{"id":2197,"date":"2011-01-19T23:10:25","date_gmt":"2011-01-20T04:10:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/?p=2197"},"modified":"2021-06-10T10:05:54","modified_gmt":"2021-06-10T15:05:54","slug":"post-cinematic-affect-in-the-era-of-plasticity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2011\/01\/19\/post-cinematic-affect-in-the-era-of-plasticity\/","title":{"rendered":"<i>Post-Cinematic Affect<\/i> in the era of plasticity"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>It&#8217;s probably inappropriate to review a book about four films when one has only seen one, and by far the shortest (it&#8217;s a music video), of the four. So this isn&#8217;t a review so much as an  appreciation of Steven Shaviro&#8217;s <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=MetRyPdbh9QC&amp;dq=shaviro+post+cinematic+effect&amp;source=gbs_navlinks_s\">Post-Cinematic Affect<\/a>, along with some half-digested notes I made while reading it, but which I haven&#8217;t been able to synthesize into what would constitute a proper review. Due to time constraints (which will continue for a while), I&#8217;ll share them as is. (I would also recommend Chris Vitale&#8217;s  <a href=\"http:\/\/networkologies.wordpress.com\/2010\/12\/29\/post-cinematic-affect\/\">response to the book<\/a>.)<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;ve been a fan of Shaviro&#8217;s work since a web search for &#8220;Dhalgren&#8221; led me directly <a href=\"http:\/\/www.dhalgren.com\/\">to Shaviro<\/a>, who it turned out was a fan of the book by Samuel Delany  that was formative in my early intellectual development. I was 13 at the time I read <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Dhalgren\"><em>Dhalgren<\/em>,<\/a> and I hadn&#8217;t read anything quite like it until then (or much like it since). I had come across Shaviro&#8217;s writings earlier, but I&#8217;ve followed them more diligently &#8212; and been inspired by his writing  on science fiction, films, music, politics and culture over the years  (his <a href=\"http:\/\/www.shaviro.com\/Stranded\/toc.html\">Stranded in the Jungle<\/a> provides a great snapshot of how widely his tastes range) &#8212; since chancing onto his site. His turn to Alfred North Whitehead in the book <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=fTYeu54xtkkC&amp;dq=without+criteria+whitehead&amp;source=gbs_navlinks_s\">Without Criteria<\/a> accompanied a move in my own thinking toward Whitehead&#8217;s  process-relational understanding of the universe. Since then, Shaviro  and I have found ourselves on the same side of the process-objects debates that  have been staged here and on other blogs.<\/p>\n<p><em>Post-Cinematic Affect<\/em> is a short work. Much of it appeared as an extra-length <a href=\"http:\/\/www.film-philosophy.com\/index.php\/f-p\/article\/viewArticle\/220\">article in Film-Philosophy<\/a>, and most of the rest is readable here and there online, but I would urge you to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.o-books.com\/book\/detail\/1038\/Post-Cinematic-Affect\">buy the book<\/a> to support Zero Books&#8217; laudable effort to make philosophy affordable.  Its shortness, however, and the small sampling of films it discusses, belies a depth of argumentation that generates rich insights on media, capitalism, affect, allure, celebrity culture, and  much more.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>The book is, as Shaviro describes it, a work of &#8220;affective mapping,&#8221; an attempt to map the &#8220;contemporary condition&#8221;  that is closing in around us in the post-9-11 world of neoliberal,  hyperflexible capitalism, a capitalism whose calculative logic of  infinite exchange has penetrated into the depths of our\u00a0 being. Shaviro closely examines four films: Olivier Assayas&#8217; <em>Boarding Gate<\/em>, Richard  Kelly&#8217;s <em>Southland Tales<\/em>, Mark Neveldine&#8217;s and Brian  Taylor&#8217;s <em>Gamer, <\/em>and the Grace Jones\/Nick Hooker music video &#8220;Corporate Cannibal.&#8221; The first three all received middling responses from critics and from the viewing public &#8212; to call them flops, at least in the case of the first two, wouldn&#8217;t be off the mark &#8212; but Shaviro argues that all can be read as both symptomatic and aesthetically productive engagements with the reality of hypercapitalism. All, in his words, &#8220;bear witness&#8221; to the &#8220;state of affairs&#8221; of the  &#8220;world of hypermediacy [&#8230;] and ubiquitous digital technologies,&#8221; the  world of neoliberal, networked and endlessly metamorphosing capital (p.  131). This is a &#8220;world of crises and convulsions&#8221; that is &#8220;ruthlessly  organized&#8221; around the relentless and singular logic of commodification  and capital accumulation, a world of &#8220;modulation, digitisation,  financialization, and media transduction&#8221; (132).