Given that a mailing list is one example (possibly the earliest example)
of an asynchronous many-to-many discussion/narrative, reposting this
like so has a deliciously recursive feel to it.

For a slightly different take on the notion of 'atemporality', see
http://www.mrlizard.com/OldSite/permaculture.html

Udhay

http://www.wired.com/beyond_the_beyond/2010/02/atemporality-for-the-creative-artist/

Atemporality for the Creative Artist

    * By Bruce Sterling
    * February 25, 2010

*An unrepentant sympathizer took the trouble to type up a full
transcript of my speech at Transmediale 10 on February 6.

*Since this volunteer made such a noble effort, it deserves to be
pitched straight into the “Internet meme ooze” of blogs and social
media. Here you are.

“Atemporality for the Creative Artist”
Bruce Sterling
Transmediale 10, Berlin, Feb. 6, 02010

I would like to talk about this slogan ‘Futurity Now,’ and how the idea
of ‘futurity now’ might become common sense. Not a contradiction in
terms, which it obviously is right now, but a legitimate demand. Or a
claim, or a lament.

So, what is ‘atemporality’? I think it’s best defined as ‘a problem in
the philosophy of history’. And I hate to resort to philosophy, because
I am a novelist. But I don’t think we have any way out here. It is about
the nature of historical knowledge. What we can know about the past, and
about the present, and about the future. How do we represent and explain
history to ourselves? What are its structures and its circumstances?
What are the dynamics of history and futurity? What has happened before?
What is happening now? What is really likely to happen next?

History is not a science; history is an effort in the humanities. It’s
about meanings, values, language, historical identity, institutions,
culture. The philosophy of history is about very standard philosophical
issues, like ontology, hermeneutics, and epistemology. And I know that’s
true, and I can’t help it. But we only have forty minutes here.

So I want to deliver a speech that’s in two parts. The first is about
atemporality as a modern phenomenon. What does it look like and feel
like, as it actually exists? And the second part of the speech is: what
can creative artists do about that? So this is ‘Atemporality for the
Creative Artist’.

Now let me start with an anecdote, because I am a novelist rather than a
philosopher, and I kinda like to tell stories. So what makes an
atemporal situation diferent from a post-modern situation, or a
modernist situation, or a classicist situation, what’s really different
about it?

Well, let me take a guy who I am very fond of, a very immediate,
hard-headed scientific thinker - Richard Feynman, American physicist.
Richard Feynman once wrote about intellectual labor, and he said the
following: ‘Step one - write down the problem. Step two - think really
hard. Step three - write down the solution’.

And I really admire this statement of Feynman’s. It’s no-nonsense, it’s
no fakery, it’s about hard work for the intellectual laborer… Of course
it’s a joke. But it’s not merely a joke. He is trying to make it as
simple as possible. I mean: really just confront the intellectual problem!

But there is an unexamined assumption in Feynman’s method, and it’s in
step one - write down the problem.

Now let me tell you how the atemporal Richard Feynman approaches this.
The atemporal Richard Feynman is not very paper-friendly, because he
lives in a network culture. So it occurs to the atemporal Feynman that
he may, or may not, have a problem.

‘Step one - write problem in a search engine, see if somebody else has
solved it already. Step two - write problem in my blog; study the
commentory cross-linked to other guys. Step three - write my problem in
Twitter in a hundred and forty characters. See if I can get it that
small. See if it gets retweeted. Step four - open source the problem;
supply some instructables to get me as far as I’ve been able to get, see
if the community takes it any further. Step five - start a Ning social
network about my problem, name the network after my problem, see if
anybody accumulates around my problem. Step six - make a video of my
problem. Youtube my video, see if it spreads virally, see if any media
convergence accumulates around my problem. Step seven - create a design
fiction that pretends that my problem has already been solved. Create
some gadget or application or product that has some relevance to my
problem and see if anybody builds it. Step eight - exacerbate or
intensify my problem with a work of interventionist tactical media. And
step nine - find some kind of pretty illustrations from the Flickr
‘Looking into the Past’ photo pool.’

(If you don’t get what atemporality is by the end of these few images, I
probably can’t help you.)

