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preroll music
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Herald: And now, a warm welcome
for Vera Tollmann.
-
She is from the research center
for proxy politics.
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For those ones from Berlin,
as far as I know,
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there is still a very exciting exhibition
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in the Museum of Photography.
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So a warm welcome for Vera Tollmann.
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(Vera) Thanks.
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applause
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Thank you very much for inviting me.
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First of all, it's just me.
Boaz Levin, my colleague,
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who is also the co-author of this text
that I'm going to present today,
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didn't make it in the end.
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It was also very kind of last minute
invitation, that we received a week ago.
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I am going to present a text,
which is entitled:
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“The Body of the Web” or
“Proud to relay flesh”
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It's a text where we want to
install the proxy as a figure of thought.
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And continue an argument,
that Hito Steyerl, the artist,
-
started in her text
“Proxy Politics: Signal and Noise”
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which you can find online.
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In this co-authored text
we are going to pick up
-
her trope of the proxy and test it in
relation to different cases of protest.
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So, from our understanding the
notion of proxy politics can be understood
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as both a symptom of crisis in current
representational political structures
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as well as a counter strategy aiming to
critically engage and challenge
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the existing mechanisms of
security and control,
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which leads to a series of questions.
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What forms of resistance might fit this vague
technopolitical economic condition?
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Mass protesters become image makers.
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Do resistance movements
need to employ PR consultants?
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How does one protest
in public space,
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if there is no public space left?
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And in what way does this
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virtuality and duplicity challenge
both public space and human bodies?
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Actually the latter is
the most important
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that we are trying to answer
or follow through with this text.
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Can you hear me well?
Yeah? Good!
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Ah, there’s … yes?
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No … okay …
I just thought there is a comment.
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Since July 2015,
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protesting in public space in Spain
has become an expensive affair.
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I don't know, if you remember from media
reports in July, there was a huge protest
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where they used the hologram as a medium.
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So protesters are now threatened
by hefty fines
-
and authoritarian reaction to
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the anti-austerity protests
three years earlier.
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The citizen safety law,
otherwise known as the gag law,
-
criminalises protests,
that interfere with public infrastructure.
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Under the new law which was passed by the
governing People’s Party in December 2014
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protesters are liable
to fines up to 600.000 EUR,
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for marching in front of congress,
blocking road, or occupying a square.
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The law, criticised as a severe attack
on Spaniards’ right of assembly and speech,
-
is the most recent attempt by the government
to curb a wave of popular protests,
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that has swept the country since 2011.
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With the unemployment rate exceeding 25%
and one half of Spaniards under 25 jobless,
-
hundreds of thousands of
outraged citizens took the streets,
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occupying squares and universities.
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In response to a discredited political class,
tarnished by years of political scandal
-
and corruption, the Indigñados,
Spanish for “The outraged”,
-
sought to mobilise citizens in a series of
grassroots demonstrations across the city
-
by reclaiming their right to public space.
-
Another flashback to 2011,
where protests using
-
similar occupation strategies
were taking place across the world:
-
in Tunesia, Egypt, Greece, Israel,
and the United States.
-
Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv, home to
the headquarters of Israel's largest banks,
-
became a kilometre-long encampment,
dubbed “the Tent Republic”.
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I have some pictures here.
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Lasting for almost three months,
this protest called the tent republic.
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Syntagma Square in Athens too was filled
with tents and make shift dwelling places
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and became a site of
lasting popular assemblies
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and daily clashes with the local authorities.
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In Zuccotti Park, New York, activists
tapped into the electricity grid
-
via lantern posts and set up
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semi-autonomous mesh networks
for the benefit of the protesters.
-
Though numerous commentators pointed out
the role played by new technologies such as
-
social networks and smart phones,
-
in facilitating the protests it was
the city's square
-
as old as political thought,
which was the true common denominator.
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Our understanding of the rights of free speech
and assembly as well as the concept of
-
participatory democracy are deeply indebted
to the development of the Greek city state,
-
the Polis, and later
the Roman public square.
-
In nearly every protest occurring
around this time,
-
the spatial dimension of political action
was once again affirmed.
-
Might this significance be altered by the
emergence of new technologies of control
-
and new modes of resistance?
