“You
put your soul in it, you put your heart in it – they will devour both the soul
and the heart. You extract the baseness out of the soul – they devour the
baseness.”
- “Writer” upon entering “The Meat Grinder” in Tarkovsky’s Stalker [1]
My last entry covered a wide time range,
from prehistory to John Locke. This entry concerns a much shorter one, the era
of late capitalism. Continuing the theme of inequality -- economists have noted that
[2] it has been increasing since the 1970’s. During that period, postmodernism,
a movement that had been encroaching on world culture since about the late 50’s,
was becoming prominent and has since come to dominate it. The linked
book, [3] published by Fredric Jameson in 1991, analyzes this movement, which
seems intimately connected with this growing inequality [4]. Since I remember best
through simile, I’ll use the above-quoted movie, which contains many interesting
parallels to the book, to guide us through it.
Text on the screen describes a
mysterious event, either a meteorite or an alien visitation, which burned a
village down, prompting the country’s government to send troops. When they
didn’t come back, police surrounded the area—which became known as “the
Zone”—to keep the curious away. Rumors spread that a place in the Zone could
grant those who went there their deepest wishes, and people started to pay
“stalkers” to guide them to it. We meet one such stalker, the protagonist, in
his squalid home. (We never learn his name, and we only know him by his
calling.) As he prepares, his wife tries to dissuade him, saying he’ll be sent
back to prison, but this time will get ten years rather than five. She accuses
him of making her prematurely old and blames him for their daughter’s
condition. Claiming that every place is a prison for him, he breaks away and
leaves her yelling after him. We hear a train pass by as she falls to the
floor, hysterically writhing and crying.
Stalker comes upon the first of his two
current clients outside a dilapidated bar. The client, a writer, is flirting
with a fashionably dressed woman, who, he tells Stalker, has bravely agreed to
come with them, and whose name he forgets. We can use the contrast between the
two women—Stalker’s temperamental wife and his client’s forgettable fashion
plate—as a figure for the book’s contrast between the high-modern and
postmodern eras similarly to Jameson’s use of two paintings from their
respective periods—Vincent Van Gough’s “A Pair of Boots” and Andy Warhol’s“Diamond Dust Shoes”
[5]. The book notes the centrality of commodification [6] in the latter
work, a commodification which modernist works resisted, before noting three
more differences:
The first and
most evident is the emergence of a new kind of flatness or depthlessness, a new
kind of superficiality in the most literal sense, perhaps the supreme formal
feature of all the Postmodernisms …
Then we must
surely come to terms with the role of photography and the photographic negative
in contemporary art of this kind; and it is this, indeed, which confers its
deathly quality to the Warhol image, whose glacéd X-ray elegance mortifies the
reified eye of the viewer in a way that would seem to have nothing to do with
death or the death obsession or the death anxiety on the level of content … but
[is a matter] of some more fundamental mutation both in the object world itself
-- now become a set of texts or simulacra -- and in the disposition of the
subject.
All of which
brings me to a third feature to be developed here, what I will call the waning
of affect in postmodern culture. [7]
After telling the young woman to leave
and reproaching the writer for drinking, Stalker enters the bar and sees his
second client, a physicist. The writer stumbles in, complaining about the mess
(the bar walls are grimy and its floor is covered with puddles), orders beer,
and tries to introduce himself. Stalker interrupts him, giving him the nickname,
“Writer” and his other client, “Professor.” Writer, answering Professor’s
question about his work, says that it is about his readers, and, to Professor’s
comment that there’s nothing else worth writing about, says, “It’s not worth it
to write at all.”
This discussion of what writing is worth
leads to another point of Jameson’s book, how communication, verbal and
otherwise, has progressed from the extreme individual styles of the high
moderns, such as Faulkner, to fragmentation, in which artists are reduced to
cobbling together pastiches
[8] of previous styles, transforming a world “into sheer images of itself”
filled with what Jameson calls, "‘simulacrum,’ the identical copy for
which no original has ever existed.”
Appropriately
enough, the culture of the simulacrum comes to life in a society where exchange
value has been generalized to the point at which the very memory of use value
is effaced, a society of which Guy Debord has observed, in an extraordinary
phrase, that in it "the image has become the final form of commodity reification"
[9]
Learning that Professor is a physicist,
Writer says that his work must be boring: “The search for the truth. … You dug
at one place – aha, the nucleus is made of protons! You dug in another place – what
a beauty: triangle ABC is equal to the triangle A′B′C′.” He contrasts
Professor’s search with his own, in which something happened to the truth as he
was digging – “it appeared to be a piece of … sorry, I will not say what.”
Professor advises him not to think so much about success or failure, but Writer
asks why, if nobody reads him after a hundred years, he should write at all.
This reference to the need for an Other to generate any kind of meaning links
to a psychological aspect of our book:
What we
generally call the signified -- the meaning or conceptual content of an
utterance -- is now rather to be seen as a meaning-effect, as that objective
mirage of signification generated and projected by the relationship of
signifiers among themselves.
…thus,
With the
breakdown of the signifying chain [that postmodernism engenders, one] is
reduced to [a schizophrenic-like] experience of pure material signifiers, or,
in other words, a series of pure and unrelated presents in time. [10]
Writer asks Professor what he wants from
the Zone, and Professor dodges the question and returns it to Writer, who says
that he is looking for inspiration. Stalker tells them it is time to go, and
they get into a “land rover”/jeep. Through a series of dark alleys in a town of
abandoned, broken-down buildings, Stalker puts himself and his clients through
numerous maneuvers to elude the police, and has Writer get out at one point to
act as a lookout. Soon after Writer says there is no one coming, the jeep
narrowly evades a policeman, and Stalker again reproaches him. After this close
call, Writer confesses to Professor his doubts about his own motives,
remarking, “It’s all these empirical things: if you name them, their meaning
disappears, melts, vaporizes… like a jellyfish in the sun. … [for instance,
what if m]y consciousness desires the victory of vegetarianism in the whole
world, but my unconsciousness dreams about a piece of juicy meat”?