<\/p>\n<p>Shaviro&#8217;s goal in this book is not to moralize or denounce the symptoms of cultural malaise characterizing this world,  nor to wax nostalgic about how things were before it came into being. It is instead to identify the &#8220;aesthetic poignancy of post cinematic  media,&#8221; media that assume that &#8220;the only way out is the way through&#8221;&#8211; <em>through<\/em> a world without transcendence, and through an exacerbation or  radicalization of capitalism &#8220;to the point of collapse,&#8221; as Benjamin  Noys puts it (136). Shaviro is aware that as a &#8220;project of affective and  cognitive mapping,&#8221; such &#8220;accelerationism&#8221; is politically dubious, but  he argues that with its exploration of &#8220;the contours of the prison we  find ourselves in&#8221; it is <em>aesthetically<\/em> productive and useful (137). And these four films capture, in one way of another, key pieces of that accelerationist aesthetic.<\/p>\n<p>I won&#8217;t go into the specifics of his analysis of the four films. But together they make up a minor <em>tour de force<\/em> of symptomatic reading, &#8220;minor&#8221; mostly because of the book&#8217;s modest length. <em>Post-Cinematic Affect<\/em> is rather like a single incision into an object that&#8217;s co-extensive with the contemporary hypercapitalist condition, but an incision so clean, precise and deep as to hit the very core of that condition.<\/p>\n<p>The films, in Shaviro&#8217;s reading, signify a shift whose contours crucially include the following:<\/p>\n<p>(1) First, a shift from <em>classical cinema<\/em>, which was analogical and indexical, a cinema of individuated presences and a duration of bodies and images, to <em>digital video<\/em>, which is processual, combinatorial, and <em>divi<\/em>dual, an  articulation and combination of forces; from <em>cinematic montage<\/em>, characterized by a mimetic, hypotactic, and striated space, to <em>digital compositing<\/em> with its simulacral, paratactic, and smooth space; from <em>analogue <\/em>cinema, in which image was primary and sound was  supplementary, to post-cinematic media in which sound is primary and  images supplement and illustrate it (as in television and music videos); and from the <em>time-image<\/em>, or rather a perpetually repeated movement out of the movement-image into the time-image (in Deleuze&#8217;s terms), to an exhausted and imploded  temporality;<\/p>\n<p>(2) Secondly, and more broadly, a shift from a (Foucauldian) disciplinary society, in which  individuals were molded into subjects according to relatively fixed parameters spanning a series of disciplinary\/organizational spaces, to a flexible society of ongoing, never-resting and never-sated <em>modulation<\/em>, where continuous recombination is a basic necessity for keeping up with the twists and turns of ever-unfolding hypercapitalism.<\/p>\n<p>Grace Jones&#8217;s and Nick Hooker&#8217;s <em>Corporate Cannibal<\/em> serves as a reflection of this state of endless modulation. Jones plays herself as endless modulator of her own image, an image that &#8220;swells and contracts, bends and fractures, twists, warps and contorts and flows from one shape to another&#8221;, all the while projecting a certain style, a certain &#8220;singularity&#8221; of &#8220;Grace Jones&#8221; as celebrity icon, a &#8220;long string of Jones&#8217;s reinventions of herself.&#8221; Jones is the transgressive &#8220;posthuman&#8221; who, unlike Madonna who &#8220;puts on and takes off personas as if they were clothes,&#8221; cannot retreat into the anonymity of the unmarked (because white) artist. Jones, a black woman, is already marked to start with, and is therefore playing &#8220;for keeps,&#8221; devouring &#8220;whatever she encounters, converting it into more image, more electronic signal,&#8221; and &#8220;track[ing] and embrac[ing] the transmutations of capital&#8221; as she goes. Jones in this sense represents &#8220;the chronic condition of our hypermodernity,&#8221; a hypermodernity we, or most of us, cannot escape.<\/p>\n<p>Shaviro points out that in this video there is no longer a reliable relation between figure and ground, or betwen stillness and movement, a pre-existing &#8220;structure of space&#8221; <em>within<\/em> which things happen. In the terms I develop in my <em>Ecologies of the Moving Image <\/em>manuscript, there is no longer any &#8220;frame&#8221; keeping the <a href=\"http:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2010\/12\/02\/the-model-peircewhitehead-films-dogs-worlds\/\">geomorphic-objectal <\/a>separate and distinct from the <a href=\"http:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2010\/12\/29\/on-anthropomorphism-making-humans-pencils-souls\/\">anthropomorphic-subjectal<\/a>; there is only continual modulation free of any stable parameters. While the argument I make there is that there has <em>always<\/em> only been a continual modulation within the frame, which itself is a kind of continual production in two directions (that of the subjective, or subjectal, and the objective\/objectal), Shaviro&#8217;s argument is that that frame of reference has now been abandoned altogether.