[-empyre-] Friday, 20th: The Sonic "Work," New Media, and Theory

2014-06-20 Thread Jim Drobnick
--empyre- soft-skinned space--
Thanks for the discussion yesterday -- it feels like we've just scratched the 
surface! 

For today, the topic is The Sonic "Work," New Media, and Theory, and will 
involve questions by David Cecchetto, Christoph Cox and Seth Kim-Cohen. This 
series of inquiries address the ontological and/or socially-constructed aspects 
of sound art, how its works are circumscribed by or reconfigure the genre of 
media art, and how it may generate new theoretical paradigms:

1) David Cecchetto: Mark Hansen notes that the term “new media” has both a 
plural and singular sense: plural in that the novelty of every medium waxes as 
an incipient innovation before waning into the sedimented form of the medium 
itself; and at the same time singular in that "for the first time in our 
history, media […] has become distinct from its own technical infrastructure” 
(p. 172). What novel affordances are offered by aural practices—in the broadest 
sense—in the context of this second, singular, newness? Might aurality, for 
example, conjure alternative sensitivities to these ubiquitous data flows and 
rhythms of change? Or does such a claim slide too easily into an essentialized 
understanding of sound? (Mark Hansen, “New Media,” in Critical Terms for Media 
Studies, ed. by Mark Hansen and W.J.T. Mitchell, University of Chicago Press, 
2010). 

2) Christoph Cox: How can we move beyond the phenomenological and 
poststructuralist approaches that have thus far dominated thinking about sound?

3) Seth Kim-Cohen: In “What Is An Author?” Foucault writes, “A theory of the 
work does not exist, and the empirical task of those who naively undertake the 
editing of works often suffers in the absence of such a theory… The word work 
and the unity that it designates are probably as problematic as the status of 
the author's individuality.”

  Let’s take this problem seriously.

  Thinking the work as always otherwise suggests a certain wisdom in regard 
to the other: to be wise regarding the other is to be "otherwise." The other, 
in this case, is, of course, not necessarily another subject, or even another 
sonic object, but a host of forces beyond the material or formal aspects of the 
sonic work: politics, economics, history, intention, power, gender, race, etc. 
In this sense, the sonic work is constituted similarly to Foucault’s notion of 
the author function. It cannot be ascribed as, or to, a specific entity. 
Rather, it designates a sort of spatial conceit, a location in which disparate 
components might coalesce, implying a necessarily temporary and contingent 
substance, founded and formed in accordance, not with its own self-contained 
aspects or demands, but according to the exigencies of something we might call 
an event, rather than an entity. 

  My questions, then, are: What is gained (or lost) in abandoning the 
fictional unity of the sonic “work”? If we abandon material and formal aspects 
as the determinants of the boundaries of the phenomena under consideration, how 
do we adjudicate the jurisdiction of the work, not to mention, that of 
criticism, evaluation, or even, production? 

There's quite a bit to delve into here, but if David, Christoph or Seth would 
like to further elaborate, please jump in. 

Jim



___
empyre forum
empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
http://www.subtle.net/empyre

Re: [-empyre-] Friday, 20th: The Sonic "Work, " New Media, and Theory

2014-06-20 Thread John Hopkins

--empyre- soft-skinned space--


2) Christoph Cox: How can we move beyond the phenomenological and
poststructuralist approaches that have thus far dominated thinking about
sound?


By original thinking and writing with less simple-minded/reductive reliance on 
buzz words, dominant approaches, and what somebody else has said before, it's 
easy ...


jh

--
++
Dr. John Hopkins, BSc, MFA, PhD
taking Manhattan as Berlin isn't possible right now
http://tech-no-mad.net/blog/
++
___
empyre forum
empyre@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au
http://www.subtle.net/empyre


Re: [-empyre-] Friday, 20th: The Sonic "Work, " New Media, and Theory

2014-06-21 Thread Seth Kim-Cohen
--empyre- soft-skinned space--
Hello again

Moving on...

I want to take up David's question, specifically this: (quoting Hansen) "'for 
the first time in our history, media […] has become distinct from its own 
technical infrastructure' (p. 172). What novel affordances are offered by aural 
practices—in the broadest sense—in the context of this second, singular, 
newness?"

