Friday, July 31, 2015

Converse Chuck II, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism

In his magnum opus Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (1991), Fredric Jameson frequently laments the abject position of both the Marxist theorist and the revolutionary artist in Postmodern/Neoliberal/Globalized/Post-Fordist culture. Unlike his German progenitors (Adorno, Brecht, Benjamin, etc..) who upheld Modernist aesthetic practices as the only antidote to or way out of the all-encompassing superstructural adaptations of the culture industry, Jameson describes a period in which previously revolutionary/avant-garde gestures and styles have become assimilated into institutional practices and have thus been evacuated of any potential political valance. These styles, in turn, now constitute an aura-less archive which contemporary artists cite as debased pastiche; in other words, as Jameson famously states, "Modernist styles" (the idiosyncratic brushstroke that indexes a transcendent subject) have now become "postmodernist codes" (the decontextualized ironic deployment of previously oppositional strategies).

Since this pronouncement (which, it should be remembered, came during the rise of finance capitalism and the emergence of China as a new capitalist power), Jameson's positions, especially his critique of pastiche as a-historical and a-political, have come under fire from a myriad of critics. But however potent these critiques remain (particularly Linda Hutcheon's in The Politics of Postmodernism), Jameson's original thesis continues to inform many of the most significant voices of post-Marxism Left who have attempted to theorize the relationship between contemporary economic/social transformations and their aesthetic expressions.

Two accounts I have found particularly stimulating are Jeffrey Nealon's Post-Postmodernism (2012) and Mark Fisher's Capitalism Realism (2009). Like Jameson, Nealon and Fisher are of course interested in the same topics of assimilation, the cultures of finance capitalism, and the ideological apparatuses that foreclose even the unconscious disavowal of capitalism. What I find most interesting in their accounts, however, is their convergence on topic with which I know y'all are constantly engaged: Classic Rock.

To summarize, according to Nealon, classic rock has undergone a process of assimilation that is comparable to Modern art in Jameson's analysis, but which, according to him, evinces a much more intense, accelerated cultural transformation. Not only has Classic Rock's oppositional potential been totally neutralized, but it has now also come to stand for a right-wing/neoliberal position that would have been antithetical to its role in its original context. To quote Nealon:

"On this line of reasoning, the prescription for classic rock’s cultural longevity is then relatively easy to reconstruct: drain the leftist political stances and the druggy danger out of rock music, and conveniently forget or downplay rock’s roots in African American culture, and there you have it—not exactly the “durable Republican majority” that Karl Rove had openly dreamed about, but something parallel" (55).

"In other words, classic rock at this juncture functions in popular culture as little more than an endless incitement to become who you want to be, being your own person, not following everyone else, and all the other stuff that cultural subversives like Miss America contestants and former sports stars talk about in their Sunday prayer breakfast speeches" (55).

"Drained" of its original political context among student demonstrations, the New Left, experimental lifestyles, drug use, and sexual "freedom," classic rock has now become an expression of the fundamental tenets of finance capitalism and global consumer culture: total, deterritorialized freedom to invest and consume. The biggest irony that I notice about this transformation is that while a protest song in the 60s might have claimed its target as the oppressive social policies that facilitated America's aggressive neoliberal interventions abroad (in southeast Asia or Latin America for example), those very same songs are now being used to promote the policies that they used to condemn (think about Trump's use of "Keep on Rockin' in the Free World").

While I'm yet to finish Capitalist Realism, Fisher's argument seems intimately related to Nealon's. Like Nealon, Fisher wants to suggest that the cultural logic of late capitalism of the late 90s and 00s has not only confirmed Jameson's original thesis, but has indeed surpassed his observations. For this claim, Fisher also cites Rock music:

"What we are dealing with now is not the incorporation of materials that previously seemed to possess subversive potentials, but instead, their precorporation: the pre-emptive formatting and shaping of desires, aspirations and hopes by capitalist culture. Witness, for instance, the establishment of settled ‘alternative’ or ‘independent’ cultural zones, which endlessly repeat older gestures of rebellion and contestation as if for the first time. ‘Alternative’ and ‘independent’ don’t designate something outside mainstream culture; rather, they are styles, in fact the dominant styles, within the mainstream. No-one embodied (and struggled with) this deadlock more than Kurt Cobain and Nirvana..." (9)

While Nealon argued that Classic Rock evinced the cultural process of  assimilation-with-inversion, here Fisher claims that the culture industry now has been able to formulate and sell oppositional tactics before they even go through the process of political transformation.

