I had never heard the term "pseud" until I started posting on ilx.
Were you brought up by wolves or something?
― Tom D., Friday, 29 June 2007 15:19 (seventeen years ago) link
Huddled in the safety of the pseduo silk kimono.
― Scik Mouthy, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:20 (seventeen years ago) link
Oh balls. Here's the rest.
Huddled in the safety of a pseudo silk kimono wearing bracelets of smoke Naked of understanding Nicotine smears, long, long dried tears, invisible tears Safe in my own words, learning from my own words Cruel joke, cruel joke
Huddled in the safety of a pseudo silk kimono a morning mare rides In the starless shutters of my eyes The spirit of a misplaced childhood is rising to speak his mind To this orphan of heartbreak, disillusioned and scarred A refugee, refugee
No, seriously, is "pseud" some british thing?
― mh, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:23 (seventeen years ago) link
Not sure why the pseudo in front of the intellectual, why do you think he's a pseud (a term I find more used by anti-intellectuals than anyone else)
I have no problem with intellectuals, just with peeople who want to sound like intellectuals by smothering their analysis of Aqua or the like with critical theory speak. Being intellectual doesn't mean being unintelligible.
― Neil S, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:24 (seventeen years ago) link
"Pseud" as in pseudo-Freud? That's hilarious. Of course he's not a pseudo-intellectual (incidentally, the last time I heard that slur it was used by Hannity against Hitchens - nuff said).
Ban Zelda Zonk
Zelda Zonk, just so you know, there are a lot of morons round here. But if you accept the stormy climate, it's all good.
― Jeb, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:24 (seventeen years ago) link
'pseud' might be but 'pseudo-intellectual' seems like a fairly standard construction.
Of course he's not a pseudo-intellectual
he's pretty much the definish.
― That one guy that quit, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:25 (seventeen years ago) link
I really get into about one out of every five or ten posts, skim over a few here and there, and usually notice my eyes glazing over during most of the 'critical' talk over philosophers of the 20th century.
Yeah. k-punk strikes me as kind of an asshole (cf. Dissensus right before he quit) and possibly batshit insane to boot, but I like him anyway. I read his blog pretty regularly until it began to seem. ... predictable; I still find it really engaging, tho intermittently. Liked his writing on the Fall.
he is a classic pseud in that his ideas are all modifications of whatever hackademic gods he's worshipping to the thing in hand, and as with the bataille-on-paris thing on the reynolds thread it's ultimately a boring parlour game.
Hey, he's just DEEP INTO BATAILLE-LAND and is never coming out. I can dig it, sort of.
― xero, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:28 (seventeen years ago) link
incidentally, the last time I heard that slur it was used by Hannity against Hitchens - nuff said
So what you're saying is that because someone called Hitchens a pseudo-intellectual, the term is automatically an off-limits slur?
― Neil S, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:29 (seventeen years ago) link
http://www.stylusmagazine.com/articles/soulseeking/no-music-day.htm
tsk i do feel a bit tainted with zelda's "anti-intellectual" jibe now. really i have no problem with his going pseudo-ott over stuff, the breadth of his discourse, his pretension if that's what you want to call it; save for the fact that i find his actual ideas just really quite barren and predictable
plus he's fostered this whole claque of similar bloggers that make it into even more of a parlour game shut-in
― r|t|c, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:29 (seventeen years ago) link
I never thought of that, maybe it is
― Tom D., Friday, 29 June 2007 15:29 (seventeen years ago) link
really i have no problem with his going pseudo-ott over stuff, the breadth of his discourse, his pretension if that's what you want to call it
it's the way he uses it as a cloak to disguise the dearth of ideas which gets me - i am only ever able to tell when he starts writing about stuff that i know about though
― lex pretend, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:31 (seventeen years ago) link
k-punk uses 'anti-intellectual' a lot and it's lol-y mainly because his scope of what constitutes the, uh, 'realm of the intellectual', is so narrow. i have never, ever got the sense that he likes r'n'b or girls aloud or any of the other new music he writes about. i can believe he likes the smiths though.
― That one guy that quit, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:35 (seventeen years ago) link
I like his big attempt at consistency and systemisation. In the archives there is some brilliant writing on glam, postpunk, politics etc.
This hauntology stuff is like the systemisation overreaching itself and making do with the boring, comfortable Ghostbox aesthetic because it's so convenient for musing over. The results of these musings are completely palty too, it's so repetitive and never gets anywhere close to what it says it's doing.
― Alex xy, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:36 (seventeen years ago) link
The thing is, I can see he might be an intellectual you disagree with, or find his critical tools offputting, but I think it's plainly absurd to say he's a pseudo-intellectual, a pretend intellectual. He plainly knows his stuff and thinks about stuff and talks about it within an intellectual framework. Yeah, talking about popular culture within a Marxist/Lacanian/Baudrillardian framework is not going to be everyone's cup of tea, I'm not sure it's even my cup of tea. But it's not a priori pseudo-intellectual. As for dearth of ideas, come on.
