
My Year in Consumption |
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| Reconsidering 2008 | |
by Joel Schalit, December 16, 2008 |
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Despite another year of falling
sales, declining readerships, and crashing stock markets, 2008 turned out
to be one of the best years for culture I can ever remember. Kevin
Martin, AKA The Bug, finally scored it big with his breathtaking London Zoo LP. Waltz with Bashir,
an Israeli anti-war film with impeccable artistic credentials became
one of the most talked about movies of the year--not just
in Tel Aviv, but internationally. Meanwhile, two of my favorite
philosophers, Slavoj Zizek and Jurgen Habermas, published their most important works in nearly two decades.
An
old Trotskyite friend of mine once said, "I'll take biology over
culture any day." It was 1994, and though the statement was made in
jest, there was an undeniable air of seriousness to it. He'd finally
gotten over Kurt Cobain killing himself when his favorite local band,
Green Day, entered the top ten, exposing Berkeley's precious punk scene
to every uncaring mallrat in America. Needless to say, he couldn't enjoy the
contradiction, or find any remote value in it. Fourteen years later, I can't help but
feel as though the 'we' that once gave voice to such anxieties still
managed to prevail.
As if we ever hadn't. My tenth year
writing top ten lists, it seems like there's never enough space to give
credit where credit is rightfully due. So, this year, instead of adding length,
I'm adding another media, specifically television and film. Why I
didn't do this in the past, I'm not so sure. I have always been a big movie-goer, and, even with just a measley TV adapter for our iMac, I still take in a lot of quality television as well. In no specific order, here is what caught my attention this
year, and perhaps might merits yours, too.
Music
The Bug: London Zoo (Ninja Tune)
Steinksi: What Does It All Mean? 1983-2006 Retrospective (Illegal Art)
2562: Aerial (Baked Goods)
Jimmy Radway & The Fe Me Time All Stars: Dub I (Pressure Sounds)
Flying Lotus: Los Angeles (Warp)
Various Artists: Give Me Love: Songs of the Brokenhearted, Baghdad, 1925-29 (Honest Jons)
Ezekiel Honig: Surfaces of a Broken Marching Band (Anticipate)
Various Artists: 1970's Algerian Proto-Rai Underground (Sublime Frequencies)
Philip Jeck: Sand (Touch)
Various Artists: Soundboy's Gravestone Gets Desecrated by Vandals (Skull Disco)
TV/Film
Strangers, (Israel) directed by Erez Tadmor and Guy Nattiv
Listening Post, presented by Richard Gizbert (Al-Jazeera English)
Gomorrah, (Italy) directed by Matteo Garrone
Mosaic, produced by Jamal Dajani (Link TV)
Under The Bombs, (France/Lebanon) directed by Philippe Aractingi
World News America, hosted by Matt Frei (BBC America)
You Don't Mess With the Zohan, directed by Adam Sandler
Hunger, (UK) directed by Steve McQueen
Waltz with Bashir, (Israel) directed by Ari Folman
The Baader-Meinhoff Complex, (Germany) directed by Uli Edel
Books
Slavoj Zizek: Violence (Picador)
Mark LeVine: Heavy Metal Islam: Rock, Resistance and the Struggle for the Soul of Islam (Three Rivers Press)
Steven Lazarides: Outsiders: Art by People (Century)
Gabriel Piterberg: The Returns of Zionism: Myths, Politics and Scholarship in Israel (Verso)
Antonio Negri and Raf Valvola Scelsi: Goodbye Mr. Socialism (7 Stories Press)
Jonathan Curiel: Al-America: Travels Through America's Arab and Islamic Roots (New Press)
Tony Judt: Reappraisals: Reflections on the Forgotten Twentieth Century (Penguin)
Allegra Stratton: Muhajababes: Meet the New Middle East: Young, Sexy, and Devout (Melville House)
Jurgen Habermas: Between Naturalism and Religion: Philosophical Essays (Polity Press)
Joel Schalit is Zeek's culture editor.
