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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

9 Theses on Art, by C.M. Djordjevic


Reference:

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/theses/theses.htm
http://www.marxists.org/archive/korsch/1950/ten-theses.htm

With thanks to R. D. Sherman for timely and helpful criticism.

For Ludwig

(1) Art is always and in all circumstances enmeshed in the fabric of ideas around it. Therefore, all contemporary art- it can be assumed, be it pro or contra, knowingly or not- is a reaction to Marxist theory. Without Adorno, there would be no contemporary music. Without Lukas no contemporary prose. Without Greenburg no contemporary painting.
(2) That the fundamental thesis of Marx is a challenge to all art hitherto in existence. Art was taken as a description of a description. 'The point however is to change it [the world]' The question 'what is art?' is a question of the function of art and it becomes fully articulated at this point in history
(3) That for Hegel and Marx a clear articulation of the necessary structure of the world, its logik, is possible independently of the conditions of the world such as practices, contingencies, etc.. And that this means that freedom is either (a) an act that seeks to negate this logik- though this negation is itself a futile gesture against the totalizing effect of the system (b) an act that accept one's place within the logik of the system. Either world-negation or self-negation.
(4) That negation is either of human agency completely; Cage's 4'33. Silence becomes 'the voice' of music. All human tampering with the now-ness of now is to be deliberately, systematically and completely removed from art. Art is what the world is without the demonic intrusion of supposed human free agency:: or the art is merely a product of the creator's will to create; Nietzsche, of course, falls into this. But the person who best represents it is Andy Warhol. Art is art because I (and this I is the only meaningful element in the equation) have elevated this- Brillo Boxes- to art.
(5) That the truth of art is a direct product of human will- be it the will-to-refrain or the will-to-assert
(6) That a truly creative act- from the point of view of the artist- must be measured by the amount of arbitrariness within the act. For Warhol, to create an artwork means to arbitrarily take an object- the more absurd the better- and raise it to 'artistic status' and that for Cage to create artwork is to arbitrarily define some random process or thing as art. Creation is ONLY and SOLELY understood in terms of the arbitrariness. Thus the true 'radicalness' of modern art. It challenges nothing by challenging everything
(7) That these theses, applied rigorously, systematically remove art from anything but a strange pattern of social and economic criteria. 4'33 is music because it is 'played' in a context, Brillo Boxes are sculpture because they are in a museum. This renders art as mere epiphenomena, completely vacuous of any claims on truth or meaning and forces art to be mere self-indulgence.
(8) That the fundamental idea behind these theses is that a logik of creation is articulable prior to the act of creation. We can know what art is and is not before we have encountered it. That the theses are seeking a Socratic definition of art and that when this definition is over-turned, the negation of the definition becomes the fundamental truth- everything is art or nothing is art because we are unable to define the logik of art.
(9) That the truth of art cannot be articulated independent of the process of engaging with the art. That the true insight of Marx is that art is NOT a description of the world. Nor is it an engagement with the logik of the world- be this logik economic or spirit. True art shows a profound understanding- indeed I'd argue the only truly adiquit one of faith- 'Faith is the substance of things hoped for; the proof of things not seen.' In art we see the Kingdom of G-d. Creative ex nihlo, not mere potential into actual. And this ex nihlo must be experienced to be understood: I and thou.. 'For behold, I am making the World anew.'
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Friday, April 25, 2008

Clinton wins imaginary popular vote!

Clinton is now claiming that she's winning the popular vote. Now I know some of you might be saying to yourselves; "Wait a second! I just went on RealClearPolitics.com and Clinton's still down by more than half a million votes."

Don't feel bad, a lot of people have the same crazy misconception that the popular vote is derived by adding up all the votes cast in certified primaries.

This is how the popular vote is actually counted:

(1) Take the popular vote from all the primaries recognized by the DNC. (Obama: 14,751,703, Clinton: 14,141,255)

(2) Add in Florida - where both candidates pledged not to campaign.

(3) Add in Michigan - where Obama wasn't even on the ballot.

(4) And now the fun part:

take out votes cast in Iowa

Washington

Maine

and Nevada.


And then you get Clinton: 15,116,688 Obama: 14,993,833.

