A loose set of blogbooks, each a series of considerations on poetry and poetics, working progressively past the concerns of the Language and post-Language poets and their devolution into aestheticisms. "Post-language" in its engagement with the extra-linguistic concerns of both Tibetan and Euro-American philosophies, it also simply posts language to work toward the form of a practice of anti-aesthetics as an answer to contemporary poetic and political theory. It is an exercise book.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
No Object #9: Note on Buddhist Thought and Hegel's Sense of Limits
On page 112 of "For they know not what they do", Zizek comments in an attempt at clarifying Hegel's concept of "limits" that the signifier reaches toward the Real and falls short inside the limit of signifying; it always already "goes wrong in relation to itself and the object inscribes itself in the blank opened by this failure." Madhyamaka philosophy says the object is built of three things: causes, relations to/of its parts, and our conceptual apparatus attempting to signify all this at the limit of re-ification. Both angles say the same thing in their tangled idioms: we meet the world in a ground established by our limits at the task of meeting it; this is its existence for us.
Friday, October 25, 2013
No Object #8: Charlie McCarthyism & Palimpsestasis
The idea of “class struggle” does not
name a thing but rather the urge
to again expose class as we must when
the Democrat-wing of the Hegemony tries to become
“the voice of the middle class” and thereby
avoids the fact of its
“ventriloquization” by the 1 %.
When the Honors program at your college
turns away from race to questions of
beautiful thought or non-racialized
environmentalism or pro-choice or
anti-death-penalty politics, we have
stasis because class is
actually erased or written over as if in a
“palimpsestasis.”
The party provides something new to worry over
while forgetting that women, prisoners, and species are
victims of money: “tutto che scintille…”
can draw your eyes away,
and money confers
“aristo”-cracy
only thru the myth of how naturally
“cream rises to the top.”
The struggle to bring a new layer of struggle
to public attention fails when
it gets translated back into
this tongue of power that comes from
the belly of the invisible beast:
ventriloquism for the dummy is
spouting talk from another’s guts
while the mouth just smiles.
Thursday, October 24, 2013
No Object #7: When a Subject Objects
Zizek opines, in "For they know not what they do" (2nd ed., London: Verso, 2002), that "a signifying chain is 'subjectivized' precisely by way of its metaphoricity: what we call 'subject' is ... a name for the very gap that prevents human language from becoming a neutral tool for designation of some objective state of things... . In other words, our speech is 'subjectivized' precisely in so far as it never 'says directly what it wants to say'." That's on page 49, but he goes further with this later in a footnote on page 95 where he asserts that his hero Lacan would have it that "it is not enough to say that the subject's identity is always, constitutively, truncated, dispersed because of the intrusion of an irreducible outside" because "the 'subject' is nothing but the name for this 'mutilation,' for this impossibility of the 'substance' to realize itself fully" in us. This is in a note to a paragraph that asserts that the "'identity' of an object consists in the feature that re-marks the asemic space of its inscription" with what is always already "one trope too many" in the attempt to designate the object precisely. All that philosophy baggage is part of Zizek's careful and thorough project of reclaiming Hegel's original sense of dialectics as including the little excess by which the object is out of our grasp and how we sense ourselves really only in this subjective grasping effort. That is what makes the world, as we know it, go round. This concept opposes the most common "objectivism" and reaches toward the greater reach of The soi-disant Objectivists. This becomes more engaging when the "object" and "subject" are grasped in a politico-historical dimension, and more engaged, of course. On page 100, simply by putting the words "class struggle" in the objective position, Zizek unfolds a sharp example: "Although 'class struggle' is nowhere directly given as a positive entity, it none the less functions, in its very absence, as the point of reference enabling us to locate every social phenomenon not by relating it to class struggle as its ultimate meaning ('transcendental meaning') but by conceiving it as an(other) attempt to conceal and 'patch-up' the rift of the 'class struggle,' to efface its traces." This reading tool lets us grasp things as having that lost dimension of effacement not quite in them but without which they are not what they truly are but only what they would be seen as.
This very computer offers itself as a neutral tool accessing a common space, but as soon as "I" put "class struggle" next to it both "neutral" and "common" have to answer to class differences in access to and accent in this machine's usage.
This very computer offers itself as a neutral tool accessing a common space, but as soon as "I" put "class struggle" next to it both "neutral" and "common" have to answer to class differences in access to and accent in this machine's usage.
Friday, September 27, 2013
No Object #6: The Quantum Mechanics of Protest
Apparently, the protest simply does not possess both a position and a momentum simultaneously.