In Defense of Zizek |
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by Josh Strawn, December 3, 2008 |
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Freud once wrote that "the technique of jokes cannot be a matter of
indifference from the point of view of discovering their essence." Adam Kirsch, in his takedown of Slavoj Zizek in The New Republic as "The
Deadly Jester," is sternly concerned with those essences, but due to an
abundance of neglect on matters of technique, not much light is shone
on the work of one of the worlds most attention grabbing cultural
theorists. How far can the jester go without turning a joke regarding
evil into an evil in itself? Does he have a productive
function--and if so, can his work be done effectively if he's demanded
by his audience to stay in-bounds?
Zizek's work is undoubtedly joke-laden. His is not programmatic
writing in the style of many of his leftist colleagues such as Antonio
Negri, Andrew Arato, Judith Butler, Enrnesto Laclau,
etc. But it is precisely for this reason that Kirsch's inference of
what Zizek's programme "really" is, and his subsequent revulsion, are
problematic. It's also familiar. Laclau has called Zizek a
totalitarian and Butler has claimed his ideas have an affinity with the
right. But Zizek is exciting precisely because his innate drive to
rail
against all kinds of orthodoxy inevitably makes him an enfant terrible
to just about anyone and everyone depending on the topic at hand.
Kirsch thinks of Zizek as the jokester who's subversively breeding
degeneracy among would-be progressives. But what about technique, both
of the critic and of the comedian?
First the critic: one wonders if Kirsch's three hundred and sixty degree attack on Zizek
is meant to be ironic, since it is fundamentally Freudian. Less an
Interpretation of the Slovenian's Dreams and more an assessment of
Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious, the diatribe enjoys as
much of the psychoanalyst's "authoritarian" posture as the subject it
claims to be analyzing. However, even the more dedicated volumes that
have been devoted to explicating what "Zizekian" thought consists of
admit that Zizek does not offer this answer very clearly (more on this
later...) It's telling that Kirsch is so ready to make that leap.
Nowhere is the problem with Kirsch's analysis more apparent than in his attacks
on the recent book 'Violence.' He tells his readers that Zizek
means to tell us that "resistance to the
liberal-democratic order is so urgent that it justifies any degree of
violence." Not so. The author is very clear. He says that his intent is to
expand our conceptual understanding of violence beyond it's more
obvious eruptions. He wants to explain violence not as merely the act
of violence with which we're most viscerally and morally aware (what he
calls 'subjective' violence), but more thoroughly--as inclusive of the
network of relations and circumstances that make that violence
possible (he calls this 'objective' violence). Sure Zizek quotes Lenin's directive to "Learn,
learn, learn." That doesn't make him a Bolshevik.
One could, if one were so inclined, shockingly quote from
'Violence,' "while [terrorists] pursue what appear to us to be evil
goals with evil means, the very form of their activity meets
the highest standard of the good." There you have it ladies and
gentlemen, Slavoj Zizek thinks that terrorism embodies the highest
standard of the good. Fascist!! This is extremely easy to do, and it suggests the person doing so is only skimming to cherry-pick. More on "form" later, but the
difference between an honest reader of Zizek and a detractor on a mission is
that the reader would deal with what comes after. Namely, that this
point is raised primarily to discuss what's wrong with terrorism.
Via
Rousseau, Zizek wants to explain that what would appear to be at work
in modern terrorism isn't a familiar egotistical evil that fails to
subordinate the self to social prohibitions against mass murder, but
rather amour-propre. The latter being a particularly perverse
form of self-love that's more bent on destruction (blowing up the WTC)
than the achievement of the supposed goal (the new Caliphate). It is
the preferring oneself to others in a way that causes one to act
against one's own interests. With so much terrorism wreaking pure
destruction and failing to accomplish any supposed goal, one might
imagine anyone interested in understanding the enemy might give more of
an ear to Zizek's ideas. What drives terrorists is ressentiment and envy--a deep anger driven by their own belief in their own inferiority and envy of the enjoyment of others:
Too often the standard left (terror is the result of U.S. foreign
policy and/or globalization) and standard right (terrorism is the
result of fanatical Islamic imperialism) explanations don't do enough
work to fully explain the phenomenon of global terror. Each side gets something
important correct, yet each comes up short. Of course there is worker
migration, the breakdown of rigid borders, and displacement from
traditional modes of community belonging that help increase the appeal
of identification with religious symbology and ideology. There is
anger toward the U.S., sometimes justified--but just as often imaginary
and xenophobic--that fuels extremism.
