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Title: The Radio Sermonettes Date: 1992 Source: Retrieved on 14<sup>th</sup> May 2021 from [[https://hermetic.com/bey/radio-sermonettes/index][hermetic.com]] Authors: Hakim Bey Topics: Immediatism Published: 2021-05-14 17:53:03Z
i. All experience is mediatedâby the mechanisms of sense perception, mentation, language, etc.â& certainly all art consists of some further mediation of experience.
ii. However, mediation takes place by degrees. Some experiences (smell, taste, sexual pleasure, etc.) are less mediated than others (reading a book, looking through a telescope, listening to a record). Some media, especially âliveâ arts such as dance, theater, musical or bardic performance, are less mediated than others such as TV, CDs, Virtual Reality. Even among the media usually called âmedia,â some are more & others are less mediated, according to the intensity of imaginative participation they demand. Print & radio demand more of the imagination, film less, TV even less, VR the least of allâso far.
iii. For art, the intervention of Capital always signals a further degree of mediation. To say that art is commodified is to say that a mediation, or standing-in-between, has occurred, & that this betweenness amounts to a split, & that this split amounts to âalienation.â Improv music played by friends at home is less âalienatedâ than music played âliveâ at the Met, or music played through media (whether PBS or MTV or Walkman). In fact, an argument could be made that music distributed free or at cost on cassette via mail is LESS alienated than live music played at some huge We Are The World spectacle or Las Vegas niteclub, even though the latter is live music played to a live audience (or at least so it appears), while the former is recorded music consumed by distant & even anonymous listeners.
iv. The tendency of Hi Tech, & the tendency of Late Capitalism, both impel the arts farther & farther into extreme forms of mediation. Both widen the gulf between the production & consumption of art , with a corresponding increase in âalienation.â
v. With the disappearance of a âmainstreamâ & therefore of an âavant-gardeâ in the arts, it has been noticed that all the more advanced & intense art-experiences have been recuperable almost instantly by the media, & thus are rendered into trash like all other trash in the ghostly world of commodities. âTrash, â as the term was redefined in, letâs say, Baltimore in the 1970s, can be good funâas an ironic take on a sort of inadvertent folkultur that surrounds & pervades the more unconscious regions of âpopularâ sensibilityâwhich in turn is produced in part by the Spectacle. âTrashâ was once a fresh concept, with radical potential. By now, however, amidst the ruins of Post-Modernism, it has finally begun to stink. Ironic frivolity finally becomes disgusting. Is it possible now to BE SERIOUS BUT NOT SOBER? (Note: The New Sobriety is or course simply the flipside of the New Frivolity. Chic neo-puritanism carries the taint of Reaction, in just the same way that postmodernist philosophical irony & despair lead to Reaction. The Purge Society is the same as the Binge Society. After the â12 stepsâ of trendy renunciation in the â 90s, all that remains is the 13th step of the gallows. Irony may have become boring, but self-mutilation was never more than an abyss. Down with frivolityâDown with sobriety.)
Everything delicate & beautiful, from Surrealism to Break-dancing, ends up as fodder for McDeathâs ads; 15 minutes later all the magic has been sucked out, & the art itself dead as a dried locust. The media-wizards, who are nothing if not postmodernists, have even begun to feed on the vitality of âTrash,â like vultures regurgitating & re-consuming the same carrion, in an obscene ecstasy of self-referentiality. Which way to the Egress?
vi. Real art is play, & play is one of the most immediate of all experiences. Those who have cultivated the pleasure of play cannot be expected to give it up simply to make a political point (as in an âArt Strike, â or âthe suppression without the realizationâ of art, etc.). Art will **go on**, in somewhat the same sense that breathing, eating, or fucking will go on.
vii. Nevertheless, we are repelled by the **extreme** alienation of the arts, especially in âthe media,â in commercial publishing & galleries, in the recording âindustry,â etc. And we sometimes worry even about the extent to which our very involvement in such arts as writing, painting, or music implicates us in a nasty abstraction, a removal from immediate experience. We miss the directness of play (our original kick in doing art in the first place); we miss smell, taste, touch, the feel of bodies in motion.
viii. Computers, video, radio, printing presses, synthesizers, fax machines, tape recorders, photocopiersâthese things make good toys, but terrible **addictions**. Finally we realize we cannot â reach out and touch someoneâ who is not present in the flesh. These media may be useful to our artâbut they must not possess us, nor must they stand between, mediate, or separate us from our animal/animate selves. We want to control our media, not be Controlled by them. And we should like to remember a certain psychic martial art which stresses the realization that the body itself is the least mediated of all media.
ix. Therefore, as artists & âcultural workersâ who have no intention of giving up activity in our chosen media, we nevertheless demand of ourselves an extreme awareness of immediacy , as well as the mastery of some direct means of implementing this awareness as play, immediately (at once) & immediately (without mediation).
x. Fully realizing that any art âmanifestoâ written today can only stink of the same bitter irony it seeks to oppose, we nevertheless declare without hesitation (without too much thought) the founding of a âmovement,â IMMEDIATISM. We feel free to do so because we intend to practice Immediatism **in secret**, in order to avoid any contamination of mediation. Publicly weâll continue our work in publishing, radio, printing, music, etc., but privately we will create **something else**, something to be shared freely but never consumed passively, something which can be discussed openly but never understood by the agents of alienation, something with no commercial potential yet valuable beyond price, something occult yet woven completely into the fabric of our everyday lives.
xi. Immediatism is not a movement in the sense of an aesthetic program. It depends on **situation**, not style or content, message or School. It may take the form of any kind of creative play which can be performed by two or more people, by & for themselves, face-to-face & together. In this sense it is like a game, & therefore certain ârules â may apply.
xii. All spectators must also be performers. All expenses are to be shared, & all products which may result from the play are also to be shared by the participants only (who may keep them or bestow them as gifts, but should not sell them). The best games will make little or no use of obvious forms of mediation such as photography, recording, printing, etc., but will tend toward immediate techniques involving physical presence, direct communication, & the senses.
xiii. An obvious matrix for Immediatism is the party. Thus a good meal could be an Immediatist art project, especially if everyone present cooked as well as ate. Ancient Chinese & Japanese on misty autumn days would hold odor parties, where each guest would bring a homemade incense or perfume. At linked-verse parties a faulty couplet would entail the penalty of a glass of wine. Quilting bees, **tableaux vivants**, exquisite corpses, rituals of conviviality like Fourierâs âMuseum Orgyâ (erotic costumes, poses, & skits), live music & danceâthe past can be ransacked for appropriate forms, & imagination will supply more.
xiv. The difference between a 19th century quilting bee, for example, & an Immediatist quilting bee would lie in our awareness of the practice of Immediatism as a response to the sorrows of alienation & the â death of art.â
xv. The mail art of the â70s & the zine scene of the â80s were attempts to go beyond the mediation of art-as-commodity, & may be considered ancestors of Immediatism. However, they preserved the mediated structures of postal communication & xerography, & thus failed to overcome the isolation of the players, who remained quite literally out of touch. We wish to take the motives & discoveries of these earlier movements to their logical conclusion in an art which banishes all mediation & alienation, at least to the extent that the human condition allows.
xvi. Moreover, Immediatism is not condemned to powerlessness in the world, simply because it avoids the publicity of the marketplace. âPoetic Terrorismâ and âArt Sabotageâ are quite logical manifestations of Immediatism.
xvii. Finally, we expect that the practice of Immediatism will release within us vast storehouses of forgotten power, which will not only transform our lives through the secret realization of unmediated play, but will also inescapably well up & burst out & permeate the other art we create, the more public & mediated art.
And we hope that the two will grow closer & closer, & eventually perhaps become one.
<em>The mandarins draw their power from the law; the people, from the secret societies.</em> (Chinese saying)
Last winter I read a book on the Chinese Tongs (**Primitive Revolutionaries of China: A Study of Secret Societies in the Late Nineteenth Century**, Fei-Ling Davis; Honolulu, 1971â77):â maybe the first ever written by someone who **wasnât** a British Secret Service agent!â(in fact, she was a Chinese socialist who died youngâthis was her only book)â& for the first time I realized **why** Iâve always been attracted to the Tong: not just for the romanticism, the elegant decadent chinoiserie decor, as it wereâbut also for the form, the structure, the very essence of the thing.
Some time later in an excellent interview with William Burroughs in **Homocore** magazine I discovered that he too has become fascinated with Tongs & suggests the form as a perfect mode of organization for queers, particularly in this present era of shitheel moralism & hysteria. Iâd agree, & extend the recommendation to **all** marginal groups, especially ones whose jouissance involves illegalism (potheads, sex heretics, insurrectionists) or extreme eccentricity (nudists, pagans, post-avant-garde artists, etc., etc.).
