dear nettimers,

I’ve been meaning to post this short essay below for some time. It was 
commissioned for the photo-book “new *not normal”, published by Martina 
Simkovicova in Slovakia, late 2021. The book presents an eerie document of the 
kind of lockdown experiences most of us went through in the past few years. The 
commission came in response to the ‘Zombie Public’ essay (for the Open! online 
platform), which received such a ‘warm’ welcome here on nettime.

You can download the book as a pdf a.o. here at Monoskop:
https://monoskop.org/images/9/9f/Simkovicova_Martina_new_not_normal_nove_nie_normalne_2021.pdf
 
<https://monoskop.org/images/9/9f/Simkovicova_Martina_new_not_normal_nove_nie_normalne_2021.pdf>

The recent collapse of the zero-covid policies in China and the abolishment of 
most lockdowns provides this small book and my even smaller text with an apt 
context to invite some reflection on what the collective experience has been we 
have went through together, even if in divided minds.

Strange how in some ways the whole experience feels distant, while less than a 
year ago here in The Netherlands we were still living under tight restrictions.

Wishing you all good health for the new year,
Eric

———————— 

Locked Down / Charged Up
Trapped in the Somatic Deficit

There is this peculiar experience that we have all become increasingly aware of 
as our collective ‘screen time’, mobile and static, has expanded and inflected 
more and more aspects of daily life. It is rather obvious, and yet it requires 
an articulation to become fully aware of it and to be able to interrogate this 
experience critically, moving beyond the (apparently) obvious. The experience I 
am referring to here is the experiential and affective gap between embodied and 
mediated experience, which can be described as the ‘Somatic Deficit’.

We have become particularly aware and sensitised to this gap in experience 
because of the repeated lockdowns in response to the Covid-19 crisis that 
‘referred’ us back to our electronic screens. At the screen, mediated from 
afar, we witness events as they unfold, linked up but disconnected and absent, 
out of touch. Especially when witnessing intense events from afar and in (near) 
real-time the experiential gap between that which is mediated to us through the 
screen and our inability to participate physically, trapped in involuntary 
lockdowns, quickly becomes overwhelming.

Still, this peculiar experience is certainly not limited to excessive screen 
time in the Covid-19 crisis. Long before I started to notice this curious 
tendency where people were desperately clinging to their screens (mobile, 
desktop, TV, whichever was in range) and at the same time frustrated by the 
denial of the physical, the body, the somatic. This tendency became most 
evident in situations of intense political strive and protest. The intense 
passions observed there, manifested time and time again in a move ‘beyond the 
screen’. Even if the potential reach of the streets was so much more limited 
than that of the electronic channels (not just so-called ‘social media’, but 
also radio, TV broadcast (local, regional, national, transnational and 
satellite transmissions), e-mail, sms and texting, and whatever else would make 
do), the streets and squares seemed to exert an irresistible attraction on 
people to go out and connect ‘in the flesh’. To establish, so it seemed to me, 
a more meaningful relationship.

We all know the list of events that could paradigmatically be cited as prime 
examples: the Green Revolution in Iran, the occupation of Tahrir Square in 
Cairo, the 15M movement in Spain and its occupation of Puerta del Sol in 
Madrid, the occupation of Syntagma Square in Athens, Occupy Wall Street in the 
US, Occupy Gezi in Istanbul, Occupy Central with Love and Peace in Hong Kong, 
Nuit Debout in France, very much so the Black Lives Matter protests of recent 
years, and the list goes on and on. 

Beyond the screen

The condition of experiencing the somatic deficit is not specific to these 
eruptions of public protest. Rather it is the intensity of these events that 
brings out so clearly the dynamics of the somatic deficit. Trapped behind or at 
the screen (looking down on the phone in the latter case) the impotence of 
non-participation in mediated events becomes palpable. Exactly what urban 
sociologist Richard Sennett had identified as electronic isolation in his 
famous study The Fall of Public Man. What the ‘social’ media offer as a cure 
for this electronic isolation is little more than a simulation of reciprocity 
(via chats, likes, recommendations etc.), which ultimately remain unsatisfying 
without completion in a bodily act of encounter and exchange. Perhaps Georges 
Bataille was right after all that the only true communication between humans 
consists of the exchange of bodily fluids (a small provocation)..

