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Borderline symptoms
Don't ask what Europe can do for you; ask what you can do
for Europe"!
We are once again in the position of having to be constructive
and productive and to behave properly when called upon by
Europe to do our duty, as formulated by the MANIFESTA project
as follows: "Don't ask what Europe can do for you; ask what
you can do for Europe!" We have to show that we can think
positive and transgress, as this is called, our borderline
syndromes, to be open to the world(s) and, I will add, to
be open to the rules of capital itself. Let us start from
a basic economy of tactics for everyday life: I was asked
to write a text without even thinking of being paid, as it
was announced that even at this initial point the money for
this Manifesta's textual project had already gone, or was
standing at zero. Unfortunately, as no money is left for this
activity, we are asked to contribute as good patriots. I can
refer to this act of writing as a humanitarian act for Europe.
To participate in this initial project, to put together the
basic concept of the whole project, to give ideas, to give
concepts, to give elements for mutual cooperation is, therefore,
a pure gift economy.
1. Thesis: EVERYTHING IS TERRITORY
The 1990s are displaying a completely different idea of what
we think about as territory. Territory as a pure geopolitical
space is gone. Territory is a much broader concept. Our intellectual
concepts, our books, our works and, last but not least, all
our archives are the new territories. Giving, contributing
concepts and ideas is, therefore, a gesture of expanding and
broadening the concept of territory itself. It is also a pure
gesture of contribution to the internal motor of capital.
Capital and capitalism have always and continually needed
new territories. That everything is becoming, is transformed
to be, a territory for the expansion of capital is fundamental
to capitalism. In this way the idea of territory itself changes
- radically. In short, at the same time as we are all into
shifting borders, an even more important process is going
on: the production of new territories. It is not really a
question of going to some geopolitical spaces, such as Africa,
eastern Europe or Asia; it is about the capitalisation of
ideas and concepts becoming territory itself. Theory is such
territory, and the Internet and the World Wide Web occupy
the same position. They are huge new territories allowing
capital even faster triplication. Theory, art and culture
are huge archives; it is the same with our bodies. What would
the history of theory, art practice, cultural strategies and
the paradigm of territory itself be e-mail, telephone cards,
multimedia and CD-Roms?
2. Thesis: TO BE VISIBLE IS NO LONGER ENOUGH: @2000 IT IS
A QUESTION OF (DISCURSIVE) RE-ARTICULATION
The second crucial change with an effect on EAST and WEST,
SOUTH and NORTH is that in the 80s it was enough to be VISIBLE;
@2000 it is a question of re-articulation much more than of
pure visibility. The concept is rooted in a much deeper universal
demand for identity, politics, strategy and tactics of action,
theorisation, emancipation and uselessness. It can be perceived
as the militant theorisation of a particular position. Issues
involving who is permitted to redefine the confines of space,
the strategies of actions within and with new media and technologies,
and the tactical dimensions of these actions are all crucial.
The concept of this thesis is not grounded in the simple game
of identity politics; rather, it is a response to this constant
process of fragmentation and particularisation. What is lost
through this process is the gesture of real politicisation.
Positioning matches repoliticisation. The following questions
or synthetic moments are crucial: Which spaces do subjects
and agents cross when they communicate? What do they call
themselves? Are they subjects, cyborgs, monsters, nomads or
simply hackers? (Yvonne Volkart) We need to reconsider public
space, the new media space, and the actors, agents and subjects
in it in their processes of transformation. We have to ask
ourselves what space, which actors, whose agents and what
subjects? Generally speaking, two broad lines of critical
thought can be detected which form positioning matrices in
this debate: the "Scum of Society Matrix" and the "Monsters
Matrix". The former refers principally to the positioning
of the so-called critical western European and North American
participants, users and online community circuits on the WWW
that form a kind of parasitic body trying to acquire everything
possible from social structures that have already been established.
The latter wants to re-articulate and interpret its proper
position in the changed constellation, after the fall of the
Berlin Wall. It is quite telling that the eastern European
"Monsters" do not want to be perceived as an image but as
actors and agents of this world. At the end of the millennium
the two matrices not only raise questions of reflection and
correspondence, but offer elements of political and analytical
intersection that must be discussed and articulated further.
3. Thesis: PRODUCTIVE NEGATIVITY INSTEAD OF THE CONSTANT
NEED FOR POSITIVISATION
Classical ontology, according to Slavoj Žižek, is focused
on the triad of the truthful, the beautiful and the good.