A Tong can perhaps be defined as a mutual benefit society for people with a common interest which is illegal or dangerously marginalâhence, the necessary **secrecy**. Many Chinese Tongs revolved around smuggling & tax-evasion, or clandestine self-control of certain trades (in opposition to State control), or insurrectionary political or religious aims (overthrow of the Manchus for exampleâseveral tongs collaborated with the Anarchists in the 1911 Revolution).
A common purpose of the tongs was to collect & invest membership dues & initiation fees in insurance funds for the indigent, unemployed, widows & orphans of deceased members, funeral expenses, etc. In an era like ours when the poor are caught between the cancerous Scylla of the Insurance Industry & the fast-evaporating Charybdis of welfare & public health services, this purpose of the Secret Society might well regain its appeal. (Masonic lodges were organized on this basis, as were the early & illegal trade unions & âchivalric ordersâ for laborers & artisans.) Another universal purpose for such societies was of course conviviality, especially banquetingâbut even this apparently innocuous pastime can acquire insurrectionary implications. In the various French revolutions, for example, dining clubs frequently took on the role of radical organizations when all other forms of public meeting were banned.
Recently I talked about tongs with âP.M.,â author of **boloâbolo** (Semiotext(e) Foreign Agents Series). I argued that secret societies are once again a valid possibility for groups seeking autonomy & individual realization. He disagreed, but not (as I expected) because of the âelitistâ connotations of secrecy. He felt that such organizational forms work best for already-close-knit groups with strong economic, ethnic/regional, or religious tiesâconditions which do not exist (or exist only embryonically) in todayâs marginal scene. He proposed instead the establishment of multi-purpose neighborhood centers, with expenses to be shared by various special-interest groups & small-entrepreneurial concerns (craftspeople, coffeehouses, performance spaces, etc.). Such large centers would require official status (State recognition), but would obviously become foci for all sorts of non-official activityâblack markets, temporary organization for âprotestâ or insurrectionary action, uncontrolled âleisureâ & unmonitored conviviality, etc.
In response to âP.M.ââs critique I have not abandoned but rather modified my concept of what a modern Tong might be. The intensely hierarchical structure of the traditional tong would obviously not work, although some of the forms could be saved & used in the same way titles & honors are used in our âfree religionsâ (or âweirdâ religions, âjokeâ religions, anarcho-neo-pagan cults, etc.). Non-hierarchic organization appeals to us, but so too does ritual, incense, the delightful bombast of occult ordersââTong Aestheticsâ you might call itâso why shouldnât we have our cake & eat it too?â(especially if itâs Moroccan **majoun** or **baba au absinthe**âsomething a bit **forbidden**!). Among other things, the Tong should be a work of art.
The strict traditional rule of secrecy also needs modification. Nowadays anything which evades the idiot gaze of publicity is already **virtually** secret. Most modern people seem unable to believe in the reality of something they never see on television âtherefore to escape being televisualized is already to be quasi-invisible. Moreover, that which is seen through the mediation of the media becomes somehow unreal, & loses its power (I wonât bother to defend this thesis but simply refer the reader to a train of thought which leads from Nietzsche to Benjamin to Bataille to Barthes to Foucault to Baudrillard). By contrast, perhaps that which is **unseen** retains its reality, its rootedness in everyday life & therefore in the possibility of the marvelous.
So the modern Tong cannot be elitistâbut thereâs no reason it canât be **choosy**. Many non-authoritarian organizations have foundered on the dubious principle of open membership, which frequently leads to a preponderance of assholes, yahoos, spoilers, whining neurotics, & police agents. If a Tong is organized around a special interest (especially an illegal or risky or marginal interest) it certainly has the right to compose itself according to the âaffinity groupâ principle. If secrecy means (a) avoiding publicity & (b) vetting possible members, the âsecret societyâ can scarcely be accused of violating anarchist principles. In fact, such societies have a long & honorable history in the anti-authoritarian movement, from Proudhonâs dream of re-animating the Holy Vehm as a kind of âPeopleâs Justice,â to Bakuninâs various schemes, to Duruttiâs âWanderers.â We ought not to allow marxist historians to convince us that such expedients are âprimitiveâ & have therefore been left behind by âHistory.â The absoluteness of âHistoryâ is at best a dubious proposition. We are not interested in a return to the primitive, but in a return OF the primitive, inasmuch as the primitive is the ârepressed.â
In the old days secret societies would appear in times & spaces forbidden by the State, i.e. where & when people are **kept apart by law**. In our times people are usually not kept apart by law but by mediation & alienation (see Part 1, âImmediatismâ). Secrecy therefore becomes an avoidance of mediation, while conviviality changes from a secondary to a primary purpose of the âsecret society.â Simply to meet together face-to-face is already an action against the forces which oppress us by isolation, by loneliness, by the trance of media.
In a society which enforces a schizoid split between Work & Leisure, we have all experienced the trivialization of our âfree time,â time which is organized neither as work nor as leisure. (âVacationâ once meant âemptyâ timeânow it signifies time which is organized & filled by the industry of leisure.) The âsecretâ purpose of conviviality in the secret society then becomes the self-structuring & auto-valorization of free time. Most parties are devoted only to loud music & too much booze, not because we enjoy them but because t he Empire of Work has imbued us with the feeling that empty time is wasted time. The idea of throwing a party to, say, make a quilt or sing madrigals together, seems hopelessly outdated. But the modern Tong will find it both necessary & enjoyable to seize back free time from the commodity world & devote it to shared creation, to **play**.
I know of several societies organized along these lines already, but Iâm certainly not going to blow their secrecy by discussing them in print. There are some people who do not need fifteen seconds on the Evening News to validate their existence. Of course, the marginal press and radio (the only media in which this sermonette will appear) are practically invisible anywayâcertainly still quite opaque to the gaze of Control. Nevertheless, thereâs the principle of the thing: secrets should be respected. Not everyone needs to know everything! What the 20th century lacks mostâ& needs mostâis **tact**. We wish to replace democratic epistemology with âdada epistemologyâ (Feyerabend). Either youâre on the bus or youâre not on the bus.
Some will call this an elitist attitude, but it is notâat least not in the C. Wright Mills sense of the word: that is, a small group which exercises power over non-insiders for its own aggrandizement. Immediatism does not concern itself with power-relations;âit desires neither to be ruled nor to rule. The contemporary Tong therefore finds no pleasure in the degeneration of institutions into conspiracies. It wants power for its own purposes of mutuality. It is a free association of individuals who have chosen each other as the subjects of the groupâs generosity, its âexpansivenessâ (to use a sufi term). If this amounts to some kind of âelitism,â then so be it.
If Immediatism begins with groups of friends trying not just to overcome isolation but also to enhance each otherâs lives, soon it will want to take a more complex shape:ânuclei of mutually-self-chosen allies, working (playing) to occupy more & more time & space outside all mediated structure & control. Then it will want to become a horizontal network of such autonomous groupsâthen, a âtendencyââthen, a âmovementââ& then, a kinetic web of âtemporary autonomous zones.â At last it will strive to become the kernel of a new society, giving birth to itself within the corrupt shell of the old. For all these purposes the secret society promises to provide a useful framework of protective clandestinityâa cloak of invisibility that will have to be dropped only in the event of some final showdown with the Babylon of MediationâŠ.
Prepare for the Tong Wars!
Many monsters stand between us & the realization of Immediatist goals. For instance our own ingrained unconscious alienation might all too easily be mistaken for a virtue, especially when contrasted with crypto-authoritarian pap passed off as âcommunity,â or with various upscale versions of âleisure.â Isnât it natural to take the **dandyism noir** of curmudgeonly hermits for some kind of heroic Individualism, when the only visible contrast is Club Med commodity socialism, or the gemutlich masochism of the Victim Cults? To be doomed & cool naturally appeals more to noble souls than to be saved & cozy.
Immediatism means to enhance individuals by providing a matrix of friendship, not to belittle them by sacrificing their âownnessâ to group-think, leftist self-abnegation, or New Age clone-values. What must be overcome is not individuality per se, but rather the addiction to bitter loneliness which characterizes consciousness in the 20th century (which is by & large not much more than a re-run of the 19th).
Far more dangerous than any inner monster of (what might be called) ânegative selfishness,â however, is the outward, very real & utterly objective monster of too-Late Capitalism. The marxists (R.I.P.) had their own version of how this worked, but here we are not concerned with abstract/dialectical analyses of labor-value or class structure (even though these may still require analysis, & even more so since the âdeathâ or âdisappearanceâ of Communism). Instead weâd like to point out specific tactical dangers facing any Immediatist project.
1. Capitalism only **supports** certain kinds of groups, the nuclear family for example, or âthe people I know at my job,â because such groups are already self-alienated & hooked into the Work/Consume/Die structure. Other kinds of groups may be **allowed**, but will lack all support from the societal structure, & thus find themselves facing grotesque challenges & difficulties which appear under the guise of â bad luck.â
The first & most innocent-seeming obstacle to any Immediatist project will be the âbusynessâ or âneed to make a livingâ faced by each of its associates. However there is no real innocence hereâonly our profound ignorance of the ways in which Capitalism itself is organized to prevent all genuine conviviality.