So, old Feynman, who was not the atemporal Feynman, would naturally
object: ‘You have not solved the problem! You have not advanced
scientific knowledge. There is no progress in this. You didn’t get to
Step three - solving the problem.’ Whereas, the atemporal Feynman would
respond: ‘It’s worse than that. I haven’t even done step one of defining
the problem and writing it down. But I have done a lot of work about its
meaning, and its value and its social framing, combined with some
database mining, and some collaborative filtering, which is far beyond
you and your pencil.’

Now, history is a story. And to write down the story of the fourteenth
century, to just ask yourself - “what happened in the fourteenth
century?” — Feynman style — is a very different matter from asking the
atemporal question: “What does Google do when I input the search term
‘fourteenth century?’” I think we are over the brink of that. It’s a
very, very different matter.

History books are ink on paper. They are linear narratives with
beginning and ends. They are stories created from archival documents and
from other books. Network culture, not really into that. Network culture
differs from literary culture in a great many ways. And step one is that
the operating system is an unquestioned given. The first thing you do is
go to the operating system, without even thinking of it as a conscious
choice.

Then there is the colossally huge, searchable, public domain, which is
now at your fingertips. There are methods to track where the eyeballs of
the users are going. There are intellectual property problems in
revenue, which interferes with scholarship as much as it aids it. There
is a practice of ‘ragpicking’ with digital material - of loops, tracks,
sampling. There are search engines, which are becoming major
intellectual and public political actors. There is ‘collective
intelligence’. Or, if you don’t want to dignify it with that term, you
can just call it ‘internet meme ooze’. But it’s all over the place, just
termite mounds of poorly organized and extremely potent knowledge,
quantifiable, interchangeable data with newly networked relations. We
cannot get rid of this stuff. It is our new burden, it is there as a
fact on the ground, it is a fait accompli.

There are new asynchronous communication forms that are globalized and
offshored, and there is the loss of a canon and a record. There is no
single authoritative voice of history. Instead we get wildly empowered
cranks, lunatics, and every kind of long-tail intellectual market
appearing in network culture. Everything from brilliant insight to
scurillous rumor.

This really changes the narrative, and the organized presentations of
history in a way that history cannot recover from. This is the source of
our gnawing discontent.

It means the end of post-modernism. It means the end of the New World
Order, which is about civilizing the entire planet, stopping all the
land wars, repressing the terrorism. It means the end of the Washington
Consensus of the nineteen nineties. It means the end of the WTO. It
means the end of Francis Fukuyama’s ‘End of History’; it ended. And it’s
moving in a completely different and unexpected direction.

The idea that history ended, and that the market sorts that out, and
that the Pentagon bombs it if that doesn’t work - it’s gone. The
situation now is one of growing disorder. A failed state, a potentially
failed globe, a collapsed WTO, a collapsed Copenhagen, financial
collapses, lifeboat economics, transition to nowhere. Historical
narrative, it is simply no longer mapped onto the objective facts of the
decade. The maps in our hands don’t match the territory, and that’s why
we are upset.

Now, a new master narrative could arise on paper. That would be easy. On
paper, if it were just a matter of paper, we could do it. But to do that
via the Internet is about as likely as the Internet becoming a single
state-controlled television channel. Because a single historical
narrative is a paper narrative.

I don’t think we are going to get one. We could conceivably get a new
ideology or a new business model that is able to seize control of the
course of events and reinstate some clear path to progress, that gets a
democratic consensus behind it. I don’t think that’s likely. At least
not for ten years. I could be wrong, but it’s not on the near-term radar.

What we are facing over a decade is a decade of emergency rescue, of
resiliency, of attempts at sustainability, rather than some kind of
clear march toward advanced heights of civilization. We are into an era
of decay and repurposing of broken structures, of new social inventions
within networks, a world of ‘Gothic High-Tech’ and ‘Favela Chic’ (as
I’ve called it), a crooked networked bazaar of history and futurity,
rather than a cathedral of history, and a utopia of futurity.

That’s just the situation on the ground. I don’t want to belabor this
point. I don’t want to go on and on about the fact that this is a new
historical situation. If you don’t get it by now, you will be forced to
get it; you will have no other choice.

The question is: now what? Given that we have atemporal organized
representations of verbal structures, what can we actually do? Where is
the fun part?

Where is the fun part? And I think there could be some, actually. We are
living in an atemporal network culture, and I don’t think that requires
a moral panic. I think it ought to be regarded as something like moving
into a new town.