<\/p>\n<p>This argument also reminds me of <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=leSNHAAACAAJ&amp;dq=sean+cubitt+cinema+effect&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=oVA3TaX-MsOclgeA0bDpAg&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=1&amp;ved=0CCMQ6AEwAA\">Sean Cubitt&#8217;s <\/a>analysis of Emile Cohl&#8217;s 1908 film <em>Fantasmagorie<\/em>, which serves as Cubitt&#8217;s example of the fullest and best of cinematic potential &#8212; what Cubitt calls the &#8220;vector&#8221; as opposed to the &#8220;pixel&#8221; and the &#8220;cut.&#8221; (His use of these terms is idiosyncratic and I won&#8217;t try to define them here.) Cohl&#8217;s <em>Fantasmagorie<\/em>, in Cubitt&#8217;s words, is &#8220;a brief line animation in which a mischievous puppet, Pierrot or <em>fantoche<\/em>,  and his environment change seamlessly. [&#8230;] Flowers become bottles  become a cannon; an elephant becomes a house; Pierrot becomes a bubble, a  hat, a valise. The vector of Cohl&#8217;s line, as it draws and redraws  itself, disrespects the frame edge and equally ignores the syntax of  layering&#8230;&#8221; (75-76).<\/p>\n<p>The point, for Cubitt, is this: while the &#8220;pixel&#8221; (which I replace in my book with the more straightforward term &#8220;spectacle&#8221;) &#8220;immerses us in the Real,&#8221; and the &#8220;cut&#8221; (which I call &#8220;narrativity,&#8221; and which is most clearly developed in classical, linear narrative) &#8220;transforms&#8221; the sensations elicited by the pixel &#8220;into signifieds, representations, the chain of cinematic objects,&#8221; thereby anchoring &#8220;motion in destiny,&#8221;<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>&#8220;the vector&#8217;s subjectivity is constantly launching itself outward, like a child playing, or even more like a playground full of children racing from game to game, personal to persona, utterly invested in what happens next. [&#8230;] In the vector, there is nothing behind &#8212; everything is in front. [&#8230;] The vector is eschatological: its future is open, governed only by hope.&#8221; (Cubitt, <em>The Cinema Effect<\/em>, p. 80)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The comparison, however, raises the question of the relationship between  digital media in today&#8217;s hypercapitalism and cinema at its very origins, before it was tamed into the &#8220;classical regime&#8221; of cinematic production and aesthetics. Will digitality <em>liberate <\/em>cinema to be what it once promised to become, at least if Cubitt&#8217;s argument is correct? But Grace Jones&#8217;s performativity is of a different order than animator Cohl&#8217;s line-drawing. Any distance there may have been between the draw<em>er<\/em> and the dr<em>awn<\/em>, between artist (Cohl) and performance (the film), has now evaporated with Jones&#8217;s ever changing mask behind which there is <em>no<\/em> unmasked <em>wearer<\/em> of masks.<\/p>\n<p>This lack of distance also makes me wonder about Shaviro&#8217;s notion that Jones&#8217;s video be considered a &#8220;feat of homeopathic magic&#8221; with respect to the hypercapitalist society in which it is immersed. Shaviro writes:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>&#8220;They [Jones and Hooker] do not claim to escape the mechanisms of the control society; rather, they revel in these mechanisms, and push them as far as   possible. Their remedy for the malaise of the digital is a further, and   more concentrated, dose of the digital&#8221; (p. 34*)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This furthering of the dose is, of course, not unlike what   Deleuze and Guattari advocated in their classic works of the 1970s, and it is related also to Baudrillard&#8217;s &#8220;fatal strategies.&#8221; What I&#8217;m wondering about here is simply whether &#8220;homeopathy&#8221; is the most appropriate analogy. Homeopathic remedies are generally thought to operate by injecting a minute dose of the &#8220;hair of the dog that bit you&#8221; (before the bite itself) to trigger an immunogenic effect. They are, in a sense, a highly diluted form of vaccine &#8212; diluted, in fact, to the point that little if anything remains of the active substance, except in the &#8220;memory&#8221; of the water.