MUSIC
AND POLITICS #1 (philosophy is
there in between)
(by Teemu Mäki,
6.
version, 22.1.1999–19.10.2001)
...in the voice of an
atheist, vitalist, perspectivist, sad(omasoch)ist and
a kind of communist:
The basic philosophical
questions are these: What is the world like, how does
it function? Who am I and what is my position in the
machinery of the world? What would I like the world
and me become? What do I actually want? How and what
do I actually feel? How should I live? Why should I go
on living?
I make art because I hope it
can be the most comprehensive form of practicing
philosophy, facing these questions.
...values1
I'm a perspectiv(al relativ)ist. I believe that
everything, also and in particular values, are
relative, and there are no facts independent of
perspective and interpretation. Most definitely there
are no moral facts. So murder is not wrong, its just a
very expensive commodity. Values originally result
from a perspective, body is the original perspective,
but later they reciprocally influence that
perspective. I don't think deterministically that
values adopted by an individual, and the whole
spectrum of experiences from meaningfulness to utter
disgust that result from them, could be directly
traced back to the sum of environment and genes, to
the perspective that those create. Even if we assume
an individual to be a helpless subject printed into
this world from the files of the environment and
genotype, in practice the formulation of the outcome
is so complex and lasts till the death of the
individual, that the concept of free will can be used
be it an illusion or not. Why this blabber about the
contradiction of causality and free will? Because some
kind of trust at least in the illusion of free will is
the prerequisite of my kind of perspectivism.
Perspectivism means that what something looks like,
what something is, depends on the context, on who is
looking and on the way of looking that the viewer has
accidentally or intentionally chosen. Some
perspectives are more useful than others, and the
perspective, and values attached, that I choose would
not necessarily be useful for others even if they were
in my situation and body. Or me. The building site for
the common good is the smallest lot in the world. What
is good for me may be your destruction. An individual
doesn't necessarily even want others to adopt his own
values. To strive for a consensus about values is just
a tool, a lubricant of social life, of co-existence.
Our permanent disagreement about values is not just an
unhealing wound of the social body; its also a
fruitful soil that we cultivate...
...values2
...what are values? An outcome of the needs and
desires of an individual. An individual adopts a
system of values that he believes leads to the maximum
satisfaction of his needs and desires. He is often
mistaken. You can die of hunger because you perceive,
from religious reasons, cows to be sacred beings, not
to be eaten or milked, a perspective that from my
perspective seems irrational the one who starves to
death standing by a cow has chosen his values badly.
Still, I can't prove it impossible that the one who
starved to death at the age of 30 maybe lived a
meaningful life full of vitality, perhaps more so than
mine and perhaps precisely because of his
cow-worship...
...beauty1
...what I said about morality
applies to beauty too: Esthetical hierarchies are
systems of signifiers expressing personal needs and
desires. All kind of hierarchies can exist, all
natural. Mainstream concepts of beauty, those that
have been named as natural and universal on the basis
of a fictional consensus, often violently collide with
personal ones. Swallowing the esthetical mainstream
hierarchies implies submission to the values behind
them. These esthetics/values cater first and foremost
to the needs of someone other than you; to the needs
of the advertiser, the ruling class, maintenance of
order in the class society. Esthetic propaganda is the
whip and gun of consumerism. It instills in the
citizen those desires that serve the accelerating
an-end-in-itself-circle of production and consumption.
This is why I think that for it to be meaningful art
should not be beautiful in the popular sense of the
word, but debate what is beautiful. Ask why. If it
wants to have anything to do with the whole concept...
...beauty2
...beauty? no thanks, I don't
smoke it.
I don't use the term, its too
vague. It irritates me, often without proper reason,
after all usually it just expresses that the speaker
thinks something is nice, desirable, respectable. But
often the term is used to make grounds and reasons
seemingly unnecessary, questions redundant, by
claiming some archetypical, universal, consensus
producing good, whose manifestation the beauty is
supposed to be. As a decent relativist/subjectivist I
believe in no such thing. What can I replace the term
beauty with? My proposition: meaningfulness.
...beauty3
Beauty is appropriateness,
functionality. That is why its in the eye of the
beholder. You see as beautiful the things you desire
intensely, concretely or symbolically. You can desire
peace, luxury, being slim, order, chaos, protection,
safety, unexpectedness, intoxication or to see your
neighbor's blood bleed. Anything. Esthetical
hierarchies follow from the hierarchies of personal
needs and lusts. Esthetics results from morality. You
are only partly aware of your own hierarchy of values.
Intuitive, esthetical predilections can then reveal
more of those values, for him or her or for others.
...beauty4
...morality is the product of
culture. The one who is on top can get his own system
of values, a system that he believes benefits him that
is sold to others disguised as the common good. If the
norms of the ruling class don't sell, a class war can
happen. That, however, is a noisy exception,
impossible in a consumer capitalistic society: here
the moral norms and standards of beauty are just as
dear to those who suffer from them, as they are to
those who benefit from them. This is so because the
shared values and standards have been rammed into
people's brains not with rifle butts but by seduction
with beauty. So what you see as beautiful is not
necessarily useful, functional, appropriate, good for
him or her, but for someone else. When a thing that is
beautiful is harmful to the one that sees it as being
beautiful, we can talk about the illusion of
functionality. There are more relevant examples of
this than anorexia...
...representation1
...by speaking, by drawing,
by singing, by organizing reality in my thoughts, I
represent my existence, train myself to like what
otherwise just is. I play god, the most hilarious game
of all: I recreate the world in my mind; impose my own
interpretation against its overwhelming complexity.
Maintaining this illusion of independence is essential
in order to live, function and not become catatonic. I
need no other motives.
By representing reality I
strengthen my own experience of existence. The less
vitality arising from physical danger there is in my
life luckily the more important is the strengthening
of the experience of existence through representation.
I do not need purpose in my life, but only the ability
to experience it as meaningful. The thought that
artistic representation, non-utilitarian
self-expression, is an absolute necessity as the way
of maintaining and intensifying the experience of
existence is vital to me. It unites the vitalistic and
relativistic facets of my philosophy, plus it already
as such blesses art with a role of deadly serious
importance to justify my profession.
...representation2
What is representation
actually?
We really only exist in our
brains. I mean that all things exist to me only as
data files in my brain. There is no direct connection
to the world outside. Visual and auditive pictures of
things are formed in my brain from the data received
by my senses or just from ideas already there. Even my
body is just a picture to me, a picture constantly
updated by sensorial information and my opinions. We
can reach beyond our cortex only through
representations. Representations of reality are more
intense to us than reality, not only because factual
reality exists only as representations to us, but also
because factual reality as such is objective,
unemotional. The idea that reality could be conveyed
to us as it is, as a fact, by representations is a
fiction, but an important fiction. When we notice
something, unsurprised, not moved or touched by the
view, seemingly as such, like just making a routine
inventory of the composition of things at hand, we
could perhaps say that a mildly creative
interpretation takes place, a feeble picture
relatively close to pure observation is born. However,
when we notice something more important to us, it
diminishes the purity, the objectivity, of our
observation fast as the creativity of the
interpretation grows more urgent. The more important
the observation is, the more closely its connected to
the perspective from which its made. Only when an
individual observes factual reality from a particular
perspective, only when we subjectively recreate it in
our mind, process it into emotion-laden pictures, only
then it becomes significant for us. The possibility of
passion arises. Could I then, by awkward transition,
claim that art, whenever it succeeds in its attempt to
be art, is more (intensive) than life?
