dear nettimers,

I just posted this text a few minutes ago on the Tactical Media Files blog - 
this is a shorter text as an extension from the recent network notebook on the 
legacies of tactical media, intended for the Re-Public on-line journal. 
Unfortunately the journal is suspended due to austerity pressures, and so we 
are now circulating it via other channels. A further posting will follow in a 
few days.

You can find the blog version with some images here:
http://blog.tacticalmediafiles.net/?p=266

bests,
eric

------------

Editorial notice:

This text was originally written for the Re-Public on-line journal, which 
focuses on innovative developments in contemporary political theory and 
practice, and is published from Greece ( www.re-public.gr/en ). As the journal 
has ground to a (hopefully just temporary) halt under severe austerity 
pressures we decided to post the current first draft of the text on the 
Tactical Media Files blog. This posting is one of two, the second of which will 
follow shortly. Both texts build on my recent Network Notebook on the 'Legacies 
of Tactical Media' ( 
http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/portal/publications/network-notebooks/no-5-legacies-of-tactical-media/
 ).

The second text is a collection of preliminary notes that expand on recent 
discussions following Marco Deseriis and Jodi Dean's essay "A Movement Without 
Demands". It is conceivable that both texts will merge into a more substantive 
essay in the future, but I haven't made up my mind about that as yet. 

Hope this will be of interest,
Eric

------------

Charting Hybridised Realities

Tactical Cartographies for a densified present

In the midst of an enquiry into the legacies of Tactical Media - the fusion of 
art, politics, and media which had been recognised in the middle 1990s as a 
particularly productive mix for cultural, social and political activism [1], 
the year 2011 unfolded. The enquiry had started as an extension of the work on 
the Tactical Media Files, an on-line documentation resource for tactical media 
practices worldwide [2], which grew out of the physical archives of the 
infamous Next 5 Minutes festival series on tactical media (1993 - 2003) housed 
at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam. After making 
much of tactical media's history accessible again on-line, our question, as 
editors of the resource, had been what the current significance of the term and 
the thinking and practices around it might be?

Prior to 2011 this was something emphatically under question. The Next 5 
Minutes festival series had been ended with the 2003 edition, following a year 
that had started on September 11, 2002, convening local activists gatherings 
named as Tactical Media Labs across six continents. [3] Two questions were at 
the heart of the fourth and last edition of the Next 5 Minutes: How has the 
field of media activism diversified since it was first named 'tactical media' 
in the middle 1990s? And what could be significance and efficacy of tactical 
media's symbolic interventions in the midst of the semiotic corruption of the 
media landscape after the 9/11 terrorist attacks?

This 'crash of symbols' for obvious reasons took centre stage during this 
fourth and last edition of the festival. Naomi Klein had famously claimed in 
her speedy response to the horrific events of 9/11 that the activist lever of 
symbolic intervention had been contaminated and rendered useless in the face of 
the overpowering symbolic power of the terrorist attacks and their real-time 
mediation on a global scale. [4] The attacks left behind an "utterly 
transformed semiotic landscape" (Klein) in which the accustomed tactics of 
culture jammers had been 'blown away' by the symbolic power of the terrorist 
atrocities. Instead 'we' (Klein appealing to an imaginary community of social 
activists) should move from symbols to substance. What Klein overlooked in this 
response in 'shock and awe', however, was that while the semiotic landscape had 
indeed been dramatically transformed (and corrupted) in the wake of the 9/11 
attacks, it still remained a semiotic landscape - symbols were still
  the only lever and entry point into the wider real-time mediated public 
domain.

Therefore, as unlikely as it may have seemed at the time, the question about 
the diversification of the terrain and the practices of media activism(s) was 
ultimately of far greater importance. What the 9/11 crash of symbols and the 
semiotic corruption debate contributed here was 'merely' an added layer of 
complexity. In a society permeated by media flows, social activism necessarily 
had to become media activism, and thus had to operate in a significantly more 
complex and contested environment. The diversification of the media and 
information landscape, however, also implied that a radical diversification of 
activist strategies was needed to address these increasingly hybridised 
conditions. 