We can use the vivid imagery of Writer’s
words and the setting through which he and his comrades escape danger to enter
the Zone as a memory image and place for Jameson's next point: The slogan,
“difference relates” can sum up this schizophrenic experience described above,
an experience … which one could … imagine in the positive terms of euphoria”, …
giving postmodern phenomenon such as photorealism the power of make even urban
squalor
a delight to the
eyes when expressed in commodification, and … an unparalleled quantum leap in
the alienation of daily life in the city can now be experienced in the form of
a strange new hallucinatory exhilaration… [11]
The men get back to the jeep, wait for
the guards to open the gate for a locomotive, then speed through, and the
police open fire. The men find a trolley and mount it while still being fired
upon. Stalker advises the others not to scream if they are hit – “when it gets
quieter, crawl back to the cordon. You’ll be picked up in the morning.” We can
contrast the fearful activity of this scene with another example of the
simulacrum, the statues of Duane Hanson, in which
The ultimate
contemporary fetishization of the human body… takes a very different direction
… [which simulacrum serves to derealize] the whole surrounding world of
everyday reality. [12]
We see the men, having dodged the
police, take the trolley on the long ride to the Zone. We’ll take this time to
meditate on the book’s description of “that enormous properly human and
anti-natural power of dead human labor stored up in our machinery.” Jameson
distinguishes three “quantum leaps in the evolution of machinery under
capital:”
Machine
production of steam-driven motors since 1848; machine production of electric
and combustion motors since the 90s of the 19th century; machine production of
electronic and nuclear-powered apparatuses since the 40s of the 20th century …
These are market capitalism, the monopoly stage or the stage of imperialism,
and our own, wrongly called postindustrial, but what might better be termed
multinational, capital.
…Jameson goes on to describe late
capitalist machinery, such as television and the computer, as reproductive
rather than productive,
and fascinating
not so much in its own right but because it seems to offer some privileged
representational shorthand for grasping a network of power and control even
more difficult for our minds and imaginations to grasp: the whole new
decentered global network of the third stage of capital itself. [13]
When the men reach the Zone, the film, à la The Wizard of Oz, changes from
black and white to color. Stalker remarks on their arrival, “How strange! The
flowers do not smell.” (This would be a good place to transition to Jameson’s
analysis of the postmodern Bonaventure Hotel
[14] in Los Angeles, whose visitors, as he says, are “in the presence of
something like a mutation in built space itself.”)
Stalker explains that his former
teacher, “Porcupine,” had trampled down some nearby flowers long ago, but that
their smell had remained for years. When asked his teacher’s reason, Stalker
says he doesn’t know, but believes that something broke inside him, speculating
that the Zone had punished him. He asks Professor to tie white gauze streamers
to some metal nuts, and then goes for a walk, telling the others to stay near
the trolley. Writer asks Professor why anyone would want to be alone in such a
place, and Professor answers, “He’s a Stalker.” He tells some of their guide’s
personal history, including that he had been jailed several times, and reveals
that his daughter is a mutant, a victim of the Zone, “presumably without legs.”
He elaborates on what Stalker had meant by the Zone’s punishing Porcupine,
saying that the teacher had become very rich one day after returning from the
Zone and had hung himself a week later. The camera cuts to Stalker entering a
field and shows a deserted building in the distance. Stalker kneels, then lies
face down in the tall weeds, letting a millipede walk across his hand, turns
over on his back and closes his eyes. I’ll leave to my readers the fun of
finding parallels between the Zone and our book’s description of the hotel, beginning
with its entrances, all
rather backdoor
affairs: the gardens in the back admit you to the sixth floor of the towers,
and even there you must walk down one flight to find the elevator by which you
gain access to the lobby. … [such unmarked ways seemingly] to have been imposed
by some new category of closure governing the inner space of the hotel itself…
…to its “disjunction
from the surrounding city” to the escalators and elevators, which not only
replace movement,
but also, and
above all, designate themselves as new reflexive signs and emblems of movement
proper (something which will become evident when we come to the question of
what remains of older forms of movement in this building, most notably walking
itself). Here the narrative stroll has been underscored, symbolized, reified,
and replaced by a transportation machine which becomes the allegorical
signifier of that older promenade we are no longer allowed to conduct on our
own: and this is a dialectical intensification of the autoreferentiality of all
modern culture, which tends to turn upon itself and designate its own cultural
production as its content…
…to the ease with which one could get
lost there, especially in its lobby,
positioned
between the four symmetrical residential towers with their elevators … I am
tempted to say that such space makes it impossible for us to use the language
of volume or volumes any longer, since these are impossible to seize. Hanging
streamers indeed suffuse this empty space in such a way as to distract systematically
and deliberately from whatever form it might be supposed to have, while a
constant busyness gives the feeling that emptiness is here absolutely packed,
that it is an element within which you yourself are immersed, without any of
that distance that formerly enabled the perception of perspective or volume. [15]
Professor and writer discuss the history
of the Zone and speculate why aliens would have bestowed such a gift on
humanity. Stalker’s voice off-screen answers, “to make us happy.” As he comes into
view, we hear a strange wailing sound, and Professor wonders if someone lives
there. Stalker says that that is impossible and that it is time to go, warning
them of danger if they fail to follow his directions closely. He points to a
pole, tells Professor to go first and Writer to follow his footsteps. This
first leg of their journey brings us to Jameson’s conclusion of the hotel’s
description, which notes that it’s
postmodern
hyperspace—has finally succeeded in transcending the capacities of the individual
human body to locate itself, to organize its immediate surroundings
perceptually, and cognitively to map its position in a mappable external world.
It may now be suggested that this alarming disjunction point between the body
and its built environment—which is to the initial bewilderment of the older
modernism as the velocities of spacecraft to those of the automobile—can itself
stand as the symbol and analogon of that even sharper dilemma which is the
incapacity of our minds, at least at present, to map the great global
multinational and decentered communicational network in which we find ourselves
caught as individual subjects. [16]
The men encounter a bus with human
remains inside. To Writer’s frightened questioning, Stalker says that when the
Zone was created people had thought that someone was trying to occupy the
country and that he remembers as a child watching their loading at the station.