<\/p>\n<p>Jones&#8217;s video, on the other hand, like other forms of &#8220;accelerationism,&#8221; is more like an excessive plunge  into the parodic or the obsessive, or perhaps the mimicry of the &#8220;master&#8221; by the  &#8220;slave&#8221; (with its undercurrent of unease and potential threat). It is more <em>magical<\/em> than homeopathic, however, in its very performativity. A video like <em>Cannibal Tales<\/em> could be considered homeopathic within the larger body politic, but if it is <em>fully<\/em> <em>expressive of the condition itself<\/em>, then its critical capacity requires an audience capable of reading it a particular way for it to be anything other than what it appears. Homeopathic magic, I would argue (to the extent that such a concept makes sense), is less about the object, i.e., the remedy, than it is about the audience, or the object-audience relation; and in the case of any performer &#8212; Grace Jones, Madonna, Stelarc, Sacha Baron Cohen, or whoever &#8212; their critical and immunogenic action is a matter of their performativity being interpreted, utilized, assimilated, and activated in particular ways by audiences in real-world contexts.<\/p>\n<p>This <em>use<\/em> of celebrity icons (and other elements of popular culture) is where the rubber hits the road, so to speak, and I think it&#8217;s also where the limits of the argument may begin to make themselves felt. Shaviro&#8217;s notion that everything has become reducible to, and in fact <em>transcodable<\/em> within, the infinite modulations of digital code, is itself an <em>alluring <\/em>argument. I made <a href=\"http:\/\/pi.library.yorku.ca\/ojs\/index.php\/topia\/article\/viewFile\/92\/85\">a version of it<\/a> (pdf warning) several years ago in an article in which I drew on the work of Bill Bogard, Nigel Thrift, and others to present a &#8220;social science fiction&#8221; of a &#8220;soft&#8221; and &#8220;telematic&#8221; capitalism that brings economy, ecology, and culture into a convergent network of &#8220;interoperable&#8221; data streams. Once everything can be digitalized, the argument goes, it is infinitely exchangeable for other bits of data, leaving <em>nothing left<\/em> outside the digital and infinitely transcodable and interoperable data-world.<\/p>\n<p>I still think of this critical analysis as a &#8220;social science <em>fiction<\/em>,&#8221; however (the term is Bogard&#8217;s), because it is a lens, a perspective, that accentuates certain features of the world, certain virtualities, at the expense of its full spectrum of possibilities. Like Jonathan Beller&#8217;s work on cinematic capitalism &#8212; which Shaviro advances and refines with his analysis of digitality &#8212; this view, I would argue, risks an overly pessimistic assessment of our situation. Charting a kind of inexorable logic of capitalist development, it omits the many ways in which we, in our everyday lives and the hopes that drive them, still find <em> breathing room<\/em>, spaces that are free or at least not fully subsumed   within this logic, spaces of transcendence, resistance, or <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=DJsu3ngZoSMC&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;dq=post-capitalist+politics&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=YllVakfzBH&amp;sig=5pldT7ix0dHUaOv1JBBQ1PaOaeg&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=wpk3TfmvLcP6lwf8m4XUBg&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=8&amp;ved=0CFUQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false\"> postcapitalist <\/a>alterity.<\/p>\n<p>People find these spaces, these moments, in likely and unlikely places: in friendship and family, in the   aesthetic delights of artistic or cultural experiences, in community and   political activism, in religious and spiritual practice, in sports and   physical challenge, even in the rituals of trade and exchange. Of course some of us have the leisure to do this  and  others do not, and of course all of these are easily &#8220;tainted&#8221; by  the  whiff of commodification, calculation, self-promotion, and the like.  But we  persist because that inexorable logic of capital has <em>not<\/em> taken over everything.<\/p>\n<p>Shaviro&#8217;s argument about modulation reminds me also of Catherine Malabou&#8217;s argument about &#8220;plasticity,&#8221; which she develops most fully in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=SolDeXO_eOQC&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;dq=plasticity+at+the+dusk+of+writing+malabou&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=Et81Xm0Xo7&amp;sig=DggUIMeAGFFBhX0oVk0DqLRzWo4&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=cxM3TbrvDIeglAe1m5HeAg&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=1&amp;ved=0CBYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false\">Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing<\/a>.