Our Virtually Real Existence I.
Nullity “A
revolutionary age is an age of action; the present age is an age of
advertisement, or an age of publicity: nothing happens, but there is
instant publicity about it.” -- Kierkegaard, The
Present Age II.
The Non-Event “The
non-event is not when nothing happens. It is, rather, the realm of
perpetual change, of a ceaseless updating, of an incessant succession in
real time, which produces this general equivalence, this indifference,
this banality that characterizes the zero degree of the event...We have,
then, to pass through the non-event of news coverage (information) to
detect what resists that coverage. To find, as it were, the ‘living
coin’ of the event. To make a literal analysis of it, against all the
machinery of commentary and stage-management that merely neutralizes
it.” -- Baudrillard, The
Intelligence of Evil or The Lucidity Pact III.
Remoteness The
world that comes at us with such ferocity is also a world that is out of
reach. TV and radio personalities, supermarket-tabloid celebrities, the
authors of bestselling books, film stars, bloggers, movie sets,
broadcasting studios, advertising shoots -- all are distant, not
proximate. In the past proximity meant seeing people in the flesh,
experiencing them in person, being party to the scenes that shaped our
Weltanschauung. Today we consent to having reality beamed into our living
room and study den, living life behind screens, through satellites and
networks. Both experience and experiencer have suffered a loss. -- Tim
Ruggier "The
spectator's consciousness, imprisoned in a flattened universe, bound by
the screen of the spectacle behind which his life has been deported, knows
only the fictional speakers who unilaterally surround him with
their commodities and the politics of their commodities. The spectacle, in
its entirety, is his 'mirror image.' Here the stage is set with the false
exit of generalized autism." -- Debord, The Society of the
Spectacle IV.
Contrivance “We
have heard ours called an age without direction -- a ‘directionless’
age. It would be better to call us the age of indirection...We make, we
seek, and finally we enjoy, the contrivance of all experience. We fill our
lives not with experience, but with the images of experience...The awkward
monstrosities of our everyday speech betray the secondhandness of our way
of looking at everything. We no longer talk about something; we talk ‘in
terms’ of it. In an organization a man is no longer important; he is
‘at the policy level.’ What we seek, we are told, is no longer wealth
or glory or happiness, but a sociological concoction called ‘status.’
We do not simply ‘believe’; instead we talk of ‘the values we
hold.’ We cannot do something in our spare time, we must cultivate it as
a ‘hobby.’ We do not study music or art or literature; we study the
‘appreciation’ of music or art or literature.” --
Daniel Boorstin, The Image V.
Reaction Is Electric “Reactionary politics work well with electronic media
because reaction is electric; that is, immediate, automatic, and
superficial. Revolutionary politics, on the other hand, have always been
tied to a dogged willingness to teach: to raise consciousness, to show how
the ties that bind include those invisible economic cords that bind the
disadvantaged to their fates.” -- Garret VI.
Watchableness "For 360 minutes per diem, we receive unconscious reinforcement of the deep thesis that the most significant quality of truly alive persons is watchableness, and that genuine human worth is not just identical with but rooted in the phenomenon of watching." -- David Foster Wallace, "E Unibus Pluram: Television & U.S. Fiction" VII. Feel, Don't Think "News broadcasts come and go as abruptly as the advertisements winking on and off in Tokyo and Times Square, the messages equivalent in their weightlessness, demanding nothing of the audience except the duty of ritual observance. Who knows or cares to know whether Rush Limbaugh's truths are truer than Toyota's? Who can follow a story to the end of the week, much less over the distance of thirty-three years? Nothing necessarily follows from anything else, and the constant viewer is free to shop around for a reality matched to taste, to make use of the advice imparted by a wise old Jedi knight to the young Darth Vader in Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace, 'Concentrate on the moment. Feel, don't think. Trust your instincts.' " -- Lewis Lapham, Harper's (August 2005)
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