying collective
ideals of an artistic or political vanguard or avant-garde,
themselves stand or fall along with that older notion (or
experience) of the so-called centered subject.
Here too Munch's painting stands as a complex
reflection on this complicated situation: it shows us that
expression requires the category of the individual monad,
but it also shows us the heavy price to be paid for that precondition,
dramatizing the unhappy paradox that when you constitute your
individual subjectivity as a self-sufficient field and a closed
realm, you thereby shut yourself off from everything else
and condemn yourself to the mindless solitude of the monad,
buried alive and condemned to a prison cell without egress.
Postmodernism presumably signals the end of
this dilemma, which it replaces with a new one. The end of
the bourgeois ego, or monad, no doubt brings with it the end
of the psychopathologies of that ego--what I have been calling
the waning of affect. But it means the end of much more--the
end, for example, of style, in the sense of the unique and
the personal, the end of the distinctive individual brush
stroke (as symbolized by the emergent primacy of mechanical
reproduction). As for expression and feelings or emotions,
the liberation, in contemporary society, from the older anomie
of the centered subject may also mean not merely a liberation
from anxiety but a liberation from every other kind of feeling
as well, since there is no longer a self present to do the
feeling. This is not to say that the cultural products of
the postmodern era are utterly devoid of feeling, but rather
that such feelings--which it may be better and more accurate,
following J.-F. Lyotard, to call "intensities"--are
now free-floating and impersonal and tend to be dominated
by a peculiar kind of euphoria, a matter to which we will
want to return later on.
The waning of affect, however, might also have
been characterized, in the narrower context of literary criticism,
as the waning of the great high modernist thematics of time
and temporality, the elegiac mysteries of duree and memory
(something to be understood fully as much as a category of
the literary criticism associated with high modernism as with
the works themselves). We have often been told, however, that
we now inhabit the synchronic rather than the diachronic,
and I think it is at least empirically arguable that our daily
life, our psychic experience, our cultural languages, are
today dominated by categories of space rather than by categories
of time, as in the preceding period of high modernism.6
II
The disappearance of the individual subject,
along with its formal consequence, the increasing unavailability
of the personal style, engender the well-nigh universal practice
today of what may be called pastiche. This concept, which
we owe to Thomas Mann (in Doktor Faustus), who owed
it in turn to Adorno’s great work on the two paths of
advanced musical experimentation (Schoenberg’s innovative
planification and Stravinsky’s irrational eclecticism),
is to be sharply distinguished from the more readily received
idea of parody.
To be sure, parody found a fertile area in
the idiosyncracies of the moderns and their "inimitable"
styles: the Faulknerian long sentence, for example, with its
breathless gerundives; Lawrentian nature imagery punctuated
by testy colloquialism; Wallace Stevens’s inveterate
hypostasis of nonsubstantive parts of speech ("the intricate
evasions of as"); the fateful (but finally predictable)
swoops in Mahler from high orchestral pathos into village
accordion sentiment; Heidegger’s meditative-solemn practice
of the false etymology as a mode of "proof" . .
. All these strike one as somehow characteristic, insofar
as they ostentatiously deviate from a norm which then reasserts
itself, in a not necessarily unfriendly way, by a systematic
mimicry of their willful eccentricities.
Yet in the dialectical leap from quantity to
quality, the explosion of modern literature into a host of
distinct private styles and mannerisms has been followed by
a linguistic fragmentation of social life itself to the point
where the norm itself is eclipsed: reduced to a neutral and
reified media speech (far enough from the Utopian aspirations
of the inventors of Esperanto or Basic English), which itself
then becomes but one more idiolect among many. Modernist sty1es
thereby become postmodernist codes. And that the stupendous
proliferation of social codes today into professional and
disciplinary jargons (but also into the badges of affirmation
of ethnic, gender, race, religious, and class-factional adhesion)
is also a political phenomenon, the problem of micropolitics
sufficiently demonstrates. If the ideas of a ruling class
were once the dominant (or hegemonic) ideology of bourgeois
society, the advanced capitalist countries today are now a
field of stylistic and discursive heterogeneity without a
norm. Faceless masters continue to inflect the economic strategies
which constrain our existences, but they no longer need to
impose their speech (or are henceforth unable to); and the
postliteracy of the late capitalist world reflects not only
the absence of any great collective project but also the unavailability
of the older national language itself.
In this situation parody finds itself without
a vocation; it has lived, and that strange new thing pastiche
slowly comes to take its place. Pastiche is, like parody,
the imitation of a peculiar or unique, idiosyncratic style,
the wearing of a linguistic mask, speech in a dead language.
But it is a neutral practice of such mimicry, without any
of parody’s ulterior motives, amputated of the satiric
impulse, devoid of laughter and of any conviction that alongside
the abnormal tongue you have momentarily borrowed, some healthy
linguistic normality still exists. Pastiche is thus blank
parody, a statue with blind eyeballs: it is to parody what
that other interesting and historically original modern thing,
the practice of a kind of blank irony, is to what Wayne Booth
calls the "stable ironies" of the eighteenth century.
It would therefore begin to seem that Adorno"s
prophetic diagnosis has been realized, albeit in a negative
way: not Schoberg (the sterility of whose achieved system
he already glimpsed) but Stravinsky is the true precursor
of postmodern cultural production. For with the collapse of
the high-modernist ideology of style--what is as unique and
unmistakable as your own fingerprints, as incomparable as
your own body (the very source, for an early Roland Barthes,
of stylistic invention and innovation)--the producers of culture
have nowhere to turn but to the past: the imitation of dead
styles, speech through all the masks and voices stored up
in the imaginary museum of a now global culture.
This situation evidently determines what the
architecture historians call "historicism," namely,
the random cannibalization of all the styles of the past,
the play of random stylistic allusion, and in general what
Henri Lefebvre has called the increasing primacy of the "neo."
This omnipresence of pastiche is not incompatible with a certain
humor, however, nor is it innocent of all passion: it is at
the least compatible with addiction-with a whole historically
original consumers appetite for a world transformed into sheer
images of itself and for pseudo-events and "spectacles"
(the term of the situationists). It is for such objects that
we may reserve Plato’s conception of the "simulacrum,"
the identical copy for which no original has ever existed.
Appropriately enough, the culture of the simulacrum comes
to life in a society where exchange value has been generalized
to the point at which the very memory of use value is effaced,
a society of which Guy Debord has observed, in an extraordinary
phrase, that in it "the image has become the final form
of commodity reification" (The Society of the Spectacle).
The new spatial logic of the simulacrum can
now be expected to have a momentous effect on what used to
be historical time. The past is thereby itself modified: what
was once, in the historical novel as Lukacs defines it, the
organic genealogy of the bourgeois collective project--what
is still, for the redemptive historiography of an E. P Thompson
or of American "oral history," for the resurrection
of the dead of anonymous and silenced generations, the retrospective
dimension indispensable to any vital reorientation of our
collective future--has meanwhile itself become a vast collection
of images, a multitudinous photographic simulacrum. Guy Debord’s
powerful slogan is now even more apt for the "prehistory"
of a society bereft of all historicity, one whose own putative
past is little more than a set of dusty spectacles. In faithful
conformity to poststructuralist linguistic theory, the past
as "referent" finds itself gradually bracketed,
and then effaced altogether, leaving us with nothing but texts.
Yet it should not be thought that this process
is accompanied by indifference: on the contrary, the remarkable
current intensification of an addiction to the photographic
image is itself a tangible symptom of an omnipresent, omnivorous,
and well-nigh libidinal historicism. As I have already observed,
the architects use this (exceedingly polysemous) word for
the complacent eclecticism of postmodern architecture, which
randomly and without principle but with gusto cannibalizes
all the architectural styles of the past and combines them
in overstimulating ensembles. Nostalgia does not strike one
as an altogether satisfactory word for such fascination (particularly
when one thinks of the pain of a properly modernist nostalgia
with a past beyond all but aesthetic retrieval), yet it directs
our attention to what is a culturally far more generalized
manifestation of the process in commercial art and taste,
namely the so- called nostalgia film (or what the French call
la mode retro).
Nostalgia films restructure the whole issue
of pastiche and project it onto a collective and social level,
where the desperate attempt to appropriate a missing past
is now refracted through the iron law of fashion change and
the emergent ideology of the generation. The inaugural film
of this new aesthetic discourse, George Lucas’s American
Graffiti (1973), set out to recapture, as so many films
have attempted since, the henceforth mesmerizing lost reality
of the Eisenhower era; and one tends to feel, that for Americans
at least, the 1950s remain the privileged lost object of desire7--not merely the stability and prosperity of a
pax Americana but also the first naive innocence of the countercultural
impulses of early rock and roll and youth gangs (Coppola’s
Rumble Fish will then be the contemporary dirge that
laments their passing, itself, however, still contradictorily
filmed in genuine nostalgia film style). With this initial
breakthrough, other generational periods open up for aesthetic
colonization: as witness the stylistic recuperation of the
American and the Italian 1930s, in Polanski’s Chinatown
and Bertolucci’s Il Conformista, respectively.
More interesting, and more problematical, are the ultimate
attempts, through this new discourse, to lay siege either
to our own present and immediate past or to a more distant
history that escapes individual existential memory.
Faced with these ultimate objects-our
social, historical, and existential present, and the past
as "referent"--the incompatibility of a postmodernist
"nostalgia" art language with genuine historicity
becomes dramatically apparent. The contradiction propels this
mode, however, into complex and interesting new formal inventiveness;
it being understood that the nostalgia film was never a matter
of some old-fashioned "representation" of historical
content, but instead approached the "past" through
stylistic connotation, conveying "pastness" by the
glossy qualities of the image, and "1930s-ness"
or "1950s-ness" by the attributes of fashion (in
that following the prescription of the Barthes of Mythologies,
who saw connotation as the purveying of imaginary and stereotypical
idealities: "Sinite," for example, as some Disney-EPCOT
"concept" of China).
The insensible colonization of the present
by the nostalgia mode can be observed in Lawrence Kasdan's
elegant film Body Heat, a distant "affluent society"
remake of James M. Cain's Double Indemnity, set in
a contemporary Florida small town a few hours’ drive
from Miami. The word remake is, however, anachronistic
to the degree to which our awareness of the preexistence of
other versions (previous films of the novel as well as the
novel itself) is now a constitutive and essential part of
the film’s structure: we are now, in other words, in
"intertextuality" as a deliberate, built-in feature
of the aesthetic effect and as the operator of a new connotation
of "pastness" and pseudohistorical depth, in which
the history of aesthetic styles displaces "real"
history.