No sooner have a group of friends begun to visualize immediate goals realizable only thru solidarity & cooperation, then suddenly one of them will be offered a âgoodâ job in Cincinnati or teaching English in Taiwanâor else have to move back to California to care for a dying parentâor else theyâll lose the âgoodâ job they already have & be reduced to a state of misery which precludes their very enjoyment of the groupâs project or goals (i.e. theyâll become âdepressedâ ). At the most mundane-seeming level, the group will fail to agree on a day of the week for meetings because everyone is âbusy.â But this is not mundane. Itâs sheer cosmic evil. We whip ourselves into froths of indignation over âoppressionâ & âunjust lawsâ when in fact these abstractions have little impact on our daily livesâwhile that which really makes us miserable goes unnoticed, written off to âbusynessâ or âdistractionâ or even to the nature of **reality** itself (âWell, I canât **live** without a **job**!â).
Yes, perhaps itâs true we canât âliveâ without a jobâalthough I hope weâre grown-up enough to know the difference between life & the accumulation of a bunch of fucking gadgets. Still, we must constantly remind ourselves (since our culture wonât do it for us) that this monster called WORK remains the precise & exact target of our rebellious wrath, the one single most oppressive reality we face (& we must learn also to recognize Work when itâs disguised as âleisureâ).
To be âtoo busyâ for the Immediatist project is to miss the very essence of Immediatism. To struggle to **come together** every Monday night (or whatever), in the teeth of the gale of busyness, or family, or invitations to stupid partiesâthat struggle is **already** Immediatism itself. Succeed in actually physically meeting face-to-face with a group which is not your spouse-&-kids, or the âguys from my job,â or your 12-Step Programâ& you have **already** achieved virtually everything Immediatism yearns for. An actual project will arise almost spontaneously out of this successful slap-in-the-face of the social norm of alienated boredom. Outwardly, of course, the project will seem to be the groupâs purpose, its motive for coming togetherâbut in fact the opposite is true. Weâre not kidding or indulging in hyperbole when we insist that **meeting face-to-face is already âthe revolution.â** Attain it & the creativity part comes naturally; like âthe kingdom of heavenâ it will be added unto you. **Of course** it will be horribly difficultâwhy else would we have spent the last decade trying to construct our âbohemia in the mail,â if it were easy to have it in some **quartier latin** or rural commune? The rat-bastard Capitalist scum who are telling you to âreach out and touch someoneâ with a telephone or âbe there!â (where? alone in front of a goddam television??)âthese lovecrafty suckers are trying to turn you into a scrunched-up blood-drained pathetic crippled little cog in the death-machine of the human soul (& letâs not have any theological quibbles about what we mean by âsoulâ!). Fight themâby meeting with friends, not to consume or produce, but to enjoy friendshipâ & you will have triumphed (at least for a moment) over the most pernicious conspiracy in EuroAmerican society todayâthe conspiracy to turn you into a living corpse galvanized by prosthesis & the terror of scarcityâ to turn you into a spook haunting your own brain. This is not a petty matter! This is a question of failure or triumph!
2. If busyness & dissipation are the first potential failures of Immediatism, we cannot say that its triumph should be equated with âsuccess.â The second major threat to our project can quite simply be described as the tragic success of the project itself. Letâs say weâve overcome physical alienation & have actually met, developed our project, & created something (a quilt, a banquet, a play, a bit of eco-sabotage, etc.). Unless we keep it an absolute secretâwhich is probably impossible & in any case would constitute a somewhat poisonous selfishnessâ**other people** will hear of it (other people from hell, to paraphrase the existentialists)â& among these other people, some will be agents (conscious or unconscious, it doesnât matter) of too-Late Capitalism. The Spectacleâor whatever has replaced it since 1968âis above all **empty**. It fuels itself by the constant Moloch-like gulping-down of everyoneâs creative powers & ideas. Itâs more desperate for **your** âradical subjectivity â than any vampire or cop for your blood. It wants your creativity much more even than you want it yourself. It would die unless you desired it, & you will only desire it if it seems to offer you the very desires you dreamed, alone in your lonely genius, disguised & sold back to you as commodities. Ah, the metaphysical shenanigans of objects! (or words to that effect, Marx cited by Benjamin).
Suddenly it will appear to you (as if a demon had whispered it in your ear) that the Immediatist art youâve created is so good, so fresh, so original, so strong compared to all the crap on the âmarketââso **pure**âthat you could water it down & sell it, & **make a living** at it, so you could all knock off WORK, buy a farm in the country, & do art together forever after. And perhaps itâs true. You **could**⊠after all, youâre geniuses. But itâd be better to fly to Hawaii & throw yourself into a live volcano. Sure, you could have success; you could even have 15 seconds on the Evening Newsâ or a PBS documentary made on your life. Yes indeedy.
3. But this is where the last major monster steps in, crashes thru the living room wall, & snuffs you (if Success itself hasnât already âspoiledâ you, that is).
Because in order to succeed you must first be âseen.â And if you are **seen**, you will be perceived as wrong, illegal, immoralâdifferent. The Spectacleâ s main sources of creative energy are all in prison. If youâre not a nuclear family or a guided tour of the Republican Party, then why are you meeting every Monday evening? To do drugs? illicit sex? income tax evasion? satanism?
And of course the chances are good that your Immediatist group **is** engaged in something illegalâ since almost everything enjoyable is in fact illegal. Babylon hates it when anyone actually enjoys life, rather than merely spends money in a vain attempt to buy the illusion of enjoyment. Dissipation, gluttony, bulimic overconsumptionâ these are not only legal but mandatory. If you donât waste yourself on the emptiness of commodities you are obviously queer & must by definition be breaking some law. True pleasure in this society is more dangerous than bank robbery. At least bank robbers share Massaâs respect for Massaâs money. But you, you perverts, clearly deserve to be burned at the stakeâ& here come the peasants with their torches, eager to do the Stateâs bidding without even being asked. Now you are the monsters, & your little gothic castle of Immediatism is engulfed in flames. Suddenly cops are swarming out of the woodwork. Are your papers in order? Do you have a permit to exist?
Immediatism is a picnicâbut itâs not easy. Immediatism is the most natural path for free humans imaginableâ& **therefore** the most unnatural abomination in the eyes of Capital. Immediatism will triumph, but only at the cost of **self-organization of power**, of **clandestinity**, & of **insurrection**. Immediatism is our delight, Immediatism is **dangerous**.
So far weâve treated Immediatism as an aesthetic movement rather than a political oneâbut if the âpersonal is politicalâ then certainly the aesthetic must be considered even more so. âArt for artâs sakeâ cannot really be said to exist at all, unless it be taken to imply that art **per se** functions as political power, i.e. power capable of expressing or even changing the world rather than merely describing it.
In fact art always seeks such power, whether the artist remains unconscious of the fact & believes in âpureâ aesthetics, or becomes so hyper-conscious of the fact as to produce nothing but agit-prop. Consciousness in itself, as Nietzsche pointed out, plays a less significant role in life than power. No snappier proof of this could be imagined than the continued existence of an âArt Worldâ (SoHo, 57th St., etc.) which still believes in the separate realms of political art & aesthetic art. Such failure of consciousness allows this âworldâ the luxury of producing art with overt political **content** (to satisfy their liberal customers) as well as art without such content, which merely expresses the power of the bourgeois scum & bankers who buy it for their investment portfolios.
If art did not possess & wield this power it would not be worth doing & nobody would do it. Literal art for artâs sake would produce nothing but impotence & nullity. Even the fin-de-sicle decadents who invented **lâart pour lâart** used it politically:âas a weapon against bourgeois values of âutility,â âmoralityâ & so on. The idea that art can be voided of political meaning appeals now only to those liberal cretins who wish to excuse âpornographyâ or other forbidden aesthetic games on the grounds that âitâs only artâ & hence can change nothing. (I hate these assholes worse than Jesse Helms; at least **he** still believes that art has **power**!)
Even if an art without political content canâfor the momentâbe admitted to exist (altho this remains exceedingly problematic), then the political meaning of art can still be sought in the **means of its production & consumption**. The art of 57th St. remains bourgeois no matter how radical its content may appear, as Warhol proved by painting Che Guevara; in fact Valerie Solanis revealed herself far more radical than Warholâ by shooting himâ(& perhaps even more radical than Che, that Rudolph Valentino of Red Fascism).
In fact weâre not terribly concerned with the content of Immediatist art. Immediatism remains for us more **game** than âmovementâ ; as such, the game might result in Brechtian didacticism or Poetic Terrorism, but it might equally well leave behind no content at all (as in a banquet), or else one with no obvious political message (such as a quilt). The radical quality of Immediatism expresses itself rather in its mode of production & consumption.
