Re-thinking “Yes We Can”

This short video, made during the Educator’s Workshop at the Center for Digital Storytelling (Berkeley, CA), is a teaser/trailer for a paper on which I’m currently working. The paper is on Barack Obama’s rhetoric of “unity” as relying on an ironic sense of community and conflict in contemporary politics; it is also about the potential pitfalls and failures of such rhetoric, which we have seen strongly in the past couple of months in the most recent “debate” over health care reform.

by ted on August 30, 2009 at 5:55 pm
Transgression 2.0: Rethinking Keywords in a Digital Age

Panel Abstract: In the famous 1964 Jacobelis v. Ohio case, Justice Potter Stewart famously claimed to know obscenity “when I see it.” Like obscenity and pornography, transgression is often taken for granted as a cultural “given.” As we become increasingly surrounded by cultural productions that blur any sense of coherent mainstream, alternative, corporate, state, or independent images, videos, music, and writing, it seems harder and harder to understand what transgression really means. In an age of online communities based on a free exchange of personally videotaped, exhibitionist pornography, websites that post embarrassing or illegal acts by powerful corporate interests, networks of political blogs that rival even the best print journalism, and the circulation of incredibly popular short films that range from the horrific to the banal, by what means do we measure how and when something transgresses what used to be known as the “dominant” culture? Breaking away from discussions of the internet, digital culture, and networks as either positive or negative characteristics of the contemporary public sphere, Transgression 2.0 brings together a variety of perspectives and case studies to find contemporary locations of cultural opposition, both on and offline. It suggests that the “prurient interest” of a culture, to borrow Justice Brennan’s terminology from another obscenity trial, is in fact to seek out those places in which it is forced to evolve. Far from an easy process, in the digital age transgression becomes increasingly essential even as it becomes harder to define, discover, and protect.Panel Rationale:Despite the constant attention paid to defining and redefining the field of Communications, and in particular the “keywords” that form the focus of this process, the concept of “transgression” has been largely avoided.  There are many reasons for this; the term is often associated with particular movements (e.g. battles for recognition in gay rights movements), specific theories (e.g. Bakhtin), and an ambivalent politics centered more on opposition than on what is commonly considered to be a progressive agenda.  This panel will attempt to bypass these issues, as they ultimately limit the usefulness of the concept of transgression.  More importantly, it will question whether or not transgression can exist in the contemporary moment, defined by increased information flow, increasingly shifting terms of personal and social identification, and political and economic systems that seem to co-opt and reappropriate areas of what would formerly be considered to be transgressive even before they are fully formed.  Focusing on transgression not as a personal act, therefore, but as a social act mediated in large part by technology, the panelists will discuss the (im)possibilities of transgression and its place in communication theory.David Gunkel, Northern Illinois University (Chair and Respondent)Ted Gournelos, Maryville University of St Louis”Hacking the News: Transgressing Performative Control Systems”Rather than presuppose the desirability of sincere, cohesive, or “positive” communication, this paper will examine how ironic and dissonant cultural productions can redefine the limits of the public sphere.  In a conflict-based view of what Henry Jenkins has called “convergence culture,” I argue that, in the search for new areas of exploitation, systems of control within late capitalism often internalize transgressive culture.  Informed by new media scholarship, the paper analyzes three primary case studies, each a performance within U.S. news productions.  In The Yes Men’s “pranks,” news organizations are forced to operate outside of existing control parameters; in faux articles and internet broadcasts by The Onion, the process of news appropriation (and thus consolidating journalism in massive conglomerates) becomes an absurd spiral of self-referentiality; finally, the judicial furor over the wikileaks project exposes the difficulty in controlling iterative discourse, particularly when it has “real world” implications and consequences.  I contrast Couldry’s “media rituals” and McNair’s “cultural chaos” to demonstrate the need for alternative methods through which we might understand transgression, departing from Habermasian fantasies of an open, power-free public sphere in favor of multiple, conflicting, and nomadic communities.  The paper argues that a model in which community and social change are embodied in a series of ontological “hacks” allows a space for a new, productive ethos of change even while operating within oppressive or stagnant system.  It culminates by trying to answer whether or not performance disrupts the everyday conceptual stasis of the news, or whether it simply acts to spice up an otherwise incestuous regime.Peter Krapp, University of California Irvine”Attention will be paid. Social media and economy of distraction”"Social media,” heralded as web 2.0, pivot on rampant monetization of attention and distraction. It depends on persuading a mass audience that participation in that dual market is not merely serving them up to advertisers, but empowers them individually to become content generators. This paper will argue that this is the most serious transgression in new media culture; it has become “the only division possible in a world now emptied of objects, beings, and spaces to desecrate.” From the vantage point of a dialectic of attention and distraction, the bundling of otherwise splintered audiences into advertising categories is an ill-concealed attempt to divert your attention from something and onto something else - or inversely, to distract you into thinking what I want you to think about. If we live in an attention economy, it is paramount to protect our freedom of decision on how attention is “paid”, and to observe closely how manipulations of the parameters of memory aid a “culture” industry.Grant Kien, California State University East Bay”Global Capitalism as Art: The case of Brendan Lott’s non-memory”This chapter explores several case studies in which conventional transgressions serve as the starting point for an entirely new common-sense understanding of agency and self-identification. Recent online phenomena such as Wretch.com and Stickcam.com circulate self-exploitative images and videos that reestablish traditional notions of transgression in a consumer base, evacuating them of any self-conscious opposition. How then to identify transgression in a world rooted in the self-management of one’s own exploitation? The work of Brendan Lott’s installation  Memories I’ll Never Have born out of online images reveals the transgressive juncture, the point at which unequal relations of global capitalism are revealed for what they are. This critical analysis of online/offline behavior is rooted in ethnography informed by Actor-Network Theory, taking web sites and Lott’s installation as sources of found data treated as narrative texts.Richard L. Edwards”Breaking Conventions: Political Video Mashups as Transgressive Texts”Political video mashups are an increasingly important part of transgressive political discourse in a digital age. Video mashups combine pop cultural knowledge, avant-garde techniques, the latest digital DIY tools and remix aesthetics into a media practice that is also increasingly driven by Web 2.0 logics and user-generated content. Using key examples of popular video mashups, this paper will examine how political video mashups are being used to affect contemporary politics and how they can play a subversive role in political discourse.As opposed to earlier modes of video activism that sought to signal their difference from mainstream, dominant media forms, a political video mashup embraces popular culture as its starting point. The formal properties of a political video mashup—frequently in line with larger trends in remix culture—are inherently transgressive. Mashups take existing media texts (many of them copyrighted and used without permission) and re-edit them and recombine them into new texts. A political video mashup can subvert official campaign media, attack mainstream news reports, reconfigure or decode the meaning of a candidate’s speech, or extend unofficial meanings latent in a video clip.But key questions remain about their transgressive potential. Can any practice that firmly embraces popular culture, even if it is subverting it on some level, operate as an oppositional practice for real-world political change? Do mashups use of certain cultural texts undercut claims of alterity or political resistance? In this paper, several case studies—including examples from mainstream shows and user-generated content—will be explored in an attempt to answer those questions.presented at the annual Popular Culture Association conference, New Orleans, April 2009