Yet from the outset a whole battery of aesthetic
signs begin to distance the officially contemporary image
from us in time: the art deco scripting of the credits, for
example, serves at once to program the spectator to the appropriate
"nostalgia" mode of reception (art deco quotation
has much the same function in contemporary architecture, as
in Toronto’s remarkable Eaton Centre).8
Meanwhile, a somewhat different play of connotations is activated
by complex (but purely formal) allusions to the institution
of the star system itself. The protagonist, William Hurt,
is one of a new generation of film "stars" whose
status is markedly distinct from that of the preceding generation
of male superstars, such as Steve McQueen or Jack Nicholson
(or even, more distantly, Brando), let alone of earlier moments
in the evolution of the institution of the star. The immediately
preceding generation projected their various roles through
and by way of their well-known off-screen personalities, which
often connoted rebellion and nonconformism. The latest generation
of starring actors continues to assure the conventional functions
of stardom (most notably sexuality) but in the utter absence
of "personality" in the older sense, and with something
of the anonymity of character acting (which in actors like
Hurt reaches virtuoso proportions, yet of a very different
kind than the virtuosity of the older Brando or Olivier).
This "death of the subject" in the institution of
the star now, however, opens up the possibility of a play
of historical allusions to much older roles--in this case
to those associated with Clark Gable--so that the very style
of the acting can now also serve as a "connotator"
of the past.
Finally, the setting has been strategically
framed, with great ingenuity, to eschew most of the signals
that normally convey the contemporaneity of the United States
in its multinational era: the small-town setting allows the
camera to elude the high-rise landscape of the 1970s and 1980s
(even though a key episode in the narrative involves the fatal
destruction of older buildings by land speculators), while
the object world of the present day--artifacts and appliances,
whose styling would at once serve to date the image--is elaborately
edited out. Everything in the film, therefore, conspires to
blur its official contemporaneity and make it possible for
the viewer to receive the narrative as though it were set
in some eternal thirties, beyond real historical time. This
approach to the present by way of the art language of the
simulacrum, or of the pastiche of the stereotypical past,
endows present reality and the openness of present history
with the spell and distance of a glossy mirage. Yet this mesmerizing
new aesthetic mode itself emerged as an elaborated symptom
of the waning of our historicity, of our lived possibility
of experiencing history in some active way. It cannot therefore
be said to produce this strange occultation of the present
by its own formal power, but rather merely to demonstrate,
through these inner contradictions, the enormity of a situation
in which we seem increasingly incapable of fashioning representations
of our own current experience.
As for "real history" itself--the
traditional object, however it may be defined, of what used
to be the historical novel--it will be more revealing now
to turn back to that older form and medium and to read its
postmodern fate in the work of one of the few serious and
innovative leftist novelists at work in the United States
today, whose books are nourished with history in the more
traditional sense and seem, so far, to stake out successive
generational moments in the "epic" of American history,
between which they alternate. E. L. Doctorow’s Ragtime
gives itself officially as a panorama of the first two
decades of the century (like World’s Fair); his most
recent novel, Billy Bathgate, like Loon Lake addresses
the thirties and the Great Depression, while The Book of
Daniel holds up before us, in painful juxtaposition, the
two great moments of the Old Left and the New Left, of thirties
and forties communism and the radicalism of the 1960s (even
his early western may be said to fit into this scheme and
to designate in a less articulated and formally self-conscious
way the end of the frontier of the late nineteenth century).
The Book of Daniel is not the only one
of these five major historical novels to establish an explicit
narrative link between the reader’s and the writer’s
present and the older historical reality that is the subject
of the work; the astonishing last page of Loon Lake,
which I will not disclose, also does this in a very different
way; it is a matter of some interest to note that the first
version of Ragtime9 positions us explicitly in our own present,
in the novelist’s house in New Rochelle, New York, which
at once becomes the scene of its own (imaginary) past in the
1900s. This detail has been suppressed from the published
text, symbolically cutting its moorings and freeing the novel
to float in some new world of past historical time whose relationship
to us is problematical indeed. The authenticity of the gesture,
however, may be measured by the evident existential fact of
life that there no longer does seem to be any organic relationship
between the American history we learn from schoolbooks and
the lived experience of the current multinational, high-rise,
stagflated city of the newspapers and of our own everyday
life.
A crisis in historicity, however, inscribes
itself symptomatically in several other curious formal features
within this text. Its official subject is the transition from
a pre-World War I radical and working-class politics (the
great strikes) to the technological invention and new commodity
production of the 1920s (the rise of Hollywood and of the
image as commodity): the interpolated version of Kleist’s
Michael Kohlhaas, the strange, tragic episode of the
black protagonist’s revolt, may be thought of as a moment
related to this process. That Ragtime has political content
and even something like a political "meaning" seems
in any case obvious and has been expertly articulated by Linda
Hutcheon in terms of
its
three paralleled families: the Anglo-American establishment
one and the marginal immigrant European and American black
ones. The novel’s action disperses the center of the
first and moves the margins into the multiple "centers"
of the narrative, in a formal allegory of the social demographics
of urban America. In addition, there is an extended critique
of American democratic ideals through the presentation of
class conflict rooted in capitalist property and moneyed power.
The black Coalhouse, the white Houdini, the immigrant Tateh
are all working class, and because of this-not in spite of
it-all can therefore work to create new aesthetic forms (ragtime,
vaudeville, movies).10
But this does everything
but the essential, lending the novel an admirable thematic
coherence few readers can have experienced in parsing the
lines of a verbal object held too close to the eyes to fall
into these perspectives. Hutcheon is, of course, absolutely
right, and this is what the novel would have meant had it
not been a postmodern artifact. For one thing, the objects
of representation, ostensibly narrative characters, are incommensurable
and, as it were, of incomparable substances, like oil and
water--Houdini being a historical figure, Tateh a fictional
one, and Coalhouse an intertextual one--something very
difficult for an interpretive comparison of this kind to register.
Meanwhile, the theme attributed to the novel also demands
a somewhat different kind of scrutiny, since it can be rephrased
into a classic version of the Left’s "experience
of defeat" in the twentieth century, namely, the proposition
that the depolitization of the workers’ movement is
attributable to the media or culture generally (what she here
calls "new aesthetic forms"). This is, indeed, in
my opinion, something like the elegiac backdrop, if not the
meaning, of Ragtime, and perhaps of Doctorow’s
work in general; but then we need another way of describing
the novel as something like an unconscious expression and
associative exploration of this left doxa, this historical
opinion or quasi- vision in the mind’s eye of "objective
spirit." What such a description would want to register
is the paradox that a seemingly realistic novel like Ragtime
is in reality a nonrepresentational work that combines
fantasy signifiers from a variety of ideologemes in a kind
of hologram.
My point, however, is not some hypothesis as
to the thematic coherence of this decentered narrative but
rather just the opposite, namely, the way in which the kind
of reading this novel imposes makes it virtually impossible
for us to reach and thematize those official "subjects"
which float above the text but cannot be integrated into our
reading of the sentences. In that sense, the novel not only
resists interpretation, it is organized systematically and
formally to short-circuit an older type of social and historical
interpretation which it perpetually holds out and withdraws.
When we remember that the theoretical critique and repudiation
of interpretation as such is a fundamental component of poststructuralist
theory, it is difficult not to conclude that Doctorow has
somehow deliberately built this very tension, this very contradiction,
into the flow of his sentences.
The book is crowded with real historical figures--from
Teddy Roosevelt to Emma Goldman, from Harry K. Thaw and Stanford
White to J. Pierpont Morgan and Henry Ford, not to mention
the more central role of Houdini--who interact with a fictive
family, simply designated as Father, Mother, Older Brother,
and so forth. All historical novels, beginning with those
of Sir Walter Scott himself, no doubt in one way or another
involve a mobilization of previous historical knowledge generally
acquired through the schoolbook history manuals devised for
whatever legitimizing purpose by this or that national tradition-thereafter
instituting a narrative dialectic between what we already
"know" about The Pretender, say, and what he is
then seen to be concretely in the pages of the novel. But
Doctorow’s procedure seems much more extreme than this;
and I would argue that the designation of both types of characters--historical
names and capitalized family roles--operates powerfully and
systematically to reify all these characters and to make it
impossible for us to receive their representation without
the prior interception of already acquired knowledge or doxa--something
which lends the text an extraordinary sense of deja vu and
a peculiar familiarity one is tempted to associate with Freud's
"return of the repressed" in "The Uncanny"
rather than with any solid historiographic formation on the
reader's part.
Meanwhile, the sentences in which all this
is happening have their own specificity, allowing us more
concretely to distinguish the moderns’ elaboration of
a personal style from this new kind of linguistic innovation,
which is no longer personal at all but has its family kinship
rather with what Barthes long ago called "white writing."
In this particular novel, Doctorow has imposed upon himself
a rigorous principle of selection in which only simple declarative
sentences (predominantly mobilized by the verb "to be")
are received. The effect is, however, not really one of the
condescending simplification and symbolic carefulness of children’s
literature, but rather something more disturbing, the sense
of some profound subterranean violence done to American English,
which cannot, however, be detected empirically in any of the
perfectly grammatical sentences with which this work is formed.
Yet other more visible technical "innovations" may
supply a clue to what is happening in the language of Ragtime:
it is, for example, well known that the source of many of
the characteristic effects of Camus’s novel The Stranger
can be traced back to that author’s willful decision
to substitute, throughout, the French tense of the passe
compose for the other past tenses more normally employed
in narration in that language.11 I suggest
that it is as if something of that sort were at work here:
as though Doctorow had set out systematically to produce
the effect or the equivalent, in his language, of a verbal
past tense we do not possess in English, namely, the French
preterite (or passe simple), whose "perfective"
movement, as Emile Benveniste taught us, serves to separate
events from the present of enunciation and to transform the
stream of time and action into so many finished, complete,
and isolated punctual event objects which find themselves
sundered from any present situation (even that of the act
of story telling or enunciation).