That is, it is produced by a group of friends either for itself alone or for a larger circle of friends; it is not produced for sale, nor is it sold, nor (ideally) is it allowed to slip out of the control of its producers in any way. If it is meant for consumption outside the circle then it must be made in such a way as to remain impervious to coöptation & commodification. For example, if one of our quilts escaped us & ended up sold as âartâ to some capitalist or museum, we should consider it a disaster. Quilts must remain in our hands or be **given** to those who will appreciate them & keep them. As for our agitprop, it must resist commodification by its very **form**;âwe donât want our posters sold twenty years later as âart,â like Mayakovsky (or Brecht, for that matter). The best Immediatist agitprop will leave no trace at all, except in the souls of those who are **changed** by it.
Let us repeat here that participation in Immediatism does not preclude the production/consumption of art in other ways by the individuals making up the group. We are not ideologues, & this is not Jonestown. This is a game, not a movement; it has rules of play, but no laws. Immediatism would love it if everyone were an artist, but our goal is not mass conversion. The gameâs pay-off lies in its ability to escape the paradoxes & contradictions of the commercial art world (including literature, etc.), in which all liberatory gestures seem to end up as mere representations & hence betrayals of themselves. We offer the chance for art which is immediately **present** by virtue of the fact that it can exist only in our presence. Some of us may still write novels or paint pictures, either to âmake a livingâ or to seek out ways to redeem these forms from recuperation. But Immediatism sidesteps both these problems. Thus it is âprivileged,â like all games.
But we cannot for this reason alone call it **involuted**, turned in on itself, closed, hermetic, elitist, art for artâs sake. In Immediatism art is produced & consumed in a certain way, & this modus operandi is already âpoliticalâ in a very specific sense. In order to grasp this sense, however, we must first explore âinvolutionâ more closely.
Itâs become a truism to say that society no longer expresses a consensus (whether reactionary or liberatory), but that a false consensus is expressed **for** society; letâs call this false consensus â the Totality.â The Totality is produced thru mediation & alienation, which attempt to subsume or absorb all creative energies **for** the Totality. Mayakovsky killed himself when he realized this; perhaps weâre made of sterner stuff, perhaps not. But for the sake of argument, let us assume that suicide is **not** a âsolution.â
The Totality isolates individuals & renders them powerless by offering only illusory modes of social expression, modes which seem to promise liberation or self-fulfillment but in fact end by producing yet more mediation & alienation. This complex can be viewed clearly at the level of âcommodity fetishism,â in which the most rebellious or avant-garde forms in art can be turned into fodder for PBS or MTV or ads for jeans or perfume.
On a subtler level, however, the Totality can absorb & re-direct any power whatsoever simply by re-contextualizing & re-presenting it. For instance, the liberatory power of a painting can be neutralized or even absorbed simply by placing it in the context of a gallery or museum, where it will automatically become a mere **representation** of liberatory power. The insurrectionary gesture of a madman or criminal is not negated only by locking up the perpetrator, but even more by allowing the gesture to be representedâby a psychiatrist or by some brainless Kop-show on channel 5 or even by a coffee-table book on Art Brut. This has been called âSpectacular recuperationâ; however, the Totality can go even farther than this simply by **simulating** that which it formerly sought to recuperate. That is, the artist & madman are no longer necessary even as sources of appropriation or âmechanical reproduction,â as Benjamin called it. Simulation cannot reproduce the faint reflection of âauraâ which Benjamin allowed even to commodity-trash, its âutopian trace.â Simulation cannot in fact reproduce or produce anything except desolation & misery. But since the Totality **thrives** on our misery, simulation suits its purpose quite admirably.
All these effects can be tracked most obviously & crudely in the area generally called âthe Mediaâ (altho we contend that **mediation** has a much wider range than even the term **broad-cast** could ever describe or indicate). The role of the Media in the recent Nintendo Warâin fact the Mediaâs one-to-one identification with that warâprovides a perfect & exemplary scenario. All over America millions of people possessed **at least** enough âenlightenmentâ to condemn this hideous parody of morality enforced by that murderous crack-dealing spy in the White House. The Media however produced (i.e. simulated) the impression that virtually no opposition to Bushâs war existed or could exist ; that (to quote Bush) âthere is no Peace Movement.â And in fact there **was** no Peace **Movement**âonly millions of people whose desire for peace had been **negated by the Totality**, wiped out, âdisappeared â like victims of Peruvian death squads; people separated from each other by the brutal alienation of TV, news management, infotainment & sheer disinformation; people made to feel isolated, alienated, weird, queer, wrong, finally no n-existent; people without voices; people without power.
This process of fragmentation has reached near-universal completion in our society, at least in the area of social discourse. Each person engages in a ârelation of involutionâ with the spectacular simulation of Media. That is, our ârelationâ with Media is essentially empty & illusory, so that even when we seem to reach out & perceive reality in Media, we are in fact merely driven back in upon ourselves, alienated, isolated, & impotent. America is full to overflowing with people who feel that no matter what they say or do, no difference will be made; that no one is listening; that there is no one to listen. This **feeling** is the triumph of the Media. âTheyâ speak, **you** listenâ& therefore turn in upon yourself in a spiral of loneliness, distraction, depression, & spiritual death.
This process affects not only individuals but also such groups as still exist outside the Consensus Matrix of nuke-family, school, church, job, army, political party, etc. Each **group** of artists or peace activists or whatever is also made to feel that no contact with other groups is possible. Each âlife-styleâ group buys the simulation of rivalry & enmity with other such groups of consumers. Each class & race is assured of its ungulfable existential alienation from all other classes & races (as in **Lifestyles of the Rich & Famous**).
The concept of ânetworkingâ began as a revolutionary strategy to bypass & overcome the Totality by setting up horizontal connections (unmediated by authority) among individuals & groups. In the 1980s we discovered that networking could also be mediated & in fact had to be mediatedâby telephone, computers, the post office, etc.â& thus was doomed to fail us in our struggle against alienation. Communication technology may still prove to offer useful **tools** in this struggle, but by now it has become clear that CommTech is not a goal in itself. And in fact our distrust of seemingly âdemocraticâ tech like PCs & phones increase with every revolutionary failure to hold control of the means of production. Frankly we do not wish to be forced to make up our minds whether or not any new tech will be or must be either liberatory or counter-liberatory. âAfter the revolutionâ such questions would answer themselves in the context of a âpolitics of desire.â For the time being, however, we have discovered (not invented) Immediatism as a means of direct production & presentation of creative, liberatory & ludic energies, carried out without recourse to mediation of any mechanistic or alienated structures **whatsoever**âŠor at least so we hope.
In other words, whether or not any given technology or form of mediation can be used to overcome the Totality, we have decided to play a game that uses no such tech & hence does not need to question itâat least, not within the borders of the game. We reserve our challenge, our question, for the total Totality, not for any one âissueâ with which it seeks to distract us.
And this brings us back to the âpolitical formâ of Immediatism. Face-to-face, body-to-body, breath-to breath (literally a conspiracy)âthe game of Immediatism simply cannot be played on any level accessible to the false Consensus. It does not represent âeveryday lifeââ**it cannot BE other than âeveryday life,â** although it positions itself for the penetration of the marvelous,â for the illumination of the real by the wonderful. Like a secret society, the networking it does must be slow (infinitely more slow than the âpure speedâ of CommTech, media & war), & it must be **corporeal** rather than abstract, fleshless, mediated by machine or by authority or by simulation.
In this sense we say that Immediatism is a picnic (a con-viviality) but is not easyâthat it is most natural for free spirits but that it is **dangerous**. Content has nothing to do with it. The sheer existence of Immediatism is already an insurrection.
<em>There is a time for the theatre.âIf a peopleâs imagination grows weak there arises in it the inclination to have its legends presented to it on the stage: it can now endure these crude substitutes for imagination. But for those ages to which the epic rhapsodist belongs, the theatre and the actor disguised as a hero is a hindrance to imagination rather than a means of giving it wings: too close, too definite, too heavy, too little in it of dream and bird-flight.</em> (Nietzsche)
But of course the rhapsodist, who here appears only one step removed from the shaman (ââŠdream and bird-flightâ) must also be called a kind of **medium** or bridge standing between âa peopleâ and its imagination. (Note: weâll use the word âimaginationâ sometimes in Wm. Blakeâs sense & sometimes in Gaston Bachelardâs sense without opting for either a âspiritualâ or an âaestheticâ determination, & without recourse to metaphysics.) A bridge carries across (âtranslate,â âmetaphorâ ) but is not the original. And to translate is to betray. Even the rhapsodist provides a little poison for the imagination.