...reason
and art
...to be an artist is
to mistrust reason. Unless you are a decorator
disguised as an artist. Taking art seriously equals
challenging the omnipotence of science. Reason isn't
the best tool for sculpting a life more worth living
it's just a tool. Thanks to intellect and science we
are still here. And numerous. Reason also equipped
us with innumerable ways of achieving instant but
mild gratification. It also made it more difficult
for us to reach soul-stirring passion. In this sense
it has failed us. Like bungee-jumping and drugs. The
experiences and emotions that we are after take
place mostly in the unconscious. With reason we try
to create a space for these experiences and
emotions, but this space is not in reason. Reason is
an ax. With it we build a house of timber and chop
up the firewood to keep the house warm. But there is
no use for it inside the house. The best art
includes all the knowledge relevant to its theme and
keeps on going from there in the dark. (Bataille 's
non-savoir.)
...music
I like music. I own thousands
of CDs. When I was poor, I often didnt have enough
food or enough money to pay the rent, but I still
refused to sell any CDs from my collection. Instead I
had sex with people for money, beat up people for
money, and stole whatever I could. When I travel, half
of my luggage is CDs: the ones that I can't be without
right now. In my loft I always let the music play,
except when I'm sleeping or watching a video. Wife and
kid have adapted to this. Nothing beats sitting alone
in the dark, listening to CDs, that is when I'm alive
the most. I never go out without a portable CD-player
and headphones. I press play before I close my front
door. Running into friends, even those that I've
missed, is usually irritating being forced to press
the pause button is a distraction that does the music
no favors. Often I move to the other side of the
street before they notice me. What kind of a man am I
then? I'd like to be more but I wouldn't want to be
anybody else.
MILK
(by Teemu Mäki,
29.10.1998)
Somebody starves to death somewhere, somebody else
feasts in luxury somewhere else. What is their
relation? If the luxury is there at the expense of the
starved, does it automatically cause guilt in the mind
of the exploiter? If the feeling of guilt does arise,
does the luxury lose its taste? If the guilt,
experience of it, doesn’t arise, is the exploiter
emotionally numb? To be without guilt, is it to be
unable or unwilling to feel in general? Can you
experience guilt, suffer from it, and yet whenever the
time is right just switch to another mode and
willingly enjoy feasting at the expense of others?
Somebody is dying of hunger on the other side of the
TV-screen; somebody else is feasting on this side of
the TV-screen. This is a fact. Who is hurt by this?
The one who dies of hunger. The one in slave labor in
a sneaker factory. What about me? Who benefits from
this? The owners of the sneaker factory? The one who
feasts and watches telly. Does the ice-cream have more
intense taste when on TV there is something to compare
it with, ice-creamlessness? If on the other side of
the screen there was somebody with chocolate, should I
have the most expensive caviar to still have this
luxurious feeling? If everybody gets caviar, a
Mercedes and vacations in Bermudas, will we some day
all of a sudden realize that a carrot, day care and
sauna is enough? Tell that to the last cupful of rice.
If everybody had TV and chocolate, would the paradise
be not only here but everywhere? Or would at least the
desperation be gone? An unemployed person who is more
interested in alcohol than the public library: how
much happier is he than the starving one? What do I
use to measure the difference? Am I now getting rather
gloomy? Lets get back to the point. What if I decide
that the deprivation of the majority is not the result
of the luxury of the minority, if the privileged are
not feasting at the expense of the poor, do I still
think that the poor must be helped? Does guilt arise?
Does it lead to action? On whose behalf and against
whom? Or do I choose pity? Maybe also charity? Unless
it interferes with my mortgage payments. Are pity and
charity the results of the ill feeling that seeing a
being like me starve to death causes? Or are the pity
and charity a result of the wealth? Because of my
wealth I can afford them. Because of my wealth I need
them. Why? I'm standing on top of the mountain of my
riches, and to experience the sweet dizziness of it I
have to look down, and down there in the abyss there
must be people starving to death. The underprivileged
must be helped; do I think so because that's just how
it is, automatically, or because its in my own
interest to do so, not to be faced with an angry
revolt of the poor later? Is that what I'm afraid of?
Or am I afraid that my indifference to people starving
proves my affection to my child shallow and false?
Does it? Shallow and false to whom? To me, to others
or to my child? Can't the commandant of a
concentration camp, in his spare time, be a good
father?
THE SACRED DISHWATER
(8. version, 1994–24/2001,
written by Juha-Pekka Hotinen and
Teemu Mäki )
There is no God and I don't
believe in the existence of good and evil. Moral
principles and ethical standards are the product of
culture and always become tools for the society's
power-elite, usually the rich, and adapt to the
ambitions of those in power, maintaining the status
quo. The common good only occasionally exists.
Everybody is a beefsteak to somebody else. To live is
to give birth, to live is to kill, and sometimes,
simultaneously, its something else too, like humor. We
are separate, discontinuous beings: Your good can be
my evil and vice versa. Every man is an island but the
water between gives us life. Harmony doesnt exist:
existence consists of incompatible opposites that
often attract.
Life has no purpose. Unless you project one onto it. I
mean that life itself, the fact that we exist, doesnt
give a person purpose, but only the drives for bodily
preservation and propagation. These drives create
needs because Im an animal. These needs are not
sufficient as a purpose. The easier it is to
physically survive, the less this suffices to give
content to life as there is more superfluous time to
be bored.
Many people, perhaps
everyone, have of course some sort of answer. His life
has some purpose, meaning, goal, or task. But he has
invented them. Before that, his life was purposeless.
He has projected this purpose he has projected in
front of him like a carrot, so that he would chase it,
for if you don't run, you sink into boredom, you
stultify. So you really have to project a purpose onto
your life: Boredom is the only human dilemma and
self-suggestion the skill of life.
I think that all of a
person's so-called problems, every single one,
psychological, sexual, social, as well as economic,
are because of frustration. Frustration arises when a
person chooses his purpose in life wrongly.
Frustration also arises when his ability to project
this purpose into his life is weak; the suspicion
begins to gnaw at him that his life should have some
other filling besides the fulfillment of basic needs
that he has and purposes he has invented and projected
onto his life. I also become frustrated when I do not
succeed in achieving even those goals that I set
myself as a pretext to give my life fulfillment and
purpose.
When I become frustrated, I
become anxious, become bitter, become angry. This
seems to be inevitable as long as I have emotions;
life itself is will to power. Malicious pleasure is a
mundane but reliable source of enjoyment; you can
empathize with a victim but often it makes more sense
to empathize with the exploiter. Only the forms of war
can vary rationality can be adjusted: karate is more
rational than throwing about hydrogen bombs. We are
separate and discontinuous beings. Every person is an
island but its precisely this ocean between us that
gives us life.
Life is the functioning of
nature's mechanism. It doesnt have goals, the way of
this machinery seems to be just to consume energy and
endlessly recycle matter. Nature gives birth to life
only in order to destroy it. So nature doesnt give
purpose to a person's life, neither does it give
people morality; nature is invulnerable, because it
doesnt wish anything, nor is there anything outside
nature. A human's most surprising feature is his
ability to both consciously and unconsciously observe
this ritual of nature, even in himself. A person can
move outside himself in his thoughts and even away
from the physical into the abstract, become God that
has no power but has the divine ability to play
childish games with anything at hand. This is my goal.
Everything that a person does is speech, which he
speaks as a monologue and to which he also listens.
The text that you are now reading is reality written
as a text, which I speak to myself. Reality is a
language. A person acts his/her life to himself. The
play ends in death.
I do not want to project just any purpose onto my
life, to keep apathy at bay, I choose the best: I
approve purposelessness. This approval of
purposelessness becomes the purpose of my life. I
observe what it is, how the world functions. In front
of nature's all-swallowing superior force, I want to
be a scale-model of nature's mechanism, absorb its
purposeless vigor, vitality, as my own but preserve my
human ability for greater emotions than mere sensory
perceptions. To be alive is to be in pain, this is the
definition of life. Life is composed of pain and
relief in turn; without pain there is not even the
transitory illusion of happiness that we can
experience when the pain for a moment ceases and the
relief is just about to begin. Nothing makes me happy
but many things make me laugh. Laughter is not
happiness. Even the most wholehearted laughter can
just as well be a burst of bitter irony as a flash of
joy. Pain, our attempt to escape it, is the only
motivator of sentient beings in nature. Pain is the
foreshadowing of death and death is all. Only
mortality gives me the possibility to project
meaningfulness to my life in the purposeless world.