<\/em> For Malabou, plasticity is a master key to the dawning\/contemporary era;  it is, as she puts it, &#8220;the systemic law of the deconstructed  real, a     mode of organization of the real that comes after  metaphysics and     that is appearing today in all the different domains  of human     activity&#8221; (<em>Plasticity<\/em>, p. 57). In an <a href=\"http:\/\/www.jcrt.org\/archives\/09.1\/\">2007 interview<\/a>, Malabou comments:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>&#8220;I don\u2019t believe in transcendence at all. I don\u2019t believe in      something like the absolute Other, or in any kind of transcendence or  openness to the     other. So in this sense, as a Hegelian, I am quite  convinced with \u017dizek that     we\u2019re living in some kind of closed  organizational structure, and that society is     the main closed  structure. But at the same time, this structure is plastic. So it      means that inside of it, we have all kinds of possibilities to wiggle  and escape from the     rigidity of the structure. What happens in the  brain is the paradigm to figure out     what happens in society as such.  We are living in a neuronic social organization.     And I\u2019m not the  only one to say it. The neuronic has become the paradigm to     think  what the social is, to think society and social relationships. So it is      clearly a closed organization; if by closed we understand without  transcendence,     without any exit to the absolute Other. But, at the  same time, this closed     structure is not contrary to freedom or any  kind of personal achievements or     resistance. So I think that in such  a structure, all individuals have their part to     play.&#8221;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.eurozine.com\/articles\/2009-11-24-jokeit-en.html\">Neurocapitalism <\/a>has, no doubt, become a piece of the larger shift toward this networked, telematic, modulatory kind of flexible capitalism, a <em>society of immanent control<\/em>, in Deleuzian terms &#8212; not one controlled by a transcendent sovereign power, but one controlled by the very networks that constitute it.<\/p>\n<p>Even though the solution he offered remained much in the same vein as the problem itself, Deleuze, to my mind, suggested a more hopeful assessment than does Malabou, and I think Shaviro follows him in this respect &#8212; though I wish that were more fully developed in this book. Like Whitehead      before him, Deleuze&#8217;s\u00a0 philosophy struggled to present a fully <em>open <\/em>future, so that if we take his philosophy seriously (and Whitehead&#8217;s, which Shaviro of course does), we aren&#8217;t living in a  &#8220;closed organization&#8221; with bits of wiggle room here and     there, as  Malabou potrays it. Rather, we&#8217;re actually opening onto     a new world  in every moment, with plenty of resources to draw from     to make that  world more interesting. The social organization of the     neuronic (to  use Malabou&#8217;s term) offers possibilities for striation     (capture,  closure, hierarchy) and for smoothness (escape,     becoming, new  forms of relationality), and it&#8217;s not a singular     &#8220;closed structure&#8221;  at all but one that&#8217;s riven with multiplicities and is opening onto new fronts all     the time.<\/p>\n<p>That being the case, I&#8217;m left wondering if there isn&#8217;t a tension between the analytical-Marxist strand in Shaviro&#8217;s narrative &#8212; that which sees commodification proceeding in every pore of the individual and collective body politic &#8212; and the Deleuzo-Whiteheadian strand (which may overlap with a more <em>utopian<\/em> Marxist strand). For the latter, commodification <em>may<\/em> be occurring with every transaction, and mechanisms of control may be engendering themselves with every step and every breath, but so are new impulses toward truth, beauty, adventure, art, and peace &#8212; those five qualities of what Whitehead termed &#8220;civilization&#8221; in his <em>Adventures of Ideas<\/em>. If these six terms (including &#8220;civilization&#8221;) seem discredited to us, living in the wake of all the critical theory of the last 150 years, then it&#8217;s our task to reinvent them today.<\/p>\n<p>When I watch the other three films, I&#8217;ll be thinking about whether and how they might contribute to that task. But I&#8217;m grateful for Shaviro for encouraging me to think these things at all.<\/p>\n<p>*<\/p>\n<p>A few favorite quotes:*<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Every act of transgression offers at least a backhanded compliment to the order, the norm, or the law that is being transgressed \u2013 since it is only the continuing power of that order, norm, or law that gives meaning to the action of defying it.&#8221; (p. 23)<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;In the forty-three years that separate <em>Red Desert<\/em> from <em>Boarding Gate<\/em>, we have moved from an industrial society characterised by massive alienation, to a digitised and ostensibly \u2018postindustrial\u2019 one that \u2018require[s] participation in depth\u2019 (McLuhan 1994, 31) from everyone. Today, alienation is a quaint luxury that cannot be permitted to anyone any longer. In consequence, Antonioni\u2019s poetry of exclusion and idle beauty is replaced by Assayas\u2019 poetry of forcible involvement, relentless inclusion and compulsory monetisation. In <em>Boarding Gate<\/em>, Assayas\u2019 poetic stylisations respond to the way that the society of cognitive capitalism and immaterial labour continually transforms affect into currency \u2013 and vice versa.