X notes on Practice
Stubborn Structures and Insistent Seepage in
a Networked World
Raqs Media
Collective
PDF [232 KB]
I. The Figure of the Artisan
The
artisan stands at the outer threshold of early modernity, fashioning
a new age, ushering in a new spirit with movable type, plumb
line, chisel, paper, new inks, dyes and lenses, and a sensibility
that
has room for curiosity, exploration, co-operation, elegance,
economy, utility and a respect for the labour of the hand, the
eye and the
mind. The artisan is the typesetter, seamstress, block-maker,
carpenter, weaver, computer, oculist, scribe, baker, dyer, pharmacist,
mason,
midwife, mechanic and cook – the ancestor of every modern trade.
The artisan gestures towards a new age but is not quite sure
of a place in it.
The figure of the artisan anticipates both the worker and the
artist, in that it lays the foundations of the transformation
of occupations
(things that occupy us) into professions (institutionalized,
structural locations within an economy). It mediates the transfiguration
of
people into skills, of lives into working lives, into variable
capital. The artisan is the vehicle that carried us all into
the contemporary world. She is the patient midwife of our notion
of
an autonomous creative and reflective self, waiting out the still
births, nursing the prematurely born, weighing the infant and
cutting the cords that tie it to an older patrimony. The artisan
makes
us who we are.
Yet, the artisan has neither the anonymity of the worker drone,
not the hyper-individuated solipsism of the artist genius. The
artisan is neither faceless, nor a celebrity; she belongs neither
in the factory, nor in the salon, but functions best in the atelier,
the workshop and the street, with apprentices and other artisans,
making and trading things and knowledge. The artisan fashions
neither the mass produced inventories of warehouses, nor the
precious,
unique objects that must only be seen in galleries, museums and
auction houses. The objects and services that pass through her
hands into the world are neither ubiquitous nor rare, nor do
they seek value in ubiquity or rarity. They trade on the basis
of their
usage, within densely networked communities that the artisan
is party to, not on the impetus of rival global speculations
based
on the volumes and volatility of stocks, or the price of a signature.
As warehouses and auction houses proliferate, squeezing out the
atelier and the workshop, the artisan loses her way. At the margins
of an early industrial capitalism, the artisan seemingly transacts
herself out of history, making way for the drone and the genius,
for the polarities of drudgery and creativity, work and art.
II. Immaterial Labour
Due to the emergence of a new economy of intellectual property
based on the fruits of immaterial labour, the distinction between
the roles of the worker and the artist in strictly functional
terms is once again becoming difficult to sustain. To understand
why
this is so we need to take a cursory look at the new ways in
which value is increasingly being produced in the world today.
The combination of widespread cybernetic processes, increased
economies of scale, agile management practices that adjust production
to
demand, and inventory status reports in a dispersed global assembly
line, has made the mere manufacture of things a truly global
fact. Cars, shoes, clothes, and medicines, or any commodity for
that
matter, are produced by more or less the same processes, anywhere.
The manufacture of components, the research and design process,
the final assembly and the marketing infrastructure no longer
need to be circumscribed within one factory, or even one nation
state
or regional economic entity. The networked nature of contemporary
industrial production frees the finished good from a fidelity
to any one location. This also results in a corollary condition
–
a multiplication of renditions, or editions, (both authorized
as well as counterfeit) of any product line at a global scale.
Often,
originals and their imitations are made in the same out-sourced
sweatshop. The more things multiply, the more they tend towards
similarity, in form and appearance, if not in function.
Thus, when capital becomes more successful than ever before
at fashioning the material surface of the world after its own
image,
it also has more need than ever before for a sense of variety,
a classificatory engine that could help order the mass that it
generates, so that things do not cancel each other out by their
generative equivalence. Hence the more things become the same
the more need there is for distinguishing signs, to enable their
purchase.
The importance given to the notions of ‘brand equity’ from which
we get derivatives from which we get derivatives like ‘brand
velocity’, ‘brand loyalty’ and a host of other usages are prefixed
by the term
‘brand’ indicative of this reality.