-
As Hannah Arendt pointed out,
the idea of Polis,
-
which for her denoted the public realm
of a political community,
-
does not necessarily designate
the physical location of the Greek city state,
-
rather this form of public realm
as the organisation of the people, quote:
-
"as it raises out of acting and
speaking together", end of quote.
-
Thus it's all the more fitting that when
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the People’s Party of Spain passed
its draconic law,
-
demonstrators were quick to
-
seek an alternative to bodily presence
and physical space.
-
Their solution was a hologram protest,
the first ever.
-
The first ever, as media outlets
were quick to point out,
-
skillfully choreographed and artfully projected
in front of the gates of congress in Madrid.
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The Independent, the newspaper reported:
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“Spanish activists have staged the world's
first ever virtual political demonstration.”
-
The Daily Mails headline read:
“The world's first hologram protest.”
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And News India asked and answered:
-
“Ghosts on Spain's street?
No it's world's first virtual protest.”
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In an interview, Cristina Flesher Fominaya,
spokeperson for the activist group,
-
that organised the hologram intervention,
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"No somos delito" –
in English "We are not a crime"
-
explained how it all came together.
-
A group of creative professionals,
who decided to remain anonymous,
-
provided the needed technical support
prior to the outdoor projection,
-
which lasted for the course of an hour.
-
The campaign was developed online.
-
A webpage with the slightly lofty title
"Holograms for Freedom",
-
in which anyone can leave their hologram,
a written message, or a shoutout,
-
was where it started.
-
Finally these composite images were screened
across a transparent screen and looped.
-
By representing people as holograms,
which appear in a particular cool blueish tone
-
reminiscent of surveillance camera footage,
-
the protest organiser seem to elude to the
popular depiction of a dystopian totalitarian state.
-
Spectors, for once quite literally,
haunted the sterile streets
-
voicing the grievance
of those barred from assembling there
-
The event had been rehearsed, performed, and
recorded in a nearby city and the equipment
-
had been installed in Madrid by a
PR company in a clandestine operation.
-
A tech savvy, [unwittingly] absurd way
to demonstrate without violating the new law.
-
Instead of public space,
the demonstrators inhabited a new medium.
-
After all, bodies in public space
pose a problem in contemporary politics.
-
The natural corporal vulnerability of protesting
was now intensified by the threat
-
of disproportionate financial penalisation.
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This was a proxy protest fit
for the age of proxy politics.
-
So, what is a proxy then,
like the way we understand it?
-
A proxy is a decoy or a surrogate.
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The word derives from the Latin procurator
(Prokurator), meaning someone responsible
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for representing someone else
in a court of law.
-
These days, the word proxy is often used
to designate a computer server
-
acting as an intermediary
for request from clients.
-
These servers afford
indirect connections to a network,
-
thus providing users with anonymity.
-
However, proxy servers
are not distinct technology
-
to hide users but can also be set up
for the opposite task: to monitor traffic.
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Proxy politics, as defined by Hito Steyerl,
as the politics of the stand-in and the decoy,
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is characterised by fraudulent contracts,
calmarical sovereignties, and void authorities.
-
The concept of the proxy is emblematic
of our post representational,
-
post democratic political age.
-
Disembodyment and invisibility of politics
and its increasing subordination
-
to economic interests.
-
So, this political age is one
increasingly populated by bot militias,
-
puppet states, ghostwriters,
and communication relays.
-
So now one paragraph on post democracy,
or the post representational,
-
what it actually means.
-
There is a book by Colin Crouch.
It's entitled “Post Democracy”.
-
And there he describes the
current political condition
-
as one in which power is
increasingly relinquish to business lobbies
-
and non-governmental organisations.
-
As a result, he argues, quote:
-
"There is little hope for an agenda
of strong egalitarian policies
-
for the redistribution of power and wealth
or for the restraint of powerful interests."
-
As a corollary to the rise of neo-liberalism,
-
the vision of an autonomous potent
political subject is devastated
-
by the growing power of privileged elites,
standing at the nexus of transnational
-
corporations, extra juridical zones,
infrastructural authorities,
-
non governmental organisations,
and covert rule.
