Saturday, December 3, 2011

Learning to write

An interesting experience, stopping for a while and surveying what it is you have done and are doing. A moment of reflection, or reflexivity, or maybe both. (A quick googlecheck yields: oar.nipissingu.ca/PDFS/V812E.pdf) But also a professional necessity for job applications. What have I been doing? Some quick online advice suggested that a research statement should state what you have been researching, a few of the results that have come from that, and outline where you are going and what you are planning to do next.

So, in the process of applying for a couple of design history positions, I came up with a one-page statement of my research project. Felt better than years of therapy. This is it:


Research statement
My research project is based on documenting and explaining the origins of professional graphic design in Canada after 1945. This project has been highly successful, as I am still working through and making sense of the wide range and sheer volume of artifacts and images it has unearthed. My research fills a huge gap in our understanding of global design. Although Canada enjoys status as a major developed economy, there has been little academic writing on its graphic design, and no single survey text or major exhibition to provide context and continuity in design studies in this country. My immediate goal is to finish writing and curating the images for such a survey text. This process will be aided by my new status as Research Associate at the Royal Ontario Museum, which houses the design archives of a number of Canadian designers.

In addition to digging back in time, my doctoral research studied how design works, going beyond the simplistic phrase “visual language” to examine how visual culture produces meaning through iteration and mimesis, without any working grammar or syntax. Design produces aesthetic, disciplinary, discursive, and even economic effects without having any regulating structure and without being a systematic language. In this sense, it is far more interesting than language. Revised parts of my dissertation have been published as articles, such as “Touch, Community, and Aesthetics: Where Harold Kurschenska’s Designs Take Us,” in DA, A Journal of the Printing Arts (2004). In addition to completing the publication of various other chapters from my doctoral work, I have another book project started, on Canadian designer and illustrator Eric Aldwinckle.

I have also sketched out a plan for a text on design history and theory. But far from adding another survey to the pile (I have taught the history of design from four different existing ones: Meggs, Raisman, Joubert, and Eskilson), I want to link key readings in critical theory to various periods and design movements, as work-shopped over ten years of teaching: Kant and typography; Saussure and Dada; Benjamin and Bauhaus; Adorno and International Style; Jameson and Grunge, etc. 

I am also continuing my reading into post-structuralism, globalization and Marxist economics, and the implications for visual culture represented by the loss of presence and positive meaning that such analyses suggest. I am developing a series of articles, and hopefully a book, on how capitalism creates value (which it measures as the cumulative price of goods and services), and how design’s fluid, mimetic, and open source generation of value points not only beyond any professional design language, but beyond the capitalist mode of production itself. This thesis was the basis for my most recent paper, “Identities, Mimesis and Ownership: How Does Design Create Price and Value?” for a session I co-chaired at the Universities Art Association conference in Ottawa last month.