Ethnography, however, allows us to assert the possibility of societies where shamans are not **specialists** of the imagination, but where everyone is a special sort of shaman. In these societies, all members (except the psychically handicapped) act as shamans & bards for themselves as well as for their people. For example: certain Amerindian tribes of the Great Plains developed the most complex of all hunter/gatherer societies quite late in their history (perhaps partly thanks to the gun & horse, technologies adopted from European culture). Each person acquired complete identity & full membership in âthe Peopleâ only thru the Vision Quest, & its artistic enactment for the tribe. Thus each person became an âepic rhapsodistâ in sharing this individuality with the collectivity.
The Pygmies, among the most âprimitiveâ cultures, neither produce nor consume their music, but become en masse âthe Voice of the Forest.â At the other end of the scale, among complex agricultural societies, like Bali on the verge of the 20th century, âeveryone is an artistâ (& in 1980 a Javanese mystic told me, âEveryone **must** be an artist!â).
The goals of Immediatism lie somewhere along the trajectory described roughly by these three points (Pygmies, Plains Indians, Balinese), which have all been linked to the anthropological concept of âdemocratic shamanism.â Creative acts, themselves the outer results of the inwardness of imagination, are not **mediated & alienated** (in the sense weâve been using those terms) when they are carried out BY everyone FOR everyoneâ when they are produced but not reproducedâwhen they are shared but not fetishized. Of course these acts are achieved thru mediation of some sort & to some extent, as are all actsâbut they have not yet become forces of extreme alienation between some Expert/Priest/Producer on the one hand & some hapless âlaypersonâ or consumer on the other.
Different media therefore exhibit different degrees of mediationâ& perhaps they can even be ranked on that basis. Here everything depends on reciprocity, on a more-or-less equal exchange of what may be called â quanta of imagination.â In the case of the epic rhapsodist who mediates vision for the tribe, a great deal of workâor active dreamingâstill remains to be done by the hearers. They must participate imaginatively in the act of telling/hearing, & must call up images from their own stores of creative power to complete the rhapsodistâs act.
In the case of Pygmy music the reciprocity becomes nearly as complete as possible, since the entire tribe mediates vision only & precisely for the entire tribe;â while for the Balinese, reciprocity assumes a more complex economy in which specialization is highly articulated, in which âthe artist is not a special kind of person, but each person is a special kind of artist.â
In the âritual theaterâ of Voodoo & Santeria, everyone present must participate by visualizing the loas or orishas (imaginal archetypes), & by calling upon them (with âsignatureâ chants & rhythms) to manifest. Anyone present may become a âhorseâ or medium for one of these **santos**, whose words & actions then assume for all celebrants the aspect of the presence of the spirit (i.e. the possessed person does not represent but presents). This structure, which also underlies Indonesian ritual theater, may be taken as exemplary for the creative production of âdemocratic shamanism.â In order to construct our scale of imagination for all media, we may start by comparing this âvoodoo theaterâ with the 18th century European theater described by Nietzsche.
In the latter, nothing of the original vision (or âspiritâ) is actually present. The actors merely re-presentâthey are âdisguised.â It is not expected that any member of troupe or audience will suddenly become possessed (or even âinspiredâ to any great extent) by the playwrightâs images. The actors are specialists or experts of representation, while the audience are âlaypeopleâ to whom various images are being transferred. The audience is passive, too much is being **done for** the audience, who are indeed locked in place in darkness & silence, immobilized by the money theyâve paid for this vicarious experience.
Artaud, who realized this, attempted to revive ritual voodoo theater (banished from Western Culture by Aristotle)âbut he carried out the attempt **within** the very structure (actor/audience) of aristotelian theater; he tried to destroy or mutate it from the inside out. He failed & went insane, setting off a whole series of experiments which culminated in the Living Theaterâ s assault on the actor/audience barrier, a literal assault which tried to force audience members to âparticipateâ in the ritual. These experiments produced some great theater, but all failed in their deepest purpose. None managed to overcome the alienation Nietzsche & Artaud had criticized.
Even so, Theater occupies a much higher place on the Imaginal Scale than other & later media such as film. At least in theater actors & audience are physically present in the same space together, allowing for the creation of what Peter Brook calls the âinvisible golden chainâ of attention & fellow-feeling between actors & audienceâthe well-known âmagicâ of theater. With film, however, this chain is broken. Now the audience sits alone in the dark with nothing to do, while the absent actors are represented by gigantic icons. Always the same no matter how many times it is âshown,â made to be reproduced mechanically, devoid of all âaura,â film actually **forbids** its audience to âparticipateââfilm has no need of the audienceâs imagination. Of course, film does need the audienceâs money, & money is a kind of concretized imaginal residue, after all.
Eisenstein would point out that montage establishes a dialectic tension in film which engages the viewerâs mindâintellect & imaginationâ& Disney might add (if he were capable of ideology) that animation increases this effect because animation is, in effect, completely made up of montage. Film too has its âmagic.â Granted. But from the point of view of **structure** we have come a long way from voodoo theater & democratic shamanismâwe have come perilously close to the commodification of the imagination, & to the alienation of commodity-relations. We have almost resigned our power of flight, even of dream-flight.
Books? Books as media transmit only wordsâno sounds, sights, smells or feels, all of which are left up to the readerâs imagination. FineâŠBut thereâs nothing âdemocraticâ about books. The author/publisher produces, you consume. Books appeal to âimaginativeâ people, perhaps, but all their imaginal activity really amounts to passivity, sitting alone with a book, letting someone else tell the story. The magic of books has something sinister about it, as in Borgesâs Library. The Churchâs idea of a list of damnable books probably didnât go far enoughâfor in a sense, all books are damned. The **eros** of the text is a perversionâalbeit, nevertheless, one to which we are addicted, & in no hurry to kick.
As for radio, it is clearly a medium of absenceâlike the book only more so, since books leave you alone in the light, radio alone in the dark. The more exacerbated passivity of the âlistenerâ is revealed by the fact that advertisers pay for spots on radio, not in books (or not very much). Nevertheless radio leaves a great deal more imaginative âworkâ for the listener than, say, television for the viewer. The magic of radio: one can use it to listen to sunspot radiation, storms on Jupiter, the whizz of comets. Radio is old-fashioned; therein lies its seductiveness. Radio preachers say, âPut your haaands on the Radio, brothers & sisters, & feel the heeeeaaaling power of the **Word**!â Voodoo Radio?
(Note: A similar analysis of recorded music might be made: i.e., that it is alienating but not yet alienated. Records replaced family amateur music-making. Recorded music is too ubiquitous, too easyâthat which is not present is not **rare**. And yet thereâs a lot to be said for scratchy old 78s played over distant radio stations late at nightâa flash of illumination which seems to spark across all the levels of mediation & achieve a paradoxical presence.)
Itâs in this sense that we might perhaps give some credence to the otherwise dubious proposition that âradio is goodâtelevision evil!â For television occupies the bottom rung of the scale of imagination in media. No, thatâs not true. âVirtual Realityâ is even lower. But TV is the medium the Situationists meant when they referred to âthe Spectacle. â Television is the medium which Immediatism most wants to overcome. Books, theater, film & radio all retain what Benjamin called âthe utopian traceâ (at least **in potentia**)âthe last vestige of an impulse against alienation, the last perfume of the imagination. TV however **began** by erasing even that trace. No wonder the first broadcasters of video were the Nazis. TV is to the imagination what virus is to the DNA. The end. Beyond TV there lies only the infra-media realm of no-space/no-time, the instantaneity & ecstasis of CommTech, pure speed, the downloading of consciousness into the machine, into the programâin other words, hell.
Does this mean that Immediatism wants to âabolish televisionâ? No, certainly notâfor Immediatism wants to be a game, not a political movement, & certainly not a revolution with the power to abolish any medium. The goals of Immediatism must be positive, not negative. We feel no calling to eliminate any âmeans of production â (or even re-production) which might after all some day fall into the hands of âa people.â
We have analyzed media by asking how much imagination is involved in each, & how much reciprocity, solely in order to implement for ourselves the most effective means of solving the problem outlined by Nietzsche & felt so painfully by Artaud, the problem of alienation. For this task we need a rough hierarchy of media, a means of measuring their potential for our uses. Roughly, then, **the more imagination is liberated & shared, the more useful the medium**.
Perhaps we can no longer call up spirits to possess us, or visit their realms as the shamans did. Perhaps no such spirits exist, or perhaps we are too âcivilizedâ to recognize them. Or perhaps not. The creative imagination, however, remains for us a realityâ& one which we must explore, even in the vain hope of our salvation.
Every culture (or anyway every major urban/agricultural culture) cherishes two myths which apparently contradict each other: the myth of Degeneration & the myth of Progress. Rene Guenon & the neo-traditionalists like to pretend that no ancient culture ever believed in Progress, but of course they all did.