― Zelda Zonk, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:36 (seventeen years ago) link
Oh aye, I did quote him there, but that was on teaching rather than on philosophy, per se.
― Scik Mouthy, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:37 (seventeen years ago) link
― Jeb, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:38 (seventeen years ago) link
I don't think k-punk is a pseud(o-intellectual) in the sense of not actually having read or thought about this stuff at length and in depth; it's just that he seems to be endlessly staking out and elaborating a position that is, among its other shortcomings, no longer at all fashionable.
― xero, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:40 (seventeen years ago) link
(but was about ten years ago, woe)
― xero, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:41 (seventeen years ago) link
i like k punk but spizzazz was more thought provoking.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:42 (seventeen years ago) link
Not really. That Hannity used it against Hitchens just proves that it's all too often used as a random slur against "real" intellectuals (I don't think many would argue that Hitchens isn't one - whether you like him or not). I'm all for its being used, but there's a time and place for it.
Fair enough, I'd agree that Hitchens may be a lot of things, but a pseud he is not. I'd stick by my assertion about k-punk above, though.
― Neil S, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:42 (seventeen years ago) link
hitchens is not a pseud exactly, but neither is he an intellectual; he's a saloon bar ranter and formerly entertaining journalist.
― That one guy that quit, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:44 (seventeen years ago) link
Well, if one definition of pseudo-intellectual is staking out positions that are no longer fashionable, I'll give it to you!
― Zelda Zonk, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:44 (seventeen years ago) link
my problem with reading much k-punk is that i have spent three years studying analytic philosophy and whilst i sort of decides that stuff wasn't "right" it has left me with a liking for clear argumentation. with k-punk it often seems to me he trips himself up over writing what essentially seem to be rather simple points. also i dunno how continental philosophy really works but some of the time he seems to merely use his chosen philosophers as appeals to authority, he could argue the point probably in more depth and more interestingly if he didn't just pull out so and so philosopher to "prove" whatever is the case. i don't read him that often tbh but his ideas seem kind of apocalyptic in a fashion i rather like but they lack urgency. it all seems rather remote compared to the fever of the likes of carmody and carlin but i guess they are doing something else altogether.
― acrobat, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:47 (seventeen years ago) link
i'd agree with this
also, this is as good a place as any to admit that while i don't reak kpunk much anymore, i'm well addicted to hyperstiti0n (highly highly toxic)
― gff, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:49 (seventeen years ago) link
xpost : It's not MY def. of pseudo-i -- that's just why I think it's easy to call him that. Also, acrobat OTM re authority & apocalypticism.
― xero, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:51 (seventeen years ago) link
i think 'pseud' usually *does* mean having done all the proper reading; in a way my problem with his corner of the blogosphere (and much of the academic world it's coming out of) is it's so relentlessly textual: everything is about connecting something some guy (badiou, zizek, baudrillard, whoever) said to certain cultural items other people have picked up on (grime, r'n'b, electropop). two fashions are being followed: blog music and philosophy. it's pseudy because it's a closed loop, nothing is produced, nothing is discovered; it's not specific ideas i disagree with necessarily, more the process itself. of course it's going to result in consistency and systemisation because the process is hermetic and won't allow any new or disruptive inputs: it all has to fit together. hence the overuse of the word 'precisely' (borrowed from zizek).
― That one guy that quit, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:52 (seventeen years ago) link
but some of the time he seems to merely use his chosen philosophers as appeals to authority, he could argue the point probably in more depth and more interestingly if he didn't just pull out so and so philosopher to "prove" whatever is the case.
A valid criticism I think, and kind of what I meant upthread when I said I let the Lacanian stuff wash over me. I think he does have some interesting things to say about a lot of stuff I'm interested in as well (Highsmith, Lynch, post-punk etc), but there's no need to appeal to Lacan or whoever to make the point. I guess I too find about 1 in 5 of his posts interesting (pretty good odds for a blog).
― Zelda Zonk, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:52 (seventeen years ago) link
K-Punk hits:
Glam The Fall Junior Boys Japan
― Alex xy, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:53 (seventeen years ago) link
it's pseudy because it's a closed loop ... the process is hermetic OK, yeah, that's exactly it. Sometimes that kinda works for me, sometimes not. ...I can just about imagine a k-punk post on The Hermetic. Maybe there has been one.
― xero, Friday, 29 June 2007 15:59 (seventeen years ago) link
OK, I probably wouldn't want to live and breathe the K Punk world. But I find it interesting to check in once in a while!
― Zelda Zonk, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:04 (seventeen years ago) link
k-punk is the klaxons of cultstud.
(...)