&#8221; (p. 62)<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;What action can still be meaningfully accomplished in the new \u2018world space\u2019 of endless circulation and modulation? What cinematic image of achievement can still be generated, in a world where all is time, where \u2018time is money,\u2019 where money is the \u2018most internal presupposition\u2019 of cinema, and where money always implies, as in Marx\u2019s formula M\u2013C\u2013M&#8217;, \u2018the impossibility of an equivalence\u2026tricked, dissymmetrical exchange\u2019 (Deleuze 1989, 77-78? What sort of subjectivity can remain true to itself, in a world where body and mind are measured and defined as flexible investments of \u2018human capital\u2019?&#8221; (p. 63)<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Indeed, time has been depleted in the world of Southland Tales, just like every other natural resource. The psychedelic drug Fluid Karma allows you to travel or \u2018bleed\u2019 through time. But this drug is just a by-product of the new energy source, also called Fluid Karma, that has freed America from its dependence on oil. Fluid Karma is produced by the Baron von Westphalen and his Treer Corporation; they manufacture it by capturing the motion of the ocean tides, a seemingly limitless source of energy. But of course, there is no such thing as a \u2018perpetual motion machine\u2019 (which is how the Baron describes Fluid Karma). The extraction of the ocean\u2019s energy results in a kind of tidal drag that slows down the rotation of the earth. This leads in turn to a gradual running down of time itself and a rift in the space-time continuum. The leaking-away of time \u2013 its asymptotic approach to an end that it never fully attains \u2013 is both a major theme of Southland Tales and the principle behind its formal organisation of sounds and images.&#8221; (p. 88)<\/p>\n<p>*Note: Page numbers here refer to the <em>Film-Philosophy<\/em> version rather than the zerO books version.<\/p>\n<div style=\"width: 1px;height: 1px;overflow: hidden\">\n<p>trying to bring science, and     through it empirical\/material reality, back into the fold of     philosophy by historicizing it within a Continental-philosophical     historiography according to which we are now &#8220;after metaphysics.&#8221;     (E.g., &#8220;plasticity is the systemic law of the deconstructed real, a     mode of organization of the real that comes after metaphysics and     that is appearing today in all the different domains of human     activity,&#8221; p. 57.)\u00a0 But I wonder if this doesn&#8217;t simply leave the     metaphysics of science\/scientism intact&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>A question: Where, in her account, is agency?\u00a0 If the human subject     is &#8220;plastic&#8221; and this does not mean an infinite malleability (which     would render it impotent in the face of political projects to impose     &#8220;form&#8221; on it &#8220;from above&#8221;), then what is it that counterbalances     that malleability? Is there something akin to a &#8220;human nature&#8221;, a     set of developmental propensities toward sociability, fairness,     etc.? If so, should we be choosing the right (or left) kind of     neuroscience over the wrong (or right) kind, and on what basis do we     make that choice?<\/p>\n<p>Having asked the question, I think there are some answers in her     interview with Noelle Vahanian (pdf here:     <a class=\"moz-txt-link-freetext\" href=\"http:\/\/www.jcrt.org\/archives\/09.1\/Malabou.pdf\">http:\/\/www.jcrt.org\/archives\/09.1\/Malabou.pdf<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; CM: &#8220;History is inscribed within the biological. That is what     \u201cplastic\u201d means when applied to the brain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; CM: &#8220;The self? [&#8230;] Damasio [says that it] is the elementary     process of self-dialogue &#8230; It is the self-information of the vital     processes&#8230;. [&#8230;]<br \/>\nOf course the general process of self-information is common to     everybody,<br \/>\nso in this sense it is a universal structure. But, if we take for     granted that at the<br \/>\nsame time the way your brain builds itself it departs from this     structure, on the<br \/>\nground of this structure, then auto-affection, the way we keep     ourselves<br \/>\ninformed about ourselves, is always individual.&#8221;<br \/>\n[&#8230;]<br \/>\nNV: &#8220;Can you say something about the relationship of the individual     to the public realm?