Friday, November 25, 2011

Contemporary Problems, Response to Chapter 10


2011.NOV.25
Chapter 10, The Global Flow of Visual Culture

Many ways to respond to globalization, as well but I will focus on one of my favorite authors: about the same time as cultural and other theorists were writing about postmodernism (see response to Ch. 8), Terry Eagleton returns to a key theme of modernist political theory, ideology
Terry Eagleton, Ideology, An Introduction (Verso, 1991)
Reject the concept of ideology, as if we are free of collective interests that determine and direct us?
Postmodern rejects representation, skeptical of any real knowledge, sees power arising everywhere
Idea of “ideology” is said to be closed, old school, too deterministic (it looks at how we are structured)
But to lose concept of ideology while remaining driven by ideas is to fight ourselves,
       as one does in psychoanalysis: the self at war with itself, a very postmodern condition
Ideology, range of meanings: any guiding ideas, or just the false ones? Necessary to all, or specific to just some misguided souls? Is ideology enabling or dominating?
Often seen as false, source of blindness, distortion, and error; but all thought requires pre-conceptions
Technocratic society wants to deny any bias, as though its power is scientific, inevitable, objective
Foucault’s concept of ideology too broad: power and ideology found in every gesture, practice, habit
Language, technology, institutions all tools, specific to some forms of power, 
not the source of oppression
Source of religion, for example, not just power or domination: it may be false but not absurd,
       responds to real needs, pain, fear, alienation, lack of identity in fluid, changing world
Ideologies often obviously false: one people are inferior, e.g., or capitalism always brings democracy
But sometimes ideology can be based on factual things, but interpreted and used deceptively
Like advertising: no lies in a cigarette ad that shows cowboys smoking, but clear implication is false:
       cigarettes don't make you manly, they make you sick or dead
Problem: facts can be confirmed, but values cannot
Is there a basis for deciding between fundamentally conflicting values, or is it all relative?
Louis Althusser’s concept of ideology: not true or false, merely our lived relationship to situation
Ideas may be warped, but are necessary, natural, and unconscious, come from our real circumstances
Ideologies pragmatic (they get things done) and constitutive (they shape and determine our actions)
But are they really natural, neutral? Surely in a society of real freedom, there would be no ideology
There would be “nothing to explain away,” (28), no reason for complex narratives and illusions
Ideology is more than everyday practices, and not all are equal: the colour of a country’s mailboxes
       not as powerful, profound, or important as the size of its army
Six broad definitions of ideology (in order of rising specificity, power, and domination):
       All general ideas or beliefs held in common
       Ideas of any group or class
       Ideas used to promote and legitimate a group’s collective interests
       Ideas of the dominant group
       Distorted ideas used to defend the dominant group’s interests
       The distortion and deception inherent and systemic in any unequal, material social structure
The last suggests that ideologies arise from historical and material circumstances; so can they be
       changed simply through changing ideas?
Or does society have to change? Or do they change each other?
Is it crude and simplistic to see ideology as a product of economic compulsions, a systematic distortion that keeps wages low, or prevents workers from running their own workplaces collectively

Jürgen Habermas: rational, technocratic, pragmatic, instrumental ideas replacing rational “public values”
Places capitalism beyond ideology? Society run on basis of pure utility, technical solutions, not values
We become “exchange-value” only, no subjectivity to work on: “capitalism flattens the human subject to a viewing eye and devouring stomach.” (38)   
But complex, modern production requires independent, creative thought: can’t all be ironic machines
Summarizes other theories of ideology: it is all around, in the air we breathe, but is it immutable?
Frankfurt School (Adorno, Marcuse), single, monolithic, deceptive, identical, reified culture
Reified = abstract ideas made concrete, embodied, frozen in material relationships
       (usually not for the best)
Raymond Williams: varieties of social experience, local cultures, allows resistance:
       no hegemony is absolute, there are many “structures of feeling,” paths to action
Michel Foucault, power is absolute, rises from a micro-physics, like sap in our veins
       (but then how to explain critical thinking? How to explain Foucault himself?) 
Important link: all ideologies must appear (be made to seem) natural, inevitable, universal, eternal
Althusser again: “ideology has no outside,” each one seems infinite (58)
But surely some interests really are universal? Equality, women’s liberation, e.g.
Only truth can survive being truly self-aware; ideology cannot understand itself to be ideological,
       or it ceases to work as, or to be, ideology
Our ideologies must be based on who we really are, or we must reject them
Eagleton then traces a broad swath of intellectual and political history, from the Enlightenment to Marx and the Second International (1914); through Lukács and Gramsci; to Adorno and Bourdieu
Chapter 7 is key for design: “Discourse and Ideology,” how words and other signs give us concepts
Tracing power through how we use language, prefer to imagine ‘deep meaning, closed systems;
       we want to imagine that the visual is a reliable language, when it is open and contingent
Our social position does imbue us with interests and specific ideas, like a galley slave vs. its master
Situation doesn't determine everything about the slave’s thoughts, but surely constrains it
And a slave’s thoughts surely represent that situation, the class position of slavery, if imperfectly
Do people become conservative from simply voting Tory? Or do they have real property to defend?  