But what does this all have to do with footwear? Cruising twitter last week, an ad popped up heralding the new "Chuck II" sneaker from Converse. The ad, which suggests a radical reformulation of the enduring basketball sneaker appears as the following:


Of course, it's no novel observation (more of a cliche by now actually) that Converse Chuck Taylors have long been intimately associated not with athletics, but musicians, particularly those positioning themselves against the perceived utilitarian normativity proffered by American culture at large. From Frank Zappa, to Kurt Cobain, to the Ramones, to Jim O'Rourke, the ironic (usually black) shoe has been adopted and re-contextualized, and for a long time remained a instantly-recognized sign which suggested a certain durable cultural mythology of the rock n roller. 

What is interesting about the shoe's latest iteration in the "Chuck II," however, is its apparent refutation of this whole previous mythology. While the original Chuck Taylor, its obstinate minimalism, suggested a monetary, physiological, and stylistic equivalence (solidarity?) between those who wore it, the new shoe suggest specialization, comfort, athleticism, and health, namely, many of the qualities that its previous customers would have repudiated. In light of my initial discussion of Jameson, Nealon, and Fisher, I want to claim that the newest iteration of the Chuck Taylor is a product of precisely the new attitude towards Rock mentioned by these critics. 

This conclusion seems to suggest itself from a number of angles. First, in relation to Jameson's initial logic, its clear that rather than embodying a particular aura of originality, the new Chucks offer only a virtual, mediated experience to its original historical referent. While when buying the "original" Chucks there was still a faint feeling that you were "in the shoes" of Dee Dee Ramone, that hope has now been vanquished as a "foam-padded collar," "non-slip gusseted tongue," "perforated micro suede liner," and "Nike Lunarlon sockliner" have invade and displaced the ethos of originality.

Secondly, and more importantly, this new sneaker shows a shocking avowal for the health culture that has been dominant for the past 20 years, which, as Foucault might suggest, is itself an expression of the need for the corporate state to produce disciplined, docile, and productive bodies. While the original Chucks were often cherished as literal canvases that recorded one's experiences (Miller Lite spills, cigarette ash, discarded roach bits), this sleek new thang seems to be instead suggest a gym membership and a bottle of coconut water; while the shoe used to be associated with a particular transgressive regime of substances, the Chuck II is instead suggestive of the modern clinical and pharmaceutical market, with its weight loss pills, dietary supplements, protein shakes, skin toners, hand lotions, and body sprays, all of which exist to tame and control natural bodily processes.

In closing, the question quickly arises to what alternatives are available, or whether or not thinking oppositionally is still even an option. Taking le Chuck as an example, we might ask with equal parts innocence and facetiousness, what becomes the radical footwear of choice? Doc Martens? They've been absorbed by the sororities! Chacos? Christian hippies! The suggestion that lingers in the background, although I cringe at its presence, is the norm core or accelerationist strategy of just wearing those brands (Nike being the prime example) that are most complicit with capitalism and taking some sort of ironic performative attitude towards them. The problem with this, however is the epistemological deadlock that it suggsets: are you wearing Jordans ironically or do you adopt an attitude of irony just to make wearing Jordans and participating in global capitalism palatable. Alternatively, even going barefoot, in its apparent disavowal of these trends, is itself informed by a green logic of the return to a prelapsarian symbiosis with nature. Duct tape shoes maybe? Idk, I guess we're fucked...

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Here's one heavy hitter. Archie Shepp's 1969 sax jazz opus:

feat. Jeanne Lee on the condemnation of men 
feat. Bob Dylan on harmonica, I'd wager

Chill those bones. It's hot out.


Friday, July 17, 2015

soda pop 101 presents: "Orient" + What We've Been Doing

A journey from the suburbs to the city and back





Orient from William Linhares on Vimeo.
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Friday, July 10, 2015

I, Leo


July 23 - August 22 is the astrological territory of Leo, the fifth sign of the Zodiac. 
How are you preparing for the cosmic month of the Lion? 
Are you even ready for the planetary shift? 
 As a Leo myself, I suggest listening to soda pop 101's stunning tune "Calling Card" 
(available to stream below) everyday at dusk, preferably as a guest in a hotel pool, 
or as the only back seat passenger of a minivan driving slowly through yawning suburbs. 
If these options don't present themselves, playing it very loud on speakers 
while you stare out your bedroom window will do. 
Ask yourself, who is this Leo? Did he save your life or did he break your heart? 
And what would it feel like to swim in a warm blue pool 
in L.A. beneath the shadow of the Hollywood sign?
Did I mention that Leos are known for their strength of heart, 
as well as their overwhelming compulsion to use the stage as a demand for attention?