To name but a few of the emerging concerns: Witnessing of human rights abuses 
around the world, and creating public visibility and debate around them 
remained a pivotal concern for many tactical media practitioners, as it had 
been right from the early days of camcorder activism. But now new concerns over 
privacy in networked media environments, coupled with security and secrecy 
regimes of information control entered the scene. Critical media arts spread in 
different directions, claiming new terrains as diverse as life sciences and 
bio-engineering, as well as 'contestational robotics', interventions into the 
space of computer games, and even on-line role playing environments. Meanwhile 
the free software movement made its strides into developing more autonomous 
toolsets and infrastructures for a variety of social and cultural needs - 
adding a more strategic dimension to what had hitherto been mostly an 
interventionist practice. In a parallel movement on-line discussion groups, 
 mailing lists, and activity on various social media platforms started to 
coalesce slowly into what media theorist Geert Lovink has described as 
'organised networks'. [5] Or finally the rapid development of wireless 
transmission technologies, smart phones and other wireless network clients, 
which introduced a paradoxical superimposition of mediated and embodied spatial 
logics, best be captured in the multilayered concept of Hybrid Space. [6]

Our question was therefore entirely justified, to ask how the term 'tactical 
media' could possibly bring together such a diversified, heterogeneous, and 
hybridised set of practices in a meaningful way? It had become clear that more 
sophisticated cartographies would be necessary to begin charting this intensely 
hybridised landscape.

A digital conversion of public space

If the events in 2011 have made one thing clear it is that the ominous claim of 
Critical Art Ensemble that "the streets are dead capital" [7] has been declared 
null and void by an astounding resurgence of street protest, whatever their 
longer term political significance and fallout might be. These protests staged 
in the streets and squares, ranging from anti-austerity protests in Southern 
Europe to the various uprisings in Arab countries in North Africa and the 
Middle East, to the Occupy protests in the US and Northern Europe, have by no 
means been staged in physical spaces out of a rejection of the semiotic 
corruption of the media space. Much rather the streets and squares have acted 
as a platform for the digital and networked multiplication of protest across a 
plethora of distribution channels, cutting right across the spectrum of 
alternative and mainstream, broadcast and networked media outlets.   

What remained true to the origin of the term 'tactical media' was to build on 
Michel de Certeau's insight that the 'tactics of the weak' operate on the 
terrain of strategic power through highly agile displacements and temporary 
interventions [8], creating a continuous nomadic movement, giving voice to the 
voiceless by means of 'any media necessary' (Critical Art Ensemble). However, 
the radical dispersal of wireless and mobile media technologies meant that 
mediated and embodied public spaces increasingly started to coincide, creating 
a new hybridised logic for social contestation. As witnessed in the remarkable 
series of public square occupations in 2011, through the digital conversion of 
public space the streets have become networks and the squares the medium for 
collective expression in a transnationally interconnected but still highly 
discontinuous media network.

Horizontal networks / lateral connections

One of the remarkable characteristics of the various protests is not simply the 
adoption of similar tactics (most notably occupations of public city squares), 
but the conscious interlinking of events as they unfold. Italian activists of 
the Unicommons movement physically linked up with revolting students in 
Tunisia, Egyptian bloggers and occupiers of Tahrir Square linked up with the 
'take the square' activists in Spain, who in turn expressed solidarity and even 
co-initiated transnational actions with #occupy activists in the United States 
and elsewhere. It is the first time that the new organisational logic of 
transnational horizontal networks that has been theorised for instance in the 
seminal work "Territory, Authority, Rights" by sociologist Saskia Sassen, has 
become so evidently visible in activists practices across a set of radically 
dispersed geographic assemblages.

Horizontal networks by-pass traditional vertically integrated hierarchies of 
the local / national / international to create specific spatio-temporal 
transnational linkages around common interests, but also around affective ties. 
By and large these ties and linkages are still extra-institutional, largely 
informal, and because of their radically dispersed make up and their 
'affective' constitution highly unstable. Political institutions have not even 
begun assembling an adequate response to these new emergent political 
constellations (other than traditional repressive instruments of strategic 
power, i.e. evictions, arrests, prohibitions). Given the structural 
inequalities that fuel the different strands of protest the longer term 
effectiveness of these measures remains highly uncertain. The institutional 
linkages at the moment seem mostly limited to anti-institutional contestation 
on the part of protestors and repressive gestures of strategic authority. The 
truly challenging pr
 oposition these new transnational linkages suggest, however, is their movement 
to bypass the nested hierarchies of vertically integrated power structures in a 
horizontal configuration of social organisation. They link up a bewildering 
array of local groups, sites, networks, geographies, and cultural contexts and 
sensitivities, taking seriously for the first time the networked space as a new 
'frontier zone' (Sassen) where the new constellations of lateral transnational 
politics are going to be constructed.