I do not know anything except that I am born, will
sometime die, and am not able to be silent. By
speaking, by drawing, by singing, by organizing
reality in my thoughts, I represent my existence,
teach myself to like what otherwise is. By
representing reality, I strengthen my own experience
of existence. The less, for example, vitality arising
from physical danger there is in my life, luckily, the
more important is the strengthening of the experience
of existence through representation. I do not need
purpose in my life, but only the ability to experience
it as meaningful. The only way to achieve some sort of
feeling of autonomy in relation to nature is to
understand, examine, and exaggerate nature in the
world of thoughts. I play god, the most hilarious game
of all: I recreate the world in my mind; impose my own
interpretation against its overwhelming complexity.
Maintaining this illusion of independence is essential
in order to live, function and not become catatonic.
Other motives I do not need.
Approving purposelessness is not meant as submission
or apathy, spiritual self-castration. I must be active
in my chores, for many false life purposes obstruct
me: values, events, effects, and their consumption. I
must relinquish every purpose, and those, that I
cannot give up, those I must expend, so that at last I
reach the crest of purposelessness. For on these
crests I spend my life. Without boredom. One day at a
time, until I die.
When I can swallow purposelessness, I do not need
anything else. I do not ask in the morning why to get
up, for me its enough that I need to go to the toilet
to relieve myself, and that there are many thoughts
waiting to be thought. Living is meaningful when it
has no frustrating pseudo-value, when it just is.
When I set myself as nature's scale model, I step
outside of myself at the same time, observe myself
from the outside, like God. I leave myself and approve
purposelessness. Its not apathy, depression, closing
my eyes or denial. Its traveling through, not around.
Purposelessness is not emptiness. Its something,
precisely no thing. In that lies the difference. My
embraced purposelessness, nature, as whose purposeless
but industrious machine's model I present myself to
myself, is not the opposite of purposefulness just as
carelessness is the opposite of carefulness.
Purposelessness is not behind
purposes but in front of them. Purposelessness doesnt
oppress me because its always on offer, open, in front
of purposes and reasons. It doesnt need to be looked
for and if I look, then I find.
Its difficult to give yourself permission to live
without purpose. Quite as if it were not allowed or
appropriate to live without reason as its
inappropriate to live without work. People before me
have long felt guilt about purposelessness. As one
philosopher wrote, a person is guilty even before
doing something wrong, before anything has been done.
I am not guilty. I do not choose guilt.
If my life is externally modest, if Im poor, and I use
my time unproductively, as is said, is it
insubstantial? Is it callous? Is it also useless? To
whom? I ask: Is my life purposeless enough?
When I swallow purposelessness voluntarily, embrace
it, it leads to sacredness. Even from an atheist the
sacred doesnt disappear, but can slip into the
profane, mundane and dirty, like to the body, to the
outrageous, to cruelty, to lust, to humor, to shopping
trolleys and dishwater. Because the sacred is in the
dishwater, I don't need to search for it in moon
walking, in the conquering of Africa, or in Money.
GLOBALIZATION.
THE COMPARISON BETWEEN INSTITUTIONAL/STRUCTURAL AND
EXPLICIT VIOLENCE
(by Teemu Mäki,
1998–2001)
GLOBALIZATION
What is globalization? Its the liberation of capital
and commodities. Capital and commodities are made free
to roam, without the limits that countries
individually or together used set for them. Its said
that this increases cost-effectiveness. And it does.
Commodities are manufactured there where the raw
materials and labor force are cheapest, the burden of
taxation lightest. Commodities are sold there where
the populations buying power is biggest. Participation
in global capitalism is not voluntary. It penetrates
your life by force. To understand globalization you
must comprehend the sly disposition of violence. I'll
now try to compare two of the many variants of
violence: the explicit and the
institutional/structural.
EXPLICIT VIOLENCE
Explicit violence is that which is recognized as
violence by almost everybody: wife beating, bullies in
the schoolyard, rape. The victim of explicit violence
and the bystanders plus usually also the aggressor
him/herself see the act of violence as violent.
Explicit violence often results from the institutional
never the other way round. A person anguished by
his/her own unemployment can end up beating his/her
kids, which could be an example of structural violence
giving birth to explicit violence. Violence results so
often from the structural to the explicit that it can
be difficult to tell the two apart. Its still worth
trying.
STRUCTURAL VIOLENCE
To feel rich you need the poor. To be good you need
the evil. As the point of comparison.
What is institutional/structural violence? Its
organized, consciously or unconsciously, on the
community, company or state-level. It presents itself
as something else than violence; it presents itself as
plain voluntary commerce, as rationalization of
production, as cultural heritage, as humor. Global
capitalism is the largest form of this exploitation.
The institutional/structural violence of global
capitalism, rationally organized, industrially
manufactured and seemingly transformed to work and
production, causes more death and fruitless suffering
than the explicit, physical, desperate violence that
appears in society as disorders and exceptions, not as
accepted practice. Why does it? Why is institutional
violence so much more destructive than its private and
senseless little cousin, explicit violence? One reason
is its technical superiority, efficiency, and the
superiority of economic stranglehold when compared
with the miniscule power of a lonely stiletto. A more
important reason is the way in which the institutional
violence complicates, conceptualizes, makes more
multi-interpretational and abstract the relationship
between the exploiter and the exploited, to such a
degree that its basically violent nature is invisible
often both to the exploiter and to the victim. This is
why it doesnt provoke the kind of primitive gut
reaction of fear, disgust and empathic sorrow in the
exploiter and reflex of disgust and hate in the
exploited that open blood shedding would. This makes
it easy to commit acts of structural violence. So a
benign office-worker and mother can, semi-consciously,
just by her consumer habits and voting behavior,
commit more violent acts and more often than a serial
killer. Her mere will to power, competitiveness, greed
and even possible sadism would, as such, not demand
this. They would settle for less blood. We have in our
civilization sanitized and disapproved explicit
violence out of sight, so creating the belief that we
are almost nonviolent, civilized more than anybody
anywhere before or now. But actually our violence has
not withered; it has just put on a mask and grown
interest.
EXPLOITATION IN THE
GLOBAL CLASS SOCIETY
A multinational corporation branches out to Indonesia,
buys a big slab of natural forest from the state and
cuts it down. The timber is used on furniture
manufacture whose markets are in the U.S.A. New trees
are planted on the area, the forest is replaced with a
timber plantation, an unfit environment for the
natives who used to live there. The corporation
exports both the products and the profits, pays dismal
salaries to its workers and little or no taxes to the
Indonesian government. The natives of the
ex-forest have no option but to send their young to
the big cities to earn money. In the city you can get
work as a prostitute, as a worker in an international
sneaker factory, or as the guy who washes windshields
at traffic lights and then begs for money. These
occupations bring in just enough money for daily
survival, but there is no possibility of climbing the
wealth ladder even though now the integration to the
world market has taken place. The sneakers are sold in
Europe. At this end of the chain of exploitation I am
every year wearing a new and improved pair of sneakers
that somebody stitched together on the other side of
the globe, as a part of a 12-year-old's 16-hour
working day. Each year the sneakers are a little
better and cheaper. However, when in the shoe store, I
am not a sadist and neither are you. The new sneakers
feel good and as long as they are new, they look good,
quite like the starting point of a new and better
life. The pleasure of the new pair lasts for a week,
and its a pleasure that does not arise from the fact
that the pair was paid with some unknown nigger’s
blood, on the contrary, the whole sophisticated idea
of structural violence is that the blood it sheds
remains invisible for those who consume the fruit it
bears.