Today, the value of a good lies not only in what makes it a
thing desirable enough to consume as a perishable capsule of
(deferred)
satisfaction. The value of a good lies especially in that aspect
of it which makes it imperishable, eternally reproducible, and
ubiquitously available. Information, which distils the imperishable,
the reproducible, the ubiquitous in a condensed set of signs,
is the true capital of this age. A commodity is no longer only
an
object that can be bought and sold; it is also that thing in
it which can be read, interpreted and deciphered in such a way
that
every instance of decryption or encryption can also be bought
and sold. Money lies in the meaning that lies hidden in a good.
A good
to eat must also be a good to think with, or to experiment with
in a laboratory. This encryption of value, the codification and
concentration of capital to its densest and most agile form is
what we understand to be intellectual property. How valuable
is intellectual property?
How valuable is intellectual property?
In attempting to find
an answer to a question such as this, it is always instructive
to
look at the knowledge base that capitalism produces to assess
and understand itself. In a recent paper titled “Evaluating
IP Rights: In Search of Brand Value in the New Economy” a
brand management consultant, Tony Samuel of PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Intellectual
Asset Management Group says:
“This change in the nature of competition and the dynamics
of the new world economy have resulted in a change in the key
value
drivers for a company from tangible assets (such as plant and machinery)
to intangible assets (such as brands, patents, copyright and
know how). In particular, companies have taken advantage of more open
trade opportunities by using the competitive advantage provided
by brands and technology to access distant markets. This is reflected
in the growth in the ratio of market-capitalised value to book
value of listed companies. In the US, this ratio has increased
from 1:1 to 5:1 over the last twenty years.
In the UK, the ratio is similar, with less than 30% of the
capitalised value of FTSE 350 companies appearing on the balance
sheet. We
would argue that the remaining 70% of unallocated value resides
largely in intellectual property and certainly in intellectual
assets. Noticeably, the sectors with the highest ratio of market
capitalisation to book value are heavily reliant on copyright
(such as the media sector), patents (such as technology and pharmaceutical)
and brands (such as pharmaceutical, food and drink, media and
financial
services).” [1]
The paper goes on to quote Alan Shepard, sometime chairman
of Grand Metropolitan plc, an international group specializing
in
branded
food, drinks and retailing which merged with Guinness in 1997
to form Diageo, a corporation which today controls brands as
diverse
as Smirnoff and Burger King.
“Brands are the core of our business. We could, if we
so wished, subcontract all of the production, distribution, sales
and service
functions and, provided that we retained ownership of our brands,
we would continue to be successful and profitable. It is our
brands that provide the profits of today and guarantee the profits of
the future.”
We have considered brands here at some length, because of the
way in which brands populate our visual landscape. Were a born
again
landscape painter to try and represent a stretch of urban landscape,
it would be advisable for him or her to have privileged access
to a smart intellectual property lawyer. But what is true of
brands is equally true of other forms of intangible assets,
or intellectual
property, ranging from music, to images to software.
The legal regime of intellectual property is in the process
of encompassing as much as possible of all cultural transactions
and production processes. All efforts to create or even understand
art will have to come to terms, sooner or later, with the
implications of this pervasive control, and intellectual property
attorneys
will no doubt exert considerable ‘curatorial’ influence as
art events,
museums and galleries clear artists projects, proposals and
acquisitions
as a matter of routine. These ‘attorney-curators’ will no
doubt ensure that art institutions and events do not become liable
for possible and potential ‘intellectual property violations’ that
the
artist, curator, theorist, writer or practitioner may or
may
not be aware of as being inscribed into their work.
III. The Worker as Artist
What are the implications of this scenario? The worker of the
twenty first century, who has to survive in a marker that places
the utmost value on the making of signs, finds that her tools,
her labour, her skills are all to do with varying degrees of
creative, interpretative and performative agency. She makes
brands shine, she sculpts data, she mines meaning, she hews
code. The real global factory is a network of neural processes,
no less material than the blast furnaces and chimneys of manufacturing
and industrial capitalism. The worker of the twenty first century
is also a performer, a creator of value from meaning. She creates,
researches and interprets, in the ordinary course of a working
day to the order that would merit her being considered an artist
or a researcher, if by ‘artist’ or ‘researcher’ we understand
a person to be a figure who creates meaning or produces knowledge.
