yes

[Alan schreibt]
>>
I think of ultimate control as leading (as in category theory, which I'm
trying now to understand) to a _terminal object,_ which absorbs everything
- cutting is among many other relevant things, an exerting of control over
the body, but it also reduces the body to a cipher; catatonia is another
example. 
>>


there is much here that seems true. and loss and control seem of course at odds,
with one another intimately, so that cutting oneself is a risk and a gamble one 
plays
with loss, and also with self promotion, self-reinsurance.  

in the political context of "extraordinary rendition"  i briefly mentioned on 
Monday,
i find little room for the detained and tortured men (i am assuming mostly men 
were
captured, but i do not have exact figures) to gamble except by confessing what 
they
might think their torturers want to hear, or be prepared to suffer and get 
killed.

having the task to teach body practices, i engaged extendedly today in the 
traces, this
perhaps strange-looking history in the west*  of body-artists cutting 
themselves, bleeding,
writing with their blood, draining themselves, having themselves shot at or 
buried or suspended in air and water,
suffocated, hurt, damaged, defaced, violated.  many many of these were women; 
some were feminists,  queer
artists, artists of color drawing attention to race and racialized violence and 
trauma, a subject that rarely is addressed here either.

in fact silence is an issue we rarely discuss or want to address; well, I did 
ask the moderators a few days ago whether this
month can be considered a relatively silent month? a cutting month.

no doubt some of these self-lacerations mentioned are risk-takings in protest,
they activate (control) provoking power, they accept losing, and they promote 
being remembered,
they want to be recalled, witnessed.

so somehow the loss of control can only be also a gain here, a calculated gain, 
Abramovic's night sea crossings.
(Ulay lost out, in history, it seems)

 but how, evoke history?  


Johannes Birringer


*[i am less familiar with live art having been practiced in asia, australia or 
latin america, though I remember a brutal 3 day performance in the 1990s
by the Peruvian group Chaclacayo, which was very disturbing & unforgettable, 
and I also remember Mike Parr down under nailing himself against the wall] 
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