We’ve moved into a new town, and the first order of business is like :
ok, what gives around here? Well, there seems to be this sort of decayed
castle, and there’s also a lot of slums…. That’s not the sort of thing
which requires a punk ‘no-future’ rage. Like: ‘You’ve taken away my
future, and I am going to kill you, or kill myself, and throw a brick at
a cop!’ I don’t really think that is helpful.

What’s needed here is like a kind of atemporality that’s like
agnosticism. Just a calm, pragmatic, serene skepticism about the
historical narratives. I mean: they just don’t map onto what is going on.

So how do we just — like — sound out our new scene? What can we do to
liven things up, especially as creative artists?

Well, the immediate impulse is going to be the ‘Frankenstein Mashup.’
Because that’s the native expression of network culture. The
“Frankenstein mashup” is to just take elements of past, present, and
future and just collide ‘em together, in sort of a collage. More or less
semi-randomly, like a Surrealist “exquisite corpse.”

You can do useful and interesting things in that way, but I don’t really
think that offers us a great deal. Even when it’s done very deftly, it
tends to lead to the kind of levelling blandness of ‘world music.’ That
kind of world music that’s middle-of-the-road disco music which includes
pygmy nose-flutes or sitars.

The kind of thing is tragically easy to do, but not really very
effective. It’s cheap to do. It’s very punk rock. It’s very safety pins
and plastic bags. But it’s missing a philosophical high-end, really an
atemporal meaning of life. High-art.

And I would like to see some of that. I think there is a large hole
there that could be filled, from an atemporal perspective. Not at the
lowest end of artistic expression, but way up at the top philosophical end.

Then there are things like that increasing vogue we have for ‘lost
futures’: steampunk, atompunk, dieselpunk. You’re finding earlier
methods of production, pretending that they’d never become defunct, and
then adding on to those. I would add to those: you could do a lot of
good work with the materiality of dead regimes and also with colonialism.

These have been hobby activities, and even sci-fi fan activities, I
think they could be classed up very considerably.

Then there are other elements which are native to our period that didn’t
really work before, such as generative art. I take generative art quite
seriously. I’d like to see it move into areas like generative law, or
may be generative philosophy. The thing I like about generative art is
that it drains human intentionality out of the art project.

Say, in generative manufacturing, you are writing code for a computer
fabricator, and you yourself don’t know the outcome of this code. You do
not know how it will physically manifest itself. Therefore you end up
with creative objects that are bleached of human intent.

Now there is tremendous artistic intent — within the software. But the
software is not visible in the finished generative product. To me, it’s
of great interest that these objects and designs and animations and so
forth now exist among us. Because they are, in a strange way, divorced
from any kind of historical ideology. They are just not human.

There are potential and new forms of collaborative art that have no
single authors. Open source arts, multiplayer arts, multimedia
collaboration. Online world building is of great interest. That was not
physically possible before. It’s something we can do that nobody else
can do.

I am listing these methods; some of them will work, some of them will
turn out to be dead-ends. The thing that interests me is that they could
be done from this particular perspective, and they can be fresh.

The ‘pre-distressed antique futurity’. William Gibson wrote about this
when we was writing about atemporality, associating it with his ‘Zero
History’ novel that he is working on. Gibson was saying that if you have
a genuinely avant garde idea, something that’s really new, you should
write about it or create about it as if it were being read twenty years
from now. In other words, if you want to do this, you want to strip away
the sci-fi chrome, the sense of wonder. You want it to be antique before
it hits the page or the screen. Imagine that it was twenty years gone
into the future. Just approach it from that perspective.

No longer allow yourself to be hypnotized by the sense of technical
novelty. Just refuse to go there. Accept that it is already passe’, and
create it from that point of view. Try to make it news that stays news.

Refuse the awe of the future. Refuse reverence to the past. If they are
really the same thing, you need to approach them from the same perspective.

‘Recuperating forms of history that cannot be written.’ This is of
tremendous interest. I think it escapes the literary traps of history.
Just history that could not be written about. History about people who
were not the winners, history about people who had no literatures.
Pre-history. Human experience before the historical record was created.

We can trace this now through genetics, we can trace it through
archeology. Times before humanity existed. Cosmic chronology. The way we
learn about our things, through non-literary sources such as garbage,
pollen counts, environmental damage, even corpses. You can look at
what’s been learned from the corpse of ‘Otzi,’ this Bronze-Age European.
Fantastic things.

