It seems weirdly regressive that anyone would need to justify applying
'high' theory to 'low' culture at this point. Those arguments were made
— and won – decades ago: they've become the premise of entire
schools, disciplines, and even large-scale funding initiatives. When I
see them now, it's mostly in the openings of PhDs, where hierarchical
conflict is explicit — and has little to do with substance. So what's
the blockage in this context? Is it that you're both upping the ante
(with quasi-theological arguments with almost apocalyptic implications)
and lowering it ante (with an abysmally amorphous object)? Or is this a
warmup for some biggish-data project that'll need funding? I don't get
it.
I sympathize: academia is really bad at images. Its main mode, maybe
even its exclusive mode, is to relentlessly and obsessively reassert the
primacy of word over image. Images are for being thought about in words;
if you try to think about words through images, game over. But I also
don't sympathize, because I want to suggest that this essay trivializes
memes by drowning them in theory — in Walter Benjamin, no less.
There are a bunch of head-scratchers in this essay, but I'll pick out a
few to make my point:
We should think of memes as local language games embedded within
communities of practice and bracketed by the affordances of platforms.
Memes are local? Memes are language? As distinct from language games
that aren't embedded in communities of practice? 🤔 And platforms?
MBA-speak tends to be pretty ahistorical, so trying to think through
this kind of proposition — say, by asking what the precursors of memes
might be — is, as Kierkegaard put it, "as baffling as depicting an elf
wearing a hat that makes him invisible."
The problem is that, in trying to takes memes Very Seriously, you don't
take them seriously enough. If you did, then I think you'd have to
address a basic question: are they new, or are they derivatives of
earlier ~genres? But rather than do the hard work of dredging up
precursors and examining the similarities and differences in how they're
used, you offer a grand analogy:
Meme genres can thus be imagined as a neo-medieval mise-en-abyme of
spheres within spheres in which there will always be a more current
meaning that you’re not yet aware of.
🤔
I guess arguing that they're neo-bumperstickers isn't sexy enough.
This substitution of high theory for base facts has one serious
consequence: you get some basic facts wrong. For example, there's no
official body that 'certifies' emoticons. There's a inter-institutional
standards-setting process for *emoji* (the images), not *emoticons*
(punctuation), but it's not a certification process. In networked
context, distinctions between authorization, authentication,
certification, etc matter. And in vernacular forms that play
bog-standard games with appropriation and subversion, it matters a lot.
But rather than pick at this and that, I want to show you an example of
how and why it's so difficult to think about how popular imagery works:
your example of the red pill. Sure, you can call it allegory and talk
about it Benjaminian term, but I think doing so misses the much more
material il/logic at play in that image — which you yourself treat as
emblematic.
Your essay gets it wrong — admittedly in a very conventional
cult-studs way. The ur–red pill didn't originate in 1999 in the
insistently green film The Matrix, it appeared in Verhoeven's 1990 film
— *very* red film — Total Recall. In Total Recall, there was only a
red pill, no blue, and it was bluntly presented "a symbol of your desire
to return to reality." That's a much better fit than the Matrix's
red/blue pill for so-called alt-right rhetoric, IMO. But distinctions
like this are precious pedantry compared to the driving force behind the
alt-right's identification with red: the GOP's deliberate seizure of
that color in the 2000 presidential election. Historically, the informal
rule was that the two main US political parties switched colors every
election (for example, in 1992 Bill Clinton was red). How exactly that
exchange took plave is one of those abiding historical mysteries: it
relied on an opaque 'standards-setting' process involving tacit,
backroom coordination between campaigns and national TV networks. I'm
sure that when the GOP captured the red flag in 2000, it was due in part
to a few GOP's power-brokers at the time who just liked red more than
blue. But it was also a deliberate political strategy. It allowed the
GOP to simultaneously *appropriate* the color associated with political
threat — insurgency, revolution, and communism — while *negate*
those same discourses. And it's on that basis that, a decade and a half
later when the alt-right 'took the red pill,' we can see what they were
up to: they tried to do to the GOP what the GOP had done to 'the left.'
But wait! There's more!
You cite Philip K. Dick — much as you cite Robert Smithson — more or
less randomly, as someone who decades later thought "in similar terms"
to Benjamin. But PKD figures much more directly in this: in the mid-'60s
he wrote "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale" on which Total Recall
was based. If I remember rightly, there's no pill in that story, but
there's no need to be so literal. His last novel, The Transmigration of
Timothy Archer, hinges in part on the proposition that eating red things
was central to Christian beliefs about the Resurrection. That novel drew
generally on PKD's long-standing interest in gnosticism, but it drew
very specifically on John Allegro's theory that Jesus wasn't a
historical figure but, instead, was a mythological figure that
originated in the ritual use of psychoactive mushrooms — Amanita
muscaria.
By academic standards, this kind of associative chain is erratic to the
point of madness. It leads everywhere and nowhere, unconstrained by
logic, definitions, context, or method. And it drifts and leaps from one
context and scale to another: from kooky theories to cinematic fragments
to backroom agreements on the fringes of governmentality. But these
delirious landscapes are *precisely* where and how memes operate. I
don't think Benjamin's theories have much to say about this all — not
without doing serious theoretical violence to the myriad specificities
at play. And you concede:
One need barely ask how Benjamin would react to the film’s Platonic
allegory. Of course Benjamin would take the red pill.
But we know how he reacted, don't we? I dimly remember — as if through
a glass (or maybe a scanner) darkly — that his suicide involved a
glass of wine, and even more dimly that it was said to be white, not
red.
❤️
Ted
On 4 Apr 2018, at 2:46, Geert Lovink wrote:
Rude Awakening: Memes as Dialectical Images by Geert Lovink & Marc
Tuters
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