Fucking Punks

"Fucking assholes..." George Zimmerman "Fucking punks..." George Zimmerman "“The essential American soul is hard, isolate, stoic, and a killer." D.H. Lawrence "After the Mexican-American war, the scalp bounties went up in price. Despite efforts to regulate the killing (some of the states tried to prevent fraud by creating standard definitions and practices), the scalping business remained profitable until the 1880s, when the unpredictability and brutality finally took its toll. The mercenaries often became a threat themselves, as happens with Glanton's gang. Nevertheless, scalping appeared during the Civil War (1861-1865) as well. "Bloody Bill" Anderson, the infamous … [Read more...]

Nothing Works (Landscape of Punishment part 2)

Seems like a good week to write a sort of short part two to the Landscape of Punishment post. And one of the reasons is the ongoing coverage of the Edward Snowden asylum search. I think that as one watches the TV news, or reads and watches it on the mainstream internet sites now, it is difficult to avoid seeing the strings of the puppeteer at work. The narrative is being spun out of whole cloth...total invention if neccessary. In the US in particular, the news is presented in simple narrative form, like a simple children's story. The 'tone' is childish, the graphics simple and, yes, childish, too. Life is a cartoon. We will see the cartoon plane as it is projected to fly from one … [Read more...]

A Tragic Tone

There are two things I want to write about this entry. One has to do with Sianne Ngai's book Ugly Feelings. The other (which is directly related) is how much Herman Melville seems to coming up in public discourse. I can think of three separate mentions of Melville in Op Ed pieces, and Chris Hedges wrote a nice piece here using Moby Dick... http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/18315-we-are-all-aboard-the-pequod Ngai's book brings up two other of Melville's works, Bartelby The Scrivner, and The Confidence Man. It is probably not at all a coincidence that Melville is being resurrected, besides that fact he is the greatest writer the US has produced, he is also among the … [Read more...]

The Landscape of Punishment, part 1

I intend to write a series (of which this is the first) on how punishment has now infected the totality of life under advanced capitalism in the West. Last blog post I commented on the idea of how culturally it is ever harder for today's populace to imagine a world without capitalism, and how advanced corporate neo liberalism had essentially negated the avant garde. Coupled to this was the idea that Capitalism was linked directly with, even predicated upon an idea of punishment as the responsibility, even duty, of the state. If one starts to dig a bit deeper into notions of punishment, you discover the ways in which almost all of modern life is mediated by punishment, and categories … [Read more...]

Machines Dreaming Us

There is a new piece at Monthly Review that addresses exactly the issues that motivated me to start this blog. I have spent a lifetime in the arts; the majority in theatre as playwright and director and even as artistic director of several companies, but also as a screenwriter and TV writer, free lance and for several painful years as a staff writer. In all that time, the one thing that has never left my mind, that was, in fact, constantly placed before me, was the truth that the system, the producers of this vast cultural apparatus, were in the business of killing art. And they were in that business because art destabilizes and awakens consciousness. It may not directly foment … [Read more...]

Odds & Ends, part 3

"“Remember, any state, any state, has a primary enemy: its own population.” Noam Chomsky "It is almost always the case that a “spontaneous” movement of the subaltern classes is accompanied by a reactionary movement of the right-wing of the dominant class, for concomitant reasons." Gramsci There are all these narratives out there right now. The public discourse is in constant process of developing or erasing certain of these narratives, or finding that they often overlap. Edward Snowden's saga seems to have become a lightening rod for *some* of them to come together. Yet, in all cases, one thing remains constant, and that is that the last thing the U.S. (and most of Europe, … [Read more...]

Control & Punish

I think one of the effects of mass corporate culture, especially Hollywood film and TV, has been to create a very clear style code for certain events in the material real world. I was thinking of this in terms of Obama's new crackdown on what he insists be termed "leakers" (not whistle blowers, and the reason for that is something the next link explains). The entire NSA saga has generated a certain spin, a certain narrative, from mainstream media. But the facts....and here I will link Richard Raznikov's recent article: http://lookingglass.blog.co.uk/2013/06/22/hammer-this-fact-home-16154325/ The facts....the facts are that what this amounts to is almost the exact definition of … [Read more...]

Odds & Ends part 2

Something occurred to me regarding the last posting. I got a few hate mails from people about autism; and this usually took the form of complaints about my insensitivity to their (the autistic email writer's) hard life, or in general those with autism and their suffering. So, a few things first -- though they lead into the actual topic of this entry: suffering is pretty much what the entire world shares. You cant stand and look around in all directions, no matter where you are, and not see suffering. Secondly, this is the province of *hurt feelings*. Unless I had an out of body experience, I didnt rape anyone, beat up anyone's children, burn down anyone's house, drop napalm on any … [Read more...]