He casts one of the gauze-flagged nuts, it falls into the grass between the
remains of war machines, and Stalker tells Professor to go where it had landed
and has the Writer follow him. The reference to war recalls Jameson’s next
example, Michael Herr’s book, Dispatches, about his experience in Vietnam—the
first postmodern war. Herr described erotic memories of choppers,
hot steel,
grease, jungle-saturated canvas webbing, sweat cooling and warming up again,
cassette rock and roll in one ear and door-gun fire in the other, fuel, heat,
vitality and death, death itself, hardly an intruder.
…and Jameson comments on the chopper:
In this new
machine, which does not, like the older modernist machinery of the locomotive
or the airplane, represent motion, but which can only be represented in motion,
something of the mystery of the new postmodernist space is concentrated. [17]
When the three men reach the nut,
Stalker points out the building where the room is, but says that they cannot go
there directly. To Writer’s protest that it’s just a couple of paces away,
Stalker answers, “but the paces must be extremely long,” and throws the nut in
another direction. We’ll let the alien space of the Zone stand for the cultural
realm’s loss of distance and autonomy from the social realm in postmodernism, a
loss coinciding with
the prodigious
new expansion of multinational capital [which] ends up penetrating and
colonizing those very precapitalist enclaves (Nature and the Unconscious) which
offered extraterritorial and Archimedean footholds for critical effectivity…
[N]ot only
punctual and local countercultural forms of cultural resistance and guerrilla
warfare but also even overtly political interventions like those of The Clash are all somehow secretly
disarmed and reabsorbed by a system of which they themselves might well be
considered a part, since they can achieve no distance from it. [18]
Writer continues to argue, declaring
that he will go directly to the room by himself. After emptying Writer’s liquor
bottle and noting that the Professor is a witness to Writer’s leaving of his
own free will, Stalker lets him go, warning him, if he senses anything strange,
to come immediately back. As we watch Writer slowly advance toward the
building, we hear a voice that seems to come from nowhere – “Halt! Do not
move!” Stalker asks Professor why he said that, and Professor replies, “I
thought it was you.” Writer runs back. The confusion, possibly a trick of
Stalker’s or Writer’s, can express the paradox Jameson describes of attempts of postmodern cultural production to
be read as
peculiar new forms of realism (or at least of the mimesis of reality), while at
the same time they can equally well be analyzed as so many attempts to distract
and divert us from that reality or to disguise its contradictions and resolve
them in the guise of various formal mystifications. [19]
Writer asks his companions which one of
them told him to stop, and Professor mocks him, thinking he did it to save
himself from feeling cowardly. Angered, Writer asks Stalker why he had emptied
his bottle. Stalker replies that the Zone is “a very complicated system ... of
traps, let’s call it, and all of them are deadly. I do not know what happens
here, when humans are away, but if only people appear here, everything starts
moving.” This description, evoking Jameson’s description of postmodernism, can
suggest the conclusion of this chapter, that:
The political
form of Postmodernism, if there ever is any, will have as its vocation the
invention and projection of a global cognitive mapping, on a social as well as
a spatial scale. [20]
We can introduce Jameson’s chapter on
the specific case of video, the primary medium of postmodernism, with an exchange
between Writer And Stalker. Stalker remarks that the Zone may seem capricious,
“but in every moment it is such as we made it ourselves ... with our inner
state.” With this reflective description we can conjure some aspects of video
as distinct from film:
Streaming,
in a situation
of total flow, the contents of the screen streaming before us all day long
without interruption (or where the interruptions -- called commercials -- are
less intermissions than they are fleeting opportunities to visit the bathroom
or throw a sandwich together), what used to be called "critical
distance" seems to have become obsolete…
…The structural exclusion of memory,
nothing here
haunts the mind or leaves its afterimages in the manner of the great moments of
film…
…and experimentality.
Released from
all conventional constraints, experimental video allows us to witness the full
range of possibilities and potentialities of the medium in a way which
illuminates its various more restricted uses, the latter being subsets and special
cases of the former. [21]
Writer quips that the Zone lets good
people pass and cuts the head off the bad ones. Stalker replies that he is not
sure what gauge the Zone uses, but suspects that it favors the unhappy. He then
warns that the Zone could easily kill even the most unhappy who don’t know how
to behave. He remarks that the Writer was lucky that it warned him -- “it may
have happened otherwise!” This odd criterion, along with Stalker's warning of
unpleasant consequences and Writer’s recently having avoided them, can help us
follow Jameson’s shift to an unpleasant affect on encountering postmodern
experimental video – boredom, which
becomes
interesting as a reaction to situations of paralysis and also, no doubt, as
defense mechanism or avoidance behavior. Even taken in the narrower realm of
cultural reception, boredom with a particular kind of work or style or content
can always be used productively as a precious symptom of our own existential,
ideological, and cultural limits, an index of what has to be refused in the way
of other people's cultural practices and their threat to our own
rationalizations about the nature and value of art. [22]
Professor suddenly decides to wait until
Writer comes back, “made happy,” but when Stalker says that if he doesn’t come
with them, they all must go back, he changes his mind. We can let
Professor's attempt to cease his quest and his reversal prod us to remember
that:
a voluntary
attention is demanded by the total flow of the videotext in time which is scarcely
relaxed at all, and rather different from the comfortable scanning of the movie
screen, let alone of the cigar-smoking detachment of the Brechtian theatergoer.