It all makes perfect sense if you think about it... Full Post


A Critical Thinker who wasn't Paralyzed by his Critical Thinking

In his recommendation to ratify the newly-written Constitution (see "crazy hippy kids"), September 17, 1787, Ben Franklin writes:

...I believe that... [the new constitutional form of government] can only end in Despotism as other Forms have done before it, when the People shall become so corrupted as to need Despotic Government, being incapable of any other...

On the whole, Sir, I can not help expressing a Wish, that every Member of the Convention, who may still have Objections to it, would with me on this occasion doubt a little of his own Infallibility, and to make manifest our Unanimity, put his Name to this Instrument.



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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Why the FCC is a laughing-stock and why we should be crying

In the wake of the FCC's Hearing held at Stanford last Thursday, and Chairman Martin's testimony yesterday before the Senate, it's hard to be muster much hope for the future of the internet. Symptoms of of accelerating decline - from a free-wheeling barely-legal commonwealth to something more like network TV - are beginning to appear. These sores are made all the more painful in light of the promise that the internet seems to hold - if it remains a public good and not private property - to put the power to express, organize productive activities and waste time at work into the hands of the many.


The Bad

I'm saying things are bad because of what I saw last Thursday at the hearing. Comcast, as some off you may know, promised not to block or degrade traffic on its internet service. This was back in 2006. Another interesting thing happened that same year...

Comcast started blocking and degrading P2P traffic.

This isn't just bad. It's really bad. P2P is a technology that allows innovative individuals to provide services on the internet that used to be impossible without server farms and deals with companies that optimize internet load times - two things that are extremely expensive. P2P allows all the users that love the widget that you invented to provide the processing power and bandwidth that our imaginary widget needs to function. It's like a co-op. SO when Comcast blocks P2P services that provide innovators a way to compete with Comcast... that's very serious.


Jason Devitt put the threat quite succinctly in his testimony:



So that all really... bad (sorry for the redundancy), but it get's soooooooo much worse.

The Worse

The worse is that the FCC is clearly not going to do anything. Chairman Martin is in bed with the Telecom companies and absolutely loving it. (Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska might be going to jail for all the nasty things that go on in that bed, and if he does he'll get to share a jail-bunk with his son... who was also in bed with corporate America or was until the Feds caught him. We still haven't determined if they were in bed at the same time.) I'm already writing my January 15th, 2009 post on Chairman Martin joining the executive board of AT&T...

Ugly as it is, that's just how regulation works the majority of the time in the United States. In academic circles we call it "industry capture" and it's exactly like what it sounds. The regulatees become the regulators.

The Telecoms can field an awesome array of forces - they have Congressmen bought-and-paid-for, they have armies of failed economists and technology 'experts' paid to sanctify their cloven-hoved attempts to destroy the rule of law in this country with spurious economic, legal and technological arguments, but most importantly - they have the FCC.

I'm going to leave this rant with the Churchill-esque call to arms Commission Copp gave in his statement at the Feb 17th hearing:
"We’ve come a long way [...] but there are no guarantees for the future. And that wonderful, open and dynamic Internet—perhaps the most liberating technology since the printing press, if not even greater than that—is, in fact, under threat. We will keep it open and free only by acting to make it happen. Its future is not on autopilot and, indeed, powerful interests would bring it under their control for their own purposes— which may not be your purposes. I’m not presenting a novel theory here, I’m only learning from history. History shows that when somebody has the ability to control technology, and also has a business incentive to do so, they’re going to try. And that, my friends, is what this issue of Internet Freedom or net neutrality, or whatever you want to call it, is all about."

Next time I post I want to throw out some ways of acting. I'd also really like to hear from anyone who's reading this - at this point that's probably just friends and family - on what they think and what is to be done.

All the best.

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Net Neutrality: The Coming Battle

“Now we face a constitutive choice with the Internet—a choice between closed networks where the network operators control the user experience and open networks that are controlled by end users. This is an issue in which you must engage, not just because you are innovators and business people, but because you are citizens.


If I see what’s happening accurately, I believe we will have an opportunity, before very long, to decide this issue of Internet Freedom. It will be a major fight, with powerful forces on the other side. We’ll all have to work—and much as I know folks out here like to keep their focus on all the good entrepreneurial things they are doing, they—you—are going to have to focus on this issue, focus on Washington, and put your commitment and your resources into making sure the decision comes out right. Without that kind of participation, we will likely lose. With it, we have a real shot to win.”