But the ideology itself also
determines the character of the movement and provides the rationale for
its activities. Therefore, the right is correct to say that ideology and
those who act avowedly according to its goals must be held to account
in very literal way. Zizek isn't offering a 'middle road' or
discounting either argument. He offers a new dimension to the
conversation--one that ultimately argues not for sympathy with
terrorism or "tolerance" for Islam--but rather one that argues
adamantly against tolerance and in favor of atheism as European legacy
worth defending against Islamic radicalism! And not Stalinist atheism,
either.
Elsewhere in the piece, Kirsch raises an eyebrow at Zizek's use of
scare quotes, but note their use when Zizek refers to "godless"
communism. Taking issue with Andre Glucksmann's use of Dostoevsky in
the title of his book 'Dostoevsy in Manhattan,' he argues that
Islamists and Stalinists prove the opposite of the Karamazov wisdom--if
there IS a God then everything is permitted.
Zizek's answer to the problem of amour-propre-driven
terror and Western liberal "tolerance"? Hold Muslims accountable for
their beliefs. Treat them like adults. And defend atheism--not just
closeted and outlying atheism common in the U.S.--but the the variety
of godlessness that is so acceptable that it isn't an obstacle to
public office that will also stave off the pursuit of anything from communist religiosity to religious extremism. Say what you will about jarring statements about the
"form of the good." Nobody who has read 'Violence' can discuss it and
fail to acknowledge that these are the driving themes of the book.
As for the form of the good versus the actual good. The distinction regarding form is made precisely because the form of the good and the actual
good can be and often are quite different. This is a bit like the
distinction in informal logic between the validity of a statement and
its soundness which I've expounded in these pages before.
In much the same way, Zizek's discussion of terrorism as a pathology isn't at odds with the prior statement that the form
of terrorism embodies a standard of the good. It is the vocation of a
philosopher to make these kinds of distinctions, which makes it all the
more depressing when others then insist on making a conflation out of a
distinction. When Zizek compares terrorists to Milton's sympathetic
Satan ("Evil, be thou my good"), he means this only in a formal sense:
So what we have is not praise for terrorism as resistance--it
is a critique of a certain perceived predicament concerning today's
coordinates of freedom and political action. Terror here is referred
to clearly as a "meaningless outburst." It is not lifted up as actual
opposition to the system, it is only formally a kind of noble
sacrifice. Its content is something entirely different, and therefore
so is the actual moral truth of the act. Elsewhere in 'Violence,' he
describes the opposition between "anemic liberals" and "impassioned
fundamentalists. Paraphrasing Yeats' 'Second Coming,' he notes, "The best' are no longer able to fully engage, while
'the worst' engage in in racist, religious, sexist fanaticism."
When
I picked up
'Welcome to
the Desert of the Real' so many years ago, I gave up on reading it
because I was quite certain that anyone that wanted to understand what
Zizek was talking about probably needed to understand something about
Lacan. What I subsequently discovered was that one does not cursorily
educate oneself on Lacan, nor is it possible to do so (even after six
years of immersion, it's quite hard to feel like you 'get' Lacan).
This is by
Lacan's design.
He famously said that the way in should be difficult. It is
willful obfuscation, not plain-spokenness in the
vein of Orwell's 'Politics and the English Language.' Then again,
Lacan wasn't
teaching politics. He was the most bizarre pedagogue. One learned
from him not by way of traditional study, but through experiencing
him.
The teacher was not to be the disseminator of knowledge so much as the
figure who provoked the unquenchable desire for knowledge.
The whole Lacanian universe, no matter how much Kirsch wants to
talk about supposed affinities for despots, is the fundamental passion
of Zizek. His is not a conventional means of communication, it takes
into account structures of desire, the unconscious, and the
joke. Art is the lie that tells the truth as the theorist
psychoanalytic Marxist tells the joke that drives toward something more real than the plain and didactic. Just as Lacan used his prose and speaking style to perform his philosophical position, so does Zizek use the mode of popculturemuncher provocateur and jester to hyperactively manipulate the audience's desire and toy with their own unconscious modes of enjoyment and repression. In Zizek's universe, these are not peripheral curiosities of mind, they are central to understanding poltics.