[23]
After intermission the film shows
Stalker’s two clients unwinding, then reacting to an off-screen call from their
guide. Writer dreads that he will get another “sermon.” We cut to Stalker
praying silently (Tarkovsky gives us the content of the prayer in a voiceover)
for his companions to believe and to “become as helpless as children.” Stalker
muses, “When a tree grows, it is tender and gentle, and when it is dry and
hard, it dies…suppleness and weakness express the freshness of living.” Such
helplessness links Jameson’s examples of the subjects of early photography, who
had to be immobilized for their images to be captured, and the
spectators of
video time … immobilized and mechanically integrated and neutralized [24]
When Professor and Writer reach Stalker,
who tells him they have to move on, Professor protests that he had not known
that they were going and had left his backpack behind. Stalker refuses to let
him return, reminding him that the places in the Zone shift from
moment to moment. We can again use the Zone, in its strange space/time
relations, this time to stand for video, which
manages to
produce the simulacrum of fictive time … the only art or medium in which this
ultimate seam between space and time is the very locus of the form, and [whose]
machinery uniquely dominates and depersonalizes subject and object alike… [25]
During Stalker’s and Writer’s progress
through a watery tunnel, they notice that the Professor has gone. Writer asks
if they can wait a little, but Stalker says that that is impossible. “Every
minute everything changes.” Jameson’s book reflects a similar continuing theme
of changeability and the actions of the searchers affecting the changes:
whatever a good,
let alone a great, videotext might be, it will be bad or flawed whenever such
interpretation proves possible, whenever the text slackly opens up just such places
and areas of thematization itself. [26]
Stalker and Writer come to a room where
a live coal smolders underwater, and we can hear voices offscreen. When Writer
questions him, Stalker exclaims that he had already explained it to him – “It’s
the Zone, do you understand? The Zone!” This scene can recall the conclusion of
our present chapter in a passage which explains how early capitalism turned
human understanding from magic to science:
because of the
corrosive dissolution of older forms of magical language by a force which I
will call that of reification, a force whose logic is one of ruthless
separation and disjunction, of specialization and rationalization, of a
Taylorizing division of labor in all realms….
… and the continuation of the process:
Yet the force of
reification, which was responsible for this new moment, does not stop there
either: in another stage, heightened, a kind of reversal of quantity into
quality, reification penetrates the sign itself and disjoins the signifier from
the signified. Now reference and reality disappear altogether, and even meaning
-- the signified -- is problematized. We are left with that pure and random
play of signifiers that we call Postmodernism, which no longer produces
monumental works of the modernist type but ceaselessly reshuffles the fragments
of preexistent texts, the building blocks of older cultural and social
production, in some new and heightened bricolage: metabooks which cannibalize
other books, metatexts which collate bits of other texts -- such is the logic
of Postmodernism in general, which finds one of its strongest and most
original, authentic forms in the new art of experimental video. [27]
As the travelers emerge from the tunnel,
they practically bump into Professor. When Stalker asks how he had gotten ahead
of them, he replies that he had only returned to where he had left his
backpack. Stalker infers that Porcupine had hung a metal nut there as a trap,
and marvels that the Zone had let them pass. Writer taunts Professor for going
back for his “underwear,” and Professor rejoins, “[D]o not poke your nose into
others’ underwear, if you cannot understand.” This retort can return us to
Jameson’s next chapter, in which he notes North Americans’ attitude to food and
architecture before postmodernism:
until very
recently they have not wanted—for good reason!–to think much about what they
were eating; and as for built space, there too a protective narcosis has long
reigned, a don't-want-to-see-it, don't-want-to-know-about-it attitude that may,
on the whole, have been the most sensible relationship to develop with the
older American city. [28]
Stalker tells them to rest, and as they
try to get comfortable Writer continues to speculate about what Professor
thought was so important to go back for. Believing Professor is trying to
experiment on the room, he jibes, “[L]et’s stuff our rucksack with various
manometers and crapmeters, let’s get into the Zone illegally... And let’s
verify all the miracles of the place with algebra.” The impossibility of
studying the Room, especially with anything that would fit in a backpack,
directs us to the perplexing goals of postmodern architecture – to abolish the
distinction between the inside and outside:
(all the
modernists ever said about that was that the one ought to express the other,
which suggests that no one had yet begun to doubt whether you needed to have
either of them at all in the first place).
…and to feed our appetite for
photography:
Downtown
conditioned reflexes turn [a postmodern building] drab before you remember its
photo; the classic Southern California construction site tarnishes its image
and imprints the usual provisionality, which is supposed to be a fine thing in
a "text" but in space just another synonym for shoddiness. [29]
Professor tells Writer that he would
make his mark more successfully on lavatory walls than on paper. Such a goad
drives home Jameson’s next point – that postmodernist architecture places
components of older forms, such as “lintel, dormer, and dome … standing out
from their former supports, as it were, in free levitation” -
as though their
secondary syncategoremic function had become for an instant the Word itself,
before being blown out into the dust of empty spaces. [30]
...Jameson broadens the architects’ term
for such placement, “wrapping,” to a theoretical level, noting the
disposability the term expresses and applying it to literature as “textuality.”
Back in the Zone, Professor accuses
Writer of pomposity, trying to award mankind with pearls of his “bought
inspiration.” Writer scoffs that he doesn’t give a fig for mankind “I’m
interested in only one person. That’s me.” With this response we can ponder the
following question about postmodernism and its rejection of modernism’s
originalities:
To what degree
can we still describe the originalities of spatial construction in the
postmodern, when this last has explicitly renounced the great modernist myth of
producing a radically new Utopian space capable of transforming the world
itself? [31]
To Professor’s further provocation,
Writer decides he doesn’t want to argue with him – “In arguments the truth is
born.” Such an epigram can head Jameson’s discussion of architecture as text,
in which he finds architectural analogies for various parts of speech, but
cannot find one for the sentence itself, leading him to speculate on the
origins of language and its possible evolution, an evolution that
is still
conceivable and entertains a vital relationship to the Utopian question about
the possible modification of society (where that is itself still conceivable).