‘Humanistic heavy iron’: it’s taken a long time for the humanities to
get into super computing, and into massive database management. They are
really starting to get there now. You are going to get into a situation
where even English professors are able to study every word ever written
about, or for, or because of, Charles Dickens or Elizabeth Barrett
Browning. That’s just a different way to approach the literary corpus. I
think there is a lot of potential there.

Information visualization is of great interest to me. I think it’s an
art form, a potential science. And also design.

Becoming ‘multi-temporal’, rather than multi-cultural: it used to be a
very big problem for historians that they supposedly could not divide
themselves from the outlooks and interests of their own age. I think we
are approaching a situation where the outlooks and interests of our own
age make very little sense. They just don’t bind us to anything in
particular. We don’t have a coherent outlook or interest that can
enslave us. This means we are closer to a potentially objective history
than anybody has ever been.

There are interesting potentials for a complete digital recapturing of
earlier artifacts, earlier means of production. Instead of just
theorizing about what people could have done with the steam engine, you
just model a steam engine. You can print a steam engine out.

There are things that could be done with the museum economy in Europe
that have not been done. I quite like the idea of a personal museum
economy. For instance, rather than dressing up your downtown as some
kind of relic of the eighteen hundreds, why don’t you just dress up your
vacation home as the seventeen fifties? Or just refit your own home,
really, as with the devices and services of an earlier century. Why feel
that it’s not modern? If they are all the same thing, why not just go
ahead, get off the grid and make your own butter and use your own well?
Just go there with a kind of immediacy and just experience it as a
contemporary thing.

Why not designer fiction as life? Why not role-playing games in real
spaces? Why not become the change you want to see?

If, for instance, you think the future should offer ‘personal space
flight’ - perhaps you are an enthusiast for that? - why don’t you just
dress up as an astronaut? Just invent the whole thing, just go out and
carry it onto the streets! Just invent the Jezz Bezos Blue Origin
spacecraft, make your own spacecraft suitcases, spacecraft astronaut gear.

Yes, you will look ridiculous. But by what standard? By what standard
can you be held to be ridiculous? Why not just go and make yourself a
personal public testimony for a future that doesn’t exist? Why not just
carry it out with a kind of Gandhian dedication, and see what happens?

There are other methods that I have not described. They will be
rediscovered, or they will be invented. But I think there is tremendous
creative potential in atemporality.

And I want to warn you, and also promise you, that this too shall pass.
It’s just a period.

We are in a period which I think is dominated by two great cultural
signifiers. An analog system that belonged to our parents, which has
been shot full of holes. It is the symbol of the ruined castle. “Gothic
High-Tech.” The ruins of the unsustainable.

And the other symbol is the favela slum, “Favela Chic,” the
informalized, illegalized, heavily networked structure of the emergent
new order. The things that the twenty first century is doing that are
genuinely novel, that have not been domesticated or brought into sociality.

The Gothic High-Tech and the Favela Chic. These are very obvious to me,
as a novelist and creative artist. Perhaps you won’t see things this way
— but I think the life-span of this will be about ten years. A new
generation will arise who does not need things explained to them in this
way. They will not wonder at a slogan like ‘futurity now’, because they
will have never known anything different.

They will not have to forget how things used to be. And at that point,
we will be on a different playing field.

But we don’t get to choose the era of history that was given to us. We
can only choose what we do within the parameters of what exists on the
ground.

Now, no matter how confusing this may seem or how poorly phrased, there
is a very good chance that you can physically outlive this era with your
own body. It’s just ten years! ‘Futurity Now’ in some ways is like a
slogan that means ‘Make me grow up’. That’s what you are demanding when
you say ‘futurity now’. It’s like ‘make me get older’, ‘make me get
wiser, now!’.

That’s doable.

We are going to have Early Atemporality, where we are struggling with
what it means and how it’s different from post-modernism, and we are
going to have Late Atemporality, where we pretty well get it about what
was going on, and we can see the limits of that, and we know that
something else is going to happen. That’s going to take ten years. You
can physically outlive the period in which explaining things in this way
makes sense.

Atemporality is a philosophy of history with a built-in expiration date.
It has a built in expiration date. It’s not going to last forever. It’s
not a perfect explanation, it’s a contingent explanation for contingent
times.

Futurity was expected, futurity is here now, there goes futurity into
the past, so long futurity, thank you for an exciting, fulfilling and
worthwhile time.

Thank you for your attention.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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