Nothing illustrates this better than the condition of workers
in Information technology enabled industries like Call Centre
and Remote Data Outsourcing, which have paved the way for a new
international matrix of labour, and a given a sudden performative
twist to the realities of what is called Globalization. In a
recent installation, called A/S/L (Age/Sex/Location) [2], we
looked at the performative dimension in the lives of call centre
workers.
The Call Centre Worker and her world [3]
A call centre worker in the suburb of Delhi, the city where
we live, performs a Californian accent as she pursues a loan
defaulter
in a poor Los Angeles neighbourhood on the telephone. She threatens
and cajoles him. She scares him, gets underneath his skin, because
she is scared that he won’t agree to pay, and that this will
translate as a cut in her salary. Latitudes away from him, she
has a window open on her computer telling her about the weather
in his backyard, his credit history, his employment record, his
prison record. Her skin is darker than his, but her voice is
trained to be whiter on the phone. Her night is his day. She
is a remote agent with a talent for impersonation in the IT enabled
industry in India. She never gets paid extra for the long hours
she puts in. He was laid off a few months ago, and hasn’t been
able to sort himself out. Which is why she is calling him for
the company she works for. He lives in a third world neighbourhood
in a first world city, she works in a free trade zone in a third
world country. Neither knows the other as anything other than
as ‘case’ and ‘agent’. The conversation between them is a denial
of their realities and an assertion of many identities, each
with their truths, all at once.
Central to this kind of work is a process of imagining, understanding
and invoking a world, mimesis, projection and verisimilitude
as well as the skilful deployment of a combination of reality
and representation. Elsewhere, we have written of the critical
necessity of this artifice to work, (in terms of creating an
impression of proximity that elides the actuality of distance)
in order for a networked global capitalism to sustain itself
on an everyday basis, but here, what we would like to emphasize
is the crucial role that a certain amount of ‘imaginative’ skill,
and a combination of knowledge, command over language, articulateness,
technological dexterity and performativity plays in making this
form of labour productive and efficient on a global scale.
IV.
Marginalia
Sometimes, the most significant heuristic openings are hidden
away on the margins of the contemporary world. While the meta-narratives
of war, globalization, disasters, pandemics and technological
spectacles grab headlines, the world may be changing in significant
but unrecognized directions at the margins, like an incipient
glacier inching its way across a forsaken moraine. These realities
may have to with the simple facts of people being on the move,
of the improvised mechanisms of survival that suddenly open out
new possibilities, and the ways in which a few basic facts and
conceptions to do with the everyday acts of coping with the world
pass between continents.
Here, margin is not so much a fact of location (as in something
peripheral to an assumed centre) as it is a figure denoting a
specific kind or degree of attentiveness. In this sense, a figure
may be located at the very core of the reality that we are talking
about, and still be marginal, because it does not cross a certain
low-visibility, low-attention threshold, or because it is seen
as being residual to the primary processes of reality. The call
centre worker may be at the heart of the present global economy,
but she is barely visible as an actor or an agent. In this sense,
to be marginal is not necessary to be ‘far from the action’ or
to be ‘remote’ or in any way distant from the very hub of the
world as we find it today.
The Margin has its own image-field. And it is to this image-field
that we turn to excavate or improvise a few resources for practice.
A minor artisanal specialization pertaining to medieval manuscript
illumination was the drawing and inscription of what has been
called “marginalia” [4]. “Marginalists” (generally
apprentices to scribes) would inscribe figures, often illustrating
profane wisdom, popular proverbs, burlesque figures and fantastical
or allegorical allusions that occasionally constructed a counter-narrative
to the main body of the master text, while often acting as what
was known as “exempla”: aids to conception and thought
(and sometimes as inadvertent provocations for heretic meditations).