-
Similarly, Jacques Rancière,
in his book entitled "Post Democracy",
-
he refers to democratic action,
post-democracy in the government practice,
-
and conceptual legitimisation
of a democracy after the demos,
-
a democracy that has eliminated
the appearance, miscount,
-
and dispute of the energies and interests.
-
At the heart of this condition
lies an ontology of deception,
-
where the public realm is conceived
as a series of smoke screens,
-
false flags, and simulations.
-
The democratic appearance of the people
is strictly opposed by its simulated reality.
-
One, which is set up by the conjunction
of media proliferation of whatever is visible
-
and the endless count of opinions polled
and votes simulated.
-
With this concept of double government,
policital scientist Michael Glennen
-
has introduced a vision of US political power,
split between elected government officials,
-
and a network of institutions constituting a disguised republic.
-
Glennan traces this phenomenon back to
-
World War II and president Truman's signing
of the national security act of 1947,
-
which established, among others,
the Central Intelligence Agency, the CIA.
-
Since then, he argues, the United Staates
has moved toward a double government,
-
wherein even the president exercises
-
little substantive over the overall direction
of US national security policy.
-
Similarly, in Turkey, Egypt, Yemen, and Syria,
-
political commentators have used
the notion of the deep state
-
to describe the nexus of police,
intelligence services, politicians,
-
and organised crime.
-
Surely, secrecy, or discretion,
to use its diplomatic euphemism,
-
is as old as politics itself.
-
But its recent resurgence
under the guise of democratic rule
-
reveals “arcana imperii”,
the secrets of governance,
-
to be all but arcane.
-
So the age of proxy politics is thus one
in which power is displaced
-
into the hands of
extra juridical unchecked authorities.
-
Whether by way of covered institutions
that it builds in classified budgets,
-
organised crimes, and grey markets,
or no less disturbingly
-
through gross privatisation
and the rise of transnational corporations.
-
According to Sheldon Wallin,
the paradox of our current regime
-
is that the more open to the
pressures of organised interests,
-
the more opaque even
mysterious politics becomes.
-
Consequently, responsibility becomes
virtually untraceable.
-
In her “Lying in politics”,
a text published in 1972,
-
written in response to the revelation
of the Pentagon Papers,
-
Hannah Arendt lamented the beginning
of an age, in which image making has become
-
the core value of American global policy.
-
When image makers govern,
-
the institutions of representational democracy
are destined to become a mere semblance.
-
The recent example came as the house of
representatives voted in May 2015
-
to end bulk surveillance by the NSA.
-
Rather than bringing
all bulk surveillance to an end,
-
the vote merely took the government
out of the collection business.
-
It would not deny its access to the information,
it would be in the hands of the private sector.
-
Almost certainly telecommunications companies
like ATT, Verizon, and Sprint.
-
In other words, even after
seemingly successful governmental reform,
-
it was revealed that the corridors of power
lay elsewhere between politics
-
and the private sector.
-
So popular protests in one country
-
are often convicts for the
expansion of power in another.
-
In the aftermath of a successful,
non violent-regime change in Belgrade,
-
activits behind the Otpor movement
relayed their experiences into
-
tutorials and training camps,
-
teaching activists in numerous countries
how to ignite and lead a revolution.
-
What's more,
-
Srđa Popović and Slobodan Đinović,
both former Otpor activists,
-
founded CANVAS, which is the Center for
Applied Non-Violent Actions and Strategies.
-
With the aim of educating
pro-democracy activists around the world
-
in what they regard as the “universal principles
for success in non violent struggle”.
-
CANVAS has trained activists
in more than 50 countries,
-
including Iran, Ukraine, Palestine, and recently
Tunisia and Egypt, to name but a few.
-
By late November 2000, an article in the
New York Times had revealed
-
that prior to the revolution,
Otpor had received funds
-
from US government affiliated organisations,
such as the National Endowment for Democracy.
-
In addition, their ties to the private
global intelligence company “Stratfor”,
-
also know as the “shadow CIA”,
prompted questions concerning
-
activists’ involvement in
global American covert foreign policy.
-
So how might proxy politics be more
than just a condition,
-
the name of a political regime that thrives
an obscurity, opaqueness, and decoys?
-
How might it also designate
a corresponding mode of resistance?