&#8221;<br \/>\nCM: &#8220;The most recent and current research in neurobiology reveals a     new kind of<br \/>\nbrain organization that may work as a model to understand all kinds     of<br \/>\norganization today: society, for example. On this point, I\u2019m very     close to what<br \/>\n\u017dizek tries to think when he says that he\u2019s looking for a new     materialism, which<br \/>\nimplies this concept of society as a whole, as a closed totality     without any kind of<br \/>\ntranscendence. That is also something he develops in The Parallax     View in<br \/>\nparticular.<br \/>\n&#8220;I don\u2019t believe in transcendence at all. I don\u2019t believe in     something like the<br \/>\nabsolute Other, or in any kind of transcendence or openness to the     other. So in<br \/>\nthis sense, as a Hegelian, I am quite convinced with \u017dizek that     we\u2019re living in<br \/>\nsome kind of closed organizational structure, and that society is     the main closed<br \/>\nstructure. But at the same time, this structure is plastic. So it     means that inside of<br \/>\nit, we have all kinds of possibilities to wiggle and escape from the     rigidity of the<br \/>\nstructure. What happens in the brain is the paradigm to figure out     what happens<br \/>\nin society as such. We are living in a neuronic social organization.     And I\u2019m not<br \/>\nthe only one to say it. The neuronic has become the paradigm to     think what the<br \/>\nsocial is, to think society and social relationships. So it is     clearly a closed<br \/>\norganization; if by closed we understand without transcendence,     without any<br \/>\nexit to the absolute Other. But, at the same time, this closed     structure is not<br \/>\ncontrary to freedom or any kind of personal achievements or     resistance. So I<br \/>\nthink that in such a structure, all individuals have their part to     play.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I can&#8217;t help wondering what would happen if she brought in Deleuze,     who (it seems to me) had already suggested this kind of &#8220;new     materialism&#8221; in ways that avoids either scientism or science&#8217;s mere     subsumption within philosophy. I think that Deleuze (like Whitehead     before him) allows for more of an openness &#8212; he wouldn&#8217;t say we&#8217;re     living in a &#8220;closed organization&#8221; with bits of wiggle room here and     there, as she suggests, but rather that we&#8217;re actually opening onto     a new world in every moment, with plenty of resources to draw from     to make that world more interesting. The social organization of the     neuronic (to use her terms) offers possibilities for striation     (capture, closure, hierarchy, etc.) and for smoothness (escape,     becoming, new forms of relationality), and it&#8217;s not a singular     &#8220;closed structure&#8221; at all but one that&#8217;s opening onto new fronts all     the time.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>It&#8217;s probably inappropriate to review a book about four films when one has only seen one, and by far the shortest (it&#8217;s a music video), of the four. So this isn&#8217;t a review so much as an appreciation of Steven Shaviro&#8217;s Post-Cinematic Affect, along with some half-digested notes I made while reading it, but which [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":99,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"advanced_seo_description":"","jetpack_seo_html_title":"","jetpack_seo_noindex":false,"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[688745,688977],"tags":[348,17800,17798,352,17799,8,17796,17797,266],"class_list":["post-2197","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-cinema_zone","category-geo_philosophy","tag-capitalism","tag-critical-theory","tag-cubitt","tag-film","tag-malabou","tag-media","tag-science-fiction","tag-sf","tag-shaviro"],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/p4IC4a-zr","jetpack-related-posts":[{"id":5205,"url":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2011\/08\/23\/coming-up-post-cinematic-affect-theme-week\/","url_meta":{"origin":2197,"position":0},"title":"Coming up: Post-Cinematic Affect theme week","author":"Adrian J Ivakhiv","date":"August 23, 2011","format":false,"excerpt":"Next week, the Media Commons project In Media Res will be hosting a theme week on Steven Shaviro's Post-Cinematic Affect (which I wrote about here). I'll be guest curating the discussion on Wednesday, and Steven will be responding on Friday. Here's the full line up: Monday August 29: Elena Del\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Cinema&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Cinema","link":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/category\/cinema_zone\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":5252,"url":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2011\/09\/02\/shaviro-responds\/","url_meta":{"origin":2197,"position":1},"title":"Shaviro responds","author":"Adrian J Ivakhiv","date":"September 