Having been significantly persuaded by Craig Dworkin's arguments in his book No 
Medium (MIT 2013), I'm not sure what media might mean as or "distinct from its 
own technical infrastructure.” Dworkin shows that every time we try to form the 
thought, "a medium is x" we create rules which the "medium" in question cannot 
obey. Ultimately, medium cannot be merely technical infrastructure, it cannot 
be the material support, it cannot be the genre or the form... At least, it's 
fair to say, it cannot be any of these things alone. Dworkin gives the example 
of Broodthaers' Pense Bete (http://armathrop.wikidot.com/mise-en-page). Copies 
of Broodthaers' own book of poems are encased in plaster. In the process, the 
books relinquish their claim on the medium of literature, at the same time, the 
plaster surrenders its status as a sculptural medium, because it now functions 
as an - admittedly poor - binding material for the book(s). Ultimately, the 
problem isn't that each medium swaps itself out for the status of another, but 
that each material and each medium slips into an ambiguous position between 
mediums, and I would argue, beyond mediality itself. 

To connect this argument to my question, the same basic logic applies to the 
status of the work. To say "the work is x" is inevitably to leave some feature 
or function of the work out of the equation (not to mention the fact that what 
the work is or does will change based on its time, place, and situation of 
audition). I would agree, then, with Dworkin who says that medium is a 
relational construct, a nexus of temporary and contingent forces brought 
together as a matter of convenience and convention to help corral the meaning 
and effect of a work or set of works. This is equally true of how we use the 
word "work." What the work is, where it begins and ends, what other entities it 
rightly interacts with, are all open questions to be contingently located at 
the crossroads of various concerns, audiences, interactions, histories, 
psychologies, intentions, politics, and desires. This is a messy pain in the 
ass for the artist, audience, and critic alike. And I wouldn't have it any 
other way. 

Have a nice weekend!
Seth

www.kim-cohen.com



On Jun 20, 2014, at 4:36 AM, Jim Drobnick wrote:

--empyre- soft-skinned space--


Thanks for the discussion yesterday -- it feels like we've just scratched the 
surface! 

For today, the topic is The Sonic "Work," New Media, and Theory, and will 
involve questions by David Cecchetto, Christoph Cox and Seth Kim-Cohen. This 
series of inquiries address the ontological and/or socially-constructed aspects 
of sound art, how its works are circumscribed by or reconfigure the genre of 
media art, and how it may generate new theoretical paradigms:

1) David Cecchetto: Mark Hansen notes that the term “new media” has both a 
plural and singular sense: plural in that the novelty of every medium waxes as 
an incipient innovation before waning into the sedimented form of the medium 
itself; and at the same time singular in that "for the first time in our 
history, media […] has become distinct from its own technical infrastructure” 
(p. 172). What novel affordances are offered by aural practices—in the broadest 
sense—in the context of this second, singular, newness? Might aurality, for 
example, conjure alternative sensitivities to these ubiquitous data flows and 
rhythms of change? Or does such a claim slide too easily into an essentialized 
understanding of sound? (Mark Hansen, “New Media,” in Critical Terms for Media 
Studies, ed. by Mark Hansen and W.J.T. Mitchell, University of Chicago Press, 
2010). 

2) Christoph Cox: How can we move beyond the phenomenological and 
poststructuralist approaches that have thus far dominated thinking about sound?

3) Seth Kim-Cohen: In “What Is An Author?” Foucault writes, “A theory of the 
work does not exist, and the empirical task of those who naively undertake the 
editing of works often suffers in the absence of such a theory… The word work 
and the unity that it designates are probably as problematic as the status of 
the author's individuality.”

  Let’s take this problem seriously.

  Thinking the work as always otherwise suggests a certain wisdom in regard 
to the other: to be wise regarding the other is to be "otherwise." The other, 
in this case, is, of course, not necessarily another subject, or even another 
sonic object, but a host of forces beyond the material or formal aspects of the 
sonic work: politics, economics, history

Re: [-empyre-] Friday, 20th: The Sonic "Work, " New Media, and Theory

2014-06-21 Thread Seth Kim-Cohen
--empyre- soft-skinned space--Hello again

Moving on...

I want to take up David's question, specifically this: (quoting Hansen) "'for 
the first time in our history, media […] has become distinct from its own 
technical infrastructure' (p. 172). What novel affordances are offered by aural 
practices—in the broadest sense—in the context of this second, singular, 
newness?"