by ted on August 29, 2009 at 11:25 pm
Popping the Bubble

 

Bubble Wrap Closeup

 As of January, 2009 my exhibition “Popping the Bubble: 2008 Unemployment Statistics” at the Springer Cultural Center in Champaign, IL has been cancelled. The piece, a massive installation (approximately 1000 square feet of space), would have covered the floor with multiple layers of bubble wrap. Each bubble was to have represented one job lost in 2008 (for a total of 2.6 million bubbles/jobs), in what economists and politicians glibly call a “popped bubble” of economic prosperity. As viewers walked through the installation, they would have popped these bubbles themselves, making a visceral connection between them and the millions of newly-unemployed.Although the Springer was excited about the piece, it was censored twice. The first time, it was censored by Tim Cronin, the safety inspector, who said that I could not place anything on the floor where people might walk. However, even after I compromised by removing the wrapping from a central walkway (leading to a locked set of glass emergency doors, no less), he was unwilling to allow the piece to appear. He was also unable to demonstrate how and why the bubble wrap was any more dangerous than any of the other materials on the floor at the Springer, including several rugs and, most significantly, other artwork from previous shows that were placed in walking areas. After the Springer’s Board of Directors overturned his decision for its sheer incoherence, he called the Champaign Fire Marshall to get the piece censored yet again. The Fire Marshall dutifully complied, and forced the Springer to halt the exhibition. He was unable to give any justification other than the materials needed to be rated as fireproof, again disregarding the flammable materials of all other art exhibitions in the building. A statement that the bubble wrap actually required a very high heat to result in a flame (in my own experiments, it took a blow torch) rather than to simply melt was ineffective.Hopefully I’ll be able to find another venue for this piece, although it will of course have to be updated with contemporary statistics. As the economy is going to be pretty bad for a while, I don’t see us losing the poignancy of the “popped bubble” any time soon. Public art or no, I can’t say I’m happy about that.

by ted on at 10:21 pm
Convergence as Conflict: the Tasing of Andrew Meyer

Available Free at FlowTV (6.8)

The incident at the University of Florida last week brought many issues to the forefront.  The censorship and torture of a student is only one of those issues.  Horrified as I am by the events, I am interested in the responses in mainstream media that whitewashed the event, not unlike the response to protests in the 1960s and 70s, and the refusal of University administration to take responsibility (also like the earlier protest movements).  Now, however, the event and the questions it raises have been brought inescapably to the forefront by responses in networked media, with images and sounds that refuse the simplistic and reactionary responses by established voices.  More than anything else, this event tells us that (1) protest will never be only in “new” media, and (2) that emergent media forms work through a sophisticated approach to conflict, not consensus, in which community is a process of change and contestation.

by ted on September 21, 2007 at 5:23 pm
God does not play dice