It is here, in these marginal illuminations, that ordinary people
– ploughmen, peasants, beggars, prostitutes and thieves would
often make their appearances, constructing a parallel universe
to that populated by kings, aristocrats, heroes, monsters, angels,
prophets and divines. Much of our knowledge of what people looked
like in the medieval world comes from the details that we find
in manuscript marginalia. They index the real, even as they inscribe
the nominally invisible. It would be interesting to think for
instance of the incredible wealth of details of dress, attitude,
social types and behaviours that we find in the paintings of
Hieronymus Bosch, or Pierre Breughel as marginalia writ large.
It is with some fidelity to this artisanal ideal of using marginalia
as exemplars that we would like to offer a small gallery of contemporary
marginal figures.
V. Five Figures to Consider
As significant annotations to the text of present realities,
and as ways out for the dilemmas that we have faced in our own
apprehensions of the world, we find ourselves coming back repeatedly
to them in our practice – as images, as datums and as figures
of thought, as somewhat profane icons for meditation. We feel
that these figures, each in their own way, speak to the predicament
of the contemporary practitioner.
Figure One: The Alien Navigates a Boat at Sea
A boat changes course at sea, dipping temporarily out of the
radar of a nearby coast guard vessel. A cargo of contraband people
in the hold, fleeing war, or the aftermath of war, or the fifth
bad harvest in a row, or a dam that flooded their valley, or
the absence of social security in the face of unemployment, or
a government that suddenly took offence at the way they spelt
their names – study the contours of an unknown coastline in their
minds, experiment with the pronunciations of harbour names unfamiliar
to their tongues. Their map of the world is contoured with safe
havens and dangerous border posts, places for landing, transit
and refuge, anywhere and everywhere, encircled and annotated
in blue ink. A geography lesson learnt in the International University
of Exile.
Figure Two: The Squatter builds a Tarpaulin Shelter
Tarpaulin, rope, a few large plastic drums, crates, long poles
of seasoned bamboo, and quick eyes and skilled hands, create
a new home. A migrant claims a patch of fallow land, marked “property
of the state” in the city. Then comes the tough part: the
search for papers, the guerrilla war with the Master Plan for
a little bit of electricity, a little bit of water, a delay in
the date of demolition, for a few scraps of legality, a few loose
threads of citizenship. The learning of a new accent, the taking
on of a new name, the invention of one or several new histories
that might get one a ration card, or a postponed eviction notice.
The squat grows incrementally, in Rio de Janeiro, in Delhi, in
Baghdad, creating a shadow global republic of not-quite citizens,
with not-yet passports, and not-there addresses.
Figure Three: The Electronic Pirate burns a CD
A fifteen square-yard shack in a working-class suburb of northeast
Delhi is a hub of the global entertainment industry. Here, a
few assembled computers, a knock-down Korean CD writer, and some
Chinese pirated software in the hands of a few formerly unemployed,
or unemployable young people turned media entrepreneurs, transform
the latest Hollywood, or Bollywood blockbuster into the stuff
that you can watch in a tea shop on your way to work. Here, the
media meets its extended public. It dies a quick death as one
high-end commodity form, and is resurrected as another. And then,
like the Holy Spirit, does not charge an exorbitant fee to deliver
a little grace unto those who seek its fleeting favours. Electronic
piracy is the flow of energy between chained product and liberated
pixel that makes for a new communion, a samizdat of the song
and dance spectacular.
Figure Four: The Hacker Network liberates Software
A community of programmers dispersed across the globe sustains
a growing body of software and knowledge – a digital commons
that is not fenced in by proprietary controls. A network of hackers,
armed with nothing other than their phone lines, modems, internet
accounts and personal computers inaugurate a quiet global insubordination
by refusing to let code, music, texts, math and images be anything
but freely available for download, transformation and distribution.
The freedom is nurtured through the sharing of time, computing
resources and knowledge in a way that works out to the advantage
of those working to create the software, as well as to a larger
public, that begins swapping music and sharing media files to
an extent that makes large infotainment corporations look nervously
at their balance sheets. The corporations throw their lawyers
at the hackers, and the Intellectual Property Shock Troops are
out on parade, but nothing can turn the steady erosion of the
copyright.