Through disparate and disjointed (often repetitive) volumes and
lectures, the most unifying thread in Zizek's oeuvre is the
fearlessness to say what dare not be said. To leave open the horizon
for saying the unsayable and doing the unthinkable. It's inevitable
that if you say that you have a fascination with the Jewish state as
the living exemplar of the violence involved in all state creation,
someone is going to call you a racist. So Zizek calls himself
a racist first as a joke, much as a Jew who mocks himself by
bestowing slurs upon himself before the anti-Semite does. Zizek and
any serious reader knows the statement is anti-statist, not
anti-Semitic.
But also, this is significantly a matter of style. Zizek is happy
to talk about his first experiences with psychoanalysis as the
patient. He did so in a debate on moral relativism with Steven Lukes
which I caught a few months ago. To watch Zizek is to know immediately
that this is a man with a hyperactive brain and an obsessive need to be
heard. He points out that his analyst had such a hard time with him
because he tends to keep speaking so that his interlocutor has little
chance to become involved (proved at said debate by the amount of floor
time Zizek hoarded from Mr. Lukes). This, if anything is the best
critique of Zizek, and it also explains why he sees his own theories
and ideas in everything, from horrible Hollywood action films to jihadism to Kindersurprise candy eggs to the Holocaust. He is
obsessively incapable of seeing anything else--he can't shut it off.
In this way, the vice of Slavoj Zizek is also the virtue. An M.
Night Shyamalan film you might never have bothered to watch can take on
whole new life as an ingenious philosophical metaphor. One gets the
sense that very often the entire universe and every historical moment
is merely a prop waiting to be used to explicate some bizarre
Hegelian-Lacanian constellation of ideas. More often it seems critics
like Kirsch primarily take issue with the absolute lack of boundaries
Zizek sets for himself in terms of what he will and will not use to
demonstrate some aspect of his thought. If Zizek suggests we notice
the kernel
in Leninism worthy of recuperation--the willingness to make the
historical rupture and assume full responsibility for our political
struggle toward a better world--this does not make him nostalgic for
the Soviet state.
This is politics as the
art of the impossible and philosophy as the art of the asshole. Some
like Kirsch will invariably insist that this means Zizek is the
harbinger of the next fascist apocalypse cloaked in pop culture
references and irony. But looking awry from Zizek and his work, he looks less like the Elvis
of cultural theory and more like Willy Wonka. There a juvenile
Socrates-cum-Johnny Rotten element to it. A gadfly who, like any great
humorist, will take the joke too far--to the point of
discomfort--to prove a point. A little ingenious, a little sadistic,
very fallible, wildly imaginative, but ultimately well-intentioned and
aware of the pitfalls that go along with the risks.
For a 20th
century that saw political oppression strictly through the lens of
liberalism vs. illiberalism, Zizek's 21st century vision is entirely unique. That's
why it's incorrect to read him as a fascist/communist. He is opposed
to different aspects of both liberalism and illiberalism. He isn't a
Marxist that sees capitalism in terms of the Industrial Revolution or
the digital one. He's opposed to capitalism as the political
organization of enjoyment. As for what that means, this isn't the
forum for exegesis. But it's far more interesting a framework--whether
one adopts it or not--for imagining a left politics or why one might
even be desirable in today's world.
It's not very apropos of Kirsch's erudite and well-written essay to
broach the subject of Eminem. I guess it's a bit "Zizekian." But it
wasn't long ago that humorless liberals and conservatives were decrying
in unison the rapper's second record as an ode to wife-beating,
homophobia, drug abuse, murder, and all around bad taste. They didn't
appreciate the joke--not when the first track had the superstar singing
about his mom 'taking it like a slut.' But oftentimes the jester is the
most successful at preventing orthodoxy from becoming a regime. In the
late 90's and early 2000's, it was political correctness that had
sanctioned what could and could not be said to the detriment of art and
politics. What was of the utmost was that somebody say anything and
everything, and so that's what Eminem did.
Even though 9/11 punctured the burgeoning orthodoxy of the End of
History, it inaugurated or reinvigorated many more, new and old.
