My Photo

Recent Comments

October 26, 2007

fragments and death... towards late bloging

To write in fragments: this is the mode du jour of the late blog style. It is a hysterical, overwrought and supercharged style, symptomatic of the anxiety that attends anything in its late phase. The late style stinks of death, wreaks of an institution in terminal decay, but also holding that end off, keeping it all alive with a supreme effort of will, a willfulness that is written across every prosaic spasm; the late modality, then, is a sysyphian modality.

My friends recently gave a beautiful and challenging talk at my university about the late and posthumous voice. What strikes me in this juxtaposition (late and posthumous) is just how unstable the juxtaposition is, and therefore how intriguing, how gloriously productive. Italian Germanist Massimo Cacciari's  Dallo Steinhof, translated into English as Posthumous People,  opens with Nietzsche’s famous Maxim: ‘It is only after death that we will enter our life and come alive, oh, very much alive, we posthumous people!’  Nietzsche’s textual self-projection into an abstracted reader-reception after his death touches on a ubiquitous process that had been under way in the Hapsburg lands since the 1850s and which continue right into our own predicament of the late modern – the careful reorganization of education around homogenized standards of reading and an immersion of students into and out of tradition: a kind of gentle dipping motion, like sheep in need of a good barrier against the pests and diseases of the vernacular.  Cacciari’s complex but beautiful account of the intellectual and artistic world of fin-de-siècle Vienna points in essence to the observation, metaphorically cast from the Steinhof (a hill above the metropolis on which stands the church of Sankt Leopold designed by Otto Wagner), that tradition and innovation are here ranged against each other, in productive but deadly conflict:

The symmetrical, repetitive rhythm is accentuated from the outside by a revetment of thin marble blocks. The iron clamps and bolts that keep them in place, rimmed with copper leaf borders, give a sense of motion to these walls, yet without any monumental emphasis and without any concession to ornament. Inside, the building’s perfect measure of basic forms is joined, without contrast, by the multicoloured clarity of light that streams through the stained glass windows. Here is the meeting, never realised so well, of the principles of tradition and quotation on the one hand and the Nervenleben [vitality] of the Secession Movement’s images and colour on the other.

In these two juxtapositions (late and posthumous and tradition and innovation), which refuse absolutely to coincide or resonate with each other, we can detect something of what seems to be at stake in the blogging moment (and it is a moment: this too will pass), a provocative and yet utterly hopeless questioning of the extent to which speaking and writing might have an intimate connection.

I do no want to emblamatize the writing/speaking binarism or link the two poles to a simple presence/absence oscillation. It is better, it seems to me, to think of medialities, the materializations that each allows and forbids: when one dose this, their relation is not binaristic, but differentiated along a line of medial fields (channels, ruts, dikes) and speaking and writing are close, very close, but not structurally summative, not able to grasp the full complexity of the late modern imagination of what it is possible to mean.

The late  and posthumous voices are thus fragments, parcels of symbolic material hat have broken off and  set adrift in a free from reign of  terror, of joy, of agony.

This is the logic of the fragment: to run free in chains, to play in strict discipline, to tarry and to leave, to conjure and to bury.

Late indeed; posthumous, certainly.

August 19, 2006

readers: a pole

Well I did a bit of thinking about reading, and now something a bit less well-shaped (if possible) about readers, those rare an shy creatures that skulk in dark and damp places, and never let you know they are there.

Actually, that's not quite true. I have one or two readers who do not call by for my fabulous wit or my elegant turn of phrase or even for the fabulousness of my political musings (honest, they don't....:-)). There are one or two of them that are, wait for it, (are you sitting down, are you, are you?) my FRIENDS.

This extraordinary discovery has hit me quite hard, actually: I had preferred a certain quietude and anonymity to this blogging thing (I prefer people not to know my gender, for example) but when I got a phone call from a close friend last week, worried if I was OK because of something I had written on my blog, I have begun to radically rethink the meaning of this blogging thing....

My anxieties about the unbearable blandness of the me-ing of it all aside, it's clear that, when friends read what you post, there are codes, meanings, double foldings of the words, that are not always available to other readers. One comment I get recently, which took me aback was 'I know who you were referring to there'... actually I wasn't referring to the person in question at all....