Having been significantly persuaded by Craig Dworkin's arguments in his book No 
Medium (MIT 2013), I'm not sure what media might mean as or "distinct from its 
own technical infrastructure.” Dworkin shows that every time we try to form the 
thought, "a medium is x" we create rules which the "medium" in question cannot 
obey. Ultimately, medium cannot be merely technical infrastructure, it cannot 
be the material support, it cannot be the genre or the form... At least, it's 
fair to say, it cannot be any of these things alone. Dworkin gives the example 
of Broodthaers' Pense Bete (http://armathrop.wikidot.com/mise-en-page). Copies 
of Broodthaers' own book of poems are encased in plaster. In the process, the 
books relinquish their claim on the medium of literature, at the same time, the 
plaster surrenders its status as a sculptural medium, because it now functions 
as an - admittedly poor - binding material for the book(s). Ultimately, the 
problem isn't that each medium swaps itself out for the status of another, but 
that each material and each medium slips into an ambiguous position between 
mediums, and I would argue, beyond mediality itself. 

To connect this argument to my question, the same basic logic applies to the 
status of the work. To say "the work is x" is inevitably to leave some feature 
or function of the work out of the equation (not to mention the fact that what 
the work is or does will change based on its time, place, and situation of 
audition). I would agree, then, with Dworkin who says that medium is a 
relational construct, a nexus of temporary and contingent forces brought 
together as a matter of convenience and convention to help corral the meaning 
and effect of a work or set of works. This is equally true of how we use the 
word "work." What the work is, where it begins and ends, what other entities it 
rightly interacts with, are all open questions to be contingently located at 
the crossroads of various concerns, audiences, interactions, histories, 
psychologies, intentions, politics, and desires. This is a messy pain in the 
ass for the artist, audience, and critic alike. And I wouldn't have it any 
other way. 

Have a nice weekend!
Seth



www.kim-cohen.com



On Jun 20, 2014, at 4:36 AM, Jim Drobnick wrote:

--empyre- soft-skinned space--


Thanks for the discussion yesterday -- it feels like we've just scratched the 
surface! 

For today, the topic is The Sonic "Work," New Media, and Theory, and will 
involve questions by David Cecchetto, Christoph Cox and Seth Kim-Cohen. This 
series of inquiries address the ontological and/or socially-constructed aspects 
of sound art, how its works are circumscribed by or reconfigure the genre of 
media art, and how it may generate new theoretical paradigms:

1) David Cecchetto: Mark Hansen notes that the term “new media” has both a 
plural and singular sense: plural in that the novelty of every medium waxes as 
an incipient innovation before waning into the sedimented form of the medium 
itself; and at the same time singular in that "for the first time in our 
history, media […] has become distinct from its own technical infrastructure” 
(p. 172). What novel affordances are offered by aural practices—in the broadest 
sense—in the context of this second, singular, newness? Might aurality, for 
example, conjure alternative sensitivities to these ubiquitous data flows and 
rhythms of change? Or does such a claim slide too easily into an essentialized 
understanding of sound? (Mark Hansen, “New Media,” in Critical Terms for Media 
Studies, ed. by Mark Hansen and W.J.T. Mitchell, University of Chicago Press, 
2010). 

2) Christoph Cox: How can we move beyond the phenomenological and 
poststructuralist approaches that have thus far dominated thinking about sound?

3) Seth Kim-Cohen: In “What Is An Author?” Foucault writes, “A theory of the 
work does not exist, and the empirical task of those who naively undertake the 
editing of works often suffers in the absence of such a theory… The word work 
and the unity that it designates are probably as problematic as the status of 
the author's individuality.”

  Let’s take this problem seriously.