Clashes of Civilizations, Barbarians At the Gates, the Triumph Of
Democracy, America As Great Satan, younameit. This arrived at the peak
in popularity of postmodernism in continental philosophy--the academic
equivalent of the cultural P.C. regime. Zizek came storming in as the
one who would call most of the left's arguments against invading Iraq
weak (even if he too objected and his "Borrowed Kettle" argument
against the
intervention was unconvincing itself). He railed against mush-headed
deconstructionists, and, yes, even liberals who had resigned themselves
to believing that There Is No Alternative to capitalism. This was and
still is refreshing and
almost always productive.
Journals like The New Republic are supposed to
encourage radical thought in the secular public sphere. Slavoj Zizek is not so
borderline fascist that his ideas should be thought of as outside the
parameters of respectable consideration. His technique may
be graceless and crass at times, and his ideas may sometimes be mistaken. But
his hyperbolic humor and sweeping statements are really no more
exaggerated than Kirsch calling him "deadly." Though when
Zizek does it, at least it most often feels like an effort at opening
up space for a new idea or a new way of thinking. Of course I'm sure Kirsch is no
advocate of active--call it 'subjective' censorship--but this
is 'objectively' how academics silence one another.
So is Zizek walking the
walk or being a hypocrite when he writes at length about G.K.
Chesterton's notion of the "thrilling romance of orthodoxy" as he does
in "The Puppet and the Dwarf?" One might say this only confirms Zizek's underlying
authoritarianism and/or fascism. But one might also be fascinated by
the sheer audacity of a staunch historical materialist to riff off of
the 20th century's most adept Christian apologist.
Being provoked to
find out just how/if Zizek can pull that off--having one's desire to
"Learn, learn, learn!" revved by the prospect, and enduring (enjoying?)
the crass and weird moments in order to arrive at the rewarding idea is
not only not Bolshevik, it often has the potential to be one of the
most engaging experiences in modern political thought. That's not
"Deadly," it's lively--as long as one is not indifferent to technique when analyzing the essence of that experience.
Žižek For Jews |
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by orasimcha, August 26, 2008 |
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Slavoj Žižek declares in his latest opus, In Defense of Lost Causes (Verso), that while postmodernism has caused (or allowed) every other kind of racial, social, and cultural identity to be in flux, Jewish identity appears to have become fixed in a simple equation in which Jews=Zionists=racists (thank you, UN). Jews are expected, he says (in his usual difficult prose) to “yield with regard to their name”—that is, “in the liberal multiculturalist perspective, all groups can assert their identity – except Jews, whose very self-assertion equals Zionist racism.”
Žižek, an internationally reknowned intellectual, has been at the cutting edge of social and political theory for almost two decades, and apparently strives to be an outsider. It is therefore no surprise that he has developed an interest in Jews, as such. Žižek cares so much about Jewish identity because he identifies as Jewish. Not literally. He is no more a Jew than Joe Lieberman is a liberal. Rather, Žižek, a product of Slovenia, a country torn by the last century’s wars, sees in the Jewish experience a representation of contemporary experience that is far more subtle than a chaotic and relativistic mash-up of identity politics. Was it not, as Žižek says, that “in the history of modern Europe, those who stood for the striving for universality were precisely atheist Jews from Spinoza to Marx and Freud?
Zizek on the Ideology of Toilets and Pubes |
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by Michael Weiss, October 5, 2007 |
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Why Nothing Is Žižekproof |
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by Josh Strawn, May 30, 2007 |
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Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek will hopefully always generate as much praise as criticism. Simon Jarvis writes of one of Žižek's recent works, The Parallax View:
Žižek himself describes this work as “his magnum opus”, but it is not really an opus at all. It is the valuable record of what an extremely intelligent Hegelian-Lacanian happens to think about whatever happens to have crossed his cerebral cortex at the time of writing.
Jarvis notes early on that Žižek has rendered classical German philosophy deconstruction-proof and recuperated universalism, then concludes by saying that the fellow "must try harder" if he is to put his talents to good use. Wait--how long has the liberal academy been stuck in its pathologically particularist, Derridean, Foucauldian loop again? Žižek is certainly not always on point, and he may pimp one soda, Hollywood film, or dead dictator too many to make his points, but it's precisely the resistance of his thought to orthodoxy that makes him essential. It'll actually be cause for concern when the shining reviews start pouring in.
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Al Qaeda Finds Its Rock Star |
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| Trent Reznor's audio valentine to Islamism | ||
by Josh Strawn, May 3, 2007 |
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