― r|t|c, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:08 (seventeen years ago) link
carmody and carlin are quite good comparative refs to bring up. i've never had the foggiest about what carmody's been on about, but nevertheless (and it's something much more than simple zealot fever) he's always been exciting and original, and i've nothing but respect for him. even when he's covered 'herr westwood and dipset nazism' or something equally, blatantly wrongheaded
carlin less so; i guess he comes like the bleeding heart humanist opposition, but really he's much the same as k-punk, ying and yang. sub the 'discourse' for the 'fever' and you've got the same "wah wah robo-bjork is crying inside ;_;" predictable guff. composing 50,0000 page threnodies every time an album comes out just isn't difficult if you can really be bothered - ditto with whatever k-punk gets up to, to my mind.
― r|t|c, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:09 (seventeen years ago) link
it often seems to me he trips himself up over writing what essentially seem to be rather simple points
This is kind of the problem with a lot of philosopher name-dropping writing I run into, in that it either awkwardly rewords some basic premises or is so self-consciously "deep" that I have trouble finding the point. Ideally, using a philosophical stance as a tangent to analyze pop culture (or culture at large) is a great idea, but often it seems like they're just two points thrown out and the blogging just kind of hints at the connecting line.
― mh, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:09 (seventeen years ago) link
If people cared more about the ideas and communicating them, than they did about knowing philosophers and academic terminology, the whole world would be better.
― Scik Mouthy, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:12 (seventeen years ago) link
If people cared more about the ideas FACTS and communicating them, than they did about knowing philosophers and academic terminology, the whole world would be better.
-- Scik Mouthy, Friday, June 29, 2007 10:12 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Link
― That one guy that quit, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:15 (seventeen years ago) link
are you suggesting some kind of objective writing about pop music enrique?
― acrobat, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:18 (seventeen years ago) link
yes nrq when what's being discussed are entirely subjective opinions on pop music, the FACTS are exactly what we should concern ourselves with!
xp
― lex pretend, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:18 (seventeen years ago) link
to be fair, k-punk is usually talking about political theory, really -- but um hang on no, there has to be some fact-content to criticism. ie 'how is this effect achieved?' is a fairly basic requirement. 'entirely subjective opinions' are best kept to blogs.... oh, i see what you did there.
― That one guy that quit, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:21 (seventeen years ago) link
my problem with reading much k-punk is that i have spent three years studying analytic philosophy and whilst i sort of decides that stuff wasn't "right" it has left me with a liking for clear argumentation. with k-punk it often seems to me he trips himself up over writing what essentially seem to be rather simple points. also i dunno how continental philosophy really works but some of the time he seems to merely use his chosen philosophers as appeals to authority, he could argue the point probably in more depth and more interestingly if he didn't just pull out so and so philosopher to "prove" whatever is the case. i don't read him that often tbh but his ideas seem kind of apocalyptic in a fashion i rather like but they lack urgency.
This is very otm for me, too. I studied a fair amount of continental philosophy during most of my university years as well some analytic, and without making substantive comments about either approach, I found the emphasis on clarity and precision in analytic/Anglo-American philosophy as something to really admire. Making your arguments as clear and transparent as possible is really a virtue in philosophy/criticism/anything, and the posts I've read of K-punk's seem so unnecessarily abstruse. I realize clarity can't always be expected in blog posts, but the points k-punk argues aren't so complex as to warrant such tangled prose.
It's a tough bit, though, because in philosophy you spend all day reading these mostly brilliant thinkers who happen to be completely terrible writers (Kant, Hegel, Marx most of the time, Lacan, Derrida, I mean these guys are truly awful writers. There are some exceptions of course -- Nietzsche is a great writer, I think, and so is Hume, Bertrand Russell, AJ Ayer. It's no coincidence that analytic philosophy takes so much influence from the last three I mentioned.)
It's fairly common, I think, for students of philosophy to think "well, this is just how philosophy/criticism is done -- the issues are so complex that you have to use complex language to describe them." Then these students grow up and become professors, and the tradition of bad writing continues.
― Mark Clemente, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:22 (seventeen years ago) link
with lacan it's supposed to be a deliberate tactic, the bad writing. must have been an odd translation gig: "make as inelegant as you can kthx".
― That one guy that quit, Friday, 29 June 2007 16:24 (seventeen years ago) link
I like him.
But that should be obvious. Cause I'm hoos and I like this kind of shit.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 29 June 2007 18:48 (seventeen years ago) link
-- r|t|c, Friday, June 29, 2007 9:29 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Link
http://kinofist.blogspot.com/2007/01/man-does-not-live-by-revolution.html
― That one guy that quit, Saturday, 30 June 2007 13:51 (seventeen years ago) link
Is that one article supposed to stand in for *everything* on *both* that guy's blogs?
I mean so what if it's curatorial or hermetic, is it so obviously ridiculous that people want to make a case for a particular aesthetic?
― Alex xy, Saturday, 30 June 2007 15:15 (seventeen years ago) link
I agree that they could do to engage more with the modern world in a less dismissive way, but humble pluralism on the other side is just as bad.