-
Ideally, proxy politics would encompass
myriad modes of withdrawal,
-
both technical and metaphorical.
-
Its tools could be a VPN, a holographic
surrogate, a stock image, or a double.
-
Its outcome is always concealment,
evasion, subterfuge.
-
The hope is that strategies
such as these
-
might be effective during our
current interim phase,
-
the period in which the difference between
real virtuality and virtual reality,
-
the tangible and the digital is
increasingly difficult to discern.
-
At the same time, it is becoming
-
increasingly evident, how severely
controlled both spheres are.
-
The world wide web, by
way of its architecture and protocols,
-
and public space by
increasing privatisations.
-
As Alexander Galloway has observed,
instead of a [politicisation] of time or space,
-
we are witnessing a rise in the
-
[politicisation] of absence- and presence-oriented
themes, such as invisibility, opacity, and anonymity.
-
Or the relationship between
identification and legibility,
-
or the tactics of
non-existence and disappearance.
-
New struggles around prevention,
therapeutics of the body, piracy on contagion,
-
information capture and the
making present of data via data mining.
-
According to Galloway,
recent protest movements' refusal
-
to make clear demands is
a form of black boxing.
-
A conscious withdrawal from political
representation and collective bargaining.
-
The choice is for relations, relays and links,
in the words of Édouard Glissant.
-
All qualities associated with the proxy.
-
This politicisation upholds the right to opacity,
also a quote from Glissant.
-
Rather than reverting once again
to the age-old demand for transparency.
-
For Glissant, opacity is the force
that drives every community,
-
the thing that would bring us together forever
and makes us permanently distinctive.
-
Recently in Paris,
-
where the state of emergency, declared in
the wake of recent terror attacks,
-
prevented climate change activists from
assembling in public spaces
-
during the climate change summit,
protesters installed over 10.000 pairs of shoes
-
at Place de la République,
-
theatrically standing in place
of the absent bodies.
-
Images of the square circulated
widely in the media,
-
emphasising the inherent mediatisation
of contemporary protest
-
and the need for effective images,
not necessarily real bodies.
-
Holograms and shoes function as
placeholders, making it all the more possible
-
for images of absent bodies to
communicate large scale discontent.
-
So in reference to the
wave of protest in 2011,
-
Judith Butler has suggested that
protest in public space has, quote:
-
"become politically potent only
when and if we have a visual and audible
-
version of the scene communicated in
live time, so that the media
-
does not merely report the scene,
but is part of the scene and the action;
-
indeed, the media is the scene or the space
in its extended and replicable
-
visual and audible dimension."
-
In Madrid, the shadow-like figures
in the hologram embodied a double movement,
-
a process of deterritorialisation and reterritorialisation.
-
Slogans and shouts were
crowdsourced online
-
and synced with holographic images
filmed in a nearby city.
-
Then, the resulting image was meticulously
reworked to match the
-
distances and angles of the scene
in front of congress.
-
So in recent years, there has been a
growing interest in the reterritorialisation
-
of the internet.
-
The artist Trevor Paglen and theoreticians,
such as Tung Hui Hu and Keller Easterling,
-
have drawn attention to the
materiality of the Internet,
-
data centres, undersea cables,
and routers, which in turn
-
rely on hydro-electric power stations
and dams for electricity, as well as
-
railway tracks and telegraph lines
for communication routes.
-
The web, until recently associated with
immateriality, virtually and spacelessness
-
as exemplified by the
popularity of the term “cyberspace”,
-
clearly has a body,
a sprawling physical infrastructure
-
and ever-growing ecological footprint.
-
The benign-sounding “cloud” is nothing less
than a publicity ploy for a vast campaign
-
to centralise digital data, and to turn
software and hardware into a black box.
-
As our computers have become thinner and sleeker,
the weight of the cloud has only grown greater.
-
So the body politic is now
intertwined with the body of the web,
-
and the web, the world wide,
is constrained by
-
national policies and geographical realities.
-
In October 2015,
-
citizens in Thailand protested against
their military government's plan to
-
channel Internet traffic to international
servers through a single network gateway,
-
with the intention of perfecting
state surveillance and censorship.
-
This political move was dubbed
“The Great Firewall of Thailand”.