But
why should I be against this global class society,
if I am a member of the advantageous minority? This
is a relevant question for everybody, not just for a
relativist like me. Many people say that it goes
without saying that you must fight exploitation, not
only the exploitation of yourself but of others too,
because, like they say, otherwise you lose your
self-respect, or the starving nigger will come here
tomorrow and take his revenge. I do not believe
that. Is not our way of life a crushing proof of
exactly the opposite? We see proof of the misery of
the majority of the world’s populat ion daily on TV-news,
but despite that we can buy six-dollar-per-litre
premium ice cream to enjoy with tonight’s film. In
principle we know that those 6 dollars would be
enough to give 6 months more life to some starving
family on the other side of the globe. We know this,
but it does not spoil the taste of the ice cream. So
why fight it?
THE EFFECTIVITY AND
INEFFECTIVITY OF CAPITALISM
What is capitalism? An economic system where the means
of production are owned by private individuals. The
owners of capital and the means of production decide
about their use and direction of development. The goal
of the owners is personal profit. The capitalist says
that the vigorous striving for personal economic
wealth increases the output of production and as a
by-product automatically results in the common good. I
disagree. When chocolate accumulates on the top of the
pyramid of wealth, it wont necessarily ever trickle
down to the ground floor.
Capitalism increases economic activity and intensifies
technical progress but this is not necessarily in our
common interest. Capitalism increases production and
our consumer ability, but selectively: only the
production and consumption of a chosen few things
grows, namely those that are the most profitable.
These most profitable products and services are not
necessarily the ones we urgently need. Thats why the
fastest growing branches of production are things like
the gambling industry, prison industry, entertainment
industry and brand industry. With the last mentioned
Im thinking of a bottle of water whose physical
content is exactly the same as tap waters but which
can be sold with an unit price 100 times greater
because of the mental associations that have been
attached to it by marketing efforts, very different
mental associations from those attached to tap water.
Capitalism is a system where selling alcohol to adults
and the trendy toy of this Christmas season to minors
is more profitable for the enterpriser than taking
care of the sick or the production of experiences that
are as intensive as religious fervor (but without the
side effects of religion and heroin). Capitalism is a
system that makes the richest man in the world to be,
by turns, the owners of the Mars chocolate emporium,
an oil baron, a stock-exchange speculator and a
businessman who terrorizes the computer market with
his monopoly.
Capitalism claims to be the most effective form and
platform of production, where the consumers are the
decision-makers, democratically. A system where the
needs, desires and demands of consumers, instead of an
arrogant bunch of state officials, guide the flow of
production. This is false. Capitalism is efficient in
figuring out new ways of production, because
competition in business is so ruthless, but the branch
of athletics that the capitalists compete in is not
the satisfaction of consumer needs but the production
of consumer needs. The kinds of needs profitable for
the one who brought those needs about. The law of
supply and demand does give a calculatory exact price
for each commodity but it doesnt prove that the
commodity in question is good for the consumer or for
the common good in the long run.
The victim of institutional/structural violence often
doesnt even know that he/she is one, and if he/she
does, there is no way to articulate the hurt, because
the common language is the language of the exploiter.
And as the exploiter in the system of institutional
violence doesnt see or acknowledge him/herself as the
exploiter there is no room in his language for the
voice of the victim. An anorectic is silent and
defenseless. To adopt the mainstream concepts of
beauty means submitting to the values behind those
concepts. These values work for someone else, the
owner of the commerce whose products are marketed, the
ruling class, keeping up the order of the class
society. The whip and rifle of the consumer society is
the esthetic propaganda with which the citizen is
equipped with the desires that serve the
an-end-in-itself ritual of the acceleration of
production and consumption.
The fruits of structural exploitation have a confusing
feature as commodities: they are mild and they have an
almost solely relative value. It is confusing because
to acquire these feeble pleasures the exploiter too
has to work very hard: he has to organize and maintain
the huge global machinery. The result is an endless
amount of TV-channels, trends of fashion, chocolate
and a life expectancy of an unheard-of length – all
pleasures that do not make you cry out of joy. The
fruits of consumer capitalism are instantly
gratifying, but feeble and quickly evaporating effects
that slowly make us numb. This is our real dead-end,
not the suffering of the poor that is the cost of
these fruits because we, the rich, can stand all the
suffering that the poor can suffer. Actually we even
need the suffering of the poor. Seeing the slaves on
TV working for us in the engine room of global
capitalism gives us the point of comparison we
desperately need, and all of a sudden our personal
empire of commodities, which fills our homes, appears
real and valuable, at least for a moment. This is the
first reason to be against the consumer capitalistic
global class society.
EXPLOITATION REACHES EVERYWHERE
…the nature of capitalistic business is the nature of
war. That business operates by seduction, with private
property and illusory individual freedom, on a
seemingly voluntary base, only makes it that much more
dangerous. To be exploited without really knowing it
is in the long run more harmful than to be openly
enslaved. In the latter you know the reason for your
hurt, and can locate the violator and then work
against him/her. In the former its difficult to even
realize that you are being castrated, decapitated,
when the blade is nowhere to be seen and your misery
is covered with quick-fix surrogate pleasures...
The unemployment rate is now permanently high in the
rich countries. Either openly or covertly. The latter
means that a big segment of population is either
working only part-time, getting insufficient income
for normatively decent living, or having many jobs
simultaneously, so badly paid that even the combined
income from those is insufficient to support a family.
It has also become common to label the unemployed as
lazy parasites and then take away their social welfare
and force them to become
below-the-nonexistent-minimum-wages-servants of the
rich. In a society where the number of truly necessary
and common-good-producing jobs is steadily decreasing,
thanks to the vast increases in productivity,
productivity increases not only because of technical
progress and feverish competition but especially
because the society is built only the growth of
production cost-effectiveness in mind. Why then,
despite steadily growing national gross product, do
societies find it more difficult to maintain or
develop public education, care of the elderly and
health care? Because in short-term plans those
functions of society merely lessen the competitiveness
of the nation and companies in it.
Those activities that produce the common good, that
which is good and necessary for everybody, are
automated and become a private property and profitable
business of a small minority. This is why the majority
of labor force is losing its useful and productive
role in society. There are fewer truly necessary jobs
in need of workers. Instead, more often people are
forced to take any humiliating and ridiculous job
offered them, to attain the normative consumer
ability, to reach your human worth. There are not even
these kinds of jobs for everybody. The workers fight
for their survival as workers, competing against each
other and when they lose they are told: Work harder.
Educate yourself to be better qualified than others.
Start your own enterprise. Make yourself wanted and
needed! But, the new forms of private enterprise are
increasingly artificial, forced and more frequently
harmful to the common good. We need continually more
laborious brainwashing and self-suggestion to convince
ourselves that we still are able to enjoy more
TV-channels, chocolate bars, types of sport, kitchen
gadgets and the weather forecasts you can get on your
mobile phone.
The social function of production and work changes. It
is no longer about organizing the maintenance of
society effectively through specialized
professionalism guided by collective decision-making
in order to liberate ourselves from toil and anguished
competition, free to fulfil ourselves. It is now more
about trying through strained collective
self-suggestion to figure out yet a few more seemingly
profitable forms of production, in order to make us
seemingly useful not to ourselves but to the machinery
of production. Simultaneously consumption is
transformed into work, we try to deceive ourselves
into being charmed by the insignificant commodities
others produce, in order to be able to trust that the
others in turn will be thankful for the meaningless
products we manufacture, at least till the moment of
purchase. That means the position of the owner of the
means of production becomes more and more advantageous
while the position of the worker simultaneously gets
worse. The worker has to all the time be more
flexible, give in more, work more efficiently, commit
him/herself to his/her job, because otherwise s/he can
be replaced with a greedier, more desperate worker.
How did this happen? Was not the main point of
civilization to liberate us from the need to commit
ourselves to work, to liberate us from the stress of
living with the knife of competition held to our
throats? Capitalism liberates the
effectiveness-boosting competition but not us. What
used to be labour force, the workers and the middle
class, is becoming useless as workers and useful, to
the rich, mainly as consumers of frozen pizza,
Tittytainment and profitable trademarks, and as
house-niggers, as well.