2, 2011","format":false,"excerpt":"Steven Shaviro has posted his response to my and three other \"curators' notes\" on his Post-Cinematic Affect. The twists and turns of the discussions that have followed each of the daily commentaries have been fascinating. Somehow we've gone from a discussion of recent cinema to theorizing about affect and the\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Cinema&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Cinema","link":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/category\/cinema_zone\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":1120,"url":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2009\/09\/18\/relations-vs-objects-part-x\/","url_meta":{"origin":2197,"position":2},"title":"relations vs. objects, part x","author":"Adrian J Ivakhiv","date":"September 18, 2009","format":false,"excerpt":"I'm glad to see that Steven Shaviro and Levi Bryant have stepped into the fray of the debate over the relative virtues of object-centered versus relation-centered ontologies. (Among others, e.g. kvond, Peter Gratton, Graham Harman of course, and see the commenters to Levi's posts on Harman and Whitehead). With some\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Philosophy&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Philosophy","link":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/category\/geo_philosophy\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":8182,"url":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2015\/04\/02\/post-cinema-cultures-of-energy\/","url_meta":{"origin":2197,"position":3},"title":"Post-Cinema, Cultures of Energy","author":"Adrian J Ivakhiv","date":"April 2, 2015","format":false,"excerpt":"Those who missed\u00a0the panel on \"Post-Cinema and\/as Speculative Media Theory\" at last week's\u00a0Society for Cinema and Media Studies conference in Montreal will be able to view the videos of the talks at medieninitiative. Steven Shaviro, Patricia Pisters, Mark Hansen and I entertained a standing-room only crowd (see\u00a0the audience\u00a0spilling out into\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Cinema&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Cinema","link":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/category\/cinema_zone\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":1032,"url":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2009\/02\/23\/kauffman-shaviro-goodwin-et-al\/","url_meta":{"origin":2197,"position":4},"title":"Kauffman, Shaviro, Goodwin, et al.","author":"Adrian J Ivakhiv","date":"February 23, 2009","format":false,"excerpt":"Complexity theorist Stuart Kaufmann recently gave a talk here from his book Reinventing the Sacred: A New View of Science, Reason, and Religion, which is getting more press these days than most books with a Spinozian\/Whiteheadian take on the emergent nature of intelligence, complexity, spirituality, and all that. Talking to\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Philosophy&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Philosophy","link":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/category\/geo_philosophy\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":8355,"url":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/2015\/07\/28\/sr-or-morton-on-the-universe-of-things\/","url_meta":{"origin":2197,"position":5},"title":"SR, or Morton on The Universe of Things","author":"Adrian J Ivakhiv","date":"July 28, 2015","format":false,"excerpt":"Tim Morton has penned a nice (if thoroughly Mortonish)\u00a0introduction\u00a0to a very nice introduction (by Steven Shaviro) to speculative realism. With lines like these: \"Theory class, in other words, needs an upgrade. Theory class is pretty obviously quite narrow in any case. \u201cTheory\u201d is basically (mostly continental) philosophy or derivatives of\u2026","rel":"","context":"In &quot;Philosophy&quot;","block_context":{"text":"Philosophy","link":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/category\/geo_philosophy\/"},"img":{"alt_text":"Gallery_Image_10562","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/files\/2015\/07\/Gallery_Image_10562-275x206.jpg?resize=350%2C200","width":350,"height":200},"classes":[]}],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2197","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/99"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2197"}],"version-history":[{"count":36,"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2197\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2448,"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2197\/revisions\/2448"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2197"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2197"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blog.uvm.edu\/aivakhiv\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2197"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}