E. L. Doctorow is the epic poet of the disappearance
of the American radical past, of the suppression of older
traditions and moments of the American radical tradition:
no one with left sympathies can read these splendid novels
without a poignant distress that is an authentic way of confronting
our own current political dilemmas in the present. What is
culturally interesting, however, is that he has had to convey
this great theme formally (since the waning of the content
is very precisely his subject) and, more than that, has had
to elaborate his work by way of that very cultural logic of
the postmodern which is itself the mark and symptom of his
dilemma. Loon Lake much more obviously deploys the
strategies of the pastiche (most notably in its reinvention
of Dos Passos); but Ragtime remains the most peculiar
and stunning monument to the aesthetic situation engendered
by the disappearance of the historical referent. This historical
novel can no longer set out to represent the historical past;
it can only "represent" our ideas and stereotypes
about that past (which thereby at once becomes "pop history").
Cultural production is thereby driven back inside a mental
space which is no longer that of the old monadic subject but
rather that of some degraded collective "objective spirit":
it can no longer gaze directly on some putative real world,
at some reconstruction of a past history which was once itself
a present; rather, as in Plato’s cave, it must trace
our mental images of that past upon its confining walls. If
there is any realism left here, it is a "realism"
that is meant to derive from the shock of grasping that confinement
and of slowly becoming aware of a new and original historical
situation in which we are condemned to seek History by way
of our own pop images and simulacra of that history, which
itself remains forever out of reach.
III
The crisis in historicity now dictates a return,
in a new way, to the question of temporal organization in
general in the postmodern force field, and indeed, to the
problem of the form that time, temporality, and the syntagmatic
will be able to take in a culture increasingly dominated by
space and spatial logic. If, indeed, the subject has lost
its capacity actively to extend its pro-tensions and re-tensions
across the temporal manifold and to organize its past and
future into coherent experience, it becomes difficult enough
to see how the cultural productions of such a subject could
result in anything but "heaps of fragments" and
in a practice of the randomly heterogeneous and fragmentary
and the aleatory. These are, however, very precisely some
of the privileged terms in which postmodernist cultural production
has been analyzed (and even defended, by its own apologists).
They are, however, still privative features; the more substantive
formulations bear such names as textuality, ecriture, or schizophrenic
writing, and it is to these that we must now briefly turn.
I have found Lacan's account of schizophrenia
useful here not because I have any way of knowing whether
it has clinical accuracy but chiefly because--as description
rather than diagnosis--it seems to me to offer a suggestive
aesthetic model.12
I am obviously very far from thinking that any of the most
significant postmodernist artists--Cage, Ashbery, Sollers,
Robert Wilson, Ishmael Reed, Michael Snow, Warhol, or even
Beckett himself--are schizophrenics in any clinical sense.
Nor is the point some culture-and-personality diagnosis of
our society and its art, as in psychologizing and moralizing
culture critiques of the type of Christopher Lasch’s
influential The Culture of Narcissism, from which I
am concerned to distance the spirit and the methodology of
the present remarks: there are, one would think, far more
damaging things to be said about our social system than are
available through the use of psychological categories.
Very briefly, Lacan describes schizophrenia
as a breakdown in the signifying chain, that is, the interlocking
syntagmatic series of signifiers which constitutes an utterance
or a meaning. I must omit the familial or more orthodox psychoanalytic
background to this situation, which Lacan transcodes into
language by describing the Oedipal rivalry in terms not so
much of the biological individual who is your rival for the
mother’s attention but rather of what he calls the Name-of-the-Father,
paternal authority now considered as a linguistic function.13
His conception of the signifying chain essentially presupposes
one of the basic principles (and one of the great discoveries)
of Saussurean structuralism, namely, the proposition that
meaning is not a one-to-one relationship between signifier
and signified, between the materiality of language, between
a word or a name, and its referent or concept. Meaning on
the new view is generated by the movement from signifier to
signifier. What we generally call the signified--the meaning
or conceptual content of an utterance--is now rather to be
seen as a meaning-effect, as that objective mirage of signification
generated and projected by the relationship of signifiers
among themselves. When that relationship breaks down, when
the links of the signifying chain snap, then we have schizophrenia
in the form of a rubble of distinct and unrelated signifiers.
The connection between this kind of linguistic malfunction
and the psyche of the schizophrenic may then be grasped by
way of a twofold proposition: first, that personal identity
is itself the effect of a certain temporal unification of
past and future with one’s present; and, second, that
such active temporal unification is itself a function of language,
or better still of the sentence, as it moves along its hermeneutic
circle through time. If we are unable to unify the past, present,
and future of the sentence, then we are similarly unable to
unify the past, present, and future of our own biographical
experience or psychic life. With the breakdown of the signifying
chain, therefore, the schizophrenic is reduced to an experience
of pure material signifiers, or, in other words, a series
of pure and unrelated presents in time. We will want to ask
questions about the aesthetic or cultural results of such
a situation in a moment; let us first see what it feels like:
I
remember very well the day it happened. We were staying in
the country and I had gone for a walk alone as I did now and
then. Suddenly, as I was passing the school, I heard a German
song; the children were having a singing lesson. I stopped
to listen, and at that instant a strange feeling came over
me, a feeling hard to analyze but akin to something I was
to know too well later--a disturbing sense of unreality. It
seemed to me that I no longer recognized the school, it had
become as large as a barracks; the singing children were prisoners,
compelled to sing. It was as though the school and the children's
song were set apart from the rest of the world. At the same
time my eye encountered a field of wheat whose limits I could
not see. The yellow vastness, dazzling in the sun, bound up
with the song of the children imprisoned in the smooth stone
school-barracks, filled me with such anxiety that I broke
into sobs. I ran home to our garden and began to play "to
make things seem as they usually were," that is, to return
to reality. It was the first appearance of those elements
which were always present in later sensations of unreality:
illimitable vastness, brilliant light, and the gloss and smoothness
of material things.14
In our present context,
this experience suggests the following: first, the breakdown
of temporality suddenly releases this present of time from
all the activities and intentionalities that might focus it
and make it a space of praxis; thereby isolated, that present
suddenly engulfs the subject with undescribable vividness,
a materiality of perception properly overwhelming, which effectively
dramatizes the power of the material--or better still, the
literal--signifier in isolation. This present of the world
or material signifier comes before the subject with heightened
intensity, bearing a mysterious charge of affect, here described
in the negative terms of anxiety and loss of reality, but
which one could just as well imagine in the positive terms
of euphoria, a high, an intoxicatory or hallucinogenic intensity.
What happens in textuality or schizophrenic
art is strikingly illuminated by such clinical accounts, although
in the cultural text, the isolated signifier is no longer
an enigmatic state of the world or an incomprehensible yet
mesmerizing fragment of language but rather something closer
to a sentence in free-standing isolation. Think, for example,
of the experience of John Cage's music, in which a cluster
of material sounds (on the prepared piano, for example) is
followed by a silence so intolerable that you cannot imagine
another sonorous chord coming into existence and cannot imagine
remembering the previous one well enough to make any connection
with it if it does. Some of Beckett's narratives are also
of this order, most notably Watt, where a primacy of the present
sentence in time ruthlessly disintegrates the narrative fabric
that attempts to reform around it. My example, however, will
be a less somber one, a text by a younger San Francisco poet
whose group or school--so-called Language Poetry or the New
Sentence--seem to have adopted schizophrenic fragmentation
as their fundamental aesthetic.
China
We live on the third
world from the sun. Number three. Nobody
tells us what to do.
The people who taught
us to count were being very kind.
It's always time
to leave.
If it rains, you
either have your umbrella or you don't.
The wind blows your
hat off.
The sun rises also.
I'd rather the stars didn't describe us to each other; I’d
rather we do it for ourselves.
Run in front of
your shadow.
A sister who points
to the sky at least once a decade is a
good sister.
The landscape is
motorized.
The train takes
you where it goes.
Bridges among water.
Folks straggling
along vast stretches of concrete, heading
into the plane.
Don't forget what
your hat and shoes will look like when you
are nowhere to be found.
Even the words floating
in air make blue shadows.
If it tastes good
we eat it.
The leaves are falling.
Point things out.
Pick up the right
things.
Hey guess what?
What? I've learned how to talk. Great.
The person whose
head was incomplete burst into tears.
As it fell, what
could the doll do? Nothing.
Go to sleep.
You look great in
shorts. And the flag looks great too.
Everyone enjoyed
the explosions.
Time to wake up.
But better get used
to dreams.
~Bob
Perelman15
Many things could be
said about this interesting exercise in discontinuities; not
the least paradoxical is the reemergence here across these
disjoined sentences of some more unified global meaning. Indeed,
insofar as this is in some curious and secret way a political
poem, it does seem to capture something of the excitement
of the immense, unfinished social experiment of the New China--unparalleled
in world history--the unexpected emergence, between the two
superpowers, of "number three,’ the freshness of
a whole new object world produced by human beings in some
new control over their collective destiny; the signal event,
above all, of a collectivity which has become a new "subject
of history" and which, after the long subjection of feudalism
and imperialism, again speaks in its own voice, for itself,
as though for the first time.
But I mainly wanted to show the way in which
what I have been calling schizophrenic disjunction or ecriture,
when it becomes generalized as a cultural style, ceases to
entertain a necessary relationship to the morbid content we
associate with terms like schizophrenia and becomes available
for more joyous intensities, for precisely that euphoria which
we saw displacing the older affects of anxiety and alienation.
Consider, for example, Jean-Paul Sartre's account
of a similar tendency in Flaubert:
His
sentence [Sartre tells us about Flaubert closes in on the
object, seizes it, immobilizes it, and breaks its back, wraps
itself around it, changes into stone and petrifies its object
along with itself. It is blind and deaf, bloodless, not a
breath of life; a deep silence separates it from the sentence
which follows; it falls into the void, eternally, and drags
its prey down into that infinite fall. Any reality, once described,
is struck off the inventory.16
I am tempted to see this
reading as a kind of optical illusion (or photographic enlargement)
of an unwittingly genealogical type, in which certain latent
or subordinate, properly postmodernist, features of Flaubert's
style are anachronistically foregrounded. However, it affords
an interesting lesson in periodization and in the dialectical
restructuring of cultural dominants and subordinates. For
these features, in Flaubert, were symptoms and strategies
in that whole posthumous life and resentment of praxis which
is denounced (with increasing sympathy) throughout the three
thousand pages of Sartre's Family Idiot. When such
features become themselves the cultural norm, they shed all
such forms of negative affect and become available for other,
more decorative uses.