For Lacan these three notions press near the limit, and show
that good is the mask of diabolical evil (e.g. Oleg Kulik,
the Russian artist-dog, or the performances entitled Was ist
Kunst? by the Belgrade artist Rasa Todosijevic. In the 70s
Todosijevic, in this series of performances, tried to drag
the answer to What is art? from women literally by force,
slapping their faces with black colour in the most shocking
manner of body art); that beauty is the mask of ugliness (e.g.
IRWIN's series of 100 pictures also entitled Was ist Kunst?
In this series, and in Laibachkunst exhibitions, persons who
are supposed to have been part of the Nazi period are portrayed
along with members of the banned Laibach group; they are engraved
into the iconography of the paintings, as their busts or torso
sculptures decorate numerous paintings in the Was ist Kunst?
project); and that truth is the mask of the central void,
around which gravitates every symbolical structure (e.g. the
Romanian flag, after the so-called Romanian revolution, a
hole instead of the star). In short, there is a field beyond
the good, the beautiful and the true that is not filled with
everyday banalities but presents a terrifying source, constitutive
of the background of the good, the beautiful and the true.
All the greatest catastrophes of our century are the result
not of being seduced by the morbid fatal attraction of this
beyond, but, on the contrary, of the constant efforts to elude
the meeting with it (Žižek), and to immediately install, saving
a confrontation with it, the reign of the positive - the reign
of the true and the good.
4. Thesis: TAKING INTO CONSIDERATION THE INTERNAL PHYSIOGNOMY
OF THE SLOVENIAN CULTURAL REALITY
What is the internal physiognomy of the Slovenian cultural-political
reality; or to what kind of structure will MANIFESTA have
to pay tribute; or with what forces will MANIFESTA have to
cooperate? Michel Wimmer and a team of European experts wrote
a Slovenian cultural policy report in 1996 entitled Cultural
Policy in Slovenia (European Programme of National Policy
Reviews, Council of Europe, CC - CULT (96)). It is a very
useful analysis of methods, political decisions and ways of
acting in the field of culture in Slovenia. The same report
was used to establish a relation between The European Cultural
Month - Ljubljana 97, and different artistic, cultural, political
and social structures (institutions, associations, media)
in Slovenia. It is important to bear in mind that the European
Cultural Month - Ljubljana 97 project was, as a structure,
conceived in a very similar way to MANIFESTA. It was a proposal
that came from abroad, from a wider European context - and
the Slovenian state and its ministerial, city and other institutions
perceived the project as exclusively the mark of its (their)
power and grandeur. The result of the project today is, if
we just ignore the programme for the moment, the big financial
speculations and manipulations produced by those organisational
bodies that were at the core of the project. But we can learn
not only from the European Cultural Month - Ljubljana 97;
we can also use some of the excellent conclusions of the European
experts' report to draw a schemata of what is, at the moment,
to be taken into consideration when discussing cultural policy
in Slovenia. The first conclusion was that, in Slovenia, that
which could be called cultural policy - with a clear programmatic
platform - exists only within different structural levels
that are trying, in a chaotic way, to develop and establish
a kind of quasi-cultural policy. The second most important
characteristic was the over-institutionalisation of the field
of culture; cultural and artistic life are ruled and consumed
entirely by official cultural institutions. The next important
characteristic was the completely chaotic relationship between
the city and the state in dealing with, developing and realising
projects in the field of culture. The so-called fruitful position
of alternative and non-institutionalised cultural and artistic
productions in the 1990s is, according to the report, exaggerated;
Wimmer clearly states that, following independence, Slovenian
cultural policy completely paralysed the fruitful existence
of the alternative art and cultural production of the 80s,
and restricted the position of non-institutionalised bodies
in the 90s. Finally, the main feature detected by the report
is the radical turn in cultural and artistic policy in Slovenia
in the 90s towards (a) the preservation of cultural heritage
and (b) the development of high art in the European humanist
tradition. This tendency is radically different from Slovenia's
flourishing modern and experimental art and cultural productions
in the 80s. This turn towards traditional modern art and culture,
or what is understood as the high European humanist tradition
in art and culture, is one way, according to the report, of
redirecting art and culture not towards modern, experimental
production but towards the imaginary humanistic art tradition
that flourished in the past in Europe, though it was not previously
present in Slovenia.
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