One version of the myth of Degeneration in Indo-European culture centers around the image of metals: gold, silver, bronze, iron. But what of the myth wherein Kronos & the Titans are destroyed to make way for Zeus & the Olympians?âa story which parallels that of Tiamat & Marduk, or Leviathan & Jah. In these âProgressâ myths, an earlier chthonic chaotic earthbound (or watery) âfeminineâ pantheon is replaced (overthrown) by a later spiritualized orderly heavenly âmaleâ pantheon. Is this not a step **forward** in Time? And have not Buddhism, Christianity, & Islam all claimed to be **better** than paganism?
In truth of course both mythsâDegeneration as well as Progressâserve the purpose of Control & the Society of Control. Both admit that before the present state of affairs something else existed, a different form of the Social. In both cases we appear to be seeing a ârace-memoryâ vision of the Paleolithic, the great long unchanging pre-history of the human. In one case that era is seen as a nastily brutish vast disorder; the 18th century did not **discover** this viewpoint, but found it already expressed in Classical & Christian culture. In the other case, the primordial is viewed as precious, innocent, happier, & easier than the present, more numinous than the presentâbut **irrevocably vanished**, impossible to recover except through death.
Thus for all loyal & enthusiastic devotees of Order, Order presents itself as immeasurably more perfect than any original Chaos; while for the disaffected potential enemies of Order, Order presents itself as cruel & oppressive (âironâ) but utterly & fatally unavoidableâin fact, omnipotent.
In neither case will the mythopoets of Order admit that âChaosâ or âthe Golden Ageâ could still exist in the present, or that they do exist in the present, here & now in factâbut repressed by the illusory totality of the Society of Order. We however believe that âthe paleolithicâ (which is neither more nor less a myth than âchaosâ or âgolden ageâ) does exist even now as a kind of unconscious within the social. We also believe that as the Industrial Age comes to an end, & with it the last of the Neolithic âagricultural revolution,â & with it the decay of the last religions of Order, that this ârepressed materialâ will once again be uncovered. What else could we mean when we speak of âpsychic nomadismâ or âthe disappearance of the Socialâ?
<em>The end of the Modern does not mean a return TO the Paleolithic, but a return OF the Paleolithic.</em>
Post-classical (or post-academic) anthropology has prepared us for this return of the repressed, for only very recently have we come to understand & sympathize with hunter/gatherer societies. The caves of Lascaux were rediscovered precisely when they needed to be rediscovered, for no ancient Roman nor medieval Christian nor 18th century rationalist could have ever have found them beautiful or significant. In these caves (symbols of an archaeology of consciousness) we found the artists who created them; we discovered them as ancestors, & also as **ourselves**, alive & present.
Paul Goodman once defined anarchism as âneolithic conservatism.â Witty, but no longer accurate. Anarchism (or Ontological Anarchism, at least) no longer sympathizes with peasant agriculturalists, but with the non-authoritarian social structures & pre-surplus-value economics of the hunter/gatherers. Moreover we cannot describe this sympathy as âconservative.â A better term would be âradical,â since we have found our roots in the Old Stone Age, a kind of eternal present. We do not wish to return **to** a material technology of the past (we have no desire to bomb ourselves back to the Stone Age), but rather for the return **of** a psychic technology which we forgot we possessed.
The fact that we find Lascaux beautiful means that Babylon has at last begun to fall. Anarchism is probably more a symptom than a cause of this melting away. Despite our utopian imaginations we do not know what to expect. But we, at least, are prepared for the **drift** into the unknown. For us it is an adventure, not the End of the World. We have welcomed the return of Chaos, for along with the danger comesâat lastâa chance to create.
Whatâs so funny about **Art**?
Was Art laughed to death by dada? Or perhaps this sardonicide took place even earlier, with the first performance of **Ubu Roi**? Or with Baudelaireâs sarcastic phantom-of-the-opera laughter, which so disturbed his good bourgeois friends?
Whatâs funny about Art (though itâs more funny-peculiar than funny-ha-ha) is the sight of the corpse that refuses to lie down, this zombie jamboree, this charnel puppetshow with all the strings attached to Capital (bloated Diego Rivera-style plutocrat), this moribund simulacrum jerking frenetically around, pretending to be the one single most truly alive thing in the universe.
In the face of an irony like this, a doubleness so extreme it amounts to an impassable abyss, any **healing** power of laughter-in-art can only be rendered suspect, the illusory property of a self-appointed elite or pseudo-avant-garde. To have a genuine avant-garde, Art must be **going somewhere**, and this has long since ceased to be the case. We mentioned Rivera; surely no more genuinely funny political artist has painted in our centuryâbut in aid of what? Trotskyism! The deadest dead-end of twentieth-century politics! No healing power **here**âonly the hollow sound of powerless mockery, echoing over the abyss.
To heal, one first destroysâand political art which fails to destroy the target of its laughter ends by strengthening the very forces it sought to attack. âWhat doesnât kill me makes me stronger,â sneers the porcine figure in its shiny top hat (mocking Nietzsche, or course, poor Nietzsche, who tried to laugh the whole nineteenth century to death, but ended up a living corpse, whose sister tied strings to his limbs to make him dance for fascists).
Thereâs nothing particularly mysterious or metaphysical about the process. Circumstance, poverty, once forced Rivera to accept a commission to come to the USA and paint a muralâfor Rockefeller!âthe very archetypal Wall Street porker himself! Rivera made his work a blatant piece of Commie agitpropâand then Rockefeller had it **obliterated**. As if this werenât funny enough, the real joke is that Rockefeller could have savored victory even more sweetly by **not** destroying the work, but by paying for it and displaying it, turning it into Art, that toothless parasite of the interior decorator, that **joke**.
The dream of Romanticism : that the reality-world of bourgeois values could somehow be persuaded to consume, to take into itself, an art which at first seemed like all other art (books to read, paintings to hang on the wall, etc.), but which would secretly infect that reality with **something else**, which would change the way it saw itself, overturn it, replace it with the revolutionary values of art.
This was also the dream surrealism dreamed. Even dada, despite its outward show of cynicism, still dared to hope. From Romanticism to Situationism, from Blake to 1968, the dream of each succeeding yesterday became the parlor decor of every tomorrowâbought, chewed, reproduced, sold, consigned to museums, libraries, universities, and other mausolea, forgotten, lost, resurrected, turned into nostalgia-craze, reproduced, sold, etc., etc., **ad nauseum**.
In order to understand how thoroughly Cruikshank or Daumier or Grandville or Rivera or Tzara or Duchamp destroyed the bourgeois worldview of their time, one must bury oneself in a blizzard of historical references and **hallucinate**âfor in fact the destruction-by-laughter was a theoretical success but an actual flopâthe dead weight of illusion failed to budge even an inch in the gales of laughter, the **attack** of laughter. It wasnât bourgeois society which collapsed after all, it was art.
In the light of the trick which has been played on us, it appears to us as if the contemporary artist were faced with two choices (since suicide is **not** a solution): one, to go on launching attack after attack, movement after movement, in the hope that one day (**soon**) âthe thingâ will have grown so weak, so **empty**, that it will evaporate and leave us suddenly alone in the field; or, two, to begin **right now immediately** to live as if the battle were already won, as if **today** the artist were no longer a special kind of person, but each person a special sort of artist. (This is what the Situationists called âthe suppression and realization of artâ ).
Both of these options are so âimpossibleâ that to act on either of them would be a joke. We wouldnât have to make âfunnyâ art because just making art would be funny enough to bust a gut. But at least it would be **our joke**. (Who can say for certain that we would fail? âI **love** not knowing the future.ââNietzsche) In order to begin to play this game, however, we shall probably have to set certain rules for ourselves:
1. There are no **issues**. There is no such thing as sexism, fascism, speciesism, looksism, or any other âfranchise issueâ which can be separated out from the social complex and treated with âdiscourseâ as a âproblem.â There exists only the **totality** which subsumes all these illusory âissuesâ into the complete falsity of **its** discourse, thus rendering all opinions, pro and con, into mere thought-commodities to be bought and sold. And this **totality** is itself an illusion, an evil nightmare from which we are trying (through art, or humor, or by any other means) to awaken.
2. As much as possible whatever we do must be done outside the psychic/economic structure set up by the **totality** as the permissible space for the game of art. How, you ask, are we to make a living without galleries, agents, museums, commercial publishing, the NEA, and other welfare agencies of the arts? Oh well, one need not ask for the improbable. But one must indeed demand the âimpossibleââor else why the fuck is one an artist?! Itâs not enough to occupy a special holy catbird seat called Art from which to mock at the stupidity and injustice of the âsquareâ world. Art is part of the problem. The Art World has its head up its ass, and it has become necessary to disengageâor else live in a landscape full of shit.
3. Of course one must go on âmaking a livingâ somehowâbut the essential thing is to make a life. Whatever we do, whichever option we choose (perhaps all of them), or however badly we compromise, we should pray never to mistake art for life: Art is brief, Life is long. We should try to be prepared to drift, to nomadize, to slip out of all nets, to never settle down, to live through many arts, to make our lives better than our art, to make art our boast rather than our excuse.