Indeed, the forms taken by just such debates will seem philosophically
receivable or on the contrary antiquated and superstitious in strict proportion
to your deeper convictions as to whether postmodern society can be changed any
longer or not. The Marr debate in the Soviet Union, for example, has been
classed with Lysenko as a scientific aberration, largely owing to Marr's
hypothesis that the very form and structure of language itself altered
according to the mode of production of which it was a superstructure. [32]
When Writer asks Stalker what his other
clients had wanted, Stalker replies, “happiness.” Writer asks if Stalker had
wanted to use the room himself, and Stalker answers that things are OK for him
as they are, then looks for a place to lie down in the debris-strewn
landscape. The debris are redolent of
the “junk” materials which a well-known postmodernist architect, Frank Gehry,
used in building his own house, “dialoguing” with an old house by building the
new one over it. Two parts in particular, a corrugated metal frame and
“tumbling cube” of a skylight,
make up the
"wrapper"; they violate the older space and are now both parts of the
newer construction and at distance from it, like foreign bodies. They also
correspond, in my opinion, to the two great constitutive elements of
architecture itself which in his postmodern manifesto, Learning from Las Vegas, Robert Venturi disengages from the
tradition in order to reformulate the tasks and vocation of the newer
aesthetic: namely, the opposition between the façade (or store front) and the
shed behind or the barnlike space of the building itself. But Gehry does not
remain within this contradiction, playing each term off against the other to
produce some interesting but provisional solution. Rather, it seems to me that
the corrugated metal front and the tumbling cube allude to the two terms of
this dilemma, which they attach to something else -- the remains of the older
house, the persistence of history and the past: a content which can still be
seen through the newer elements, literally, as when the simulated window
opening of the corrugated wrapper discloses the older windows of the frame
house behind them. [33]
Writer, although falling asleep, keeps
talking, asking Professor what would happen if his wish gets granted and he
returns to their “godforsaken city” as a genius. Since a man writes because he
constantly needs to prove his worth to others, if he knows for sure that he is
a genius, why should he write? We’ll set the paradox of the Writer’s
transformation and return against the paradox of Gehry’s space, which, Jameson
claims,
…confronts us
with the … impossibilities (not least the impossibilities of representation)
which are inherent in this latest evolutionary mutation of late capitalism
toward "something else" which is no longer family or neighborhood,
city or state, nor even nation, but as abstract and nonsituated as the
placelessness of a room in an international chain of motels or the anonymous
space of airport terminals that all run together in your mind. [34]
Writer and Professor turn their argument
to world matters: Writer, noting that science merely helps people work less and
eat more, claims that art, as an unselfish occupation, is superior. Professor
points out that people are still starving – So who is more selfish? The
expansion of the discussion can move us to Jamesons’ broadening of the disorderly
aspect of Gehry’s house to characterize postmodern life:
Indeed, one is
tempted (without wishing to overload a very minor feature of Gehry's building)
to evoke the more general informing context of some larger virtual nightmare,
which can be identified as the sixties gone toxic, a whole historical and
countercultural "bad trip" in which psychic fragmentation is raised
to a qualitatively new power, the structural distraction of the decentered
subject now promoted to the very motor and existential logic of late capitalism
itself. [35]
Stalker falls asleep and dreams of his
wife quoting the book of Revelation and gloating at the description of
the rich and powerful asking mountains and rocks to fall on them to escape the
wrath of the Lamb. We’ll use Stalker’s dream to envisage the servant’s bedroom
that Gehry has retained intact from the previous house – a bedroom he preserved
to represent:
a whole range of
other very different and nonarchitectural phenomena in postmodern art and
theory: the transformation into the image or simulacrum, historicism as a
substitute for history, quotation, enclaves within the cultural sphere, and so
forth [36]
He wakes, and, looking at Professor and
Writer, whispers a quote from Luke 24: “and when they were talking and
discussing it together ... and He came up to them, went with them, but their
eyes were held, so that they did not recognize Him.” The quote can help us
picture a modernist interpretation of the Gehry house’s illusions and
contradictions – illusions and contradictions that force “one to continually
question the nature of what one sees, to alter the definition of reality, in
the end, from the memory of a thing to the perception of that thing."
Jameson disagrees with this interpretation:
Such
formulations, with their familiar stress on the vocation of art to restimulate
perception, to reconquer a freshness of experience back from the habituated and
reified numbness of everyday life in the fallen world, bring us to the very
heart of the essential modernism of Macrae-Gibson's aesthetic. … It is not
clear, to put it crudely and succinctly, why, in an environment of sheer advertising
simulacra and images, we should even want to sharpen and renew our perception
of those things. [37]
Stalker picks up the argument Professor
and Writer had engaged in before they all had fallen asleep. He brings up how music is the art least connected
to our experience, yet “penetrates into the very soul,” unites and shakes us.
Seemingly purposeless, it, like everything, has its own meaning. On the mystery
of art and its purpose we can follow Jameson’s next question;
[c]an some other
function [than the previously rejected modernist one] be conceived for culture
in our time? [38]
We see the men at a door looking down a dark
tunnel. Over Writer’s objections, Stalker has them draw straws to decide who
will be first to walk through it. Although an odd choice, we can use the term
“draw” for the first of two kinds of reification in which postmodernist
architects engage:
The project, the
drawing, is … one reified substitute for the real building, but a
"good" one, that makes infinite Utopian freedom possible. The
photograph of the already existing building is another substitute, but let us
say a "bad" reification—the illicit substitution of one order of
things for another, the transformation of the building into the image of
itself, and a spurious [commodified/consumable] image at that... [39]
Writer calls behind him that he has
found another door, and Stalker tells him to go through it. Writer, frightened,
takes out a handgun. The gun can embody contradiction – in this case, a
contradiction that Jameson, contrary to Macrae-Gibson's Malevichian [40]
theory, lies between
The increasingly
abstract (and communicational) networks of American reality beyond [LA], whose
extreme form is the power network of so-called multinational capitalism itself…
…and the
Third World side
of American life today—the production of poverty and misery, people not only
out of work but without a place to live, bag people, waste and industrial
pollution, squalor, garbage, and obsolescent machinery. [41]
After Stalker talks him into dropping
the gun, Writer goes through the door. Stalker has him climb a ladder at the
far end of that room and tells him to wait. As Professor and Stalker follow,
Stalker says he hopes Professor doesn’t have anything similar, to which
Professor replies that he has only an ampule of poison “sewn in … just in
case.” When they get to the top of the ladder, Stalker sees that Writer is
still walking, and calls for him to stop. This scene, something of a
cliffhanger, seems a good place to finish this chapter of our book, which
concludes that a sign that the contradiction referenced above has been resolved
would be in
the new
intermediary space itself -- the new living space produced by the interaction
of the other poles. If that space is meaningful, if you can live in it, if it
is somehow comfortable but in a new way, one that opens up historically new and
original ways of living -- and generates, so to speak, a new Utopian spatial
language, a new kind of sentence, a new kind of syntax, radically new words
beyond our own grammar -- then, one would think, the dilemma, the aporia, has
been resolved, if only on the level of space itself. I will not decide that,
nor dare to evaluate the outcome. [42]
We see Writer lying in large puddle near
a well. He gets up and speaks, spitting out bitterness about his profession,
starting with the quote at the top of my entry, asking why he writes if he
hates to write, and comparing the occupation to hemorrhoids. He mourns his
former belief that his books would help people, and says that people will
forget about him two days after his death, concluding, “I wanted to remake
them, but I myself was remade—in their own image! Earlier the future was only a
continuation of the present, and all the changes loomed somewhere behind the
horizons. And now the future became one with the present.” We can use writer’s
tirade, with its pathological and intersubjective themes, to evoke similar
themes in Jameson’s next chapter, on the novel, for which he uses Claude
Simon’s Les Corps Conducteurs (1971)
as an example:
Art … yields
social information primarily as symptom … it tells of contradictions as such,
which constitute the deepest form of social reality in our prehistory and must
stand in for the “referent” for a long time to come.