  Thinking the work as always otherwise suggests a certain wisdom in regard 
to the other: to be wise regarding the other is to be "otherwise." The other, 
in this case, is, of course, not necessarily another subject, or even another 
sonic object, but a host of forces beyond the material or formal aspects of the 
sonic work: politics, economics, histor

Re: [-empyre-] Friday, 20th: The Sonic "Work, " New Media, and Theory

2014-06-21 Thread David Cecchetto
--empyre- soft-skinned space--
Thanks for this Seth, 
I actually couldn’t agree more with literally everything that you say. And yet, 
I’m also cognizant of the fact that—precisely as part of the inarticulable 
seepages of meaning—we are seduced to think in terms of a ‘work’ in some sense. 
Put differently, to take the discursive dimensions of a work (or of ongoing 
fields of relation) seriously is to my mind to note how particular relations 
conjure particular versions of the “extra-discursive” even as these remain 
impossible. (I’m reminded of Derrida’s implicit warning about flattening 
difference through reference to its slipperiness; as he puts it: “it is between 
different things that one can think difference. But this difference-between may 
be understood in two ways: as another difference or as access to non 
difference.”)  

This is why I proposed my question in the (cybernetic) language of affordances, 
which takes categorical and descriptive insufficiency as a given. Of course—of 
course!—there is nothing like a pure separation of media and its technical 
infrastructure. And yet, I nonetheless think that the particularities of the 
nonlinearity of interaction are different in the scenario that Hansen describes 
(hence their particularity) and that this difference may constitute a 
difference in kind rather than just degree. What I was trying to explore, then, 
was precisely the ways that we might be differently seduced in a particular 
type of nexus that comes to prominence today. 

(apologies for sending this from my phone…as we all know, tempo can be as 
important as pitch so I wanted to clarify quickly)


On Jun 20, 2014, at 8:26 PM, Seth Kim-Cohen  wrote:

> --empyre- soft-skinned space--
> Hello again
> 
> Moving on...
> 
> I want to take up David's question, specifically this: (quoting Hansen) "'for 
> the first time in our history, media […] has become distinct from its own 
> technical infrastructure' (p. 172). What novel affordances are offered by 
> aural practices—in the broadest sense—in the context of this second, 
> singular, newness?"
> 
> Having been significantly persuaded by Craig Dworkin's arguments in his book 
> No Medium (MIT 2013), I'm not sure what media might mean as or "distinct from 
> its own technical infrastructure.” Dworkin shows that every time we try to 
> form the thought, "a medium is x" we create rules which the "medium" in 
> question cannot obey. Ultimately, medium cannot be merely technical 
> infrastructure, it cannot be the material support, it cannot be the genre or 
> the form... At least, it's fair to say, it cannot be any of these things 
> alone. Dworkin gives the example of Broodthaers' Pense Bete 
> (http://armathrop.wikidot.com/mise-en-page). Copies of Broodthaers' own book 
> of poems are encased in plaster. In the process, the books relinquish their 
> claim on the medium of literature, at the same time, the plaster surrenders 
> its status as a sculptural medium, because it now functions as an - 
> admittedly poor - binding material for the book(s). Ultimately, the problem 
> isn't that each medium swaps itself out for the status of another, but that 
> each material and each medium slips into an ambiguous position between 
> mediums, and I would argue, beyond mediality itself. 
> 
> To connect this argument to my question, the same basic logic applies to the 
> status of the work. To say "the work is x" is inevitably to leave some 
> feature or function of the work out of the equation (not to mention the fact 
> that what the work is or does will change based on its time, place, and 
> situation of audition). I would agree, then, with Dworkin who says that 
> medium is a relational construct, a nexus of temporary and contingent forces 
> brought together as a matter of convenience and convention to help corral the 
> meaning and effect of a work or set of works. This is equally true of how we 
> use the word "work." What the work is, where it begins and ends, what other 
> entities it rightly interacts with, are all open questions to be contingently 
> located at the crossroads of various concerns, audiences, interactions, 
> histories, psychologies, intentions, politics, and desires. This is a messy 
> pain in the ass for the artist, audience, and critic alike. And I wouldn't 
> have it any other way. 
> 
> Have a nice weekend!
> Seth
> 
> 
> 
> www.kim-cohen.com
> 
> 
> 
> On Jun 20, 2014, at 4:36 AM, Jim Drobnick wrote:
> 
> --empyre- soft-skinned space--
> 
> 
> Thanks for the discussion yesterday -- it feels like we've just scratched the 
> surface! 
> 
> For today, the topic is The Sonic "Work," New Media, and Theory, and will 
> involve questions by David Cecchetto, Christoph Cox and Seth Kim-Cohen. This 
> series of inquiries address the ontological and/or socially-constructed 
> aspects of sound art, how its works are circumscribed by o