4. The healing laugh (as opposed to the poisonous and corrosive laugh) can only arise from an art which is seriousâ**serious, but not sober**. Pointless morbidity, cynical nihilism, trendy postmodern frivolity, whining/bitching/moaning (the liberal cult of the âvictimâ), exhaustion, Baudrillardian ironic hyperconformityânone of these options is serious enough, and at the same time none is **intoxicated** enough to suit our purposes, much less elicit our laughter.
The categories of naive art, art brut, and insane or eccentric art, which shade into various & further categories of neo-primitive or urban-primitive artâ all these ways of categorizing & labelling art remain **senseless**:âthat is, not only ultimately useless but also essentially unsensual, unconnected to body & desire. What really characterizes all these art forms? Not their marginality in relation to a mainstream of art/discourseâŠfor heavenâs sake, **what** mainstream?! **what** discourse?! If we were to say that thereâs a âpost-modernistâ discourse currently going on, then the concept âmarginâ no longer holds any meaning. Post-post-modernism, however, will not even admit the existence of **any** discourse of **any** sort. Art has fallen silent. There are no more categories, much less maps of âcenterâ & âmargin. â We are free of all that shit, right?
Wrong. Because **one** category survives: Capital. Too-Late Capitalism. The Spectacle, the Simulation, Babylon, whatever you want to call it. All art **can** be positioned or labelled in relation to **this** âdiscourse.â And it is **precisely & only** in relation to this âmetaphysicalâ commodity-spectacle that âoutsiderâ art can be seen as marginal. If this spectacle can be considered as a para-medium (in all its sinuous complexity), then âoutsiderâ art must be called **im-mediate**. It does not **pass thru** the paramedium of the spectacle. It is meant only for the artist & the artistâs âimmediate entourageâ (friends, family, neighbors, tribe); & it participates only in a âgiftâ economy of positive reciprocity. Only this non-category of âimmediatismâ can therefore approach an adequate understanding & defense of the **bodily** aspects of âoutsiderâ art, its connection to the senses & to desire, & its avoidance or even ignorance of the mediation/alienation inherent in spectacular recuperation & re-production. Mind you, this has nothing to do with the **content** of any outsider genre, nor for that matter does it concern the **form** or the **intention** of the work, nor the naivetĂ© or knowingness of the artist or recipients of the art. Its âimmediatismâ lies solely in its means of **imaginal production**. It communicates or is âgivenâ from person to person, âbreast-to-breastâ as the sufis say, without passing thru the distortion-mechanism of the spectacular paramedium.
When Yugoslavian or Haitian or NYC-graffiti art was âdiscoveredâ & commodified, the results failed to satisfy on several points:â(1) In terms of the pseudo-discourse of the âArt World, â all so-called ânaivetĂ©â is doomed to remain quaint, even campy, & decidedly marginalâeven when it commands high prices (for a year or two). The forced entrance of outsider art into the commodity spectacle is a **humiliation**. (2) Recuperation as commodity engages the artist in ânegative reciprocityââi.e., where first the artist âreceived inspirationâ as a free gift, and then âmade a donationâ directly to other people, who might or might not âgive backâ their understanding, or mystification, or a turkey & a keg of beer (positive reciprocity), the artist now first creates for money & receives money, while any aspects of âgiftâ exchange recede into secondary levels of meaning & finally begin to fade (negative reciprocity). Finally we have **tourist** art, & the condescending amusement, & then the condescending boredom, of those who will no longer pay for the âinauthentic.â (3) Or else the Art World vampirizes the energy of the outsider, sucks everything out & then passes on the corpse to the advertising world or the world of âpopularâ entertainment. By this **re-production** the art finally loses its âauraâ & shrivels & dies. True, the âutopian traceâ may remain, but in essence the art has been **betrayed**.
The **unfairness** of such terms as âinsaneâ or âneo-primitiveâ art lies in the fact that this art is not produced only by the mad or innocent, but by all those who evade the alienation of the paramedium. Its true appeal lies in the intense aura it acquires thru immediate imaginal **presence**, not only in its âvisionaryâ style or content, but most importantly by its mere present-ness (i.e., it is âhereâ and it is a âgiftâ). In this sense it is more, not less, noble than âmainstream â art of the post-modern eraâwhich is precisely the art of an absence rather than a presence.
The only **fair** way (or âbeauty way,â as the Hopi say) to treat âoutsiderâ art would seem to be to keep it âsecretââto refuse to define itâto **pass it on** as a secret, person-to-person, breast-to-breastârather than pass it thru the paramedium (slick journals, quarterlies, galleries, museums, coffee-table books, MTV, etc.). Or even better:âto become âmadâ & âinnocentâ ourselvesâfor so Babylon will label us when we neither worship nor criticize it anymoreâwhen we have **forgotten** it (but not âforgivenâ it!), & remembered our own prophetic selves, our bodies, our âtrue will.â
i. Any number can play but the number must be pre-determined. Six to twenty-five seems about right.
ii. The basic structure is a banquet or picnic. Each player must bring a dish or bottle, etc., of sufficient quantity that everyone gets at least a serving. Dishes can be prepared or finished on the spot, but nothing should be bought ready-made (except wine & beer, although these could ideally be home-made). The more elaborate the dishes the better. Attempt to be **memorable**. The menu need not be left to surprise (although this is an option)â some groups may want to coordinate the banquets so as to avoid duplications or clashes. Perhaps the banquet could have a theme & each player could be responsible for a given course (appetizer, soup, fish, vegetables, meat, salad, dessert, ices, cheeses, etc.). Suggested themes: Fourierâs GastrosophyâSurrealismâNative AmericanâBlack & Red (all food black or red in honor of anarchy)âetc.
iii. The banquet should be carried out with a certain degree of formality: toasts, for example. Maybe âdress for dinnerâ in some way? (Imagine for example that the banquet theme were âSurrealism â; the concept âdress for dinnerâ takes on a certain meaning). Live music at the banquet would be fine, providing some of the players were content to perform for the others as their âgift,â & eat later. (Recorded music is not appropriate.)
iv. The main purpose of the potlatch is of course gift-giving. Every player should arrive with one or more gifts & leave with one or more **different** gifts. This could be accomplished in a number of ways: (a) Each player brings one gift & passes it to the person seated next to them at table (or some similar arrangement); (b) Everyone brings a gift for every other guest. The choice may depend on the number of players, with (a) better for larger groups & (b) for smaller gatherings. If the choice is (b), you may want to decide beforehand whether the gifts should be the same or different. For example, if I am playing with five other people, do I b ring (say) five hand-painted neckties, or five totally different gifts? And will the gifts be given specifically to certain individuals (in which case they might be crafted to suit the recipientâs personality), or will they be distributed by lot?
v. The gifts must be made by the players, **not** ready-made. This is vital. Pre-manufactured elements can go into the making of the gifts, but each gift must be an individual work of art in its own right. If for instance I bring five hand painted neckties, I must paint each one myself, either with the same or with different designs, although I may be allowed to buy ready-made ties to work on.
vi. Gifts need not be physical objects. One playerâs gift might be live music during dinner, anotherâs might be a performance. However, it should be recalled that in the Amerindian potlatches the gifts were supposed to be superb & even ruinous for the givers. In my opinion physical objects are best, & they should be **as good as possible**ânot necessarily costly to make, but really impressive. Traditional potlatches involved prestige-winning. Players should feel a competitive spirit of giving, a determination to make gifts of real splendor or value. Groups may wish to set rules beforehand about thisâsome may wish to insist on physical objects, in which case music or performance would simply become extra acts of generosity, but **hors de potlatch**, so to speak.
vii. Our potlatch is non-traditional, however, in that theoretically all players **win**âeveryone gives & receives equally. Thereâs no denying however that a dull or stingy player will lose prestige, while an imaginative &/or generous player will gain âface.â In a really successful potlatch each player will be equally generous, so that all players will be equally pleased. The uncertainty of outcome adds a zest of randomness to the event.
viii. The host, who supplies the place, will of course be put to extra trouble & expense, so that an ideal potlatch would be part of a series in which each player takes a turn as host. In this case another competition for prestige would transpire in the course of the series:âwho will provide the most memorable hospitality? Some groups may want to set rules limiting the hostâs duties, while others may wish to leave hosts free to knock themselves out; however, in the latter case, there should really be a complete series of events, so that no one need feel cheated, or superior, in relation to the other players. But in some areas & for some groups the entire series may simply not be feasible. In New York for example not everyone has enough room to host even a small party. In this case the hosts will inevitably win some extra prestige. And why not?
ix. Gifts should not be âuseful.â They should appeal to the senses. Some groups may prefer works of art, others might like home-made preserves & relishes, or gold frankincense & myrrh, or even sexual acts. Some ground rules should be agreed on. No mediation should be involved in the giftâno videotapes, tape recordings, printed material, etc. All gifts should be present at the potlatch âceremonyââ i.e. no tickets to other events, no promises, no postponements. Remember that the purpose of the game, as well as its most basic rule, is to avoid all mediation & even representationâto be â**present**,â to give â**presents**.â
The problem is not that too much has been revealed, but that every revelation finds its sponsor, its CEO, its monthly slick, its clone Judases & replacement people.