… then distinguishes between
the
symptomaticity of high art in the modernist period (in which it stands in
radical opposition to the nascent media or culture industry as such) and that
of a residual elite culture in our own postmodern age, in which, owing in part
to the democratization of culture generally, these two modes (high and low
culture) have begun to fold back into one another. [43]
Stalker tells Writer how lucky he is for
surviving what he calls “the meat grinder,” exclaiming that he “will live for
100 years!” Adding that Porcupine sent his own brother to die there, Stalker
recites a poem that this brother had written, a poem with the refrain, “only
that’s not enough” This specter and his elegy resonate with a description of a
museum installation by Robert Gober that Jameson describes in the next chapter.
He explains the impossibility of seeing the contents as a whole, as all are
distinct
artistic materials, which emit their own discordant formal and material voices,
also here summon up the ghostly, but social, presence of real human
collaborators, who raise again the issues of the subject and of agency, even
the false problems of collective subject and individual intention,
…and claims that its interpretation
demands an allegorical method, in which
these articles
slowly take on the positive and active value of conscious resistance, as
choices and symbolic acts that now repudiate the dominant poster-and-decorative
culture and thereby assert themselves as something emergent rather than
something residual. What was the delectation with a fantasy past now turns out
to look more like the construction of a Utopian future. [44]
As they all enter a flooded room, Writer
claims that Stalker had given him two long matches and accuses him of playing
favorites, and Stalker counters that the nut had shown that only Writer could
survive the meat grinder. We’ll use Writer’s accusation of favoritism as an
index for Jameson’s next point about the fine arts in modernism:
Like synesthesia
in the literary real (Baudelaire), the ideal of the Gesamtkunstwerk respected the "system" of the various
fine arts and paid it tribute in the notion of some vaster overarching
synthesis in which they might all somehow "combine" (the theoretical
and philosophical parallel to yesterday's notion of the interdisciplinary is
striking), generally under the "fraternal leadership" of one of them
-- in the case of Wagner, of music. The present installation is, as has been
suggested, no longer that, not least because the very "system" on
which the older synthesis was based has itself become problematical, along with
the claim of any one of the individual fine arts to its own intrinsic autonomy
or semiautonomy. [45]
A phone rings, interrupting the
argument. Writer answers, cries, “No, it’s not a clinic!” hangs up, continues the
argument, then does a double-take. Then Professor, over Stalker’s objection,
picks it up and calls a former colleague, saying he found what the man had
hidden, and quarrels with him, declaring that he is no longer afraid of him. We
can use this declaration to summarize the end of the chapter, in which Jameson
discusses painting and photography, arts which, in postmodernism, express the
death of the subject, yet in which Jameson sees
something like
an unacknowledged "party of Utopia": an underground party whose
numbers are difficult to determine, whose program remains unannounced and
perhaps even unformulated, whose existence is unknown to the citizenry at large
and to the authorities, but whose members seem to recognize one another by means
of secret Masonic signals. [46]
Stalker asks Professor what he is
planning, and Professor claims that the room is dangerous, asking him to
imagine if a potential fuhrer got in, wishing to remake the world. Writer
argues that such fears are unfounded, since the wish for a “Kingdom of Heaven
on Earth” is not a wish, but an ideology. We can use the calling to remake the
world to beckon a story Jameson discusses in his next chapter, a Philip K. Dick
story titled, Time Out of Joint, that begins in an idealized version of a small
town in the 1950’s – a setting which seems to come from a television series of
the era. Jameson states that
[TV Series are]
the only kind of art willing (and able) to deal with the stifling Eisenhower
realities of the happy family in the small town, of normalcy and nondeviant
everyday life. High art apparently cannot deal with this kind of subject matter
except by way of the oppositional [47]
Writer describes what he considers more
realistic unconscious wishes people might harbor, such as having their boss hit
by a car, to which Stalker protests, ‘How can one be happy at the expense of
somebody else’s unhappiness?” This question brings up Jameson’s point about how
“idyllic” white, middle-class, American life in the 1950’s was -
the
gratifications of the new car, the TV dinner and your favorite program on the
sofa—which are now themselves secretly a misery, an unhappiness that doesn't
know its name, that has no way of telling itself apart from genuine
satisfaction and fulfillment since it has presumably never encountered this last.