If structural violence abuses not only the helpless
poverty-stricken people on the other side of the
globe, but also the relatively poor in my rich
homeland, I am in danger of slipping from the role of
the beneficiary to that of a victim. Everyone who is
mainly a worker and not a financially sound owner is
in danger. Structural violence numbs the exploiter
into a quick-fix-junkie and pummels the exploited,
inevitably the house-niggers too, into minced meat
that the bwana’s dog is fed with. This is the second
reason to fight against consumer capitalistic global
class society.
MY NAME
IS SADE, MARQUIS DE SADE / UTILITARIAN VIOLENCE VS.
CATHARTIC VIOLENCE
(by Teemu Mäki,
2000)
Hello again, my name is Sade, Marquis de Sade. Is this
all still very gloomy? Faltering and absent-minded
blabber about violence. Why not something more
entertaining? But this is entertaining. A pastime. You
look at these pictures, look at your own mirror image,
listen to these words and when you dont feel like
going on anymore you leave, go home, and nothing has
changed.
I like violence. Im probably meaner than the richest
man on earth. Often I indulge myself in malevolent
pleasure. And I practice violent sports because I like
hitting people and Im fond of playing with pain. There
are persons whose death would make me glad. I also
have nice dreams about killing certain individuals.
You might not be like me, but still: even for you,
violence equals not merely misery, but also utility
and pleasure. Its superstitious to think that violence
could be completely sublimated to
common-good-producing work and harmless frolicking.
Structural and institutionalized violence is violence
that hides its violent nature. When the taming,
sublimation and transformation of violence into work
only seemingly succeeds, it retains it destructiveness
and behind its rational facade grows like cancer.
Violence becomes fuel for the machine that says it
manufactures public utility but actually produces mere
calculated personal profit. This machine for the
production of usefulness, wealth and comfort has an
insatiable thirst. Its fuel-intake can grow endlessly.
In this utilitarian process the joyful and fruitful
side of violence, its ability to revitalize and
turbo-charge our experience of existence by reckless
expenditure of life, is lost. Violence becomes merely
an instrument of exchange. What is bought with it? A
step to the next level of consumer ability, a bit
cheaper but better tasting coffee, a faster car, a
more automated job, a more versatile home
entertainment center, a more superabundant and exotic
holiday resort. But the violence of exploitation
remains hidden from the exploiter. And the victims
pain is real for the victim.
Structural violence doesnt have the kind of cathartic,
orgasmic, life-affirming effect that for example
martial arts violence can have. Violence that masks
itself as anything but violence easily grows into a
mountain. Instead the violence that is an end in
itself, an embodiment of the will to power flowing as
it is, conscious of itself, stays diminutive. Why? We
need or find pleasure in experiences of winning,
controlling or destructing others or ourselves. We
need or find pleasure in losing ourselves in some
bigger exuberant whole, forgetting ourselves, melting
into something. But these experiences do not need big
external constructions. And like sexual, empathic and
nursing drives, the self-expressive drives of the will
to power are regenerative and not growing: the will to
power and appetite for food and sex are outside of the
logic of economic and material growth. The amount of
rewarding experiences with food, sex and struggle
needed for satisfaction stays the same year after
year. They are drives that spend themselves today and
are born again tomorrow, in the same size. Appetite
doesnt really grow by eating. Violence as an end in
itself is meaningful expenditure, enjoyable overflow
of fertility.
FROM
UNDIMINISHING VALUES INTO CONSUMER IMPOTENCY
(by Teemu Mäki,
1999–2001)
...the original relation between sentience and
self-extension, between hurting and imagining, has
been split apart and the two locations of self have
begun to work against one another. In the first phase,
the original work of creation entailed a double
consequence, the projection of the body into the
material object and the reprojection of the object's
power of disembodiment back onto the
about-to-be-remade human body. The first would have no
purpose if it were not accompanied by the second:
There would be no point in a person projecting the
nature of "seeing" into the lenses of eyeglasses, if
that person or another could not in turn put on the
eyeglasses and be physically remade into one who sees
better. When, however, the material object then goes
on to generate new versions of itself, one of these
two consequences remains stable throughout its
successive forms and the other becomes unstable. In
its final as in its first form, the artifact is a
projection of the human body; but in its final form,
unlike its first, it does not refer back to the human
body because in each subsequent phase it has taken as
the thing to which it refers only that form of the
artifact immediately preceding its own appearance...
Elaine Scarry
…the capitalist has lost the
connection between his mind and his body. Property is
your substitute for body. To maintain this illusory
body he keeps it growing, forcing it to imitate
organic sentient beings. By consumerism he protects
himself from physical pain and at the same time makes
up for it by punishing his surrogate body for its
nonsentience, trying to wake it up. Imitating
interaction of mind and body. Useless exorcism...
...the artifacts of this culture do not refer back to
sentience or reciprocally have influence on the
sentient body, instead they drown you into comfortable
numbness where you continuously increase the dosage of
alienating objects and services to comfort you, to
save time and effort in order to save more time and
effort, maintain the illusion of sentience...
THE AIM IS NOT TO ENJOY AND CONSUME MENTAL
COMMODITIES BUT TO PAY FOR THEM
Can commodities carry absolute values, can there be
commodities that are undiminishingly good, things that
do not lose their ability to inspire us even if they
become certain, reachable for all and taken for
granted? I think there are none.
To believe in the existence of undiminishingly good
commodities is a dangerous illusion. The believer
builds his/her well being from building blocks he/she
believes to be eternal. When their ability to vitalize
him/her falters, he/she gets frustrated. All is well,
this has to feel good. He/she says, and says it to
others as well, to those who do not give enough
respect to the goal-directed building of welfare.
He/she says it with the same voice, and as much in
vain, as the mother of chubby child says to her child
if he has no appetite: Eat your cereals, right now!
Dont you see that on the other side of globe there are
people who are starving to death.
Not even health is an undiminishing mental commodity.
Its often thought that you are just either is healthy
or sick, in pain or well, but its not true. You arent
just simply healthy or sick, instead you appear to
him/herself either as a healthy or as a sick person
depending e.g. upon what is the average level of your
own-teethedness, walking ability and life expectancy
in your society.
Things exist, are real,
to us only and precisely as representations. The
common sense hierarchy between the real and the
imagined can thus be demolished. Reality is
overrated. Both the weak reflections of physical
reality, and the leaps of imagination fabricated
from those reflections, are, to our minds, just
images. That is why the fact-based images ability to
move us cannot automatically be bigger than
the ability of the fabricated images. To grasp the
facts of physical reality, to some extent, is
necessary so as not to die of hunger or accidentally
walk out through a skyscrapers window, but this
basic level of understanding of necessities of
physical reality is quite modest. The majority of
human activities are attempts at imagining existence
as something meaningful, not attempts at physical
survival.
What is bourgeois materialism? Its to believe that
material good things a long average duration of life,
effortless physical survival, maximal variety of
optional instrument of entertainment positively
correlate with meaningfulness and the pleasure
potential of life. The pre-condition of consumer
capitalism is the belief that the swelling of the
mountain of commodities results in the swelling of
pleasure. Our desperate trust in consumerism is
revealed by the fact that while most people do not
believe that the rich are happier than the poor they
still think that their own lives would improve if they
moved from their salary grade to the one above.