Figure Five: Workers Protect Machines in an Occupied Factory
Seamstresses at the Brukman Garment Factory in Buenos Aires [5] shield their machines against a crowd of policemen intent
on smashing them. The power of the Argentine state provokes a
perverse
neo Luddite incident, in which the workers are attacked while
they try to defend their machines from destruction. The Brukman
Factory is a “fabrica ocupada”, a factory occupied
by its workers, one of many that have sustained a new parallel
social and economic structure based on self regulation and the
free exchange of goods and services outside or tangential to
the failed money economy – a regular feature of the way in which
working people in Argentina cope with the ongoing economic crisis.
Turning the rhetoric and tactics of working class protest on
its head, the seamstresses of the Brukman factory fight not to
withdraw their labour from the circuit of production, but to
protect what they produce, and to defend their capacity to be
producers, albeit outside the circuit desired by capital.
VI. Significant Transgressions
These five transgressors, a pentacle of marginalia, can help
us to think about what the practitioner might need to understand
if she wants to recuperate a sense of agency. In very simple
terms, she would need to take a lesson in breaking borders and
moving on from the migrant, in standing her ground and staying
located from the squatter, in placing herself as a link in an
agile network of reproduction, distribution and exchange from
the pirate, in sharing knowledge and enlarging a commons of ideas
from the hacker, and in continuing to be autonomously productive
from the workers occupying the factory.
The first imperative, that of crossing borders, translates
as scepticism of the rhetoric of bounded identities, and relates
to the role of the practitioner as a ‘journeyman’, as the peripatetic
who maps an alternative world by her journey through it. The
second, of building a shelter against the odds of the law, insists
however on a practice that is located in space, and rooted in
experience, that houses itself in a concrete ‘somewhere’ on its
own terms, not of the powers that govern spaces. It is this fragile
insistence on provisional stability, which allows for journeys
to be made to and from destinations, and for the mapping of routes
with resting places in between. The third imperative, that of
creating a fertile network of reproduction of cultural materials,
is a recognition of the strength of ubiquity, or spreading ideas
and information like a virus through a system. The fourth imperative,
of insisting on the freedom of knowledge from proprietary control,
is a statement about the purpose of production – to ensure greater
pleasure and understanding without creating divisions based on
property, and is tied in to the fifth imperative – a commitment
to keep producing with autonomy and dignity.
Taken together, these five exempla constitute an ethic of radical
alterity to prevailing norms without being burdened by the rhetorical
overload that a term like ‘resistance’ invariably seems to carry.
They also map a different reality of ‘globalization’ – not the
incessant, rapacious, expansion of capitalism, but the equally
incessant imperative that makes people move across the lines
that they are supposed to be circumscribed by, and enact the
everyday acts of insubordination that have become necessary for
their survival. It is important to look at this subaltern globalization
from below, which is taking place everywhere, and which is perhaps
far less understood than the age-old expansionist drive of capitalism,
which is what the term ‘globalization’ is now generally used to
refer to. It embodies different wills to globality and a plethora
of global imaginaries that are often at cross-purposes with the
dominant rhetoric of corporate globalization.
The illegal emigrant, the urban encroacher, electronic pirate,
the hacker and the seamstresses of the Brukman Factory of Buenos
Aires are not really the most glamorous images of embodied resistance.
They act, if anything, out of a calculus of survival and self-interest
that has little to do with a desire to ‘resist’ or transform
the world. And yet, in their own way, they unsettle, undermine
and
destabilize the established structures of borders and boundaries,
metropolitan master plans and the apparatus of intellectual property
relations and a mechanism of production that robs the producer
of agency. If we examine the architecture of the contemporary
moment, and the figures that we have described, it does not take
long to see five giant, important pillars: a) The consolidation,
redrawing and protection of boundaries; b) The grand projects
of urban planning and renewal and c) The desire to protect information
as the last great resource left for capitalism to mine – which
is what Intellectual Property is all about, d) Control over
the production of knowledge and culture and e) The denial of
agency
to the producer.