But we have not yet fully exhausted the structural
secrets of Perelman's poem, which turns out to have little
enough to do with that referent called China. The author has,
in fact, related how, strolling through Chinatown, he came
across a book of photographs whose idiogrammatic captions
remained a dead letter to him (or perhaps, one should say,
a material signifier). The sentences of the poem in question
are then Perelman’s own captions to those pictures,
their referents another image, another absent text; and the
unity of the poem is no longer to be found within its language
but outside itself, in the bound unity of another, absent
book. There is here a striking parallel to the dynamics of
so-called photorealism, which looked like a return to representation
and figuration after the long hegemony of the aesthetics of
abstraction until it became clear that their objects were
not to be found in the "real world" either but were
themselves photographs of that real world, this last now transformed
into images, of which the "realism" of the photorealist
painting is now the simulacrum.
This account of schizophrenia and temporal
organization might, however, have been formulated in a different
way, which brings us back to Heidegger's notion of a gap or
rift between Earth and World, albeit in a fashion that is
sharply incompatible with the tone and high seriousness of
his own philosophy. I would like to characterize the postmodernist
experience of form with what will seem, I hope, a paradoxical
slogan: namely, the proposition that "difference relates."
Our own recent criticism, from Macherey on, has been concerned
to stress the heterogeneity and profound discontinuities of
the work of art, no longer unified or organic, but now a virtual
grab bag or lumber room of disjoined subsystems and random
raw materials and impulses of all kinds. The former work of
art, in other words, has now turned out to be a text, whose
reading proceeds by differentiation rather than by unification.
Theories of difference, however, have tended to stress disjunction
to the point at which the materials of the text, including
its words and sentences, tend to fall apart into random and
inert passivity, into a set of elements which entertain separations
from one another.
In the most interesting postmodernist works,
however, one can detect a more positive conception of relationship,
which restores its proper tension to the notion of difference
itself. This new mode of relationship through difference may
sometimes be an achieved new and original way of thinking
and perceiving; more often it takes the form of an impossible
imperative to achieve that new mutation in what can perhaps
no longer be called consciousness. I believe that the most
striking emblem of this new mode of thinking relationships
can be found in the work of Nam June Paik, whose stacked or
scattered television screens, positioned at intervals within
lush vegetation, or winking down at us from a ceiling of strange
new video stars, recapitulate over and over again prearranged
sequences or loops of images which return at dyssynchronous
moments on the various screens. The older aesthetic is then
practiced by viewers, who, bewildered by this discontinuous
variety, decided to concentrate on a single screen, as though
the relatively worthless image sequence to be followed there
had some organic value in its own right. The postmodernist
viewer, however, is called upon to do the impossible, namely,
to see all the screens at once, in their radical and random
difference; such a viewer is asked to follow the evolutionary
mutation of David Bowie in The Man Who Fell to Earth
(who watches fifty-seven television screens simultaneously)
and to rise somehow to a level at which the vivid perception
of radical difference is in and of itself a new mode of grasping
what used to be called relationship: something for which the
word collage is still only a very feeble name.
IV
Now we need to complete this exploratory account
of postmodernist space and time with a final analysis of that
euphoria or those intensities which seem so often to characterize
the newer cultural experience. Let us reemphasize the enormity
of a transition which leaves behind it the desolation of Hopper's
buildings or the stark Midwest syntax of Sheeler’s forms,
replacing them with the extraordinary surfaces of the photorealist
cityscape, where even the automobile wrecks gleam with some
new hallucinatory splendor. The exhilaration of these new
surfaces is all the more paradoxical in that their essential
content--the city itself--has deteriorated or disintegrated
to a degree surely still inconceivable in the early years
of the twentieth century, let alone in the previous era. How
urban squalor can be a delight to the eyes when expressed
in commodification, and how an unparalleled quantum leap in
the alienation of daily life in the city can now be experienced
in the form of a strange new hallucinatory exhilaration--these
are some of the questions that confront us in this moment
of our inquiry. Nor should the human figure be exempted from
investigation, although it seems clear that for the newer
aesthetic the representation of space itself has come to be
felt as incompatible with the representation of the body:
a kind of aesthetic division of labor far more pronounced
than in any of the earlier generic conceptions of landscape,
and a most ominous symptom indeed. The privileged space of
the newer art is radically antianthropomorphic, as in the
empty bathrooms of Doug Bond’s work. The ultimate contemporary
fetishization of the human body, however, takes a very different
direction in the statues of Duane Hanson ["Museum
Guard"] ["Tourist
II"]: what I have already called the simulacrum,
whose peculiar function lies in what Sartre would have called
the derealization of the whole surrounding world of
everyday reality. Your moment of doubt and hesitation as to
the breath and warmth of these polyester figures, in other
words, tends to return upon the real human beings moving about
you in the museum and to transform them also for the briefest
instant into so many dead and flesh-colored simulacra in their
own right. The world thereby momentarilv loses its depth and
threatens to become a glossy skin, a stereoscopic illusion,
a rush of filmic images without density. But is this now a
terrifying or an exhilarating experience?
It has proved fruitful to think of such experiences
in terms of what Susan Sontag, in an influential statement,
isolated as "camp." I propose a somewhat different
cross-light on it. drawing on the equally fashionable current
theme of the "sublime," as it has been rediscovered
in the works of Edmund Burke and Kant; or perhaps one might
want to yoke the two notions together in the form of something
like a camp or "hysterical" sublime. The sublime
was for Burke an experience bordering on terror, the fitful
glimpse, in astonishment, stupor, and awe, of what was so
enormous as to crush human life altogether: a description
then refined by Kant to include the question of representation
itself, so that the object of the sublime becomes not only
a matter of sheer power and of the physical incommensurability
of the human organism with Nature but also of the limits of
figuration and the incapacity of the human mind to give representation
to such enormous forces. Such forces Burke, in his historical
moment at the dawn of the modern bourgeois state, was only
able to conceptualize in terms of the divine, while even Heidegger
continues to entertain a phantasmatic relationship with some
organic precapitalist peasant landscape and village society,
which is the final form of the image of Nature in our own
time.
Today, however, it may be possible to think
all this in a different way, at the moment of a radical eclipse
of Nature itself: Heidegger's "field path" is, after
all, irredeemably and irrevocably destroyed by late capital,
by the green revolution, by neocolonialism and the megalopolis,
which runs its superhighways over the older fields and vacant
lots and turns Heidegger’s "house of being"
into condominiums, if not the most miserable unheated, rat-infested
tenement buildings. The other of our society is in that sense
no longer Nature at all, as it was in precapitalist societies,
but something else which we must now identify.
I am anxious that this other thing not overhastily
be grasped as technology per se, since I will want to show
that technology is here itself a figure for something else.
Yet technology may well serve as adequate shorthand to designate
that enormous properly human and anti-natural power of dead
human labor stored up in our machinery-an alienated power,
what Sartre calls the counterfinality of the practico-inert,
which turns back on and against us in unrecognizable forms
and seems to constitute the massive dystopian horizon of our
collective as well as our individual praxis.
Technological development is however on the
Marxist view the result of the development of capital rather
than some ultimately determining instance in its own right.
It will therefore be appropriate to distinguish several generations
of machine power, several stages of technological revolution
within capital itself. I here follow Ernest Mandel, who outlines
three such fundamental breaks or quantum leaps in the evolution
of machinery under capital:
The
fundamental revolutions in power technology-the technology
of the production of motive machines by machines-thus appears
as the determinant moment in revolutions of technology as
a whole. Machine production of steam-driven motors since 1848;
machine production of electric and combustion motors since
the 90s of the 19th century; machine production of electronic
and nuclear-powered apparatuses since the 40s of the 20th
century--these are the three general revolutions in technology
engendered by the capitalist mode of production since the
"original" industrial revolution of the later 18th
century.17
This periodization underscores
the general thesis of Mandel's’s book Late Capitalism;
namely, that there have been three fundamental moments in
capitalism, each one marking a dialectical expansion over
the previous stage. These are market capitalism, the monopoly
stage or the stage of imperialism, and our own, wrongly called
postindustrial, but what might better be termed multinational,
capital. I have already pointed out that Mandel's intervention
in the postindustrial debate involves the proposition that
late or multinational or consumer capitalism, far from being
inconsistent with Marx's great nineteenth-century analysis,
constitutes, on the contrary, the purest form of capital yet
to have emerged, a prodigious expansion of capital into hitherto
uncommodified areas. This purer capitalism of our own time
thus eliminates the enclaves of precapitalist organization
it had hitherto tolerated and exploited in a tributary way.
One is tempted to speak in this connection of a new and historically
original penetration and colonization of Nature and the Unconscious:
that is, the destruction of precapitalist Third World agriculture
by the Green Revolution, and the rise of the media and the
advertising industry. At any rate, it will also have been
clear that my own cultural periodization of the stages of
realism, modernism, and postmodernism is both inspired and
confirmed by Mandel’s tripartite scheme.
We may therefore speak of our own period as
the Third Machine Age; and it is at this point that we must
reintroduce the problem of aesthetic representation already
explicitly developed in Kant's earlier analysis of the sublime,
since it would seem only logical that the relationship to
and the representation of the machine could be expected to
shift dialectically with each of these qualitatively different
stages of technological development.
It is appropriate to recall the excitement
of machinery in the moment of capital preceding our own, the
exhilaration of futurism, most notably, and of Marinetti’s
celebration of the machine gun and the motorcar. These are
still visible emblems, sculptural nodes of energy which give
tangibility and figuration to the motive energies of that
earlier moment of modernization. The prestige of these great
streamlined shapes can be measured by their metaphorical presence
in Le Corbusier's
buildings, vast Utopian structures which ride like so many
gigantic steamship liners upon the urban scenery of an older
fallen earth.18 Machinery exerts another kind of fascination
in the works of artists like Picabia and Duchamp, whom we
have no time to consider here; but let me mention, for completeness’
sake, the ways in which revolutionary or communist artists
of the 1930s also sought to reappropriate this excitement
of machine energy for a Promethean reconstruction of human
society as a whole, as in Fernand Leger and Diego
Rivera.
It is immediately obvious that the technology
of our own moment no longer possesses this same capacity for
representation: not the turbine, nor even Sheeler's grain
elevators or smokestacks, not the baroque elaboration of pipes
and conveyor belts, nor even the streamlined profile of the
railroad train--all vehicles of speed still concentrated at
rest--but rather the computer, whose outer shell has no emblematic
or visual power, or even the casings of the various media
themselves, as with that home appliance called television
which articulates nothing but rather implodes, carrying its
flattened image surface within itself.