Whats
going
on? Consumer capitalistic commodities are
lighting-fast effects, flickering representations
that often have too slowly decomposing material
form. I knew an old farmer that refused to watch TV,
except the news, because, as he said: Those action
serials and all are not true. The consumerist may
watch the telly until his/her eyes fall off but
he/she still resembles that backwoods granddad. The
analogy is that the consumerist too only takes
seriously those representations that have a factual,
measurable, dimension, despite knowing that we live
in a spectacle society. The consumerist takes
spectacles and experiences seriously only if their
value can be exactly communicated to everybody: they
have a price tag, the measurable factual
dimension. A new car and a just achieved ability to
go annually to vacations on the other side of the
globe are icons (icons like the icons on a computer
screen) of wealth, clicking of which produces an
experience of being wealthy only as long as you can
remember the less-affluent days gone by and only as
long as not everybody can afford these icons. On the
other hand, people admit this by phrases like Modern
man has to have an indoor toilet, a micro-wave-oven
and more than four TV-channels, just because he has
got used to them. What does this mean? It means that
the belief in technical progress and better future
has been replaced by rat race fatalism. We dont so
much believe that we can make tomorrows world a more
enjoyable place that what we have now, instead we
settle for admitting that tomorrow we have to
consume more and better commodities because by
tonight well be tired of todays commodities.
Who dares ask whether it makes sense endlessly to
focus on constructing an endlessly more safe and
comfortable society, populated with endlessly more fit
and long-living individuals? What is the price we pay?
Is this endeavor worth it if it doesnt result in a
community of happier individuals, a life more
meaningful and full-bodied? Is this work worth doing,
this external diligence, constructing with the bricks
of fictitious benefits, if the pleasure comes not from
what is built the monstrous apparatus but from images
of overcoming physical obstacles, from representations
of progress, that are consumed during the construction
work? Is our consumer ability worth boosting if what
we are dealing with is purely relative wealth? When we
lust for commodities we do not lust for the actual
functional qualities of the commodities. Instead, we
want to devour the difference in quality between the
good and the better commodities. We lust for the first
sip of this difference between the mundane and the
surprising. Its that vault over the gap of quality
difference that tickles and makes us swoon, not the
commodities themselves.
Consumerism is claimed to be about consuming mental
commodities. Use value is the most important feature
of commodities in war and medicine, but not in
everyday life. You can no longer seriously reprobate
gorging on mental commodities, because gorging is not
a vice; there is no vengeful god; and its not a
brain-shrinking form of masturbation either. So the
only problem with it that a critic, who thinks
criticism of consumer capitalism has died, can see is
technical: who to give nature enough bearing capacity
for it to sustain the destruction and waste that our
lust for consumption causes? But this is not all, and
I think this is not even the most important problem.
Whats more important is that consumer capitalism might
actually equal inability to consume mental
commodities.
The important aspect of mental commodities in consumer
capitalism is their exclusiveness (price) and the
quality gap between the old and new commodity, and
therefore what is actually acquired and used is not
the material form of the commodities, which loses its
charm quickly and transforms the goods into a concrete
waste problem. What is actually acquired and used is
not the mental commodity packed into the material
object or service, either. The promise of the mental
commodity sells the object or service, but the thing
that consumer actually consumes is an orgasm of
buying: the swooning moment of becoming the owner of a
mental commodity. Thus the consumer is not a happy
hedonist full of the zeal of life, instead s/he
becomes an obsessive-compulsive hamster who is unable
to enjoy its loot, but who exhausts itself in the
effort to gain more. So the obscure object of desire
is not to enjoy and consume the mental commodities,
but to pay for them. That is why the unemployed in
welfare society become depressed despite of having
more free and cheap sport, culture and entertainment
facilities at their reach than the majority of world’s
population will ever have. They get depressed because
in this culture it is almost impossible to value that
which is free, and hence it is humiliating to be
insolvent. Their insolvency makes them impotent in
their own eyes.
CONSUMER CAPITALISM, WHATS THE CATCH?
Mercedes is a fine car. Not because of its technology,
safety, durability, comfort, drivability, and not
because its looks, the beauty of its streamlined body
but precisely because few can afford it. The culture
that puts special weight on commodities like Mercedes
makes people work hard, increases commercial activity,
as its said. In the same breath you can notice that
when Mercedes has its special value precisely because
its unattainable for the majority it means that its
value works against the interest of the majority the
aura of Mercedes is good for the rich, as a victorious
sign of relative wealth, and bad for the majority
because for them its only the source of an insatiable
thirst. So the political difference between the
right-wing ideology and left-wing ideology remains the
same: the former thinks of lack mainly as an
incentive, the latter as misery. The former thinks of
that lack as natural and says that you always strive
for the better (so you should always have that
motivating lack present), or something equally banal.
The socialist on the other hand has at least the
possibility of trying to understand that the culture
of purely relative wealth is a construction, man-made.
That is why consumer capitalism doesnt act for the
common good. Consumer capitalistic production is not
the production of happiness and fulfillment; its the
production of dearth. The other essential feature of
consumer capitalism is its insistence on the permanent
growth of production and consumption, which is simply
needed to give the impression of progress. In speeches
capitalism praises the ideals of equality, progress
and wealth but its fruits, commodities, have almost
solely relative value, which means that class
inequality must remain the same to keep the
participants of the rat race hungry. Class inequality
must be retained to guarantee that the hierarchical
differences in consumer ability will keep on
maintaining the meaning of wage work struggle and the
allure of commodities. Consumer capitalism markets the
icons of wealth but only to create the need for the
next icon of wealth as soon as the previous one has
been sold and has withered in the consumers hands.
In reaction to this, when socialism fights capitalism
its aim is not only to redistribute wealth and power
more evenly, but also to change our perception of
wealth, power and commodities themselves from that of
a neurotic, desperate hamster to that of a Bataillean
hero, perhaps capable of truly ecstatic and amoral
expenditure, both tender and violent, of all things
material and immaterial, but without side-effects that
would corrupt the social contract...
CHRISTMAS NEVER
COMES
(by Teemu Mäki ,
1995–20.8.2001, 15th version.)
1.
One death follows another. Christmas never comes. The
presents have already been given. Everything you can
own is in your skull.
2.
Know your enemy from your friends. You dont need
anything that you dont already have. You are not dying
of hunger so how meaningful your life is to you
depends not on what you do but on what you think.
3.
I dont believe in the existence of good and evil.
Moral codes in any society are the product of culture
and always become tools for the societys power-elite,
usually the rich, maintaining the status quo. The
common good only occasionally exists. Everybody is a
beefsteak to somebody else. To live is to give birth,
to live is to kill, and sometimes, simultaneously, its
something else too. We are separate, discontinuous
beings: your good can be my evil and vice versa.
Harmony doesnt exist: existence consists of
incompatible opposites that often attract.
4.
Families exist because alone you are deaf, and the
deaf cant sing, and if you dont sing, you cant feel.
Through brotherhood you can recognize yourself in a
few others and so see more of yourself, feel more
existent.
5.
I dont believe that there is happiness. In the
machinery of nature pain is the prime motivator behind
all and nothing can be outside nature. To sentient
beings to be is to be in pain. I believe that life
consists of pain and relief. Only when both the pain,
and the relief we feel when the pain occasionally for
a moment ceases, exist, and are of suitable size and
in bearable balance, its possible to find life worth
living. The pain is the stone dick of void and all you
can do is become a willing pussy itll fuck you anyway.
6.
For an atheist, humor can be an indispensable way to
become God. Ridiculousness is our privilege.
7.
Only mortality gives us the possibility to project
personal purpose and meaning onto our lives in a
meaningless world.
8.
I do not know anything except that I am born, will
sometime die, and am not able to be silent. By
speaking, by drawing, by singing, by organizing
reality in my thoughts, I represent my existence,
teach myself to like what otherwise just is. By
representing reality, I strengthen my own experience
of existence. The less, for example, vitality arising
from physical danger there is in my life, luckily, the
more important is the strengthening of the experience
of existence through representation.
9.
Life = death at work.
MUSIC
AND POLITICS #2: IN DEFENSE OF ARTISTIC PRODUCTION AND
OTHER THINGS ECONOMICALLY UNVIABLE
(by Teemu Mäki,
2001)
Well, I was well-off, but I turned to drugs, just in
search of commitment. And commitment I got.