Think it over. And have a wonderful Leo.





















Thursday, July 9, 2015

Glenn Beck's Scatological Imagination

Although Ebola has effectively receded from the American Terror Consciousness©, after cleaning out some old files on my computer this week I was reminded of the media tactics employed last year when the virus ostensibly threatened to spread to the United States. I remember witnessing one of the most fascinating exhibitions of this sort on Glenn Beck's program on The Blaze, to which a folder of screen shots entitled "Beck Feces" attests to both the bizarre nature of this particular display and my remaining fascination.

In a show that aired on October 15, 2014, Beck and his Blaze team members attempted to reveal apparent inadequacies in the CDC's protective protocol for doctors treating patients with full-blown ebola, and thus prove how easily ebola will spread internationally. But what this argument really provided was a flimsy pretext which allowed the host and his fellow Blazers with an opportunity to engage in one of the most obscenely regressive spectacles I have witnessed on cable television. To demonstrate the problems with the CDC's protective measures, Beck dresses in a smock and face mask while his helpers shower him in mixture of spaghetti and chocolate in attempt to stimulate the "projective vomiting and explosive diarrhea" that characterized the clinical conditions in Nigeria and other disease-stricken locations.




What I find most interesting about this performance is, first, its demonstration of the desire of Beck (and the far Right more generally) to return to a utopian, pre-Oedipal state before the law-of-the-father (participation in the symbolic economy) and its attendant social prohibitions (control of bodily fluids), which prohibit such aberrant and infantile behavior. While before the entrance into language, the subject participates in a fluid symbiosis with the mother in which the subject-object "cut" has not yet occurred, after the initiation into discourse, the subject must abandon this fluidity to enter the phallic symbolic economy, with its emphasis on the division between subject and object and the discrete, unitary (non-fluid) structure of language. 

Thus from this analysis, the far Right's resistance to discourse--as exhibited on such media outlets Fox News and The Blaze--emerges not simply as some superficial ideological manipulation by Murdoch and cronies, but as a deep-seated infantile desire to return to a pre-discursive, maternal intersubjective space in which the pressures of language and phallic law do not exist. This desire is certainly evinced in political discourse by the frequent invocation of the Edenic years of the 50s or the Reagan long 80s.

The second aspect I find fascinating by this display is its all too obvious relationship to a preceding transgressive visual culture of both performance art and popular images of torture. To the first point, Beck's performance is reminiscent of a salient tradition in Western performance art which explores the political body by employing paint, bodily fluids, and animal blood. The forerunner for this tradition is of course the Viennese Actionists. In ritualistic displays of extreme bodily states (often involving the self-laceration), artists of this movement (including Otto Mühl, Günter Brus, and Hermann Nitsch) explored the permeable boundaries of the body and the inter-corporeal relationship between multiple members of an artistic project. Below are images from performances by Mühl and Nitsch, respectively.



This second image, from Nitsch's "Orgies Mysteries Theater," brings me to my second point--the relationship between Beck's scatalogical explorations and images of torture. What I have in mind here is particularly those images that emerged during the Abu Ghraib prison scandal that came to light in 2003. Below is an infamous picture of DETAINEE-25, a prisoner who had been known to suffer from mental disabilities, and appears here covered in mud and feces.


What the homologies between these images (particularly that between Beck and DETAINEE-25) suggest is that rather than being a humorous diversion and thus an anomaly, Beck's performance last year actually reveals the law of the Right-wing American psyche. Instead of being "isolated" incidents, the rituals on Beck's program and those staged at Abu Ghraib actually constitute the fundamental iterative performances that reveal, in a horrifying visual display, the regression and infantilization (the need for "good guys and bad guys") that actually underpins the desires of the radical American Right. Thus, while we typically associate American conservatism with hyper-masculinity, this performance of masculinity is better understood as a supplement or mask to hide the primordial desire to return to a maternal symbiosis.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

soda pop 101 presents You Don't Know Jack

We made it past the copyright censors!
soda pop 101 presents their first video (and first blunder) You Don't Know Jack
 Enjoy.