Such machines are indeed machines of reproduction
rather than of production, and they make very different demands
on our capacity for aesthetic representation than did the
relatively mimetic idolatry of the older machinery of the
futurist moment, of some older speed-and-energy sculpture.
Here we have less to do with kinetic energy than with all
kinds of new reproductive processes; and in the weaker productions
of postmodernism the aesthetic embodiment of such processes
often tends to slip back more comfortably into a mere thematic
representation of content-into narratives which are about
the processes of reproduction and include movie cameras, video,
tape recorders, the whole technology of the production and
reproduction of the simulacrum. (The shift from Antonioni’s
modernist Blow-Up to DePalma's postmodernist Blowout
is here paradigmatic.) When Japanese architects, for example,
model a building on the decorative imitation of stacks of
cassettes, then the solution is at best thematic and allusive,
although often humorous.
Yet something else does tend to emerge in the
most energetic post-modernist texts, and this is the sense
that beyond all thematics or content the work seems somehow
to tap the networks of the reproductive process and thereby
to afford us some glimpse into a postmodern or technological
sublime, whose power or authenticity is documented by the
success of such works in evoking a whole new postmodern space
in emergence around us. Architecture therefore remains in
this sense the privileged aesthetic language; and the distorting
and fragmenting reflections of one enormous glass surface
to the other can be taken as paradigmatic of the central role
of process and reproduction in postmodernist culture.
As I have said, however, I want to avoid the
implication that technology is in any way the "ultimately
determining instance" either of our present-day social
life or of our cultural production: such a thesis is, of course,
ultimately at one with the post-Marxist notion of a postindustrial
society. Rather, I want to suggest that our faulty representations
of some immense communicational and computer network are themselves
but a distorted figuration of something even deeper, namely,
the whole world system of a present-day multinational capitalism.
The technology of contemporary society is therefore mesmerizing
and fascinating not so much in its own right but because it
seems to offer some privileged representational shorthand
for grasping a network of power and control even more difficult
for our minds and imaginations to grasp: the whole new decentered
global network of the third stage of capital itself. This
is a figural process presently best observed in a whole mode
of contemporary entertainment literature--one is tempted to
characterize it as "high-tech paranoia"--in which
the circuits and networks of some putative global computer
hookup are narratively mobilized by labyrinthine conspiracies
of autonomous but deadly interlocking and competing information
agencies in a complexity often beyond the capacity of the
normal reading mind. Yet conspiracy theory (and its garish
narrative manifestations) must be seen as a degraded attempt--through
the figuration of advanced technology--to think the impossible
totality of the contemporary world system. It is in terms
of that enormous and threatening, yet only dimly perceivable,
other reality of economic and social institutions that, in
my opinion, the postmodern sublime can alone be adequately
theorized.
Such narratives, which first tried to find
expression through the generic structure of the spy novel,
have only recently crystallized in a new type of science fiction,
called cyberpunk, which is fully as much an expression
of transnational corporate realities as it is of global paranoia
itself: William Gibson’s representational innovations,
indeed, mark his work as an exceptional literary realization
within a predominantly visual or aural postmodern production.
V
Now, before concluding, I want to sketch an
analysis of a full-blown postmodern building--a work which
is in many ways uncharacteristic of that postmodern architecture
whose principal proponents are Robert Venturi, Charles Moore,
Michael Graves, and, more recently, Frank
Gehry, but which to my mind offers some very striking
lessons about the originality of postmodernist space. Let
me amplify the figure which has run through the preceding
remarks and make it even more explicit: I am proposing the
notion that we are here in the presence of something like
a mutation in built space itself. My implication is that we
ourselves, the human subjects who happen into this new space,
have not kept pace with that evolution; there has been a mutation
in the object unaccompanied as yet by any equivalent mutation
in the subject. We do not yet posess the perceptual equipment
to match this new hyperspace, as I will call it, in part because
our perceptual habits were formed in that older kind of space
I have called the space of high modernism. The newer architecture
therefore--like many of the other cultural products I have
evoked in the preceding remarks--stands as something like
an imperative to grow new organs, to expand our sensorium
and our body to some new, yet unimaginable, perhaps ultimately
impossible, dimensions.
The building whose features I will very rapidly
enumerate is the Westin
Bonaventure Hotel, built in the new Los Angeles downtown
by the architect and developer John Portman, whose other works
include the various Hyatt Regencies, the Peachtree Center
in Atlanta, and the Renaissance Center in Detroit. I have
mentioned the populist aspect of the rhetorical defense of
postmodernism against the elite (and Utopian) austerities
of the great architectural modernisms: it is generally affirmed,
in other words, that these newer buildings are popular works,
on the one hand, and that they respect the vernacular of the
American city fabric, on the other; that is to say, they no
longer attempt, as did the masterworks and monuments of high
modernism, to insert a different, a distinct, an elevated,
a new Utopian language into the tawdry and commercial sign
system of the surrounding city, but rather they seek to speak
that very language, using its lexicon and syntax as that has
been emblematically "learned from Las Vegas."
On the first of these counts Portman's Bonaventure
fully confirms the claim: it is a popular building, visited
with enthusiasm by locals and tourists alike (although Portman's
other buildings are even more successful in this respect).
The populist insertion into the city fabric is, however, another
matter, and it is with this that we will begin. There are
three entrances to the Bonaventure, one from Figueroa and
the other two by way of elevated gardens on the other side
of the hotel, which is built into the remaining slope of the
former Bunker Hill. None of these is anything like the old
hotel marquee, or the monumental porte cochere with which
the sumptuous buildings of yesteryear were wont to stage your
passage from city street to the interior. The entryways of
the Bonaventure are, as it were, lateral and rather backdoor
affairs: the gardens in the back admit you to the sixth floor
of the towers, and even there you must walk down one flight
to find the elevator by which you gain access to the lobby.
Meanwhile, what one is still tempted to think of as the front
entry, on Figueroa, admits you, baggage and all, onto the
second story shopping balcony, from which you must take an
escalator down to the main registration desk. What I first
want to suggest about these curiously unmarked ways in is
that they seem to have been imposed by some new category of
closure governing the inner
space of the hotel itself (and this over and above the
material constraints under which Portman had to workThere
are three entrances to the Bonaventure, one from Figueroa
and the other two by way of elevated gardens on the other
side of the hotel, which is built into the remaining slope
of the former Bunker Hill. None of these is anything like
the old hotel marquee, or the monumental porte cochere with
which the sumptuous buildings of yesteryear were wont to stage
your passage from city street to the interior. The entryways
of the Bonaventure are, as it were, lateral and rather backdoor
affairs: the gardens in the back admit you to the sixth floor
of the towers, and even there you must walk down one flight
to find the elevator by which you gain access to the lobby.
). I believe that, with a certain number of other characteristic
postmodern buildings, such as the Beaubourg in Paris or the
Eaton Centre in Toronto, the Bonaventure aspires to being
a total space, a complete world, a kind of miniature city;
to this new total space, meanwhile, corresponds a new collective
practice, a new mode in which individuals move and congregate,
something like the practice of a new and historically original
kind of hypercrowd. In this sense, then, ideally the minicity
of Portman’s Bonaventure ought not to have entrances
at all, since the entryway is always the seam that links the
building to the rest of the city that surrounds it: for it
does not wish to be a part of the city but rather its equivalent
and replacement or substitute. That is obviously not possible,
whence the downplaying of the entrance to its bare minimum.19
But this disjunction from the surrounding city is different
from that of the monuments of the International Style, in
which the act of disjunction was violent, visible, and had
a very real symbolic significance--as in Le Corbusier’s
great pilotis, whose gesture radically separates the
new Utopian space of the modern from the degraded and fallen
city fabric which it thereby explicitly repudiates (although
the gamble of the modern was that this new Utopian space,
in the virulence of its novum, would fan out and eventually
transform its surroundings by the very power of its new spatial
language). The Bonaventure, however, is content to "let
the fallen city fabric continue to be in its being" (to
parody Heidegger); no further effects, no larger protopolitical
Utopian transformation, is either expected or desired.
This diagnosis is confirmed by the great reflective
glass skin of the Bonaventure, whose function I will now interpret
rather differently than I did a moment ago when I saw the
phenomenon of reflection generally as developing a thematics
of reproductive technology (the two readings are, however,
not incompatible). Now one would want rather to stress the
way in which the glass skin repels the city outside, a repulsion
for which we have analogies in those reflector sunglasses
which make it impossible for your interlocutor to see your
own eyes and thereby achieve a certain aggressivity toward
and power over the Other. In a similar way, the glass skin
achieves a peculiar and placeless dissociation of the Bonaventure
from its neighborhood: it is not even an exterior, inasmuch
as when you seek to look at the hotel’s outer walls
you cannot see the hotel itself but only the distorted images
of everything that surrounds it.
Now consider the escalators and elevators.
Given their very real pleasures in Portman, particularly the
latter, which the artist has termed "gigantic kinetic
sculptures" and which certainly account for much of the
spectacle and excitement of the hotel interior--particularly
in the Hyatts, where like great Japanese lanterns or gondolas
they ceaselessly rise and fall--given such a deliberate marking
and foregrounding in their own right, I believe one has to
see such "people movers" (Portman’s own term,
adapted from Disney) as somewhat more significant than mere
functions and engineering components. We know in any case
that recent architectural theory has begun to borrow from
narrative analysis in other fields and to attempt to see our
physical trajectories through such buildings as virtual narratives
or stories, as dynamic paths and narrative paradigms which
we as visitors are asked to fulfill and to complete with our
own bodies and movements. In the Bonaventure, however, we
find a dialectical heightening of this process: it seems to
me that the escalators and elevators here henceforth replace
movement but also, and above all, designate themselves as
new reflexive signs and emblems of movement proper (something
which will become evident when we come to the question of
what remains of older forms of movement in this building,
most notably walking itself). Here the narrative stroll has
been underscored, symbolized, reified, and replaced by a transportation
machine which becomes the allegorical signifier of that older
promenade we are no longer allowed to conduct on our own:
and this is a dialectical intensification of the autoreferentiality
of all modern culture, which tends to turn upon itself and
designate its own cultural production as its content.