You canât get sick from too much knowledgeâbut we can suffer from the virtualization of knowledge, its alienation from us & its replacement by a weird dull changeling or simulacrumâthe same âdata,â yes, but now deadâlike supermarket vegetables; no âaura.â
Our malaise (January 1, 1992) arises from this: we hear not the language but the echo, or rat her the reproduction ad infinitum of the language, its reflection upon a reflection-series of itself, even more self-referential & corrupt. The vertiginous perspectives of this VR datascape nauseate us because they contain no hidden spaces, no privileged opacities.
Infinite access to knowledge that simply fails to interact with the body or with the imaginationâin fact the manichean ideal of fleshless soulless thoughtâ modern media/politics as pure gnostic mentation, the anaesthetic ruminations of Archons & Aeons, suicide of the ElectâŠ
The organic is secretiveâit secretes secrecy like sap. The inorganic is a demonic democracyâeverything equal, but equally valueless. No gifts, only commodities. The Manichaeans invented usury. Knowledge can act as a kind of poison, as Nietzsche pointed out.
Within the organic (âNature,â âeveryday lifeâ) is embedded a kind of silence which is not just dumbness, an opacity which is not mere ignoranceâa secrecy which is also an affirmationâ a tact which knows how to act, how to change things, how to breathe into them.
Not a âcloud of unknowingâânot âmysticismââwe have no desire to deliver ourselves up again to that obscurantist sad excuse for fascismânevertheless we might invoke a sort of taoist sense of âsuchness-of-thingsâââa flower does not talk,â & itâs certainly not the genitals which endow us with logos. (On second thought, perhaps this is not quite true; after all, myth offers us the archetype of Priapus, a talking penis.) An occultist would ask how to âworkâ this silenceâbut weâd rather ask how to **play** it, like musicians, or like the playful boy of Heraclitus.
A bad mood in which every day is the same. When are a few lumps going to appear in this smooth time? Hard to believe in the return of Carnival, of Saturnalia. Perhaps time has stopped here in the Pleroma, here in the Gnostic dreamworld where our bodies are rotting but our âmindsâ are downloaded into eternity. We know so muchâhow can we not know the answer to this most vexing of questions?
Because the answer (as in Odilon Redonâs âHarpocratesâ) isnât answered in the language of reproduction but in that of gesture, touch, odor, the hunt. Finally **virtu** is impassableâeating & drinking is eating & drinkingâthe lazy yokel plows a crooked furrow. The Wonderful World of Knowledge has turned into some kind of PBS Special from Hell. I demand real mud in my stream, real watercress. Why, the natives are not only sullen, theyâre taciturnâdownright incommunicative. Right, gringo, weâre tired of your steenking surveys, tests & questionnaires. There are some things bureaucrats were not meant to knowâ & so there are some things which even artists should keep secret. This is not self-censorship nor self-ignorance. It is cosmic tact. It is our homage to the organic, its uneven flow, its backcurrents & eddies, its swamps & hideouts. If art is âworkâ then it will become knowledge & eventually lose its redemptive power & even its taste. But if art is âplayâ then it will both preserve secrets & tell secrets which will remain secrets. Secrets are for sharing, like all of Natureâs secretions.
Is knowledge **evil**? Weâre no mirror-image Manichees hereâweâre counting on dialectics to break a few bricks. Some knowledge is dadata, some is commodata. Some knowledge is wisdomâsome simply an excuse for doing nothing, desiring nothing. Mere academic knowledge, for example, or the knowingness of the nihilist post-mods, shades off into realms of the UnDeadâ& the UnBorn. Some knowledge breathesâsome knowledge suffocates. What we know & how we know it must have a basis in the fleshâthe whole flesh, not just a brain in a jar of formaldehyde. The knowledge we want is neither utilitarian nor âpureâ but celebratory. Anything else is a totentanz of data-ghosts, the âbeckoning fair onesâ of the media, the Cargo Cult of too-Late Capitalist epistemology.
If I could escape this bad mood of course Iâd do so, & take you with me. What we need is a plan. Jail break? tunnel? a gun carved of soap, a sharpened spoon, a file in a cake? a new religion?
Let me be your wandering bishop. Weâll play with the silence & make it ours. Soon as Spring comes. A rock in the stream, bifurcating its turbulence. Visualize it: mossy, wet, viridescent as rainy jade-faded copper struck by lightning. A great toad like a living emerald, like Mayday. The strength of the **bios**, like the strength of the bow or lyre, lies in the **bending back**.
To speak too much & not be heardâthatâs sickening enough. But to acquire **listeners**âthat could be worse. Listeners think that to listen sufficesâas if their true desire were to hear with someone elseâs ears, see thru someone elseâs eyes, feel with someone elseâs skinâŠ
The text (or the broadcast) which will change reality:â Rimbaud dreamed of that, & then gave up in disgust. But he entertained too subtle an idea about magic. The crude truth is perhaps that texts can only change reality when they inspire readers to **see & act**, rather than merely **see**. Scripture once did thisâbut Scripture has become an idol. To see thru its eyes would be to possess (in the Voodoo sense) a statueâor a corpse.
Seeing, & the literature of seeing, is too easy. Enlightenment is easy. âItâs easy to be a sufi,â a Persian shaykh once told me. âWhatâs difficult is to be human.â Political enlightenment is even easier than spiritual enlightenmentâneither one changes the world, or even the self. Sufism & Situationismâor shamanism & anarchyâthe theories Iâve played withâ are just that: theories, visions, ways of seeing. Significantly, the âpracticeâ of sufism consists in the repetition of words (dhikr). This action itself is a text, & nothing but a text. And the âpraxisâ of anarcho-situationism amounts to the same: a text, a slogan on a wall. A moment of enlightenment. Well, itâs not totally valuelessâbut afterwards what will be **different**?
We might like to purge our radio of anything which lacks at least the **chance** of precipitating that difference. Just as there exist books which have inspired earthshaking crimes, we would like to broadcast texts which cause hearers to seize (or at least make a grab for) the happiness God denies us. Exhortations to hijack reality. But even more we would like to purge our lives of everything which obstructs or delays us from setting outânot to sell guns & slaves in Abyssiniaânot to be either robbers or copsânot to escape the world or to rule itâbut to open ourselves to **difference**.
I share with the most reactionary moralists the presumption that art can really affect reality in this way, & I despise the liberals who say all art should be permitted becauseâafter allâitâs only art. Thus Iâve taken to the practice of those categories of writing & radio most hated by conservativesâpornography & agitpropâin the hope of stirring up trouble for my readers/hearers & myself. But I accuse myself of ineffectualism, even futility. Not enough has changed. Perhaps nothing has changed.
Enlightenment is all we have, & even that weâve had to rip from the grasp of corrupt gurus & bumbling suicidal intellectuals. As for our artâwhat have we accomplished, other than to spill our blood for the ghostworld of fashionable ideas & images?
Writing has taken us to the very edge beyond which writing may be impossible. Any texts which could survive the plunge over this edgeâinto whatever abyss or Abyssinia lies beyondâwould have to be virtually self-created, like the miraculous hidden-treasure Dakini-scrolls of Tibet or the tadpole-script spirit-texts of Taoismâ& absolutely incandescent, like the last screamed messages of a witch or heretic burning at the stake (to paraphrase Artaud).
I can sense these texts trembling just beyond the veil.
What if the mood should strike us to renounce both the mere objectivity of art & the mere subjectivity of theory? to risk the abyss? What if no one followed? So much the better, perhapsâ we might find our equals amongst the Hyperboreans. What if we went mad? Wellâthatâs the risk. What if we were bored? AhâŠ
Already some time ago we placed all our bets on the irruption of the marvelous into everyday lifeâwon a few, then lost heavily. Sufism was indeed much much easier. Pawn everything then, down to the last miserable scrawl? double our stakes? cheat?
Itâs as if there were angels in the next room beyond thick wallsâarguing? fucking? One canât make out a single word.
Can we retrain ourselves at this late date to become Finders of hidden treasure? And by what technique, seeing that it is precisely technique which has betrayed us? Derangement of the senses, insurrection, piety, poetry? **Knowing how** is a cheap mountebankâs trick. But **knowing what** might be like divine self-knowledgeâit might create **ex nihilo**.
Finally, however, it will become necessary to leave this city which hovers immobile on the edge of a sterile twilight, like Hamelin after all the children were lured away. Perhaps other cities exist, occupying the same space & time, but⊠different. And perhaps there exist jungles where mere enlightenment is outshadowed by the black light of jaguars. I have no ideaâ& Iâm terrified.