It follows that there is an intrinsic fuzziness in the microworld that is manifested whenever we attempt to measure two incompatible observable qualities, such as position and momentum. Among other things, this fuzziness demolishes the intuitive idea of a protest moving along a distinct path or trajectory in space. A quantum projectile cannot have both at once.
In daily life, we take it for GRANTed that strict laws of cause and effect direct the bullet to its target along a precisely defined geometrical path in space. We would not doubt that when the bullet arrives at its target its point of arrival represents the end-point of a continuous curve which started at the barrel of the gun. No so for protests.
It is sometimes convenient to think of each protest as somehow possessing an infinity of different paths, each of which contributes to its behavior. This is how the protest can keep track of what is happening throughout an extended region of space. The fuzziness in its activity enables it to "feel out" many different routes.
(Thanks to The Ghost in the Atom)
It follows that there is an intrinsic fuzziness in the microworld that is manifested whenever we attempt to measure two incompatible observable qualities, such as position and momentum. Among other things, this fuzziness demolishes the intuitive idea of a protest moving along a distinct path or trajectory in space. A quantum projectile cannot have both at once.
In daily life, we take it for GRANTed that strict laws of cause and effect direct the bullet to its target along a precisely defined geometrical path in space. We would not doubt that when the bullet arrives at its target its point of arrival represents the end-point of a continuous curve which started at the barrel of the gun. No so for protests.
It is sometimes convenient to think of each protest as somehow possessing an infinity of different paths, each of which contributes to its behavior. This is how the protest can keep track of what is happening throughout an extended region of space. The fuzziness in its activity enables it to "feel out" many different routes.
(Thanks to The Ghost in the Atom)
Sunday, September 22, 2013
No Object #5
It is the urge to read the picture showing up with the words as "illustration" that makes possible the slight delay entered when there's some doubt about that. When it is not so obvious that the picture shows what the words are saying, what becomes obvious is the delay itself. As Zizek wrote in For they know not what they do (Verso, 1991, rev. 2002): "This dialogical economy therefore implies a purely logical temporality: a temporal scansion between the moment of expectation and the moment of its disappointment, a minimal delay of the second part of the tautology. Without this minimal temporality, the proposition A = A remains a simple affirmation of identity and cannot produce the effect of pure contradiction." He is talking about Hegel's commentary on "God is ... God," but the dissolution works likewise, as it can do in words alone when reference is delayed; however, there people turn away or merely back to some quality in the words themselves.
Sunday, July 7, 2013
No Object #4
For Kipling
If
the assumption is that the world is badly screwed up,
If
we realize that both social relations and personal relations are screwed up by the social system of capital investment and growth,
If
we get it that this is what makes even the environment steadily deteriorate,
If
the sense of relations sweeping thru the social, personal, and environmental also extends to the inner (intra-) personal,
If
language can be seen to be a focus at the core of all this,
If
consciousness shows thru as the very core,
If
consciousness can be changed by experience of awarenesses playing across language and other perceptual relations,
then
poetry matters, especially where it can stop objectifications from reifying "the world."
Thursday, July 4, 2013
No Object #3
Nicole Brossard writes in French but has her books readily translated. In her most recent in English, there is this that fits this project:
in each language our violence is intact
we inhale it with its collisions
its t/errors and small print
then in 3steps in a Neues museum
stroke of the bow
an image deflects our attention
This is a section from a serial poem called "Piano Topology" in a series of poems called "White Piano" in a book called White Piano (Toronto: Coach House, 2013). It deals with the image on the cover of that book too, a photo of an installation called Missa that is made of many identical pairs of shoes hanging all in the same walking pose from wires, piano wires perhaps to be bowed. The resonance "deflects our attention" and calls it toward resonances. This is the no-object theory at work with and beyond imagery. Now you see it and you don't.
in each language our violence is intact
we inhale it with its collisions
its t/errors and small print
then in 3steps in a Neues museum
stroke of the bow
an image deflects our attention
This is a section from a serial poem called "Piano Topology" in a series of poems called "White Piano" in a book called White Piano (Toronto: Coach House, 2013). It deals with the image on the cover of that book too, a photo of an installation called Missa that is made of many identical pairs of shoes hanging all in the same walking pose from wires, piano wires perhaps to be bowed. The resonance "deflects our attention" and calls it toward resonances. This is the no-object theory at work with and beyond imagery. Now you see it and you don't.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)