I am more at a loss when it comes to conveying
the thing itself, the experience of space you undergo when
you step off such allegorical devices into the lobby or atrium,
with its great central column surrounded by a miniature lake,
the whole positioned between the four symmetrical residential
towers with their elevators, and surrounded by rising balconies
capped by a kind of greenhouse roof at the sixth level. I
am tempted to say that such space makes it impossible for
us to use the language of volume or volumes any longer, since
these are impossible to seize. Hanging streamers indeed suffuse
this empty space in such a way as to distract systematically
and deliberately from whatever form it might be supposed to
have, while a constant busyness gives the feeling that emptiness
is here absolutely packed, that it is an element within which
you yourself are immersed, without any of that distance that
formerly enabled the perception of perspective or volume.
You are in this hyperspace up to your eyes and your body;
and if it seemed before that that suppression of depth I spoke
of in postmodern painting or literature would necessarily
be difficult to achieve in architecture itself, perhaps this
bewildering immersion may now serve as the formal equivalent
in the new medium.
Yet escalator and elevator are also in this
context dialectical opposites; and we may suggest that the
glorious movement of the elevator gondola is also a dialectical
compensation for this filled space of the atrium--it gives
us the chance at a radically different, but complementary,
spatial experience: that of rapidly shooting up through the
ceiling and outside, along one of the four symmetrical towers,
with the referent, Los Angeles itself, spread out breathtakingly
and even alarmingly before us. But even this vertical movement
is contained: the elevator lifts you to one of those revolving
cocktail lounges, in which, seated, you are again passively
rotated about and offered a contemplative spectacle of the
city itself, now transformed into its own images by the glass
windows through which you view it.
We may conclude all this by returning to the
central space of the lobby itself (with the passing observation
that the hotel rooms are visibly marginalized: the corridors
in the residential sections are low-ceilinged and dark, most
depressingly functional, while one understands that the rooms
are in the worst of taste). The descent is dramatic enough,
plummeting back down through the roof to splash down in the
lake. What happens when you get there is something else, which
can only be characterized as milling confusion, something
like the vengeance this space takes on those who still seek
to walk through it. Given the absolute symmetry of the four
towers, it is quite impossible to get your bearings in this
lobby; recently, color coding and directional signals have
been added in a pitiful and revealing, rather desperate, attempt
to restore the coordinates of an older space. I will take
as the most dramatic practical result of this spatial mutation
the notorious dilemma of the shopkeepers on the various balconies:
it has been obvious since the opening of the hotel in 1977
that nobody could ever find any of these stores, and even
if you once located the appropriate boutique, you would be
most unlikely to be as fortunate a second time; as a consequence,
the commercial tenants are in despair and all the merchandise
is marked down to bargain prices. When you recall that Portman
is a businessman as well as an architect and a millionaire
developer, an artist who is at one and the same time a capitalist
in his own right, one cannot but feel that here too something
of a "return of the repressed" is involved.
So I come finally to my principal point here,
that this latest mutation in space--postmodern hyperspace--has
finally succeeded in transcending the capacities of the individual
human body to locate itself, to organize its immediate surroundings
perceptually, and cognitively to map its position in a mappable
external world. It may now be suggested that this alarming
disjunction point between the body and its built environment--which
is to the initial bewilderment of the older modernism as the
velocities of spacecraft to those of the automobile--can itself
stand as the symbol and analogon of that even sharper dilemma
which is the incapacity of our minds, at least at present,
to map the great global multinational and decentered communicational
network in which we find ourselves caught as individual subjects.
But as I am anxious that Portman’s space
not be perceived as something either exceptional or seemingly
marginalized and leisure-specialized on the order of Disneyland,
I will conclude by juxtaposing this complacent and entertaining
(although bewildering) leisure-time space with its analogue
in a very different area, namely, the space of post-modern
warfare, in particular as Michael Herr evokes it in Dispatches,
his great book on the experience of Vietnam. The extraordinary
linguistic innovations of this work may still be considered
postmodern, in the eclectic way in which its language impersonally
fuses a whole range of contemporary collective idiolects,
most notably rock language and black language: but the fusion
is dictated by problems of content. This first terrible postmodernist
war cannot be told in any of the traditional paradigms of
the war novel or movie--indeed, that breakdown of all previous
narrative paradigms is, along with the breakdown of any shared
language through which a veteran might convey such experience,
among the principle subjects of the book and may be said to
open up the place of a whole new reflexivity. Benjamin’s
account of Baudelaire, and of the emergence of modernism from
a new experience of city technology which transcends all the
older habits of bodily perception, is both singularly relevant
and singularly antiquated in the light of this new and virtually
unimaginable quantum leap in technological alienation:
He
was a moving-target-survivor subscriber, a true child of the
war, because except for the rare times when you were pinned
or stranded the system was geared to keep you mobile, if that
was what you thought you wanted. As a technique for staying
alive it seemed to make as much sense as anything, given naturally
that you were there to begin with and wanted to see it close;
it started out sound and straight but it formed a cone as
it progressed, because the more you moved the more you saw,
the more you saw the more besides death and mutilation you
risked, and the more you risked of that the more you would
have to let go of one day as a "survivor." Some
of us moved around the war like crazy people until we couldn’t
see which way the run was taking us anymore, only the war
all over its surface with occasional, unexpected penetration.
As long as we could have choppers like taxis it took real
exhaustion or depression near shock or a dozen pipes of opium
to keep us even apparently quiet, we’d still be running
around inside our skins like something was after us, ha ha,
La Vida Loca. In the months after I got back the hundreds
of helicopters I’d flown in began to draw together until
they’d formed a collective meta-chopper, and in my mind
it was the sexiest thing going; saver-destroyer, provider-waster,
right hand-left hand, nimble, fluent, canny and human; hot
steel, grease, jungle-saturated canvas webbing, sweat cooling
and warming up again, cassette rock and roll in one ear and
door-gun fire in the other, fuel, heat, vitality and death,
death itself, hardly an intruder.20
In this new machine,
which does not, like the older modernist machinery of the
locomotive or the airplane, represent motion, but which can
only be represented in motion, something of the mystery
of the new postmodernist space is concentrated.
VI
The conception of postmodernism outlined here
is a historical rather than a merely stylistic one. I cannot
stress too greatly the radical distinction between a view
for which the postmodern is one (optional) style among many
others available and one which seeks to grasp it as the cultural
dominant of the logic of late capitalism: the two approaches
in fact generate two very different ways of conceptualizing
the phenomenon as a whole: on the one hand, moral judgments
(about which it is indifferent whether they are positive or
negative), and, on the other, a genuinely dialectical attempt
to think our present of time in History.
Of some positive moral evaluation of postmodernism
little needs to be said: the complacent (yet delirious) camp-following
celebration of this aesthetic new world (including its social
and economic dimension, greeted with equal enthusiasm under
the slogan of "postindustrial society") is surely
unacceptable, although it may be somewhat less obvious that
current fantasies about the salvational nature of high technology,
from chips to robots--fantasies entertained not only by both
left and right governments in distress but also by many intellectuals--are
also essentially of a piece with more vulgar apologias for
postmodernism.
But in that case it is only consequent to reject
moralizing condemnations of the postmodern and of its essential
triviality when juxtaposed against the Utopian "high
seriousness" of the great modernisms: judgments one finds
both on the Left and on the radical Right. And no doubt the
logic of the simulacrum, with its transformation of older
realities into television images, does more than merely replicate
the logic of late capitalism; it reinforces and intensifies
it. Meanwhile, for political groups which seek actively to
intervene in history and to modify its otherwise passive momentum
(whether with a view toward channeling it into a socialist
transformation of society or diverting it into the regressive
reestablishment of some simpler fantasy past), there cannot
but be much that is deplorable and reprehensible in a cultural
form of image addiction which, by transforming the past into
visual mirages, stereotypes, or texts, effectively abolishes
any practical sense of the future and of the collective project,
thereby abandoning the thinking of future change to fantasies
of sheer catastrophe and inexplicable cataclysm, from visions
of "terrorism" on the social level to those of cancer
on the personal. Yet if postmodernism is a historical phenomenon,
then the attempt to conceptualize it in terms of moral or
moralizing judgments must finally be identified as a category
mistake. All of which becomes more obvious when we interrogate
the position of the cultural critic and moralist; the latter,
along with all the rest of us, is now so deeply immersed in
post-modernist space, so deeply suffused and infected by its
new cultural categories, that the luxury of the old-fashioned
ideological critique, the indignant moral denunciation of
the other, becomes unavailable.
The distinction I am proposing here knows one
canonical form in Hegel’s differentiation of the thinking
of individual morality or moralizing (Moralitat) from
that whole very different realm of collective social values
and practices (Sittlichkeit).21
But it finds its definitive form in Marx’s demonstration
of the materialist dialectic, most notably in those classic
pages of the Manifesto which teach the hard lesson of some
more genuinely dialectical way to think historical development
and change. The topic of the lesson is, of course, the historical
development of capitalism itself and the deployment of a specific
bourgeois culture. In a well-known passage Marx powerfully
urges us to do the impossible, namely, to think this development
positively and negatively all at once; to achieve, in other
words, a type of thinking that would be capable of grasping
the demonstrably baleful features of capitalism along with
its extraordinary and liberating dynamism simultaneously within
a single thought, and without attenuating any of the force
of either judgment. We are somehow to lift our minds to a
point at which it is possible to understand that capitalism
is at one and the same time the best thing that has ever happened
to the human race, and the worst. The lapse from this austere
dialectical imperative into the more comfortable stance of
the taking of moral positions is inveterate and all too human:
still, the urgency of the subject demands that we make at
least some effort to think the cultural evolution of late
capitalism dialectically, as catastrophe and progress all
together.
Such an effort suggests two immediate questions,
with which we will conclude these reflections. Can we in fact
identify some "moment of truth" within the more
evident "moments of falsehood" of postmodern culture?
And, even if we can do so, is there not something ultimately
paralyzing in the dialectical view of historical development
proposed above; does it not tend to demobilize us and to surrender
us to passivity and helplessness by systematically obliterating
possibilities of action under the impenetrable fog of historical
inevitability? It is appropriate to discuss these two (related)
issues in terms of current possibilities for some effective
contemporary cultural politics and for the construction of
a genuine political culture.
To focus the problem in this way is, of course,
immediately to raise the more genuine issue of the fate of
culture generally, and of the function of culture specifically,
as one social level or instance, in the postmodern era. Everything
in the previous discussion suggests that what we have been
calling postmodernism is inseparable from, and unthinkable
without the hypothesis of, some fundamental mutation of the
sphere of culture in the world of late capitalism, which includes
a momentous modification of its social function. Older discussions
of the space, function, or sphere of culture (mostly notably
Herbert Marcuse’s classic essay "The Affirmative
Character of Culture") have insisted on what a different
language would call the "semiautonomy" of the cultural
realm: its ghostly, yet Utopian, existence, for good or ill,
above the practical world of the existent, whose mirror image
it throws back in forms which vary from the legitimations
of flattering resemblance to the contestatory indictments
of critical satire or Utopian pain.