You Don't Know Jack from William Linhares on Vimeo.

The character revealed through Google searches

will eating multiple eggs every morning result in an untimely death?

what the hell’s happening in Ukraine?

have you ever eaten a stone instead of a lentil?

versailles frogs

effective vs. affective

lincoln county bob's creek flooding

farm-related pinkeye

idiosynchratic

smalltowndidactic

ching liu piratebay final cut

best brunch chicago

mother teresa controversy

why the fuck did the godfather 3 not come out until 1990?

summer wedding attire

is it really better to have bad credit than to have no credit at all?

discover cashback rewards


how do they do neopolitan?

tienanmen square rubber duck

one cannot lose sight of oneself, and of what one does when idle
-proverb

Sinatra In Space




"...And stop at the poolroom for a beer /

     And sadly say to myself /

     I don't know anyone here..."

Thursday, July 2, 2015

100 Year Old Treasures: "Birth of A Nation" and Nicanor Parra

       One crude but unquestionable indication of his greatness was his power to create permanent images. All through his work there are images which are as impossible to forget, once you have seen them, as some of the grandest and simplest passages in music or poetry....
       This was the one time in movie history that a man of great ability worked freely, in an unspoiled medium, for an unspoiled audience, on a majestic theme which involved all that he was; and brought to it, besides his abilities as an inventor and artist, absolute passion, pity, courage, and honesty. "The Birth of a Nation" is equal with Brady's photographs, Lincoln's speeches, Whitman's war poems; for all its imperfections and absurdities it is equal, in fact, to the best work that has been done in this country. And among moving pictures it is alone, not necessarily as "the greatest" -- whatever that means -- but as the one great epic, tragic film.
-James Agee







"Birth Of A Nation" was released in 1915.  I don't think it's hyperbole to claim it is an impossible exercise in imagination to even begin to comprehend what the viewers would have felt watching a Griffith epic on an enormous flashing screen 100 years ago. 

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40 years ago the Oscar Nominees for Best Picture were the following:

"One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest"

"Jaws"
"Nashville"
"Barry Lyndon"
"Dog Day Afternoon"


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My first passionate feelings towards cinema seemed to coincide precisely with the industry's mainstream decline. This was the Bush/Cheney, post-9/11 what-have-you and it seemed like a new cast of rich and slimy men were wielding power and destroying things from all corners. I went to movies occasionally, with friends, at some megaplex across from some megachurch. It just wasn't part of the culture, and it certainly still isn't, not really, at least not as a central cultural conversation like it seemed to be in the golden days, whatever that means.

So it's also impossible for me to imagine that movies like the ones up for best picture in the 1975-6 season were available for every kid in the country to feast on. These were the films the studios were willing to sling money towards. Similar ones seemed to be making an impact in Europe, so why not? 



Studio bosses don't have the guts to take real chances on flicks these days. Cuz it's all about the loot, man.


Seriously how many more superhero movies can we endure? It's getting embarrassing just to see the incessant stream of commercials every week. 

When I see one, I switch it off immediately and then wipe the sweat from my brow. 


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In other news, the Chilean poet Nicanor Parra is 100 years old. 
He's seen it all. From Griffith to "Antman" :


