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N is for Nature
McKenzie Wark
pdf (12 Kb)
There are people who think what makes a good wine comes from
nature - factors like rain and soil and temperature. Then there
are those who think it's a matter of second nature - of picking
and fermenting and ageing. But thesedays, there's a whole new
world of wine making technology - and a whole new argument as
to what is "natural" and what is not.
Thesedays, its chemists rather than vignerons who are increasingly
in charge of technique. It is illegal in the United States and
in many other countries to add flavours or colourings. But it
isn't illegal to add oak chips to wine fermenting in stainless
steel barrels to get that "oak finish" promised on the
label.
Adjustments can be made in the level of carbon dioxide, to vary
acidity and fruitiness, or grape juice can be introduced as a
sweetener. Powedered tannins can be added for a firmer feel on
the palate. Pressure can be used to separate alcohol from acid.
The technique known as micro-oygenation aerates the wine and gets
around the need for the age old and labourt intensive process
known as racking.
These increasingly popular technologies shift wine making away
from the idea of a process subject to regional variations in climate
and seasonal variations in weather. Nature no longer rules; second
nature eliminates the necessary vaguaries of wind and water and
sunshine. While the images and copy on the labels still refer
to the wine makers ancient status as an alchemical transformer
of nature into art, the reality is otherwise.
But there's a whole new transformation going on, which takes
wine making a step further away from the natural world. The Enologix
company of Sonoma, California, makes software that predicts how
a wine will rate in reviews even before it is made. Many winemakers
think that the fortunes of their wine has less to do with whether
they had a vintage year and more to do with the fashions current
among the influential wine reviewers.
Robert M. Parker, who reviews for Wine Spectator magazine,
says "my scores have led to higher quality at all price levels."
But many would argue that his influence leads to a homogenisation
of the wine, as each company tries to second guess the contemporary
trends in flavours.
As Guy Debord once put it: "An era which finds it profitable
to fake by chemical means various famous wines, can only sell
them if it has created wine experts able to con their marks into
admiring their new, more distinctive flavours."
"Whenever people lose the capacity to see things for themselves,
the expert is there it offer an absolute reassurance", Debord
says. In the case of wine, the media shifts from representing
the gold standard in taste to creating a floating currency of
value.
Wine, once a liminal product, hovering on the border between
nature and second nature, between the world of wind and rain and
the world of collective human labour and skill, becomes an index
of a further development in the human relation to nature - the
development of "third nature".
It is only when second nature develops that nature appears as
a concept. Once the techniques are in place for making nature
into a resource, for trapping or taming it, an appreciation arises
for nature in its raw state, a state that only appears at the
point where it is no longer a general condition. What cultures
represent to themselves as nature is always a world we have lost.
Nature, which appears as an origin, appears only retroactively,
as it disappears.
The lost world of nature exercises a magic fascination over culture,
which expresses itself in its finest form as romanticism. But
it also expresses itself as a consumer preference, for that which
is close to nature, for that which, while produced, exposes itself
in its production to the serendipidy of wind and rain. In spite
of the fashion for organic foods and herbal remedies, the most
enduring product of this hankering for a lost nature is wine.
But that very hankering for a lost nature produces its opposite,
a second nature. The expanded demand for wine as a commodity leads
to techniques which eliminate the vagaries of season and the peculiarities
of region. It becomes second nature to prefer a natural product,
but that natural product is only appears as natural because of
the huge investment in a second nature of industrialised production.
The canny consumer knows about the manipulation of the appearance
of nature. This is where media plays the critical role in asserting
the value of the product, its authenticity. If it is not authentic
in every detail of its production, a case can be made for the
authenticity of its consumption - for the veracity of its flavour.
Wine becomes an artifact of third nature, of the management of
appearances, the valuation of signs, a third nature capable of
transforming any product of second nature's industrial ingenuity
into the sign of its opposite.
The very dependence of wine on the aura of nature makes it a
prime candidate for this kind of vectoral transformation. It comes
to depend on the owners and managers of third nature, a vectoral
class and their hired specialists in communication. "It must
not be forgotten that every media professional is bound by wages
and other rewards and recompenses to a master, and sometimes to
several; and that every one of them knows he is dispensible",
as Debord writes.
In order to achieve the veracity of third nature, winemakers
resort to ever more advanced techniques. They step beyond the
construction of the ideal environment for wine production. They
invest in processes rooted not in agriculture but in biochemical
information. At the production as at the consumption end, information
worms its way into the life cycle of the vintage.
And so too do the owners of information. On the one side, the
chemists and even the computer programmers, making production
safe for the reviewers, and on the other, the reviewers, making
consumption safe for the consumer, who is spared the indignity
of uncorking an uncharacteristic year.
But in the process, wine is no longer the archetypal transaction
between the producer close to nature and the consumer's fidelity
to his/her own nose. A third party inserts itself into the game,
the owners and distributors of the information through which the
appearance may be preserved of this once hallowed but long lost
relation.
Into every unexpected nook and crany of culture and economy,
a vectoral class asserts its prerogatives, and the producing of
the signs of production takes the place of the production of what
once preceded the sign. The appearance of nature is preserved
- despite the perservatives - through the construction of a third
nature in which the sign of nature itself becomes a commodity.
A HACKER MANIFESTO 2.0
http://www.feelergauge.net/projects/hackermanifesto/version_2.0/
NOTES
Guy Debord, Comments on the Society of the Spectacle,
Verso, London, 1990, pp16-17; Alice Feiring, "For Better
or Worse, Winemakers Go High Tech", Business, New York
Times, 26th August 2001.
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