Illegal emigration, urban encroachment, the assault on intellectual
property regimes by any means, hacking and the occupation of
sites of production by producers, each of which involve the accumulation
of the acts of millions of people across the world on a daily,
unorganized and voluntary basis, often at great risk to themselves,
are the underbelly of this present reality.
But how might we begin to consider and understand the global
figures of the alien, the encroacher, the pirate, the hacker
and the worker defending her machine?
VII. Capital and its Residue
The first thing to consider is the fact that most of these
acts of transgression are inscribed into the very heart of established
structures by people located at the extreme margins. The marginality
of some of these figures is a function of their status as the
‘residue’ of the global capitalist juggernaut. By ‘residue’,
we mean those elements of the world that are engulfed by the
processes
of Capital, turned into ‘waste’ or ‘leftovers’, left behind, even
thrown away.
Capital transforms older forms of labour and ways of life into
those that are either useful for it at present, or those that
have no function and so must be made redundant. Thus you have
the paradox of a new factory, which instead of creating new jobs
often renders the people who live around ‘unemployable’; A new
dam, that instead of providing irrigation, renders a million
displaced, a new highway that destroys common paths, making movement
more, not less difficult for the people and the communities it
cuts through. On the other hand sometimes, like a sportsman with
an injury who no longer has a place on the team, a factory that
closes down ensures that the place it was located in ceases to
be a destination. And so, the workers have to ensure that it
stays open, and working in order for them to have a place under
the sun.
What happens to the people in the places that fall off the
map? Where do they go? They are forced, of course, to go in search
of the map that has abandoned them. But when they leave everything
behind and venture into a new life they do not do so entirely
alone. They go with the networked histories of other voyages
and transgressions, and are able at any point to deploy the insistent,
ubiquitous insider knowledge of today’s networked world.
Seepage in the Network
How does this network act, and how does it make itself known
in our consciousness? We like to think about this in terms of
Seepage. By seepage, we mean the action of many currents of fluid
material leaching on to a stable structure, entering and spreading
through it by way of pores. Until, it becomes a part of the structure,
both in terms of its surface, and at the same time continues
to act on its core, to gradually disaggregate its solidity. To
crumble it over time with moisture.
In a wider sense, seepage can be conceived as those acts that
ooze through the pores of the outer surfaces of structures into
available pores within the structure, and result in a weakening
of the structure itself. Initially the process is invisible,
and then it slowly starts causing mould and settles into a disfiguration
– and this produces an anxiety about the strength and durability
of the structure.
By itself seepage is not an alternative form; it even needs
the structure to become what it is – but it creates new conditions
in which structures become fragile and are rendered difficult
to sustain. It enables the play of an alternative imagination,
and so we begin seeing faces and patterns on the wall that change
as the seepage ebbs and flows.
In a networked world, there are many acts of seepage, some
of which we have already described. They destabilize the structure,
without making any claims. So the encroacher redefines the city,
even as she needs the city to survive. The trespasser alters
the border by crossing it, rendering it meaningless and yet making
it present everywhere – even in the heart of the capital city
– so that every citizen becomes a suspect alien and the compact
of citizenship that sustains the state is quietly eroded. The
pirate renders impossible the difference between the authorised
and the unauthorised copy, spreading information and culture,
and devaluing intellectual property at the same time. Seepage
complicates the norm by inducing invisible structural changes
that accumulate over time.
It is crucial to the concept of seepage that individual acts
of insubordination not be uprooted from the original experience.
They have to remain embedded in the wider context to make any
sense. And this wider context is a networked context, a context
in which incessant movement between nodes is critical.
VIII. A
Problem for the History of the Network
But how is this network’s history to be understood? To a large
measure, this is made difficult by the fact of an “asymmetry
of ignorance” about the world. We are all ignorant of the
world in different ways and to different degrees. And that is
one of the reasons why the “Network” often shades off
into darkness, at some or the other point. This is what leads
to global networks that nevertheless ignore the realities of
large parts of the world, because no one has the means to speak
of those parts, and no one knows, whether people exist in those
parts that can even speak to the world in the language of the
network. Thus the language of the network often remains at best
only a mobile local dialect.