The most remarkable case in point might be the germination of the #occupygezi 
protests in Turkey, June 2013. Media researcher and ‘technosociologist’ Zeynep 
Tufekci witnessed the unfolding of events on the screen on June 1 of that year. 
 A small protest [1] against the razing of an urban park (Gezi Park) next to 
Taksim Square in Istanbul, citizens attempting to stop the bulldozers from 
moving in, was brutally broken up by riot police with teargas and excessive 
violence. The protestors mainly came from a nearby architecture faculty and 
contested the megalomanic plans for a giant new mosque and shopping centre in 
this mostly secular part of the city. Tufekci saw that the proliferation of the 
images of police violence via online channels and the simultaneous suppression 
of the news on mainstream (state-controlled) media channels, produced such an 
outrage that solidarity protests erupted within hours across other cities in 
Turkey, while the protests in Istanbul quickly expanded exponentially. [2] The 
original issue at stake, the razing of the city park and the protest against 
the spatial politics of the reigning AK party, was quickly lost in a spilling 
over of intensity, beyond the screen and into the streets and squares (and 
parks!). The vitality of this moment, of the event, could apparently not be 
contained or properly expressed in an electronically mediated relation. It 
required a different form of relation and expression, one that foremost should 
be understood as somatic.

Locked down: a gradual crisis

Bruno Latour made this prescient observation that it is the things that divide 
us most that bring us together. However, under conditions of a general lockdown 
this coming together, as a public, is what is being denied or at the very least 
is complicated severely. In this uncharted territory of physical lockdowns and 
viral contamination the electronic media channels, especially online 
distributed (internet-based) media assume an ambivalent and paradoxical double 
role: On the one hand, our abilities to stay connected, at least online, have 
greatly expanded and enabled the online meeting rooms, the online classrooms, 
the online and live-streamed events that have all become daily realities for a 
large chunk of the population, even if unwarranted. So it seems at first that 
online connectivity is one of the lifelines that makes the lockdowns bearable.

However, this same mode of mediated connectivity without physical proximity and 
reciprocity seems to be responsible for a gradual build-up of somatic 
discomfort. Lacan’s famous dictum says that ‘desire is predicated on a lack’. 
The lack here is exactly this discrepancy of being able to ‘connect’, almost in 
real-time, across distance, safeguarded from potentially lethal contamination, 
to witness, to hear and see, to exchange information in various modalities, but 
simultaneous to be absent, to be without touch, without visceral sensation, 
without smell, without moist (if not Bataille’s bodily fluids then at least 
without the floating aerosols) – in short, an entirely impotent connection that 
attempts to hide the fundamental separation the lockdowns impose and ultimately 
fails to do so.

Thus it is the paradox of being locked down in online connectivity that the 
very medium that sustains these lockdowns is also the one that produces the 
very desires to transcend them. Ultimately people transcend the lockdown 
through a violation of the prescripts. Again in protest situations we witnessed 
such acts of transcendence of prohibition, most clearly in the Black Lives 
Matter protests that became massive events. Not just in the US, but also for 
instance here in The Netherlands where they completely violated the 
restrictions on physical gatherings in public space in place at the time (and 
slightly less strict still there). This transcendence of prohibition happened, 
accepting the risk of contamination even in the absence of a viable vaccine or 
treatment for the plague.

The Somatic Turn

In theory, there seems to be a parallel movement that appears to accompany the 
expansion of the electronic communication circuitry. It would be a mistake to 
simply call this a ‘product’ of the proliferation of the technological 
infrastructure. Technologies are always to some extent cultural and biased. 
Techno-determinism falsely ignores this component in human and technological 
development. However, it would be fair to say that there is something of a 
dialectic between the expansion of electronic mediation and the ‘Somatic Turn’ 
in theory – that is to say, the turn towards the body. Where before we 
‘discovered’ that the sub-conscious was structured as a language (Lacan), we 
now ‘discover’ that the non-conscious is first of all physical, somatic, and 
that this bodily intensity and its vitalistic interactivity operates across all 
sensorial registers while preceding the cognitive processing and filtering of 
all this sensorial complexity – our connection to the world, to our bodies, and 
other bodies.

This does not imply that ‘language’, consciousness, cognition, semantics, 
meaning, are no longer important or relevant. The somatic turn simply redirects 
our attention back to the biological body, to the physical environment, to the 
networks of material associations, to reach a more complete picture (may we 
hope understanding?) of our connection to the world around and inside of us. It 
opens up the way also for the highly productive new forms of ecological 
thinking that have blossomed in recent years. It is certainly no coincidence 
that this turn towards the somatic happens exactly concurrent with the 
expansion of electronic mediation - it is a shift that was long overdue in any 
case.

References

1 - Tufekci refers to this Twitter post on June 1, 2013, 1.17 pm:
      https://twitter.com/aaronstein1/status/340789304806739969

2 - Zeynep Tufekci, “Is there a Social-Media-fuelled Protest Style? An Analysis 
From #jan25 to #geziparki”, posted June 1, 2013, at: 
https://technosociology.org/ 
https://technosociology.org/?p=1255  [accessed: February 7, 2022]

-----

Eric Kluitenberg
December 2021

#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nett...@kein.org
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to