― Alex xy, Saturday, 30 June 2007 15:20 (seventeen years ago) link
that one article is on a collective blog that k-punk's involved in and is tied up with a film show that k-punk is involved in. it's a fair sample. there may be a case for the riefenstahl aesthetic -- i doubt it, tbh -- but owen's case for it is terrible. i hate the word 'curate', but that aside, there's nothing curatorial about plucking old films out of an old canon. is there any discovery involved in the enterprise?
― That one guy that quit, Saturday, 30 June 2007 15:36 (seventeen years ago) link
He wasn't arguing for the Riefenstahl aesthetic, he was arguing (not very thoroughly) that it differs from leftist modernism, and that the two can't be equated, like liberal critics tend to do.
Is there discovery? Sure, within a narrow field. If you are interested in how the legacy of modernism might fit in with modern left wing politics, then these art history posts are interesting.
― Alex xy, Saturday, 30 June 2007 15:58 (seventeen years ago) link
i am unconvinced that anyone is 'equating' them but, y'know, it's not exactly crazy to point out the manifest similarities. he never explains what his modernism entails anyway. i missed the part about modern left-wing politics in his post but here's how i read it:
There has always been a desperation among cultural conservatives to find the missing diabolical link that ties all their hatreds together.
REF PLZ
In cinema, this role tends to have been played by Leni Riefenstahl. In her work, we find the quickfire montage and sharp camera angles of the Soviet avant-garde, the shadowy chiaroscuro and fluid camera of the German expressionists, and the fixation on mass gatherings so beloved of the Socialist spartakiada public festivals.
ALSO, NAZIS
“A modernism from hell,” Guardian art critic Jonathan Jones called Triumph of the Will, comparing it to Battleship Potemkin in a long think-piece published last year, and thus the sneaking suspicion is quietly implanted, that, irrespective of Nazism, modernism itself was always-already from hell.
UH.
Jones himself puts it as follows, “to survey the cinema of modernism is to recognise its affinity for political extremes, and to realise that we are the lucky ones, enjoying the cinematic echoes of Metropolis in the architecture of Tate Modern's turbine hall before going into the museum cinema to savour those shadows - from a distance.”
OK, JONES IS A BIT WRONG TOO -- IT'S RIDIC TO CALL 'METROPOLIS' MODERNIST, UNLESS HG WELLS IS ALSO A MODERNIST... BUT MAYBE MONOLITHIC NOTIONS OF MODERNISM ARE MAD GAY WHEN YOU THINK ABOUT IT.
The point here is not just a matter of taste or opinion about different aesthetic styles, but rather embraces the very idea of the aesthetic as such.
AH.
None other than J.G. Ballard himself has put this point plainly. “I have always admired modernism and wish the whole of London could be rebuilt in the style of Michael Manser’s brilliant Heathrow Hilton,” he wrote in the Guardian last year, riffing off the V&A's moneyspinning (“Utopia soap! Only five pounds!”) exhibition Modernism: Designing a New World, “but I know that most people, myself included, find it difficult to be clear-eyed at all times and rise to the demands of a pure and unadorned geometry. Architecture supplies us with camouflage, and I regret that no-one could fall in love inside the Heathrow Hilton. By contrast, people are forever falling in love inside the Louvre and the National Gallery... Fearing ourselves, we need our illusions to protect us... Modernism lacked mystery and emotion, was a little too frank about the limits of human nature’.
JG BALLARD IN OTM SHOCK?
In other words, dehumanizing, unromantic and brutal, modernism failed to respect the frailty of human nature, to the extent that a human disaster then naturally followed.
I DON'T THINK SANE PEOPLE THINK MODERNIST ARCHITECTURE 'CAUSED' THE GULAG... BUT THE EUPHEMIZED "HUMAN DISASTER" HAPPENED DURING THE FUCKEN RUSSIAN CIVIL WAR.
“Death always calls on the very best architects,” Ballard darkly concludes, adding a note of the sinister to this basically conservative schema. Architecture is best left to merely adorn, tradition best left to be venerated, thought best left to be hesitant, and utopia certainly left always to be deferred.
WHY, WHAT ON EARTH COULD HAVE GIVEN BALLARD THIS GRIM OUTLOOK ON LIFE...?
This, then, against the background of the continuuing, pressing social imperative, to fall in love, or to put it another way, to breed.
"SOCIAL"
Elsewhere in his piece, Ballard alludes to the profoundly modernist environs of London Zoo, where last year, a guilty conservationalism, deeply unnerved by the Constructivist legacy left to them by Berthold Lubetkin and his Tecton architectural group, replaced the water of the penguin pool with woodchips, and moved the penguins to another location, in a desperate attempt to encourage them to produce more little baby penguins. So that now, under the impossible swoops and curves of the boards, a pair of porcupines sit disgruntled, contemplating their future, like a young professional, recently married couple, silently watching the news in their small ersatz cottage in some urban enclave somewhere, gingerly taking their first steps on the housing ladder.
PROJECTION MUCH
Dreary conformity, then or fascist death: such is the basic contemporary ideological ‘choice’.