A media practitioner or cultural worker from India, e.g., is
in all likelihood more knowledgeable about the history of Europe
than could be the case for the European vis-a-vis India. This
is a fact engendered by colonialism that has left some societies
impoverished in all but an apprehension of reality that is necessarily
global. The historian Dipesh Chakrabarty has reminded us,
“Insofar as the academic discourse of history is concerned,
‘Europe’ remains the sovereign, theoretical subject of all histories,
including
the ones we call ‘Indian’, ‘Chinese’, ‘Kenyan’, and so on. There
is a peculiar way in which all these other histories tend to
become variations on a master narrative that could be called
‘the history of Europe’.” [6]
But this very same fact, when looked at from a European standpoint,
may lead to a myopia, an inability to see anything other than
the representational master narrative of European history moulding
the world. The rest of the world is thus often a copy seeking
to approximate this original.
All this to say: not merely that we have incomplete perspectives,
but that this asymmetry induces an inability to see the face
in the wall, the interesting pattern, produced by the seepage.
We may inhabit the anxiety, even be the source and locus of the
destabilization and recognize the disfiguration, but the envisioning
of possible alternative imaginaries may still continue to elude
us.
IX. Towards an Enactive Model of Practice
Recently in a book on neuropolitics [7], we came across an
experiment which is now considered classic in studies of perception,
(The
Held and Heims Experiment) which might give us an interesting
direction to follow now.
Two litters of kittens are raised in the dark for some time
and then exposed to light under two different sets of conditions.
The first group is allowed to move around in the visual field
and interact with it as kittens do – smelling things, touching
them, trying out what can be climbed and where the best places
to sleep are. The kittens in the second group, (though they are
placed in the same environment) are carried around in baskets
rather than allowed to explore the space themselves, and thus
are unable to interact with it with all their senses and of their
own volition.
The two groups of kittens develop in very different ways. When
the animals are released after a few weeks of this treatment,
the first group of kittens behaves normally, but those who have
been carried around behave as if they were blind; they bump into
objects and fell over edges. It is clear that the first group’s
freedom to experience the environment in a holistic way is fundamental
to its ability to perceive it at all. What is the significance
of this? Within neuroscience, such experiments have served to
draw neuroscientists and cognitive scientists away from representational
models of mind towards an “enactive” model of perception
in which objects are not perceived simply as visual abstractions
but rather through an experiential process in which information
received from this one sense is “networked” with that
from every other. Vision, in other words, is deeply embedded
in the processes of life, and it is crucial to our ability to
see that we offset the representations that we process, with
the results of the experiences that we enter into. We need to
know what happens when we take a step, bump into someone, be
startled by a loud noise, come across a stranger, an angry or
a friendly face, a gun or a jar of milk.
In a sense this implies a three-stage encounter that we are
ascribing between the practitioner and her world. First, a recognition
of the fact that instances of art practices can be seen as contiguous
to a ‘neighbourhood’ of marginal practices embodied by the figures
of the five transgressors. Secondly, that ‘seeing’ oneself as
a practitioner, and understanding the latent potentialities of
one’s practice, might also involve listening to the ways in which
each of the five transgressive figures encounters the world.
Finally, that what one gleans from each instance of transgression
can then be integrated into a practice which constitutes itself
as an ensemble of attitudes, ways of thinking, doing and embodying
(or recuperating) creative agency in a networked world.
For us here, this helps in thinking about the importance of
recognizing the particularity of each encounter that the practitioner
witnesses
or enters into, without losing sight of the extended network,
of the ‘neighbourhood’ of practices.
It is only when we see particularities that we are also able
to see how two or more particular instances connect to each other.
As residues, that search for meaning in other residual experiences;
or as acts of seepage, in which the flow of materials from one
pore to another ends up connecting two nodes in the network,
by sheer force of gravity. Here it is the gradients of the flow,
the surface tension that the flow encounters and the distance
that the flow traverses, that become important, not the intention
to flow itself. Intentions, resistances, may be imputed, but
in the end they have little to do with the actual movements that
transpire within the network.