Charting the layered densities of hybrid space

Hybrid Space is discontinuous. It's density is always variable, from place to 
place, from moment to moment. Presence of carrier signals can be interrupted or 
restored at any moment. Coverage is never guaranteed. The economics of the 
wireless network space is a matter of continuous contestation, and transmitters 
are always accompanied by their own forms of electromagnetic pollution 
(electrosmog). Charting and navigating this discontinuous and unstable space, 
certainly for social and political activists, is therefore always a challenge. 
Some prominent elements in this cartography are emerging more clearly, however: 
  

- connectivity: presence or absence of the signal carrier wave is becoming an 
increasingly important factor in staging and mediating protest. Exclusive 
reliance on state and corporate controlled infrastructures thus becomes 
increasingly perilous.

- censorship: censorship these days comes in many guises. Besides the continued 
forms of overt repression (arrests, confiscations, closures) of media outlets, 
new forms are the excessive application of intellectual property rights regimes 
to weed out unwarranted voices from the media landscape, but also highly 
effective forms of  dis-information and information overflow, something that 
has called the political efficacy of a project like WikiLeaks emphatically into 
question.

- circumvention: Great Information Fire Walls and information blockages are 
obvious forms of censorship, widely used during the Arab protests and common 
practice in China, now also spreading throughout the EU (under the guise of 
anti-piracy laws). These necessitate an ever more sophisticated understanding 
and deployment of internet censorship circumvention techniques, an 
understanding that should become common practice for contemporary activists. [9]

- attention economies: attention is a sought after commodity in the 
informational society. It is also fleeting. (Media-) Activists need to become 
masters at seizing and displacing public attention. Agility and mobility are 
indispensable here.

- public imagination management: Strategic operators try to manage public 
opinion. Activists cannot rely on this strategy. They do not have the means to 
keep and maintain public opinion in favour of their temporary goals. Instead 
activists should focus on 'public imagination management' - the continuous 
remembrance that another world is possible. 

Beyond semiotic corruption: A perverse subjectivity

The immersion in extended networks of affect that now permeate both embodied 
and mediated spaces introduces a new and inescapable corruption of 
subjectivity. Critical theory already taught us that we cannot trust 
subjectivity. However, the excessive self-mediation of protestors on the public 
square has shown that a deep desire for subjective articulation drives the 
manifestation in public. The dynamic is underscored further by upload 
statistics of video platforms such as youtube that continue to outpace the 
possibility for the global population to actually see and witness these 
materials. 

Rather than dismissing subjectivity it should be embraced. This requires a new 
attitude 'beyond good and evil', beyond critique and submission. A new perverse 
subjectivity is able to straddle the seemingly impossible divide between 
willing submission to various forms of corporate, state and social coercion, 
and vital social and political critique and contestation. It's maxim here: 
Relish your own commodification, embrace your perverse subjectivity, in order 
to escape the perversion of subjectivity.

Eric Kluitenberg
Amsterdam, April 15, 2012.


References:

1 - See: David Garcia & Geert Lovink, The ABC of Tactical Media, May 1997, a.o. 
here:
     www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=37996

2 - www.tacticalmediafiles.net 

3 - Documentation of the Tactical Media Labs events can be found at: 
www.n5m4.org

4 - Naomi Klein - Signs of the Times, in The Nation, October 5, 2001.
     Archived at: www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=46632 

5 - Geert Lovink and Ned Rossiter, Dawn of the Organised Networks, in; 
Fibreculture Journal, Issue 5, 2005. 
     http://five.fibreculturejournal.org/fcj-029-dawn-of-the-organised-networks/

6 - See my article The Network of Waves, and the theme issue Hybrid Space of 
Open - Journal for Art and the Public Domain, Amsterdam, 2006; 
www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=48405  
(the complete issue is linked as pdf file to the article). 

7 - Critical Art Ensemble, Digital Resistance, Autonomedia, New York, 2001.

8 - Michel de Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life, University of California 
Press, 1984.

9 - A useful manual can be found here: 
www.flossmanuals.net/bypassing-censorship/



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