For a detailed and challenging book on this same theme, but read through the philosophy of art and culture, see Terry Eagleton, The Ideology of the Aesthtetic (Blackwell, 1990).

Contemporary Problems, Response to Chapter 8


2011.NOV.25
Chapter 8, Postmodernism, Indie Media and Popular Culture

Many ways to look at Postmodernism; it was much more than a style that came after the modern’
Exhaustion of the modern energy; an end to its confidence in progress; loss of self-critique as
       any guarantee of its truth or progressive nature
In fact, today, postmodernism isn't even a central concept: as if we have lost the focus and ability
       to even doubt the modern, a permissive, infinite flat plain of possibility
Has the market simply absorbed everything, the sole justification for whatever we do,
leaving no room for critique and opposition?
 (Only a disorganized Occupy movement without even demands?)
But it’s worth looking at the question still, of what overall is the role of culture (and design) today, starting with modernism itself:
Tony Pinkney, “Modernism and Cultural Theory,” Introduction to Raymond Williams, The Politics of Modernism (Verso, 1989)
Raymond Williams, studies many aspects of culture, indeed establishes ‘cultural studies’ as a field
Sees modernization and modernism (the art of modern societies) as “acceleration,” true of Wordsworth (English Romantic poet, 1770 – 1850) as it is of post-structuralist French philosophers today
Modernism the accelerated culture of a mass industrial society, serving the capitalist class it arises with?
By the 1950s, it was, in Williams’s words, a kind of “glossy futurism,” (9) a highly efficient and
       effective form of mass communication, perfect for corporate needs
Postmodernism continues the role of modernism, de-familiarizing, questioning, but in a popular idiom
Using irony and imagery from mass culture, not an oppositional avant-garde of difficult, negative works
Or is postmodernism just what it appears, an endless play of forms, without choices or distinctions
Once again perfect for corporate needs, but now on a truly global, mass scale?
Williams argues against postmodernism, as a newly dominant and misleading ideology
In “When was Modernism” he suggests 1880 – 1950; the late 19th Century crucial for media innovation:
       photography, cinema, magazines, radio, recordings, etc.
Just as World War One (incidentally) produced income tax, propaganda, passports and
       workers’ revolution throughout Europe (but especially in Russia)
Modern art movements an incidental product of these energies and technologies; modern forms
       easily absorbed back into global capitalism: marketing and innovating in “heartless formulae” (35).
So, perhaps postmodernism is not too far removed from modernism, a continuation of it
Shares same problem: how to understand culture (let alone oppositional culture) in a world
       so completely dominated by private ownership of production, global markets, and the profit motive

No doubt many people (like me) first became aware of postmodernism in this collection of essays:
Hal Foster, Ed., The Anti-Aesthetic, Essay on Postmodern Culture (Bay Press, 1983)
Foster argues “the project of modernism is now deeply problematic.” (ix)
Modernism successful, but absorbed: became dominant culture, its jarring innovations new norm
Modern exploration of specific demands of a medium (painting is the prime example), now becomes
       about “cultural terms,” ideas that cross boundaries of discipline and media
We explore the idea of the sublime, or push issues representation, across high and low art,
       mixing popular and avant-garde culture, re-using and re-writing them like so many texts
Positions within a wildly plural field defined by politics, “affiliations,” interests
Play of the economic on culture not repressed, but celebrated, explored, to play with
Both “a postmodernism of resistance and a postmodernism of reaction”: take apart the dominant
       paradigm of high modernism; or just use history to rehash the past and leave things as they are
To be critical, postmodern practice cannot just return to old forms, in quote and pastiche
Foster insists on a critical distance, “a critique of origins, not a return to them.”
But: I think the proliferation of so many critical approaches—like the many topics and chapters in
       Practices of Looking—no longer have a meaningful way to engage, or to conflict with each other
In modern practice, certain works were validated as “genius,” most was rejected as kitsch or trash
But if everything is equally interesting, useful, worthy of study, and representative of some specific
       culture, how are we to decide which way to move, what is progress, and what to do next?
There must be a material basis from which all art and design arise, it must represent something more than stylistic or personal preference
Modernism pushed against the academic and stale culture based on Renaissance standards,
       which had become a parody of itself, badly in need of radical vision and artistic revolution
How are we to push against a culture that can buy and sell anything? Not whom do we work for,
       but what are we working against?


