----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------

dear all

So much to ponder, in your postings, that one doesn't know where to go, 
following Simon's dark pronouncement of our dilemma, and the fear projected 
onto us all?

>Is it possible to talk about a political intention in accelerating violent 
>imagery, collapsing historical precedence, dividing societies by reversing 
>meanings, that debt will be credit, that risk and danger will be security, 
>that wars are humanitarian, that is eradicating rights because they threaten 
>democracy, privatising and marketising weapons manufacture, including nuclear 
>arms, while directing their deployment in a controlled market of the senseless 
>consumption of living flesh, enslaving governments to corporations, while 
>violently overthrowing states who fail to surrender sovereignty or economic 
>self-determination?> [Simon]

The reversing of meanings, or the crossing over (inside/outside, before/after) 
the Law, also haunts me after reading Andreas' letter.  And yet, last night, I 
felt encouraged to think of poetry, yes, and the power of "accents" in the very 
ambiguity, unassimilated to power, towards law and power, also the power of 
joke     - thank you Murat for the text you linked us to 
[http://ziyalan.com/marmara/murat_nemet_nejat3.html]  - I laughed loud, and 
cried as well as you recount your wild dissimulations and "self-immolations" , 
migrating to an Am-erika without poetic continuities (and thus no anxiety of 
influence..of rights or rites);
and I had to think of Rustom Bharucha's last chapter as well, where he 
struggles to explain Ghandi's training to die, training the body to become the 
proper source of sacrifice (Terror and Performance, p. 156), training 
non-violence in Ghandi's Hindu understanding of 'ahimsa' (non-violence) and 
'satya' (truth)....  but thus also training to be sacrificed, to be beaten

and to my horror Rustom then engages a longer discussion of the performatives 
of suicide bombers who record their video testimonials, auto-erotically 
preparing the destruction of self, before the act of killing, or 'martyrdom.'   
The Jihadists  of ISIS, in interviews, are not sick in the sense in which the 
US secretary of state thinks they are. They knew their camera work too, in the 
videos, and two of them, believed to have been recruited from France and 
Britain, spoke yesterday of their 'spectacular' mission, perfectly ready, as 
Maxime Hauchard is quoted, for "martyrdom, obviously." 

After reading Monika's powerful plea for healing, lamenting as pollution and 
indictment of public space-against-forgetting-and-in-need-of-communal 
enunciation-rituals, and Ana's resigned response that there is too much 
un-health -- it occurred to me that quite a few here amongst our participants, 
including Christina and Mine, who insist on the arts as educational techniques, 
and Murat, Rustom and Monika, and also Fereshteh with her new play, and of 
course Alan when he makes music and writes apocalyptic poetry -- are probing 
performance and theatre along a potential line -- maybe also considered 
spatial/physical practice -  that can rupture emotionally (as briefly evoked 
last night in my reading of Hamed Taheri's lost home) and aurally the terrible 
"legal spectacle" , the "thick liquid undecidablity," as Andreas ponders. 


Fereshteh,  what were you (not) able to take from there to there, what accent 
do you speak in now?  what garden do you tend now?


And as a small but not irrespectful question to Monika, which was on my tongue 
last night when I ran into Olga Danylyuk, the question of speaking for others 
or of voice. 

[Monika schreibt] > Leila  Sadat, a scholar of international crime and law ... 
would travel around the globe, she would see and meet the communities, the 
individuals, the whole generations and nations affected, mourning, in 
suspension of trauma, but not fully mourning. What voice do they have, she 
asked me. Where does it live, the voice>  < This is why subjectivity appears as 
witness; this is why it can speak for those who cannot speak’ >

When I mentioned this to Olga, her reply was  - what if someone does not want 
to speak?  What do you do (for) when someone does not need to speak?



Johannes Birringer

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