What we must now ask ourselves is whether it
is not precisely this semiautonomy of the cultural sphere
which has been destroyed by the logic of late capitalism.
Yet to argue that culture is today no longer endowed with
the relative autonomy it once enjoyed as one level among others
in earlier moments of capitalism (let alone in precapitalist
societies) is not necessarily to imply its disappearance or
extinction. Quite the contrary; we must go on to affirm that
the dissolution of an autonomous sphere of culture is rather
to be imagined in terms of an explosion: a prodigious expansion
of culture throughout the social realm, to the point at which
everything in our social life--from economic value and state
power to practices and to the very structure of the psyche
itself --can be said to have become "cultural" in
some original and yet untheorized sense. This proposition
is, however, substantively quite consistent with the previous
diagnosis of a society of the image or the simulacrum and
a transformation of the "real" into so many pseudoevents.
It also suggests that some of our most cherished
and time-honored radical conceptions about the nature of cultural
politics may thereby find themselves outmoded. However distinct
those conceptions--which range from slogans of negativity,
opposition, and subversion to critique and reflexivity--may
have been, they all shared a single, fundamentally spatial,
presupposition, which may be resumed in the equally time-honored
formula of "critical distance." No theory of cultural
politics current on the Left today has been able to do without
one notion or another of a certain minimal aesthetic distance,
of the possibility of the positioning of the cultural act
outside the massive Being of capital, from which to assault
this last. What the burden of our preceding demonstration
suggests, however, is that distance in general (including
"critical distance" in particular) has very precisely
been abolished in the new space of post-modernism. We are
submerged in its henceforth filled and suffused volumes to
the point where our now postmodern bodies are bereft of spatial
coordinates and practically (let alone theoretically) incapable
of distantiation; meanwhile, it has already been observed
how the prodigious new expansion of multinational capital
ends up penetrating and colonizing those very precapitalist
enclaves (Nature and the Unconscious) which offered extraterritorial
and Archimedean footholds for critical effectivity. The shorthand
language of co-optation is for this reason omnipresent on
the left, but would now seem to offer a most inadequate theoretical
basis for understanding a situation in which we all, in one
way or another, dimly feel that not only punctual and local
countercultural forms of cultural resistance and guerrilla
warfare but also even overtly political interventions like
those of The Clash are all somehow secretly disarmed
and reabsorbed by a system of which they themselves might
well be considered a part, since they can achieve no distance
from it.
What we must now affirm is that it is precisely
this whole extraordinarily demoralizing and depressing original
new global space which is the "moment of truth"
of postmodernism. What has been called the postmodernist "sublime"
is only the moment in which this content has become most explicit,
has moved the closest to the surface of consciousness as a
coherent new type of space in its own right--even though a
certain figural concealment or disguise is still at work here,
most notably in the high-tech thematics in which the new spatial
content is still dramatized and articulated. Yet the earlier
features of the postmodern which were enumerated above can
all now be seen as themselves partial (yet constitutive) aspects
of the same general spatial object. The argument for a certain
authenticity in these otherwise patently ideological productions
depends on the prior proposition that what we have been calling
postmodern (or multinational) space is not merely a cultural
ideology or fantasy but has genuine historical (and socioeconomic)
reality as a third great original expansion of capitalism
around the globe (after the earlier expansions of the national
market and the older imperialist system, which each had their
own cultural specificity and generated new types of space
appropriate to their dynamics). The distorted and unreflexive
attempts of newer cultural production to explore and to express
this new space must then also, in their own fashion, be considered
as so many approaches to the representation of (a new) reality
(to use a more antiquated language). As paradoxical as the
terms may seem, they may thus, following a classic interpretive
option, be read as peculiar new forms of realism (or at least
of the mimesis of reality), while at the same time they can
equally well be analyzed as so many attempts to distract and
divert us from that reality or to disguise its contradictions
and resolve them in the guise of various formal mystifications.
As for that reality itself, however--the as
yet untheorized original space of some new "world system"
of multinational or late capitalism, a space whose negative
or baleful aspects are only too obvious--the dialectic requires
us to hold equally to a positive or "progressive"
evaluation of its emergence, as Marx did for the world market
as the horizon of national economies, or as Lenin did for
the older imperialist global network. For neither Marx nor
Lenin was socialism a matter of returning to smaller (and
thereby less repressive and comprehensive) systems of social
organization; rather, the dimensions attained by capital in
their own times were grasped as the promise, the framework,
and the precondition for the achievement of some new and more
comprehensive socialism. Is this not the case with the yet
more global and totalizing space of the new world system,
which demands the intervention and elaboration of an internationalism
of a radically new type? The disastrous realignment of socialist
revolution with the older nationalisms (not only in Southeast
Asia), whose results have necessarily aroused much serious
recent left reflection, can be adduced in support of this
position.
But if all this is so, then at least one possible
form of a new radical cultural politics becomes evident, with
a final aesthetic proviso that must quickly be noted. Left
cultural producers and theorists--particularly those formed
by bourgeois cultural traditions issuing from romanticism
and valorizing spontaneous, instinctive, or unconscious forms
of "genius;’ but also for very obvious historical
reasons such as Zhdanovism and the sorry consequences of political
and party interventions in the arts--have often by reaction
allowed themselves to be unduly intimidated by the repudiation,
in bourgeois aesthetics and most notably in high modernism,
of one of the age-old functions of art--the pedagogical and
the didactic. The teaching function of art was, however, always
stressed in classical times (even though it there mainly took
the form of moral lessons), while the prodigious and still
imperfectly understood work of Brecht reaffirms, in a new
and formally innovative and original way, for the moment of
modernism proper, a complex new conception of the relationship
between culture and pedagogy. The cultural model I will propose
similarly foregrounds the cognitive and pedagogical dimensions
of political art and culture, dimensions stressed in very
different ways by both Lukacs and Brecht (for the distinct
moments of realism and modernism, respectively).
We cannot, however, return to aesthetic practices
elaborated on the basis of historical situations and dilemmas
which are no longer ours. Meanwhile, the conception of space
that has been developed here suggests that a model of political
culture appropriate to our own situation will; necessarily
have to raise spatial issues as its fundamental organizing
concern. I will therefore provisionally define the aesthetic
of this new (and hypothetical) cultural form as an aesthetic
of cognitive mapping.
In a classic work, The Image of the City,
Kevin Lynch taught us that the alienated city is above all
a space in which people are unable to map (in their minds)
either their own positions or the urban totality in which
they find themselves: grids such as those of Jersey City,
in which none of the traditional markers (monuments, nodes,
natural boundaries, built perspectives) obtain, are the most
obvious examples. Disalienation in the traditional city, then,
involves the practical reconquest of a sense of place and
the construction or reconstruction of an articulated ensemble
which can be retained in memory and which the individual subject
can map and remap along the moments of mobile, alternative
trajectories. Lynch’s own work is limited by the deliberate
restriction of his topic to the problems of city form as such;
yet it becomes extraordinarily suggestive when projected outward
onto some of the larger national and global spaces we have
touched on here. Nor should it be too hastily assumed that
his model--while it clearly raises very central issues of
representation as such--is in any way easily vitiated by the
conventional poststructural critiques of the "ideology
of representation" or mimesis. The cognitive map is not
exactly mimetic in that older sense; indeed, the theoretical
issues it poses allow us to renew the analysis of representation
on a higher and much more complex level.
There is, for one thing, a most interesting
convergence between the empirical problems studied by Lynch
in terms of city space and the great Althusserian (and Lacanian)
redefinition of ideology as "the representation of the
subject’s Imaginary relationship to his or her
Heal conditions of existence.22
Surely this is exactly what the cognitive map is called upon
to do in the narrower framework of daily life in the physical
city: to enable a situational representation on the part of
the individual subject to that vaster and properly unrepresentable
totality which is the ensemble of society’s structures
as a whole.
Yet Lynch’s work also suggests a further
line of development insofar as cartography itself constitutes
its key mediatory instance. A return to the history of this
science (which is also an art) shows us that Lynch’s
model does not yet, in fact, really correspond to what will
become mapmaking. Lynch’s subjects are rather clearly
involved in precartographic operations whose results traditionally
are described as itineraries rather than as maps: diagrams
organized around the still subject-centered or existential
journey of the traveler, along which various significant key
features are marked--oases, mountain ranges, rivers, monuments,
and the like. The most highly developed form of such diagrams
is the nautical itinerary, the sea chart, or portulans,
where coastal features are noted for the use of Mediterranean
navigators who rarely venture out into the open sea.
Yet the compass at once introduces a new dimension
into sea charts, a dimension that will utterly transform the
problematic of the itinerary and allow us to pose the problem
of a genuine cognitive mapping in a far more complex way.
For the new instruments--compass, sextant, and theodolite--correspond
not merely to new geographic and navigational problems (the
difficult matter of determining longitude, particularly on
the curving surface of the planet, as opposed to the simpler
matter of latitude, which European navigators can still empirically
determine by ocular inspection of the African coast); they
also introduce a whole new coordinate: the relationship to
the totality, particularly as it is mediated by the stars
and by new operations like that of triangulation. At this
point, cognitive mapping in the broader sense comes to require
the coordination of existential data (the empirical position
of the subject) with unlived, abstract conceptions of the
geographic totality.
Finally, with the first globe (1490) and the
invention of the Mercator projection at about the same time,
yet a third dimension of cartography emerges, which at once
involves what we would today call the nature of representational
codes, the intrinsic structures of the various media, the
intervention, into more naive mimetic conceptions of mapping,
of the whole new fundamental question of the languages of
representation itself, in particular the unresolvable (well-nigh
Heisenbergian) dilemma of the transfer of curved space to
flat charts. At this point it becomes clear that there can
be no true maps (at the same time it also becomes clear that
there can be scientific progress, or better still, a dialectical
advance, in the various historical moments of mapmaking).