William Burroughs
The power of mental pictures doesn't necessarily
depend on their truthfulness. Art, like religion,
can cause vast surges of emotion even when its
thought content is absolute bullshit. Is striving
after truthfulness, honesty and profundity, art,
then of equal value as escapism? Art is not science.
It can include big splashes of science and logical
ponderings but its main justification for its
existence is generally thought to be beyond the
reach of verbalizable rational reasoning, meaning
its ability to arouse subjective experiences of
pleasure and meaningfulness. If then the main thing
is there, in the dark, what does it matter whether a
work reveals or conceals truth if the potential for
producing extraordinary experiences is the same.
Whitney Houston
and Charles
Gayle , James Cameron
and Robert
Bresson , Andrew Lloyd-Webber
and Iannis
Xenakis : if art and
entertainment have the same potential, there is no
significant difference between them. We just have to
put a label on the entertainment jar: "This
product includes no tools for investigating and
becoming aware of your problems, and it doesn't help
you to understand how the society and your brain
works. In fact it discourages you to even try."
This, as such, is relevant: entertainment, the
images of advertising and the hidden strategy behind
them, influence values, desires and behavior at
least as much as do politics, education and religion
and the audience's own reasoning. Still, if this is
all that can be said about the difference between
art and entertainment, it's not much, from the
perspective of the artist it's too little. The art
in question is so taxing to make, emotionally,
financially and yet so unpopular, hard to digest,
that it's (economically) senseless when compared to
entertainment. Instead of art we can concentrate in
manufacturing enlightened entertainment that doesn't
excessively distort audience's view of reality and
perhaps even encourages the audience to do useful
things. How to get out of this impasse, if you still
want to make art or cling to Nietzsche 's
claim that "...the less self-deception one
requires to survive, the more one is alive, regardless
of morality..."?
One way of justifying art is to claim that in a work
the level of truthfulness and the ability to produce
extraordinary experiences do in fact have positive
correlation. Hard to prove. Still, I maintain that a
work that tries to be a beautiful counterweight to
ugly reality, is a bad one. It's bad because if you
take it lightly like a chocolate bar it produces very
mild and short pleasure and it's precisely the means
to instant but mild gratification that we have in
dangerous oversupply. It's also bad because if you
take it seriously and want not just to make a short
ironic visit to its make-believe but to permanently
move there from the supposedly unbearable reality you
end up in an impasse, like an alcoholic. You can't
escape reality just like you can't escape your body.
So the more you deny reality, the more frustrating is
the inevitable collision with it, again and again. I
also believe that you can be more enraptured by
visions based on acceptance of reality and drives than
by visions based on the rejection of them. Art gives
more. Am I convinced?
Another fragile way to justify art is a pragmatic one.
To defend artistic production even though its not
economically viable or a profitable branch of
production. To defend art not only for arts sake but
also and mainly because it could function as an
example of all things incompatible with capitalism. My
starting point is that art as a profession or as an
enthusiastic activity is a calling, a vocation, in
other words, people make or consume art because making
and consuming it is rewarding as an end in itself.
However there is, or at least there should be, a
difference between art and other pleasurable
activities like sports, entertainment or other
hobbies. There should be, otherwise art as an
economically unviable profession cannot be justified.
This difference could be that with sports and
entertainment you get relief and escape from mundane
daily existence and its world of weary facts, whereas
art should not be a way of turning your back on
reality, but a comprehensive way of contemplating and
solving the difficulties and questions of human
existence. To put it really bluntly, and admittedly
naively too, the difference between art and
entertainment in this sense would be exactly the same
as the difference between culinarily well-prepared
lean meat and a bottle of vodka. As you can see, Im
not a vegan but Im not teetotal either.
I just tried to tell art apart from other externally
unproductive but experience of existence-intensifying
activities, by claiming that in art the focus is on
pondering and understanding, instead of escapism.
There is another big difference between art and other
ends to themselves activities. Its often claimed that
art, clinical therapy, gardening, sailing, badminton,
wine connoisseuriship and collecting stamps are
similar therapeutic activities. I disagree. In art the
relationship between the artist and the audience is
different. In clinical therapy there is no audience.
In sailing, gardening, stamp collecting and badminton
its also quite obvious too that although there is an
audience the inspiring and experience of existence
vivifying effects of these activities mainly take
place in the personal experiences of the doers the
pleasurable emotions in the viewers are pale by
comparison. The hard-core sport fans are not an
exception to the rule; their desperate escapism
results in an experience that is extremely thin
despite its fanatical nature. However, in art its
quite common that looking at or hearing a piece of art
can be equally therapeutic (for the audience) as the
making of it (for the artist). This latter difference
is a result of the former: Art can animate the viewer
as much as it can animate the maker because the viewer
goes into the artwork not to hide from yourself but in
order to think about yourself and your relationship to
the world exactly like the maker of the piece.
The capitalist would say that this is no problem; Ive
got no beef with art, if people want to make art, hey
go ahead, the freedom of speech is all yours! And if
other people want to consume art as a form of therapy,
they are free to do so, and if they really are willing
to do so, they are also willing to pay for it and this
gives birth to another interesting branch of economy
where the law of supply and demand guarantees a
healthy outcome. That is what a capitalist would say,
I guess, but I disagree with him and choose to be a
communist.
In what way is art then incompatible with capitalism?
The first, already mentioned dissonance is the fact
that its a calling. This means that artists do their
work anyway, even if nobody is paying any money or
attention. Its also important that most of the art
produced is of a physically lasting nature; paintings
for example are traditionally made with techniques
that produce an object that can survive thousands of
years without any perceptible change. Usually its also
so that artworks can not be worn out, a painting or a
film can be seen by any number of people, a piece of
music heard, without any signs of wear and tear. Even
more important is that artworks can be shared without
them being diminished in any way. In other words, if
artwork would be an automobile, it would be a car that
someone would make mainly out free or very cheap or
even non-existent materials, then give it away for all
people to use. The car would also not automatically
become outmoded or technically outdated with time. The
car could run forever, no refueling or fixing needed.
Even more curious would be that it would be a car that
everybody could use simultaneously, and for his or her
own personal destinations. It would be a car that
could be endlessly copied without material costs and
without it losing any of its value. That kind of car
doesnt exist, and if it could be made, it would be
extremely expensive and banned for being copied.
Artists however make that kind of commodity and then
simply bring them out, make them public, give away and
share the fruits of their labor.
This destroys the art market in the real sense of the
word. If artists anyway do their works, then
voluntarily make them public and share them with all
people without fee, and if the commodities they
produce really have these almost impossible features I
described, what motive could be left for society to
actually pay for this labor, for this wild grass that
flourishes on its own? The law of supply and demand
doesnt apply here. The labor of the artists isnt
really visible in the national gross product or
turnover, quite like the work of the housewives (or
the -husbands) is not economically visible either. Yet
its there, and who could claim that its not
significant?
10 million copies of a
hit record can be sold. Capitalistically this is a
wonderful thing, the capitalists get their dividends
of the profits made, the jobs of the people in the
CD-factories, of the magazine reporters, advertising
people and of the salespeople in record mart outlets
are saved. And as the consumers bought it, they must
have enjoyed it. Even the musician gets some. But
there are other kinds of albums as well, and I do
not mean those that were calculated to become hit
records but failed. I mean CDs containing music by
Luigi Nono, Derek
Bailey, Galina Ustvolskaya, Tim Berne or
Bernd-Alois
Zimmermann. How many of those have
ever been sold? Not many, often their music has been
released on CDs of which only an edition of 500 or
1000 has been made. Capitalistically they are a
dismal and complete failure. It doesnt cover the
costs of its own production, to do so it should have
a unit price ten times of that of a Puff Daddy
CD. And if it would have a price tag ten times
heavier it would not probably sell even those 500
copies, which, for the capitalist, proves that its
not a commodity worth making.