[48]
Writer claims that he knows that
Professor plans to destroy mankind “with some kind of unimaginable
benevolence,” but that he won’t succeed – Professor may get the Nobel Prize, or
something even more incongruous, like the telephone. “You dream about one
thing, but you get something different” a twist analogous to the one in Dick’s
story:
it transpires,
from an increasing accumulation of tiny but aberrant details, that the
environment of the novel, in which we watch the characters act and move, is not
really the fifties after all (I do not know that Dick ever uses this particular
word). [49]
Writer flips a switch and a light turns
on. He wonders at all the conveniences in the supposedly abandoned room—phone,
electricity, and a number of strong tranquilizers. We can let these
incongruities pull us further into Time
Out of Joint:
It is a Potemkin
village of a historical kind: a reproduction of the 1950s—including induced and
introjected memories and character structures in its human population—constructed
(for reasons that need not detain us here) in 1997, in the midst of an
interstellar atomic civil war. [50]
Stalker suggests they go to room before
it gets dark, but Writer, twisting a wire, briefly delays him, alleging that
Stalker’s “poetry readings and going in circles” is a form of apology. Having
turned the wire into what looks like a crown of thorns he puts it on his head –
“I’m not going to forgive you.” This talk of manipulation can pull us yet
further:
The village has
been constructed in order to trick him, against his will, into performing an
essential wartime task for the government. In that sense, he is the victim of
this manipulation, which awakens all our fantasies of mind control and
unconscious exploitation, of anti-Cartesian predestination and determinism. On
this reading, then, Dick's novel is a nightmare and the expression of deep,
unconscious, collective fears about our social life and its tendencies. [51]
Stalker reproaches Writer and calls to Professor,
who has wandered down the hall. We hear a dog whining behind Professor, and he
turns toward it, then the camera slowly moves beyond it, zooming in on two
corpses in a corner locked in an embrace. With the end of our travelers’
journey, we can finish Jameson’s description of the preceding novel with his
note that its structure
articulates the
position of Eisenhower America in the world itself and is thereby to be read as
a kind of distorted form of cognitive mapping, an unconscious and figurative
projection of some more "realistic" account of our situation, as it
has been described earlier [52]
Stalker then indicates the threshold – a
good place to make the transition in the chapter. Jameson contrasts Dick’s
novel, “mobilizing a vision of the future in order to
determine its return to a now historical present” with two movies, Something Wild and Blue Velvet. He categorizes both as subverted forms of “gothic”
stories, and defines the genre as
…ultimately a
class fantasy (or nightmare) in which the dialectic of privilege and shelter is
exercised: your privileges seal you off from other people, but by the same
token they constitute a protective wall through which you cannot see, and
behind which therefore all kinds of envious forces may be imagined in the
process of assembling, plotting, preparing to give assault [53]
To focus his clients on what will bring
them the most happiness, Stalker tells them, “...concentrate and try to
remember the whole of your life. When people think about the past, they become
better.” With such meditation, one can reminisce about times such as those the
central scene of Something Wild bring up,
a class reunion,
the kind of event which specifically demands historical judgments of its
participants: narratives of historical trajectories, as well as evaluations of
moments of the past nostalgically reevoked but necessarily rejected or
reaffirmed.
… This reevaluation seems to occur only
on the most superficial level, however. The decades that are supposedly
evaluated – the fifties and sixties – are presented without reference to what
was being revolted against during them; and the only thing that differentiates
the hero from his fellow yuppies are his clothes.
At the end of
the film, of course, he also sheds his corporate job; but it would probably be
asking too much to wonder what he does or can become in its stead, except in
the "relationship" itself, where he becomes the master and the senior
partner. [54]
Back to our own movie, Stalker tells his
clients that, during their preparatory meditations, the most important thing is
to believe. Belief being a function of ideology, this counsel guides us to the
last movie that Jameson discusses in this chapter:
History
therefore enters Blue Velvet in the
form of ideology, if not of myth: the Garden and the Fall, American exceptionalism,
a small town far more lovingly preserved in its details like a simulacrum or
Disneyland under glass somewhere than anything the protagonists of Something Wild were able to locate on
their travels … Even a fifties-style pop psychoanalysis can be invoked around
this fairy tale, since besides a mythic and sociobiological perspective of the
violence of nature, the film's events are also framed by the crisis in the
paternal function … [T]his particular call for a return to the fifties coats
the pill by insistence on the unobtrusive benevolence of all these fathers—and,
contrariwise, on the unalloyed nastiness of their opposite number. [55]
Writer disagrees that he will become
better if he reevaluates his life, and declines to enter the room, so Stalker invites
Professor to go in. Professor brings out a cylinder and other objects and
starts to assemble them, and Writer hails Professor’s “soul-o-meter.” Professor
corrects him – it’s “just a bomb.” Professor reiterates his fears about the
room, but expresses new ambivalence – it represents some kind of hope, and “one
should never perform irreversible actions.” When Stalker tries to take the bomb
from him, Writer (over Professor’s objections) attacks Stalker. He calls
Stalker a “hypocritical nit” deciding who lives and who dies “dizzy with power,
secrecy, and authority!” the actions by these men-of-the-mind can incarnate
Jameson’s interpretation of the second film…
this particular
parable of the end of the sixties is also, on another metacritical level, a
parable of the end of theories of transgression as well, which so fascinated
that whole period and its intellectuals. [56]
Stalker, crying, protests that he helps
the suffering – those who have no other
hope and no one to help them – “and ... I, nit, am able to! … That’s all! And I
want nothing else.” Writer apologizes, gently saying that Stalker has no idea
about what happens in the Room. He interprets the fate of Stalker’s mentor –
what “is in accordance with your nature, your essence, is what comes true here!
That essence that you have no idea about, but it sits in you and rules you all
your life! You understood nothing, Leather Stocking. Porcupine was not overcome
by his greed. He crawled on his knees in this very puddle begging for his
brother. And he got a lot of money, and couldn’t get anything else. Because a
Porcupine gets everything that’s porcupine-like! And conscience, throes of the
soul – it is invented, it's brain work. He understood that and hanged himself.”
