Monday, December 10, 2007

Reaction to "The Ecstacy of Influence" by Jonathan Lethem

Saturday night, my boyfriend and I were driving north on 57, attempting to get home for a family celebration. Instead, we found ourselves flung 30 yards off the roadside, with a tree trunk 2 ft into the back of his car. This was by far the closest experience I've had to death. However, during the two full spins and what seemed like hours of sliding, all I remember thinking about was a mix of the muddy car scene in Jurassic Park with the "let go" crash from Fight club. I didn't even realize how frightened I was until stepping out of the car. While reading Lethem's article, I felt a little indignant that I didn't experience that car crash as my own. For god's sake, I was thinking about a movie! Lethem addresses the concept of original source. I often find myself wondering, when writing or sketching, if I read or saw what I am working on somewhere else. There are only so many human experiences to draw from. Re appropriation and remixing is as common as "original" work anymore. I love Lethem's conclusion: "Today, when we can eat Tex-Mex with chop sticks while listening to reagge and watching a YouTube rebroadcast of the Berlin Wall's fall--i.e. when damn near everything presents itself as familiar--it's not asurprise that some of today's most ambitious art is going about trying to make the familiar strange. In so doing, in reimagining what human life might truly be like over there across the chasms of illusion, mediation, demographics, marketing, imago, and appearance, artists are paradoxically trying to restore what's taken for "real" to three whole dimensions, to reconstruct a univocally round world our of disparate streams of flat sights." I often find myself trying to push my experiences, separate myself from media, and record something uniquely mine and completely whole. I think this is a reaction to the impossibility of unmediated experience.

Reaction to "Rebirth of a Nation" by Paul D. Miller

I really had a hard time deciphering DJ Spooky's remix of "Birth of a Nation." I wiki-ed D. W. Griffith's 1915 white supremacist film. To be perfectly honest, I didn't feel that Miller made any interesting point with the remix, that I could understand, and I found his notes very frustrating and indirect. The only line I really could relate to what I saw was "But if you compare that kind of flux to stuff to DJ mixes, you can see a similar logic at work: it's all about selection of song as narrative." Griffith's original film used a very strong story/narrative to make a political statement with a strong emotional appeal. By telling a story, Griffith makes his audience empathize with the victimized white characters and celebrate the heroic ones. I guess this relates to DJing? Telling a story with the mixing of different songs? Miller connects his work with montage. Which makes sense. I really don't know what else to say. I didn't really appreciate it.

Reactions to "The Body and the Archive" by Alan Seluka

I have a feeling I did not fully understand the entirety of Sekula's essay. This may show significant misinterpretation, but I would summarize Seluka's thesis as such: The introduction of photography began an exact documentation of human bodies/physiological features, that provided "the man" with further evidence to categorize society, based on these features, into a social and ethnic taxonomy. As in, photographs of Chinese farmers could be dissected into thousands of implications of "Orientalism," low income, and subservience in Western eyes. Or the image of a man beside a woman could demonstrate his superior strength by examination of his height, muscle mass, and posture. I guess, if this is a correct interpretation, I can agree with Seluka as much as the camera accelerated this already existent taxonomy. This whole essay made me think of the 16th century Casta paintings that came out of the Spanish conquest of South America. In fact, I believe you showed one in class. These existed far before the invention of the camera, but definitely highlights European interest in ethnography and social taxonomy. My boyfriend, who is Peruvian, has told me that, to this day, you can see remnants of this social categorization, where the lighter skinned generally hold higher-paying jobs. I guess the point could be made, that Casta paintings were very similar to the inexistent world of photography, as they were pictorial documentation of people's bodies, with as much "scientific accuracy" as possible. The camera is a very powerful tool, in that it holds this status of "scientifically accurate," however, I think the power of photography dwindles everyday with the accelarating pervasiveness of photoshop and special effects. However, a perfect example of this is fashion publications for women. While we know perfectly well that the pictures we see of Kate Moss and Keira Knightly have been airbrushed and altered, we cannot help but to disect ourselves in comparison to these images. We lift "signs" of beauty, such as slimness, clean skin, large eyes, and shiny hair, despite the fact that half these things have been artificially created. We know the photograph is not "scientifically accurate" but its power still holds. It would be odd to find a woman comparing herself to a contemporary painting, because the media does not claim accuracy.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Reactions to "What is a Sign?" by Charles Peirce

The tone that Charles Peirce uses really dates the article. It definitely seems like the analysis of a far simple culture, and body of information than today's world. He breaks all of "human interest" into three levels: primary [interest in the a thing in and of itself], secondary [interest in a thing in relation to other things], and mediatory [interest in a thing as a representation]. First of all I do not think this a very linear progression. Second I don't think it encompasses all of the many cognitive relationships we have with our environment. Peirce continues to separate signs into a somewhat corresponding three groups: likenesses [or icons], indications, and symbols. The catagory that is the least consistent and logical, to me, is the indices. What does that mean? His example was a guide post, which is a physical thing and not well related to the world of images. He then continues to say that "pictures alone--pure likenesses--can never convey the slightest information." Ok, lets look at his zebra example. He states that equating a zebra to a donkey as a symbol of stubbornness is an application of likeness. Tell me how that is "no information" whatsoever. I would say, using his own incomplete formula, that the analysis would go like this. As you perceive a zebra, you already have the perception of a donkey in your mind [a likeness]. The shape of the animal indicates [indice, obviously] that the zebra relates to the donkey. You associate the image of a donkey with the animal's stubborn nature, and that correlation is a third-level symbolic/representative level of cognition. But instead he delivers a shit-awful jumble of random information. Personally, I think his theory leaves out many important factors in how we think about images. I guess personal taste and customs can be learned, but I don't think they would fit in the same pattern of logic. What about all the things we learn by way of community. For example, when we are little, and our brains are most active, we will put anything into our mouths, regardless of association to things we have eaten before. We learn on a case-by-case basis. Then our parents instruct us on what is good and bad for our bodies. That lingual learning formula is far more complicated than perception, indication, rule. Anyway, it was an interesting article.