OR DISINTERRING SOVIET AESTHETICS OF THE '20S, OBVIOUSLY
And yet, there are two telling moments in Triumph of the Will which resist the tedium of this trajectory, and suggest that the identification between fascism and modernism is not quite as clear as it is often suggested. These moments occur within minutes of each other, in the scenes shot inside Albert Speer’s vast, abstracted-classical Zeppelinfeld.
First, a distinguishing gesture: Hitler, alluding to rumours of disunity (specifically, the disunity that led to the murderous events of the Night of the Long Knives two months earlier) proclaims that the Nazi Party is, on the contrary, utterly solid. “It stands as firm,” he barks, slamming his fist down upon a stone, “as diese Block hier!” This apparent piece of pure political theatre in fact alludes to a deep ideological division. In response to “Der Ring”, the Bauhaus-centred, left-leaning German modernist architectural collective, the Nazi wing of the profession formed “Der Block”: fixed, where the modernists were dynamic, volkish where they were cosmopolitan, made for eternity rather than for a society in flux. Solid, immutable, fit to last to the end of the Thousand Year Reich. Riefenstahl’s lovingly shot stone incarnates this solidity.
OH MY FUCKING GOD
Second, an apparent blot on the copy: soon after Hitler reminds us of the Reich's firmness, the camera pitches up to gaze at the swastika-festooned tribune above him. Unmistakeably, running up and down it, is a lift with a cinematographer perched inside. Our attention isn’t exactly drawn to it, but it isn’t hidden either. What is happening here? Could it be that Riefenstahl is indulging in a kind of pseudo-Brechtian laying bare of the device? Are we being reminded of the construction of reality that lies behind all this?
As it is unlikely that this was simply a mistake (it's all too meticulous for that) it can perhaps be seen as a signature, along the lines of Hitchcock popping up here and there in his films.
After all, the construction isn’t really threatened by it: it doesn’t provoke thought in the sense of the modernist ‘making strange.’ Indeed, it doesn't really provoke thought at all, rather, seeming to serve instead an essentially narcissitic, parasitic, even idiotic function - like the’Hi Mom!’ of the US soldiers in the background of television news, undistracted by the destruction they’ve created.
OH MY FUCKING GOD. NB: EXACTLY HOW BORING IS THE NOTION OF "LAYING BARE THE DEVICE" AS MASTER-DEVICE OF "MODERNISM"?
The use of artificial light in this film is one of the elements that most disturbed Weimar avant gardists.
INTERESTING TO KNOW BACKSTORY HERE. I GUESS THEY WERE DISTURBED IN EXILE...
Riefenstahl's montage always takes care to emphasize electric lettering, ironically a technology pioneered in Germany by the Jewish architect Erich Mendelsohn. He, of course, was horrified to see his creation used so powerfully by the Nazis, though, they did not, of course, use it on any buildings even remotely resembling his own. Notice the moment we see, lit up at night, the house where Hitler is staying: a shining swastika and a burning “HEIL HITLER,” beaming out from a kitsch set of tweedy Bavarian lodgings.
I'M MISSING THE POINT HERE
The asynchronic film sound advocated by Dziga Vertov and Hanns Eisler also finds a strange correspondent here.
EVERYBODY WAS ADVOCATING THIS BY THE EARLY THIRTIES, NOT JUST EISLER AND VERTOV.
The first quarter of Triumph of the Will is silent, with a tacked-on soundtrack, a glutinous melange of music and cheering, overdubbed onto it.
BIT LIKE IN HITCHCOCK'S EARLY SOUND FILMS THEN, ONLY MORE NAZI
What we hear is not what we see. No one speaks in synch until we reach the conference room: thus, we are given to understand the Nazi hierarchy of power amounts to an essentially natural one, with Nazi leaders in effect identified as the men possessing the most fundamental temporal fidelity.
"THUS" DOING A LOT OF WORK
The lovingly shot boys of the first quarter, gaily wrestling, showering, cutting each others’ hair, evoke the body culture of Weimar, a social trend also foregrounded in the only Communist film of the Republic, Slatan Dudow and Bertolt Brecht's 1932 masterpiece Kuhle Wampe. And yet, again, despite this apparent similarity, a vital distinction pertains here as well. For all her jollity, with Riefenstahl, everything is much more stiff, sexless, ritualized, wholesome, and crucially, male, in marked contrast to the explicit feminist undercurrents in the earlier film.
OK
This last point draws attention to a wider historical division between fascist and communist bodies. As curious as it may seem, in the pre-1933 period even nudists were politically polarised, with Adolf Koch’s socialist naturists pitted against both the Free Sunland movement and propagandists for the “nordic nude” like Hans Suren.
WHY IS THAT "CURIOUS"?
Photographs of Suren and his beautiful boys immediately evoke Riefenstahl with their hard, glossy, tensed bodies. Think also of the sequence late on where, intercut with the speeches, we see a succession of gloriously cheekboned Aryan youths, staring forwards, shadowed via stunning chiaroscuro into angular abstracts.