X. Art practice and protocols of networked conversation
What does art and artistic practice have to do with all this?
What can the practitioner take from an understanding of interactive
embeddedness in a networked world? We would argue that the diverse
practices that now inhabit art spaces need to be able to recognize
the patterns in the seepage, to see connections between different
aspects of a networked reality.
To do this, the practitioner probably has to invent, or discover,
protocols of conversation across sites, across different histories
of locatedness in the network; to invent protocols of resource
building and sharing, create structures within structures and
networks within networks. Mechanisms of flexible agreements about
how different instances of enactment can share a contiguous semantic
space will have to be arrived at. And as we discover these ‘protocols’,
their different ethical, affective and cognitive resonances will
immediately enter the equation. We can then also begin to think
of art practice as enactment, as process, as elements in an interaction
or conversation within a network.
For the acts of seepage to connect to form new patterns, many
new conversations will have to be opened, and mobile dialects
will have to rub shoulders with each other to create new, networked
Creoles. Perhaps art practice in a networked reality can itself
aspire to create the disfigurations on the wall, to induce some
anxieties in the structure, even while making possible the reading
of the face in the spreading stain, the serendipitous discovery
of an interesting pattern or cluster of patterns, and possible
alterities.
[This text draws from a presentation by Monica Narula (Raqs
Media Collective) at Globalica – a symposium on “conceptual
and artistic tensions in the new global disorder”, held
at the WRO Center for Media Art, Wroclaw, Poland in May 2003.
The images are from A/S/L, an installation by Raqs Media Collective.
A/S/L support: Editing: Parvati Sharma, Sound Design: Vipin Bhati,
Production Assistance: Ashish Mahajan, T.Meyarivan, Produced
at Sarai Media Lab, Sarai/CSDS, Delhi.]
Notes
1) Tony Samuel, PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Intellectual
Asset Management Group, “Evaluating IP Rights: In Search of Brand
Value
in the
New Economy”
http://www.pwcglobal.com/Extweb/service.nsf/docid/210123EF9AEBAC1885256B96003428C6 [back]
2) A/S/L: A video, text and sound installation by Raqs Media
Collective that juxtaposes the protocols of interpersonal communication,
online labour, data outsourcing, and the making/unmaking of remote
agency in the ‘new’ economy. Presented at the Geography and the
Politics of Mobility exhibition, curated by Ursula Biemann for
the Generali Foundation, Vienna, (January – April 2003).
http://www.absolutearts.com/artsnews/2003/01/17/30667.html http://foundation.generali.at/exhibit/2003_1_geo_indexe.htm [back]
3) Raqs Media Collective, “Call Centre Calling: Technology,
Network and Location”, Sarai Reader 03: Shaping Technologies,
February 2003. http://www.sarai.net/journal/03pdf/177_183_raqsmediac.pdf
for more on the call center industry in India, see – Mark Landler, “Hi
I’m in Bangalore (But I Dare Not Tell)”, New
York Times (Technology Section) March 21, 2001.
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/21/technology/21CALL.html?ex=1054353600&en=7576033f99208ca6&ei=5070
India Calling – A Report on the Call Centre Industry in India
http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/2387/ [back]
4) Andrew Otwell, Medieval Manuscript Marginalia and Proverbs,
1995.
http://www.heyotwell.com/work/arthistory/marginalia.html [back]
5) Naomi Klein, “Argentina’s Luddite Rulers: Workers in the
Occupied Factories Have a Different Vision: Smash the Logic,
Not the Machines”,
Dissident Voice, April 25, 2003
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Articles4/Klein_Argentina.htm [back]
6) Dipesh Chakravarty, “Postcoloniality and the Artifice
of History: Who Speaks for ‘Indian’ Pasts”, Representations,
37 (Winter, 1992). [back]
7) William E. Connolly, “Neuropolitics: Thinking, Culture,
Speed”, Theory Out of Bounds, Number 23, Univ.
of Minnesota, 2002. [back]
Raqs Media Collective
Sarai–CSDS
29 Rajpur
Road, Delhi 110 054
www.raqsmediacollective.net
www.sarai.net
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