Other key writers in this very 1980s debate on postmodernism, many of whom happen to come from a Marxist perspective, seeing history as based in material interests, and the struggle between classes:
Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (Duke, 1991)
100 year old modernism exhausted; popular forms, not difficult ones, become central:
       pulp fictions, Las Vegas architecture, ‘B’ movies, gothic and science fiction, etc.    
Postmodernism is a new period, where all forms of art and design are passively accepted
“Aesthetic production today has become integrated into commodity production generally”
A culture of depthlessness (no deep meanings); schizophrenia (can’t separate what is real and what is not); impersonal intensities but not emotions (like movie effects or video games); and a “waning of affect,” no feeling or expressive power, just a cool surface of images copying each other



Another important text, by a Marxist geographer who puts postmodernism in a wider social and
       economic perspective. This is a great overview of modern intellectual and social history:
David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity (Blackwell, 1990)
We experience life as if guided purely by ideas; postmodernism makes a kind of sense
As if the struggle of ideas alone creates cultures and change; fail to see the material basis of ideas
Postmodern ideas arise in universities, among academics, not arising out of wider social upheavals
A rising capitalist class had an interest in Enlightenment and modern ideas: they has to displace the
       monarchs and privileged aristocratic classes, to build a society based on investment and merit
Who is the postmodern for? Who fights for it, what social interests are represented by it?
What drives this plural, permissive culture, what determines its logic, its boundaries? Are there any?
Harvey traces rise of modern in the city, in philosophers (Condorcet, Weber, Nietzsche)
In new modern culture: writing (Proust, Joyce); art (Picasso, Duchamp); music (Stravinsky, Bartok)
theatre (Brecht); science (Einstein); industry (Ford); and other fields (Saussure)
Class inserted itself in the modern: workers’ revolutions of 1917 and later in Russia, Germany
       or realist art of working classes in the depression, 1930s
Do we see the world through that lens today? Understand the forces and struggles that drive it?
Tracks key postmodern figures, like Foucault: drive to power diffuse, everywhere in society
Lyotard: there are no big “meta-narratives” anymore, universal themes that can liberate ‘all mankind’
       only local constructs; a vast middle class, not workers vs. the bourgeoisie; just people, not ‘Man’
Harvey also explains the changes in global capitalism since 1973, the first big postwar recession
From 1945 to the mid-1970s, it seemed as though the economic system had solved its crises,
       Depression a distant memory, not a real possibility; only a question of how much growth
Why did economy boom after the war, and why did it return to crisis and slow growth in the ‘70s?
Capitalism has become highly flexible, investments move rapidly across globe,
       new cheap sources of labour appear (tens of millions of Chinese peasants move to cities, e.g.)
Still not enough to create sustainable, livable, and equitable modern world
Like Marx, Harvey looks for the contradiction, the self-defeating principle at the heart of capital
It needs human labour to grow and profit, but it constantly replaces workers with machines
Efficiency pushes out the source of all new value (that’s us), in search for short term gain (see: banks)
A culture that thinks it can escape the need for living labour is the basis of a postmodern culture?
       With its rootless images, a culture without origins or essences, change without progress

This all seems to beg the question: Are Indie media and popular forms of culture an adequate practical response to the loss of confidence in a progressive, or even just a professional, modern culture?