For all her formal daring, the true relationship of Riefenstahl to the avant-garde, can be summed up quite succintly, in the seemingly endless parade of marchers that takes up much of the last third of Triumph of the Will. Germany, it seems, is on the move again, and the effect is either hypnotic, or utterly interminable, depending on your boredom threshold, or perhaps, your politics. In either case, the crucial point is this: here, whatever else we see, the cross-cutting always takes us back to Hitler, who salutes each new flank.
At one point it is broken up by percussive cannon blasts. At a similar moment in Vertov’s Three Songs of Lenin, each blast leads to a chain of association, outside of the immediate subject along lines of thought and development. Here, each blast only returns us to Hitler.
OH SNAP, THAT'S COMFORTING
At another point we see a row of tanks, immediately followed by Chariots, carried along by galloping horses. Thus the mechanised warfare of Nazism, aligns itself ethically with the outmoded forms of the past. The technical properties of the State and the Director may be sometimes innovative, but in the end, the ideas they carry herald something far more atavistic.
JESUS CHRIST
― That one guy that quit, Saturday, 30 June 2007 16:02 (seventeen years ago) link
1st I wasn't trying to defend that article.
It doesn't even try to say why constructivism is better politically (just thin refs to Brecht and montage). The anti-liberal bit is kind of lifted from Zizek, and he does that better.
― Alex xy, Saturday, 30 June 2007 16:29 (seventeen years ago) link
There is much better stuff on 'The Measures Taken' blog, but if you are looking at it from a position completely hostile to the Soviet avant-garde etc. then I wouldn't bother.
― Alex xy, Saturday, 30 June 2007 16:33 (seventeen years ago) link
a weird argument i remember with MF -- on a vanished iteration of the k-punk blog in maybe 2005-ish, in the comments, and so i think doubly long-lost to web-rot -- was cheerfully throwing at him the criticism that he was terrible at dialectics. i forget even why -- it was probably a pop-cultural discussion, i never engaged him abt politics
anyway he came back (disarmingly in the sense that i had no comeback, and memorably in the sense that i knew there and then that this was a big thing to say, and never forgot it): "i'm glad i'm not -- dialectical thinking is a bad thing!"
well, it turns out -- i didn't find this out for years -- that nick land loathed dialectics, and he was still involved with CCRU at that time (and i don't think land had made his break for the grimmer neo-reactionary shores yet) (accelrationism was also a few years off). but the funny thing is -- as i realised when i was reading this book to review it, and as jenny t has much more space to say nore about it, he *is* a dialectical thinker, in the sense that he has two contradictory sides to his thought which he uses to work on one another. the gentle attention to small intimate subtleties and the world-bestriding cyber-amplified world of implacable historical momentum. he spoke both languages -- and they did operate on one another -- but i'm not sure how much he consciously decided to explore this as it was happening, or even (actally) how much he was aware of it as a forked tendency in him. war and scission were modes he chose, i think knowingly submitting to the flawed perceptions that come with them -- and they gave him his reach, but i don't actually think they were the best of him.
― mark s, Thursday, 2 May 2019 17:19 (five years ago) link
Is yr review online anywhere mark?
― Stevie T, Friday, 3 May 2019 09:42 (five years ago) link
it's in the wire, so i guess yes if yr a subscriber and can access their archive but basically no
― mark s, Friday, 3 May 2019 09:43 (five years ago) link
did zero get up to some more bullshit?
Could all those who continue to confuse @RepeaterBooks with Z*ro please read this note of clarification, and also share as widely as possible pic.twitter.com/7h5aNCYbRI— Alex Niven (@Alex_Niven) June 5, 2018
― untuned mass damper (mh), Wednesday, 4 September 2019 23:39 (five years ago) link
(that tweet is old but was just retweeted by Niven)
― untuned mass damper (mh), Wednesday, 4 September 2019 23:40 (five years ago) link
I work in further education, like k-punk did, and I once printed a quote from one of his blogs and stuck it on all the noticeboards at work, because it described exactly our situation: " lecturers are conscripted into performing endless bureaucratic procedures which and have nothing to do with their ostensible function (to improve teaching and learning) and everything to do with the concealed function of improving the representation of the college through the abstract mechanisms of paperwork and statistics. This has served to create a virtual college, which is prioritised over the real college in every conceivable way."
― Dr X O'Skeleton, Thursday, 5 September 2019 22:25 (five years ago) link
https://www.residentadvisor.net/reviews/24137
Since Mark Fisher's death in 2017, his acolytes have cemented his legacy in philosophy, literature and music. They've done so through anthology books, public talks and now, with the release of On Vanishing Land, vinyl records. The album comes courtesy of Hyperdub's Kode9, who has launched a spoken-word sub-label called Flatlines. The label's first release is this audiovisual essay, made in 2006 and exhibited in 2013, which Fisher worked on with the philosopher, writer and sound artist Justin Barton. On Vanishing Land is a 40-minute narration of a walk Barton and Fisher took along the Suffolk coast. It also includes snippets from interviews they conducted that introduce themes of long-lost societies and the machinations of capital to the piece's main subject: the idea of the eerie. These voices accompany an ambient score that features contemporary experimental musicians such as Gazelle Twin, Raime, Skjølbrot, Baron Mordant and Ekoplekz. But unless you're familiar with the artists' hallmarks, it won't likely be clear whose music is playing when.