Transcoding all this now into the very different
problematic of the Althusserian definition of ideology, one
would want to make two points. The first is that the Althusserian
concept now allows us to rethink these specialized geographical
and cartographic issues in terms of social space--in terms,
for example, of social class and national or international
context, in terms of the ways in which we all necessarily
also cognitively map our individual social relationship to
local, national, and international class realities. Yet to
reformulate the problem in this way is also to come starkly
up against those very difficulties in mapping which are posed
in heightened and original ways by that very global space
of the postmodernist or multinational moment which has been
under discussion here. These are not merely theoretical issues;
they have urgent practical political consequences, as is evident
from the conventional feelings of First World subjects that
existentially (or "empirically") they really do
inhabit a "postindustrial society" from which traditional
production has disappeared and in which social classes of
the classical type no longer exist--a conviction which has
immediate effects on political praxis.
The second point is that a return to the Lacanian
underpinnings of Althusser’s theory can afford some
useful and suggestive methodological enrichments. Althusser’s
formulation remobilizes an older and henceforth classical
Marxian distinction between science and ideology that is not
without value for us even today. The existential--the positioning
of the individual subject, the experience of daily life, the
monadic "point of view" on the world to which we
are necessarily, as biological subjects, restricted--is in
Althusser’s formula implicitly opposed to the realm
of abstract knowledge, a realm which, as Lacan reminds us,
is never positioned in or actualized by any concrete subject
but rather by that structural void called le sujet suppose
savoir (the subject supposed to know), a subject-place
of knowledge. What is affirmed is not that we cannot know
the world and its totality in some abstract or "scientific"
way. Marxian "science" provides just such a way
of knowing and conceptualizing the world abstractly, in the
sense in which, for example, Mandel’s great book offers
a rich and elaborated knowledge of that global world system,
of which it has never been said here that it was unknowable
but merely that it was unrepresentable, which is a very different
matter. The Althusserian formula, in other words, designates
a gap, a rift, between existential experience and scientific
knowledge. Ideology has then the function of somehow inventing
a way of articulating those two distinct dimensions with each
other. What a historicist view of this definition would want
to add is that such coordination, the production of functioning
and living ideologies, is distinct in different historical
situations, and, above all, that there may be historical situations
in which it is not possible at all--and this would seem to
be our situation in the current crisis.
But the Lacanian system is threefold, and not
dualistic. To the Marxian-Althusserian opposition of ideology
and science correspond only two of Lacan’s tripartite
functions: the Imaginary and the Real, respectively. Our digression
on cartography, however, with its final revelation of a properly
representational dialectic of the codes and capacities of
individual languages or media, reminds us that what has until
now been omitted was the dimension of the Lacanian Symbolic
itself.
An aesthetic of cognitive mapping--a pedagogical
political culture which seeks to endow the individual subject
with some new heightened sense of its place in the global
system--will necessarily have to respect this now enormously
complex representational dialectic and invent radically new
forms in order to do it justice. This is not then, clearly,
a call for a return to some older kind of machinery, some
older and more transparent national space, or some more traditional
and reassuring perspectival or mimetic enclave: the new political
art (if it is possible at all) will have to hold to the truth
of postmodernism, that is to say, to its fundamental object-the
world space of multinational capital--at the same time at
which it achieves a breakthrough to some as yet unimaginable
new mode of representing this last, in which we may again
begin to grasp our positioning as individual and collective
subjects and regain a capacity to act and struggle which is
at present neutralized by our spatial as well as our social
confusion. The political form of postmodernism, if there ever
is any, will have as its vocation the invention and projection
of a global cognitive mapping, on a social as well as a spatial
scale.
NOTES
1
Robert Venturi and Denise Scott-Brown, Learning from Las
Vegas, (Cambridge, Mass. 1972). [return]
2
The originality of Charles Jencks's pathbreaking Language
of Post-Modern Architecture (1977) lay in its well-nigh
dialectical combination of postmodern architecture and a certain
kind of semiotics, each being appealed to to justify the existence
of the other.
Semiotics becomes appropriate
as a mode of analysis of the newer architecture by virtue
of the latter's populism, which does emit signs and messages
to a spatial "reading public;" unlike the monumentality
of the high modern. Meanwhile, the newer architecture is itself
thereby validated, insofar as it is accessible to semiotic
analysis and thus proves to be an essentially aesthetic object
(rather than the transaesthetic constructions of the high
modern). Here, then, aesthetics reinforces an ideology of
communication (about which more will be observed in the concluding
chapter), and vice versa. Besides Jencks's many valuable contributions,
see also Heinrich Klotz, History of Postmodern Architecture
(Cambridge, Mass., 1988); Pier Paolo Portoghesi, After
Modern Architecture (New York, 1982). [return]
3
Heidegger, "The Origin of the Work of Art;" in Albert
Hofstadter and Richard Kuhns, eds. Philosophies of Art
and Beauty (New York, 1964), p.663. [return]
4
Remo Ceserani, "Queue scarpe di Andy Warhol;" Il
Manifesto (June 1989). [return]
5
Ragna Stang, Edvard Munch (New York, 1979), p.90. [return]
6
This is the moment to confront a significant translation problem
and to say why, in my opinion, the notion of a postmodern
spatialization is not incompatible with Joseph Frank's influential
attribution of an essentially "spatial form" to
the high modern. In hindsight, what he describes is the vocation
of the modern work to invent a kind of spatial mnemonics,
reminiscent of Frances Yates's Art of Memory--a "totalizing"
construction in the stricter sense of the stigmatized, autonomous
work, whereby the particular somehow includes a battery of
re- and pre-tensions linking the sentence or the detail to
the Idea of the total form itself. Adorno quotes a remark
about Wagner by the conductor Alfred Lorenz in precisely this
sense: "If you have completely mastered a major work
in all its details, you sometimes experience moments in which
your consciousness of time suddenly disappears and the entire
work seems to be what one might call 'spatial; that is, with
everything present simultaneously in the mind with precision"
(W 36/33). But such mnemonic spatiality could never characterize
postmodern texts, in which "totality" is eschewed
virtually by definition. Frank's modernist spatial form is
thus synedochic, whereas it is scarcely even a beginning to
summon up the word metonymic for postmodernism's universal
urbanization, let alone its nominalism of the here-and-now.
[return]
7
For further on the 50s, see chapter 9. [return]
8
See also "Art Deco," in my Signatures of the
Visible (Routledge, 1990). [return]
9
"Ragtime," American Review no.20 (April 1974):
1-20. [return]
10
Lynda Hutcheon, A Poetics of Postmodernism (1988),
pp.61-2. [return]
11
Jean-Paul Sartre, "L'Etranger de Camus,"
in Situations II (Paris, Gallimard. 1948). [return]
12
The basic reference, in which Lacan discusses Schreber, is
"D'Une question preliminaire a' tout traitement possible
de la psychose," in Ecrits, Alan Sheridan, trans.
(New York, 1977), pp.179-225. Most of us have received this
classical view of psychosis by way of Deleuze and Guattari's
Anti-Oedipus. [return]
13
See my "Imaginary and Symbolic in Lacan," in The
Ideologies of Theory, volume I (Minnesota, 1988), pp.75-115.
[return]
14
Marguerite Sechehaye, Autobiography of a Schizophrenic
Girl, G. Rubin-Rabson, trans. (New York, 1968), p.19.
[return]
15
Primer (Berkeley, Calif., 1981). [return]
16
Sartre, What Is Literature? (Cambridge, Mass., 1988).
[return]
17
Ernest Mandel, Late Capitalism (London, 1978), p.118.
[return]
18
See, particularly on such motifs in Le Corbusier, Gert Kahler,
Architektur als Symbolverfall: Dos Dampfermotiv in der
Baukunst (Brunswick, 1981). [return]
19
"To say that a structure of this type 'turns its back
away' is surely an understatement, while to speak of its 'popular'
character is to miss the point of its systematic segregation
from the great Hispanic-Asian city outside (whose crowds prefer
the open space of the old Plaza). Indeed, it is virtually
to endorse the master illusion that Portman seeks to convey:
that he has re-created within the precious spaces of his super-lobbies
the genuine popular texture of city life.
"(In fact, Portman
has only built large vivariums for the upper middle classes,
protected by astonishingly complex security systems. Most
of the new downtown centres might as well have been built
on the third moon of Jupiter. Their fundamental logic is that
of a claustrophobic space colony attempting to miniaturize
nature within itself. Thus the Bonaventure reconstructs a
nostalgic Southern California in aspic: orange trees, fountains,
flowering vines, and clean air. Outside, in a smog-poisoned
reality, vast mirrored surfaces reflect away not only the
misery of the larger city, but also its irrepressible vibrancy
and quest for authenticity including the most exciting neighbourhood
mural movement in North America)." (Mike Davis, "Urban
Renaissance and the Spirit of Postmodernism," New
Left Review 151 [May-June 1985): 112).
Davis imagines I am
being complacent or corrupt about this bit of second-order
urban renewal; his article is as full of useful urban information
and analysis as it is of bad faith. Lessons in economics from
someone who thinks sweatshops are "precapitalist"
are not helpful; meanwhile it is unclear what mileage is to
be gained by crediting our side ("the ghetto rebellions
of the late 1960s") with the formative influence in bringing
postmodernism into being (a hegemonic or "ruling class"
style if there ever was one), let alone gentrification. The
sequence is obviously the other way round: capital (and its
multitudinous "penetrations") comes first, and only
then can "resistance" to it develop, even though
it might be pretty to think otherwise. ("The association
of the workers as it appears in the factory is not posited
by them but by capital. Their combination is not their being,
but the being of capital. To the individual worker it appears
fortuitous. He relates to his own association with other workers
and to his cooperation with them as alien, as to modes of
operation of capital;' [Karl Marx, Grundrisse, Collected
Works, volume 28 (New York, 1986), p.5051).
Davis's reply is characteristic
of some of the more "militant" sounds from the Left;
right-wing reactions to my article generally take the form
of aesthetic handwringing, and (for example) deplore my apparent
identification of postmodern architecture generally with a
figure like Portman, who is, as it were, the Coppola (if not
the Harold Robbins) of the new downtowns. [return]
20
Michael Herr, Dispatches (New York, 1978), pp.8-9.
[return]
21
See my "Morality and Ethical Substance," in The
Ideologies of Theory, volume I (Minneapolis, 1988). 22
Louis Althusser, "Ideological State Apparatuses;"
in Lenin and Philosophy (New York, 1972). [return]
22
Louis Althusser, "Ideological State Apparatuses,"
in Lenin and Philosophy (New York, 1972). [return]
Fredric
Jameson's Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late
Capitalism. Duke UP, 1991.
original site: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~DRBR/JAMESON/jameson.html
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