In a way, a community of readers is a set of points in the cartography of discourse-making: where some might read to encounter ideas, or turns of phrase or a certain political solidarity, other read to glimpse something of the person. There are at least two (and, obviously many more) kinds of readers implicit to this description: the reader who consumes in anonymity, who is happy to read and re-read and to consume slowly, thoughtfully. The other is a kind of smash-and-grab reader who drops in for a quick look, clicks around and leaves.

We all prefer the former, of course, but in the end the reader is a creature who is never consistent to itself.

I know some of my friends, for example, never read closely (at least not in the Blogosphere) - this is not how they engage with it - for them, blogging is about a certain pleasure, a certain informality: their blogs read like lists of cats and symptoms, jokes about their day and few witty aphorisms about who they've seen, where they've been and what they will be doing tomorrow.

Others take a different view, choosing instead to rise to the challenge of writing as a political symptom. Here is where I feel most at home, but I am not consistent to myself. And so here are two different posts, one for the former, and one for the latter..... Let's see which one gets the most comments (if any)....

a post for my first kind of friend

Hi lovelies!

How is everyone? What a week it's been: long meetings and dreary days working on dreary admin stuff. At least I'm off to R and M's tonight - should be well jolly - they can really cook up a storm those two. Recent highlights of their efforts have included salt cod with potatoes and cream, wonderful salads including a variation of panzanella, duck rice (absolutely fantastic), bread and butter pudding with pear (oh, my God!) and so on. I;m going to be such a bloater by the end of it.

Had a lovely coffee with B and C (a colleague form the School of Modern languages and her partner) and chatted about school, life and research. They are SO lovely... Had some yummy chocolate with chillies and and good old chin-wag. Enjoying being on my own today - sis is out with th girls and the cat is out somewhere pretending he can fight bigger and scarier cats (he's such a wuss).

Weather grey, but I;m listening to flamenco which cheers me up. Thought I'd take some jazz round to R and M's tonight - L is going through a serious jazzing and we all want to nurture it....

anyway, must get back to he drabness that is my inbox

un besote

July 23, 2006

oh we had fun!!!

Exasperation, tantrums and irritations mixed wih a startled sense of being an outsider (again) - what fun conferences can be, how well they articulate the misery of being an academic in times untuned to thinking...

Despite all the tensions, though, this one was really rather good fun: Spurious and RE were in fine form, especially the former who really found his obscenity mojo and made me laugh so much it hurt...

David and ITHOM were also good value, and we had long and productive chats in the heat over too much wine.

My freinds are so patient with me - I can be so hard on them, so mean and nasty, so bitchy, so undermining and yet they forgive (or seem to) and allow me to continue to run with them.

We had fun making the case for ieology critique, which we wielded with a certain swaggering arogance that comes from collective security...

what jollies

June 25, 2006

getting it wrong

the micro-political, is has always seemed to me, is so volatile and fragile. In a recent meeting with my collegeus, I made a flippant remark that incensed one colleague. The hurt was not meant and the fallout, although short, was extremely intense. I had to put it all back together, since I had smashed it.

This got me to thinking about how personality and ideolgoy co-articulate each other. There are behavioural standards that haunt each subculture, modalities of address and language use that attend each ideological moment and certain kinds of habitus that hold sway over it all. This is what Bourdieu called somatisation - the manner in which the body as articulated through culture can hold the ideological field together, project a fantasy that the meanings of the world come from within (for a left-wing secularist like me this is the first sin).

habitus-personality-ideoolgoy

that indeed is a potent constellation, but it is one that works extremely effectively

May 26, 2006

I just can't find him

I know he's out there, my friend. He is so easy to spot. You can't miss him...

Well I, aparently, can.

I so want to find him - this new blogger. He writes so well, he thinks so well... so where is he?

They seek him here, they seek him there.

Every time I think I've found him, I think 'mmmmmm, is that him? Maybe not. Or is it?'

Confusion, dispondency....

I WANT TO FIND HIM

I know he'll be a real blogging presence ... tempestuous, exasperating, loud and all brash and shiny but with a softness and a tenderness and a wit that curls the lip and sends me out into the strange world of those other Europeans - those that speak differently to us but are in some sense so much more European than we

I imagine him reading Auster, James and laughing out loud at Kafka...

Where is he?

What is he writing?

What has he written?

I can't WAIT to find him...