We can use Writer’s “it is
what it is” interpretation of Porcupine’s history as a foil for the
interpretations in Jameson’s three examples:
Dick used
science fiction to see his present as (past) history; the classical nostalgia
film, while evading its present altogether, registered its historicist
deficiency by losing itself in mesmerized fascination in lavish images of
specific generational pasts. The two 1986 movies, while scarcely pioneering a
wholly new form (or mode of historicity), nonetheless seem, in their
allegorical complexity, to mark the end of that and the now open space for
something else. [57]
Writer clarifies why he won’t enter the
room – “I do not want to spill all the trash that has accumulated inside me, on
anybody’s head. Even on yours” – and doubts that the room even can grant
wishes, asking Professor who told him about the Room and Porcupine, to which
Professor answers that it was Stalker, then disassembles the bomb, asking what
the point was in coming. The three return to the bar, and Stalker goes home
with his wife and daughter. Lying on the
floor, he agonizes about his clients, that “they think every minute how not to
be sold too cheap, how to sell themselves for a higher price! That everybody
paid them for every movement of their soul!” His lamentations can call to mind
Jameson’s remarking the disappearance of the Great Writer, a Greatness for
which Jameson credits the means of production in the modernist age, one of
archaic holdovers within a modernizing economy. He uses Kafka as an example:
It is then, in
Kafka as elsewhere, the peculiar overlap of future and past, in this case, the
resistance of archaic feudal structures to irresistible modernizing tendencies
-- of tendential organization and the residual survival of the not yet
"modern" in some other sense -- that is the condition of possibility
for high modernism as such, and for its production of aesthetic forms and
messages that may no longer have anything to do with the unevenness from which
it alone springs. What follows paradoxically as a consequence is that in that
case the postmodern must be characterized as a situation in which the survival,
the residue, the holdover, the archaic, has finally been swept away without a
trace. In the postmodern, then, the past itself has disappeared (along with the
well-known "sense of the past" or historicity and collective memory).
Where its buildings still remain, renovation and restoration allow them to be
transferred to the present in their entirety as those other, very different and
postmodern things called simulacra. Everything is now organized and planned;
nature has been triumphantly blotted out [58]
Stalker’s wife helps him up and into
bed, then looks at the camera and talks to us about being the wife of a
Stalker, saying that “there had been a lot of grief, and it was frightening,
and it was shameful. But I have never regretted and I have never envied
anybody. … [I]f there was no grief in our life, it would not be better, it
would be worse. Because then there would be ... neither happiness, nor hope.”
We can use this speech, linking contrasts to hope, to bookmark Jameson’s last
chapter, in which he describes the diminishment of “[m]emory, temporality, the
very thrill of the "modern" itself, the New, and innovation”
…all casualties
of this process in which not only Mayer's residual ancien régime is obliterated
but even classical bourgeois culture of the belle epoque is liquidated. [59]
We then see Stalker’s daughter reading a
poem contrasting expressions in a loved one’s eyes – one, a “magic play of
flames/when suddenly they look up” and the other, “In moments of the passionate
kiss/When there through the lowered eyelashes/Burns a dreadful, dim fire of the
wish.” With these verses we can turn to Jameson’s contrasts in his last chapter
– contrasts between the modernist hermeneutic with the postmodern. In the
former, the hermeneutic intervenes to save the day for biblical narratives that
seemed to have lost their relevance. These narratives,
including the
gospel itself, are no longer to be taken literally -- that way Hollywood lies!
…As for the commandments and the ethical doctrine, casuistry has long since
settled the matter; they also need no longer be taken literally, and confronted
with properly modern forms of injustice, bureaucratic warfare, systemic or
economic inequality, and so forth, modern theologians and churchmen can work up
persuasive accommodations to the constraints of complex modern societies, and
provide excellent reasons for bombing civilian populations or executing
criminals which do not disqualify the executors from Christian status…
…Whereas a fundamentalist, such as John
Howard Yoder, who insists on the literal reading of the Scripture, is
postmodern in that his reading has
a simulated relationship to the past rather than a commemorative one,
and … share[s] characteristics of other such postmodern historical simulations.
In our own context here, the striking feature of such simulation is in effect the denial
of any fundamental social or cultural difference between postmodern subjects of
late capitalism and the Middle-Eastern subjects of the early Roman Empire: such
fundamentalism thus absolutely refuses what Latour calls the Great Divide,
particularly insofar as belief in that distinction authorized and legitimated
modernity in the first place, as an experience as well as an ideology. [60]
Stalker’s daughter looks at some objects
on a table, and seems to be moving them telekinetically; then we hear a train
rumble by the house, its vibrations knocking one of the glasses off and
breaking it. Ode to Joy plays. With this finale, we can quote Jameson’s
conclusion:
That a new
international proletariat (taking forms we cannot yet imagine) will reemerge
from this convulsive upheaval it needs no prophet to predict: we ourselves are
still in the trough, however, and no one can say how long we will stay
there…"We have to name the system": this high point of the sixties
finds an unexpected revival in the Postmodernism debate. [61]
P.S. Having written this entry using a
former Soviet movie and ending by speaking of the sixties, I’ll include an
article
that uses the cold-war classic, Dr.
Strangelove (1964,) to analogize a current upheaval. I’ll also include a
link to various updates on the situation [62]
1. Arkadiy Strugatsky, Boris Strugatsky &
Andrei Tarkovsky. Stalker (1979.) Script
in: The Tarkovsky Zone. September 9, 2006.
2. Paul Krugman. “Why We’re in a New
Gilded Age.” in: The New York Review of
Books. May 8, 2014.
3. Fredric Jameson. Postmodernism, Or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. 1991
[Chapters written bet. 1984 & 1990] in: flawedart.net.
4. Andrew
Hartman. “Neoliberalism and the Spirit of the 60s,” “Review of James
Livingston, The World Turned Inside Out: American Thought and Culture at the
End of the 20th Century,” and “The Cunning of History”; Or, the Unintended
Negative Consequences of Good Ideas.” in: Society for U.S. Intellectual
History. December 17, 2010, November 2, 2010, and March 27, 2009, respectively.
5. Jessica Jane O'Hara. “The classic
illustration of postmodern style.” in: Waves
and Radiation: English 200. March 18, 2010.
6. “Commodification.” in: Wikipedia. January
25, 2014.
7. Jameson. Postmodernism. in: flawedart.net.
9a. Jameson. Postmodernism.
in: flawedart.net.
9b “Reification (Marxism.)” in: Wikipedia. April 23, 2014.
9b “Reification (Marxism.)” in: Wikipedia. April 23, 2014.
10-13. Jameson. Postmodernism. in: flawedart.net.
14. “Westin Bonaventure Hotel.” in: Wikipedia. March
15, 2014.
15-39. Jameson. Postmodernism. in: flawedart.net.
40. “Kazimir Malevich.” in: Wikipedia. April 23,
2014
41-61. Jameson. Postmodernism. in: flawedart.net.
62a in: Common Dreams. May 6, 2014.62b in: imdb.com May 7, 2014.
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