On Vanishing Land is a 40-minute narration of a walk Barton and Fisher took along the Suffolk coast. It also includes snippets from interviews they conducted that introduce themes of long-lost societies and the machinations of capital to the piece's main subject: the idea of the eerie. These voices accompany an ambient score that features contemporary experimental musicians such as Gazelle Twin, Raime, Skjølbrot, Baron Mordant and Ekoplekz. But unless you're familiar with the artists' hallmarks, it won't likely be clear whose music is playing when.
― j., Saturday, 21 September 2019 19:50 (five years ago) link
In W.G. Sebald's footsteps? Either way, I'm very curious to hear this, thanks for the link.
― Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 22 September 2019 11:40 (five years ago) link
KP deeply disliked sebald, so no (but yes)
unless you're familiar with the artists' hallmarks, it won't likely be clear whose music is playing when
as a way of glossing "it all sounds exactly the same" this made me lol a bit
― mark s, Sunday, 22 September 2019 11:53 (five years ago) link
You're right, I hadn't remembered that. From the Wire:
Rob Turner writes of Mark and his hauntological partner-in-crime Justin Barton:
The pair’s wonky tour guide, shifting from nerdy digressions on Brian Eno to enthusiastic riffs on TV horror shows, is a reply to WG Sebald’s celebrated study of the same coastline The Rings of Saturn. In a 2011 essay for Sight & Sound, Fisher described that book as a trudge through Suffolk that entirely failed to look at the place, offering instead “mittel-brow miserabilism, a stock disdain, in which the human settlements are routinely dismissed as shabby”. Here, in apparent solidarity with the humans trapped in this realm, the narrator is gripped by the features of the landscape, reading lost poems of late capitalism in the stacked iron containers of Felixstowe terminal.
I agree that Sebald's Suffolk 'trudge' wasn't about Suffolk or that coast per se, but that wasn't really Sebald's point to begin with. Either way, I'm looking forward to this.
― Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 22 September 2019 11:58 (five years ago) link
He is kinda right. Austerlitz > Rings of Saturn in my book. Though I must say, after spending a few days in Great Yarmouth this summer, it was kinda funny reading his description of Lowestoft. But also really harsh.
― Frederik B, Sunday, 22 September 2019 17:36 (five years ago) link
Harsh is ok, though.
Just listened to the record. It wasn't off putting - it was rather special to hear Mark's voice in this way - but as a spoken word album, well, it is what it is, and nothing more: you hear it once, enjoy it, but probably will never listen to it again. I hate that this is how it goes, but it is how it goes.
― Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 23 September 2019 20:18 (five years ago) link
I've been really enjoying On Vanishing Land and have listened to it repeatedly. It reminded me a bit of Patrick Keiller's films, Robinson in Space particularly.
― neilasimpson, Tuesday, 24 September 2019 16:30 (five years ago) link
RIP Mark Fisher on the anniversary of his death. I taught Capitalist Realism this fall, and was pleasantly surprised how much students connected with Fisher's ability to connect the ongoing crisis of capitalism with depression and anxiety. He saw something.https://t.co/vONLSBLuSA— Jason Read (@Unemployedneg) January 13, 2020
― j., Monday, 13 January 2020 19:01 (four years ago) link
I liked him as a lecturer.
― tokyo rosemary, Tuesday, 14 January 2020 05:28 (four years ago) link
https://sydneyreviewofbooks.com/essay/mark-fisher-blogosphere/
― umsworth (emsworth), Friday, 6 March 2020 21:03 (four years ago) link
:(
man, really feels like these trajectories have sped right up pic.twitter.com/j2ZV0G2ESf— michael (@Sisyphusa) July 6, 2020
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 6 July 2020 21:09 (four years ago) link
nina power is now writing in the telegraph about cancel culture
― plax (ico), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 16:58 (four years ago) link
lol, didn't click yr link before posting
― plax (ico), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 16:59 (four years ago) link
honestly fisher would have been on her side
― If you choose too long a name, your new display name will be truncated in (Left), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 20:52 (four years ago) link
this isnt a big development, nina has been on youtube with some very dodgy people over the last couple of years, she always has that look on her face where she's just said something a bit naughty,
― Anti-Cop Ponceortium (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 20:59 (four years ago) link
only a finite amount of books you can read in a lifetime, and an infinite amount of tedious and horrible writers!