However, I think the capitalists conclusion is not the
whole truth of the matter. What follows, is an
argument that would be difficult, but not impossible,
to prove. Let us think of it now as a mental
experiment. The aim would be to reason that a CD that
sells only 1000 copies could produce more common good
than a CD that sells 10 million copies. How could it?
I will call the former difficult music and the latter
hit music from now on. It could be that the hit music,
in spite of its apparent popularity, is used in a
halfhearted manner, as a backdrop, and that even its
purchasers think of it as old-fashioned corny rubbish
already after a year. It could be that the hit music
is used as a brief escape and relief, as aural
wallpaper, as muzak, if so it could be said that the
pleasure it brings is instant but short-lived,
accessible to many but alienating from reality and
what is the most important feature: of a low
intensity.
A CD of a difficult music may have a pressing of only
500 copies but it could be that those that buy one
often have such a thirst of music that they'd rather
have their arm amputated than be without the music.
They might also be willing to pay ten times more than
the regular price for it, if they had the money. It
could also be that they listen to this CD with extreme
concentration, again and again, the enjoyment
undiminished, quite the contrary: the rewards of
listening growing as the increasing familiarity with
the music opens new and ever more versatile and rich
vistas into its content. It could also be that this
enthusiasm with music would be not an autistic
activity, not a way of forgetting the world but a way
of grasping it, a way of finding and molding a
meaningful position in it. If all this would be true
it could be said that the rewards of this difficult
music reveal themselves slowly but are long-lasting,
accessible only to those who put in enough time and
effort to grasp the complicated language, that this
music doesnt alienate but is life-affirming instead
and that the rewards of this music are of a burning
intensity.
How could you test this hypothesis of mine about the
difference of intensity and function in listening
between the layman and the art buff? Maybe by looking
into this: Observing music buffs, it can perhaps be
noticed that the bigger the record collection and the
more often its listened to (= the more important the
music is to them) the more unpopular (= generally
perceived as difficult), according to sales
statistics, is the music on their shelves.
Let us suppose that all this could be proved. You can
say that its a naïve and romantically lofty view about
the promise of art. I just say that its possible. If
all aforementioned was proved to be true, wouldnt the
real weighing between these two types of commodities
be this: Is the lame and even, because of its
escapism, hazardous pleasure of many more important
and more common good producing than the intensive and
thought-provoking pleasure of just a few? Which
actually is the more popular, the music that kills the
time for the 10 million people, or the music that
makes the life of 1000 people worth living? How could
we measure these two against each other? Its stated
that the hit record touches a much bigger number of
people than the difficult one, and its hazardousness
is as mild as the hazardousness of alcohol, in other
words bearable when balanced with the pleasures it
brings. We could also remind ourselves of the jobs it
guarantees, of the economic activity it produces. But
on the other hand we could say that, yes, the
entertainment of the lowest common denominator pleases
many, its side-effects are maybe bearable, but
shouldnt we still encourage ourselves to turn to
something more constructive and in the end more
intensively rewarding? Isnt that what we actually
crave for? When we complain and are bored in spite of
all our wealth, are not satisfied with the innumerable
TV-channels and chocolate bars and the new Mercedes,
when we then turn to drugs and bungee-jumping, even
base-jumping, isnt it then obvious that what there is
an over-abundance of is instant mild pleasures, and
what we fatally lack is slow but intensive experiences
of existence that require concentration and
commitment?
So, my claim is this:
The vocational nature of
artistic production, the extreme durability and
share-ability of artworks and the lasting ability to
trouble and interest us that artworks have, make art
as production, artist as a profession and artworks as
commodities capitalistically irrational and useless
but valuable for the common good and mankind. If this
is true about art, isnt it likely that there are other
activities as well, professions, branches of
production and even meaningful positions of existence
that produce common good but are not only
capitalistically insignificant but are even persecuted
by capitalism?
EROTICISM
(by Teemu Mäki but
also modified fragments from the writings of
Georges Bataille
included, 1995–2001)
...the squat is the best metaphor of life made worth
living that I know. I go down with the weight,
regularly, as often as my body can take it, keeping
this routine on year after year, even though it don't
give me money, it don't make me a better athlete
anymore, it don't improve my looks it's just an end in
itself. Down there with the weight is just the
shittiest place I know, that is why getting up gives
me such an enormous feeling of relief, verging on the
brink of ecstasy. Maximizes my mortality and so
maximizes the intensity of the experience of my
existence...
Life = (death at work). Kickboxing religion is this: A
death follows another death. This is the ridiculous
rhythm of existence. To which I choose to Dance. Pain
is the dick I am rubbing against my void, clitoris. I
wake up, open my eyes. And see the face of the Devil,
and it says: I am time. Then I ask: What am I?, and it
answers: You? You are nothing, you are just death at
work. Kickboxing can save your brains. Eroticism is
non-alienating consumerism without the accumulation of
artifacts and waste...
I want to feel how the lines of age are cut and drawn
into my body and mind as death works its way through
me in the guise of life…
...two contrasting basic desires form the/a
fundamental tension of human existence: the desire to
be autonomous and the desire to unite. Each being is
distinct from all others. His birth, his death, the
events of his life may have an interest for others,
but he alone is directly concerned in them. What is
good for him may be bad for someone else. He is born
alone. He dies alone. Between one being and another,
there is a gulf, a discontinuity. This gulf exists,
for instance, between you, listening to me, and me
speaking to you. We are attempting to communicate, but
no communication between us, even if communication
were possible, can abolish our fundamental difference.
If you die its not my death.
You and I are discontinuous beings. But I cannot refer
to this gulf that separates us without feeling that
this is not the whole truth of the matter. Its a deep
gulf, and I dont think it could be done away with by
any kind of bridges or empathy it. None the less, we
can approach this gulf from opposing directions, look
at each other over it, and look down into the abyss
together, experience its dizziness together. It can
hypnotize us. This gulf is death and the dizziness is
eroticism. For us, discontinuous beings that we are,
death means the continuity of being. In eroticism the
concern is to substitute for the individual isolated
discontinuity a feeling of profound continuity.
Continuity is what we are after, but generally only if
that continuity which the death of discontinuous
beings can alone establish is not the victor in the
long run. What we desire is to bring into a world
founded on discontinuity all the continuity such a
world can sustain...
You've got to admit that violence brings us all
pleasure too. Maybe its because of the will to power
that boils inside us. If there is not enough violence
in our life we go for a taste of it in our
imagination. In the utopian, understanding our own
violent desires could make it possible for us to
plunge into violent pleasures with such control, in
such circumstances, so selectively, that there would
be no need to burn down the house, set up a
concentration camp, wage wars of religion or try
sublimate or escape the forbidden fruit of violence
into consumerism…
…the breakers of joy can only take place on one
condition: that the ebb of pain be no less dreadful.
The doubt born of great sorrows cannot help but
illuminate those who enjoy we can fully know happiness
only transfigured, in the dark halo of sorrow. Reason
cannot solve the ambiguity: extreme happiness is only
possible at the moment I doubt it will last; it
changes on the contrary into heaviness the moment Im
certain of it. So we can live sensibly only in a state
of ambiguity. There is never a clear-cut difference,
for that matter, between sorrow and joy: the awareness
of sorrow on the prowl is always present, and even in
horror the awareness of possible joy is not entirely
suppressed: Its this awareness that adds dizzily to
the pain, but by the same token its what enables you
to endure the torments. This lightness of the lifes
game is so much a part of the ambiguity of things that
we feel contempt for the anxious, if they take things
too seriously. The common ideological mistake in
morality and dogma is that they confuse the tragic,
which is a game, with the serious, which is a mark of
labor.
(Epilogue: a poem by
Samuel Beckett
:)
my way is
in the sand flowing
my way is in the sand flowing
between
the shingle and the dune
the
summer rain rains on my life
on me
my life harrying fleeing
to
its beginning to its end
my
peace is there in the receding mist
when
I may cease from treading these long shifting
thresholds
and
live the space of a door
that opens and shuts
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