-
As in Madrid, the choice of protest space
corresponded with the space,
-
the new law was tailored for.
-
The military government's websites were
targeted and downed for several hours by
-
denial of service attacks.
-
The online action was reported beyond
activist platforms and international media,
-
however, it lacked images that could
represent the bodies of those who would
-
literally be barred from leaving Thailand
-
where the government was
following through on its plans
-
for greater surveillance and censorship.
-
In the meantime, the
hacker collective “Anonymous”
-
declared cyberwar on the Thai government.
-
Operation “Single Gateway” targeted
Thai police servers in an effort to
-
demonstrate the actual vulnerability
of virtual state institutions.
-
So, how can one possibly grasp the current
relation between the digital and its outside,
-
back when the Internet was still thought of
as synonymous with cyberspace?
-
Both were clearly defined as separate.
-
A quote from Wendy Chun:
-
"Cyberspace as a virtual non-place made
the Internet so much more
-
than a network of networks:
-
It became a place in which things happened,
in which users’ actions separated from their bodies,
-
and in which local standards became
impossible to determine.
-
It thus freed users from their locations."
-
So in the 1990s, the Internet was
imagined to be a perfect frontier
-
science fiction dream come true,
-
where users could navigate as powerful agents,
invisible and free of physical constraints.
-
Yet, as Wendy Chun in her book
“Control and Freedom”, published in 2006,
-
as she has demonstrated,
the world wide web was designed
-
as a technology of control from the start,
-
geographically rooted and constantly
monitoring its users via protocols such as TCP/IP.
-
So in what way does virtuality challenge
our conception of public space
-
and the mobilisation of human bodies?
-
As we have seen, the digital and the real
coalesce in ever new forms and devices.
-
And despite the gaming industry's
recent success in
-
bringing early visions of virtual reality
to technical perfection,
-
think of Oculus Rift, or something
like the body snap app,
-
prior myth of virtual reality are slowly,
but certainly eroding.
-
The old demarcations between
the human body in physical space
-
and the so called “immateriality of the
digital sphere” are superseded.
-
Attempts to conceptualise the
effect of the synthetic face-to-screen situation
-
either one that this is downfall
of the sovereign subject or
-
extricate emancipatory potential from
the entanglement of humans and technology.
-
How then might a proxy give way to
different bodily modes and morphologies
-
a body both present and absent?
-
Whereas Donna Haraway and Rosi Braidotti
have attempted to destabilise the subject
-
as it was conceived during the 20th century,
exploring notions as the cyborg
-
in conceptualising a feminist post humanism.
-
Might the proxy antagonistically restabilise
a very concrete subject in a synthetic situation,
-
is a proxy a techno body,
does it have flesh after all?
-
Might it serve as the object other of the
high tech clean and efficient bodies
-
endorsed by contemporary culture
as Haraway envisions?
-
Or rather as a nomadic device
that enables people to become
-
post human subjects in Braidotti's
line of thought?
-
Braidotti warns of a fatal nostalgia for
either, humanist past or the cold war cyborg.
-
And instead proposes that we embraced
vulnerability, take pride in being flesh.
-
Her post-human theory aims at
shaping and shifting new subjectivities
-
against modern humanism,
a school of thought she criticises
-
for its wide male supremacy,
eurocentric normativity, imperial past,
-
and inhuman consequences.
-
So proxies permit human bodies
to step out of the line of fire
-
to evade forensics,
the lack of a human silhouette,
-
face, or fixed physiognomy
and can be associated with numerous
-
individuals wherever they are.
-
Rather than the avatar, a creatively designed
porn in the network gaming environment,
-
they assume either a transformative
shape and form, or none at all.
-
Last two sentences. chuckles
-
Proxies are necessary in
contemporary political struggle,
-
they're counter figures to
capitalist self improvement
-
or a [???] opaque other.
-
So proxies provide an escape route
from a schizophrenic situation,
-
which denies or limits bodies to being
mere vessels of biotechnological information.
-
Proxies offer a path toward a new,
a fleeting relation as sovereign bodies.
-
Thank you.
-
applause
-
Herald: Thank you very much for the
spontaneity and the talk
-
and I think there might be time
for questions outside.
-
Thank you.
-
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