― calzino, Tuesday, 7 July 2020 21:05 (four years ago) link
^^^ truth.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 7 July 2020 21:06 (four years ago) link
Still working my way through “Capitalist Realism,” so grateful for his provocations. https://t.co/N19DxsR7Dp— Zoé (@ztsamudzi) July 12, 2020
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 12 July 2020 14:45 (four years ago) link
https://crackmagazine.net/2023/01/kode9-releases-previously-unheard-conversation-with-mark-fisher/
Kode9 has shared a previously unheard recording of a conversation between himself and the late Mark Fisher, 6 years after his passing. The recording is from a conversation between the producer and theorist from 1998.According to a note shared on Kode9’s Instagram, the conversation “was the first of a series of recorded conversations whose aim was to explicate/clarify/transmit the embryonic mythos.”He continued: “Due to the mnemonic fade and/or nonrecovery of other minidiscs, it is unclear whether subsequent recordings existed”.
According to a note shared on Kode9’s Instagram, the conversation “was the first of a series of recorded conversations whose aim was to explicate/clarify/transmit the embryonic mythos.”
He continued: “Due to the mnemonic fade and/or nonrecovery of other minidiscs, it is unclear whether subsequent recordings existed”.
― "Spaghetti" Thompson (Pheeel), Tuesday, 17 January 2023 22:58 (one year ago) link
https://thequietus.com/news/tariq-goddard-repeater-zero-books-mark-fisher-statement/
Tariq Goddard the co-founder and publisher of Zero & Repeater books is stepping down from both titles today, it has been announced. Goddard, an author and tQ contributor, founded Zero in 2009 with Mark Fisher to combat “anti-intellectualism” in modern culture and went on to publish key works by Eugene Thacker and Owen Hatherly, as well as the groundbreaking Capitalist Realism by Fisher himself. The pair left Zero in 2014 to co-found Repeater with Watkins Media alongside Al Niven and Tam Shlaim, where they published more notable work by the likes of Dawn Foster, Robert Barry and David Stubbs. In 2021 Watkins bought Zero, bringing it back under the same ownership as Repeater. In a statement released via Watkins this morning, Goddard says: “Repeater and Zero Books are publishing imprints that have become a culture. That culture will endure longer than the individuals that helped bring it about, and although I will be leaving the imprints, it is impossible to leave what they have created. Success in business is easily measured in sales and exposure, but influencing a block of time, registers in a more general and less personal way. The strength and influence of Repeater and Zero Books is felt as much in the publishing ether, and in the creation of our own community and niche, as it is in market share or famous names. Both imprints followed the simple brief of trying to discover what was happening, and create it if it could not be found. After seventeen years I go with the deepest gratitude to the friends that contributed to that process, who worked for us and with me, and to all of you that supported our titles in numbers we hardly dreamed of in 2007/8. “As a writer I have never thought of our, or any authors, as exalted beings, despite sharing the motivation to try and and attain such heights in print, but I believe I have understood them better than I do other people, and I will miss them all, certainly more than some of them I have crossed swords with might suppose. It is always surprising when different types of author have recourse to use exactly the same phrase, especially when it is not a particularly writerly one, and in the last few weeks that has been to thank me for ‘taking a chance on’ them. “I want to thank them all for taking a chance on me, and to you, our readership, for taking a chance on us. Goodnight and joy be with you all.”
Goddard, an author and tQ contributor, founded Zero in 2009 with Mark Fisher to combat “anti-intellectualism” in modern culture and went on to publish key works by Eugene Thacker and Owen Hatherly, as well as the groundbreaking Capitalist Realism by Fisher himself.
The pair left Zero in 2014 to co-found Repeater with Watkins Media alongside Al Niven and Tam Shlaim, where they published more notable work by the likes of Dawn Foster, Robert Barry and David Stubbs. In 2021 Watkins bought Zero, bringing it back under the same ownership as Repeater.
In a statement released via Watkins this morning, Goddard says: “Repeater and Zero Books are publishing imprints that have become a culture. That culture will endure longer than the individuals that helped bring it about, and although I will be leaving the imprints, it is impossible to leave what they have created. Success in business is easily measured in sales and exposure, but influencing a block of time, registers in a more general and less personal way. The strength and influence of Repeater and Zero Books is felt as much in the publishing ether, and in the creation of our own community and niche, as it is in market share or famous names. Both imprints followed the simple brief of trying to discover what was happening, and create it if it could not be found. After seventeen years I go with the deepest gratitude to the friends that contributed to that process, who worked for us and with me, and to all of you that supported our titles in numbers we hardly dreamed of in 2007/8.
“As a writer I have never thought of our, or any authors, as exalted beings, despite sharing the motivation to try and and attain such heights in print, but I believe I have understood them better than I do other people, and I will miss them all, certainly more than some of them I have crossed swords with might suppose. It is always surprising when different types of author have recourse to use exactly the same phrase, especially when it is not a particularly writerly one, and in the last few weeks that has been to thank me for ‘taking a chance on’ them.
“I want to thank them all for taking a chance on me, and to you, our readership, for taking a chance on us. Goodnight and joy be with you all.”
― Elvis Telecom, Friday, 19 July 2024 02:04 (three months ago) link