The Trap

During that time I kept out of circumstances that were too full of mystery
As people with stomach ailments avoid heavy meals,
I preferred to stay at home inquiring into certain questions
Concerning the propagation of spiders,
To which end I would shut myself up in the garden
And not show myself in public until late at night;
Or else, in shirt-sleeves, defiant,
I would hurl angry glances at the moon,
Trying to get rid of those bilious fancies
That cling like polyps to the human soul.
When I was alone I was completely self-possessed,
I went back and forth fully conscious of my actions
Or I would stretch out among the planks of the cellar
And dream, think up ways and means, resolve little emergency problems.
It was at that moment that i put into practice my famous method for interpreting dreams
Which consists in doing violence to oneself and then imagining what one would like,
Conjuring up scenes that I had worked our beforehand with the help of powers from other worlds.
In this manner I was able to obtain priceless information
Concerning a string of anxieties that afflict our being:
Foreign travel, erotic disorders, religious complexes.
But all precautions were inadequate,
Because, for reasons hard to set forth,
I began sliding automatically down a sort of inclined plane.
My soul lost altitude like a punctured balloon,
The instinct of self-preservation stopped functioning
And, deprived of my most essential prejudices,
I fell unavoidably into the telephone trap
Which sucks in everything around it, like a vacuum,
And with trembling hands I dialed that accursed number
Which even now I repeat automatically in my sleep.
Uncertainty and misery filled the seconds that followed,
While I, like a skeleton standing before that table from hell
Covered with yellow cretonne,
Waited for an answer from the other end of the world,
The other half of my being, imprisoned in a pit.
Those intermittent telephone noises
Worked on me like a dentist's drill,
They sank into my soul like needles shot from the sky
Until, when the moment itself arrived,
I started to sweat and to stammer feverishly,
My tongue like a veal steak
Obtruded between my being and her who was listening,
Like those black curtains that separate us from the dead.
I never wanted to conduct those over-intimate conversations
Which I myself provoked, just the same, in my stupid way,
My voice thick with desire, and electrically charged.
Hearing myself called by my first name
In that tone of forced familiarity
Filled me with a vague discomfort,
With anguished localized disturbances which I contrived to keep in check
With a hurried system of questions and answers
Which roused in her a state of pseudo-erotic effervescence
That eventually affected me as well
With a feeling of doom.
Then I'd make myself laugh and as a result fall into a state of mental prostration.
These ridiculous little chats went on for hours
Until the lady who ran the pension appeared behind the screen
Brusquely breaking off our stupid idyll.
Those contortions of a petitioner at the gates of heaven
And those catastrophes which so wore down my spirit
Did not stop altogether when I hung up
For usually we had agreed
To meet next day in a soda fountain

Or at the door of a church whose name I prefer to forget. 





Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Welcome to soda pop 101! Educate Yourself

The MIT Guide to Lock-Picking:


click here::---> is it not nifty?


Introduction/Manifesto

Ain't It Nifty?
The decision to start this blog came to me in a coffee shop on a Sunday evening. It was a visceral impulse (what else?) and seemed to have a significant weight attached to it so I anticipated its trajectory and quickly texted a few accomplices to join the ranks. Then I sat and waited for their responses. 
I tried to read some Pascal but the words looked like tiny black bricks, or maybe tiny black bugs. I was all alone with a cup of iced coffee and a decision to start a blog. 
My head felt light and I thought I saw one of the black bugs crawl off the page onto my shoe. I realized with horror I was elapsing into an episode of madness: that specific kind of madness that seems to only find me in coffee shops on Sunday afternoons. 
Looking around the place (with eyes twitching and hands shaking), I saw at the booth next to me a girl with one arm reading a book I couldn't see the title of. Behind her, at a table with four cramped occupants (I was lounging in a booth all by myself), a lesbian with a mustache was discussing feminist discourse and the recent Supreme Court decision. I kept my eyes scanning until they landed on two young guys with "Black Lives Matter" shirts playing chess and beat-boxing quietly to each other as if they were careful not to disturb others, but just couldn't contain themselves. 
The rest of the tables were filled with people on headphones dead-locked into their computer screens, surfing the world-wide web for content, a ragged federation of discourse, simultaneously pathetic and brave.
Then my phone buzzed : vibrations : accomplices

This blog seeks to blow the sentimental travel blog from its shallow waters. It seeks to confront the crimes and deeds of popular culture and the cowardly ruminations of moralists promulgated by media and groupthink. Its contributors resemble a group of recently laid-off detectives trudging through the slopes of our Age (an Age that is more indecipherable each passing day), picking metaphysical locks and looking for clues.

Readers (if there are any) can expect explorations into subjects as audacious as :

the current state of cinema     micro-and macro-fashion       politic-o's (rad)    
girls w/ backpacks            lit. & writers            muzak              boys in fleece          
boys & girls in nature           sleep                venues & infrastructure        
the forgotten saints    &       the infinity of dreams        (which accepts us all)



Confession:
We wouldn't recognize Truth if it walked up to us and asked to the movies.



Also posted sporadically will be music, videos and other work of our own creation.
like everything we do, expect instinct & improvisation w/ a sub-conscious allegiance to pop culture.



and please don't make fun of us.


-soda pop 101

JULY 2015 AD