Commissioner Copps openning statement @ the April 17th FCC En Banc Hearing on Net Neutrality

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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Exporting violence and exploitation, Importing really cheap tube socks

"Rep. James McGovern, D-Mass., [discussing the House Democrat obstruction of a free-trade agreement with Columbia] cited figures that in the first 12 weeks of this year, 17 trade unionists in Colombia were assassinated. 'When it comes to issues like human rights, I refuse to be a cheap date,' he said."

McGovern went on to say that the President would at least have to buy him dinner and listen to his legislative dreams before he would be willing to undermine human rights. (Not really.)
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Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Not with a bang but with a whimper...

First things first... Clinton showed that she can attack without looking mean or sounding shrill. And Obama that... well... I heard he was great at Harvard Mock Trial.

Whatever you want to say about Obama’s performance in tonight’s debate – awkward, lackluster, masochistic, punching-bag-esque… - it faithfully delivered the point that he’s manically pursued throughout the campaign. Namely:

I’m not playing your game.

Obama’s rhetoric – lampooned by Clinton as just a little too beautiful, just a little too authentic – operates on the level of what’s good in us, not what we fear or what our parochial views incline us toward. The latest conflagration over Barack’s San Francisco remarks is the Obama style writ large. Instead of knocking back a shot or donning a hard-hat for a photo-shoot, he addressed Pennsylvania seriously… foot-in-mouth serious, but serious nonetheless.

So, back to the debate, it shouldn’t surprise that Obama didn’t make the big political counter-punches on Hillary’s authenticity that the situation demanded. When the moderators brought up Hillary's serial misspeak on Bosnia, Clinton offered up that she hadn't gotten much sleep (possibility due to 3:00am phone-calls?) Obama did nothing to pursue her on the fact that she didn't just 'misspeak', she did it on at least three occasions. When Hillary was waxing poetic on her working-class roots, Obama didn't hit back with the fact that she grew up in privileged circumstances in an affluent Chicago suburb.

He gave his answers, not the right answers. When questioned on the “bitterness” comment, he described communities in this country that lost their economic raison d’etre 30 years ago and have lingered on since then fed on the Democratic Party’s starvation diet of empty populism; communities that have fallen back on those traditions that still give there togetherness meaning, religion and guns. When questioned on his… er… outspoken Minister, he repeated his old line. The Church had a profoundly positive ministry and he does not support the views of Rev. Wright.

Lame.

Obama also talked about transcending these issues and about how they were side shows. Good point, but this time his words truly fell short of his message. It’s all fine and good to talk about transcendence, but you need to show us that new world if you want to shatter the old paradigm. He did that in his “Major Speech on Race”, but today, he choked.

The trouble with attempting such a gambit in a debate is that transcendence takes time. It takes a speech like the one he delivered in Philly after the Rev. Wright issue turned into a media orgy, or his religion speech in 2006, or his 2004 Convention speech, or his “Yes, We Can” speech...etc. He’s used these speeches to move us beyond the sound bite and thus succeed in inverted Hillary’s attacks into a symbol of her own Rovian campaign tactics. His strong, non-violent responses have turned people irresistibly back to the image of Hillary as the Machiavellian attacker (no disrespect to Mackie).

But in the final analysis he just couldn’t get there; he needed to have more than weak excuses and repetition of previous remarks – however true those remarks were – to turn the momentum of Clinton’s aggression back upon her.

Obama needed to take the elitism remarks as an opportunity to say “I take you seriously.” To say “I’m talking to you like an adult rather than trying to manipulate you with images of shooters and hard-hat photo shoots.”

He needed to use the “he wouldn’t have been my pastor” attack to say “Rev. Wright was the pastor of my community, a community that I love and have chosen to work through.”

To say “We can’t wait for perfection or the mythic leader we agree with completely before we put our shoulders to the wheel. Just as we can’t wait for America to be the America want and to have the leaders she needs before we pull together to make her truly beautiful.”

Why not? This is what the left has always needed – less “American baaaahd” and more commitment to America as a common project.

Obama doesn’t need to retreat into the old manipulative language of politics to win. He needs to go deeper into his strength: speaking to me and you like we are adults. If he wins this nomination, I hope he will look back on this debate and remember that what America needs – though perhaps she has not learn to want it yet – is an end to condescending sound-bite, image politics (the rhetoric of domination.)

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