| FUTURE CITY |
FREDRIC JAMESON
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Fredric Jameson is the William A. Lane Jr.
Professor of Comparative Literature at Duke
University. He is also chair of the Program
in Literature and of the Center for Critical
Theory. He is the author of many works, includingPostmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of
Late Capitalism (London: Verso, 1991) and most recently The Cultural Turn: Selected Writings on the
Postmodern, 1983-1998 (London: Verso, 1998). During his recent stay at the Cornell University
School of Criticism and Theory, Jameson shared
with us some of his thoughts on contemporary
culture.
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The Project on the City assembles research
from an ongoing graduate seminar directed
by Rem Koolhaas at the Harvard School of
Design; its first two volumes—the Great Leap
Forward, an exploration of the development
of the Pearl River Delta between Hong Kong
and Macao, and the Guide to Shopping—have
just appeared in sumptuous editions, from
Taschen. [1] These extraordinary volumes
are utterly unlike anything else one can
find in the print media; neither picture
books nor illustrated text, they are in movement,
like a cd rom, and their statistics are visually
beautiful, their images legible to a degree.
Although architecture is one of the few remaining
arts in which the great auteurs still exist—and
although Koolhaas is certainly one of those—the
seminar which has produced its first results
in these two volumes is not dedicated to
architecture but rather to the exploration
of the city today, in all its untheorized
difference from the classical urban structure
that existed at least up until World War
II. Modern architecture has been bound up
with questions of urbanism since its eighteenth
and nineteenth century beginnings: Siegfried
Giedion’s modernist summa, Space, Time and
Architecture, for example, begins with the
Baroque restructuration of Rome by Sixtus
V and ends with the Rockefeller Centre and
Robert Moses’s parkways, even though it is
essentially a celebration of Le Corbusier.
And obviously Le Corbusier was both an architect
and, with the Radiant Cities, Chandigarh
and the plan for Algiers, an ‘urban planner’.
But although the Project testifies to Koolhaas’s
commitment to the question of the city, he
is not an urbanist in any disciplinary sense;
nor can the word be used to describe these
books, which also escape other disciplinary
categories (such as sociology or economics)
but might be said to be closest to cultural
studies.
The fact is that traditional, or perhaps
we might better say modernist, urbanism is
at a dead end. Discussions about American
traffic patterns or zoning—even political
debates about homelessness and gentrification,
or real-estate tax policy—pale into insignificance
when we consider the immense expansion of
what used to be called cities in the Third
World: ‘in 2025,’ we are told in another
Koolhaas collective volume, ‘the number of
city-dwellers could reach 5 billion individuals
. . . of the 33 megalopolises predicted in
2015, 27 will be located in the least developed
countries, including 19 in Asia . . . Tokyo
will be the only rich city to figure in the
list of the 10 largest cities’. [2] Nor is
this a problem to be solved, but rather a
new reality to explore: which is, I take
it, the mission of the Project on the City,
two further volumes of which are so far projected:
one on Lagos, Nigeria, and one on the classical
Roman city as prototype.
Volume One of the Project, Great Leap Forward,
interprets the prodigious building boom in
China today—almost nine thousand high rises
built in Shanghai since 1992—not so much
in terms of some turn or return to capitalism,
but rather in terms of Deng Xiaoping’s strategy
to use capitalism to build a radically different
society: infrared rather than red:
the concealment of Communist, red ideals
. . . to save Utopia at a moment when it
was being contested on all sides, when the
world kept accumulating proofs of its ravages
and miseries . . . infrared©, the ideology
of reform, is a campaign to preempt the demise
of Utopia, a project to conceal 19th century
ideals within the realities of the 21st century.
Those who believe that the market is a reality,
anchored in nature and in Being, will have
difficulty grasping such a proposition, which
from their perspective will be dispelled
either by an outright conversion to capitalism
or by economic collapse. But consider the
architectural perspective: we witness thousands
upon thousands of buildings constructed or
under construction which have no tenants,
which could never be paid for under capitalist
conditions, whose very existence cannot be
justified by any market standards. We here
follow the outlines of housing communities
in the Pearl River Delta area which are being
projected for a future quite unlike those
researched by Western speculators or banks
and funding institutions in the capitalist
world. Indeed, the four communities explored
here are something like four different Utopian
projections: Shenzhen, a kind of alternate
or double of Hong Kong; Dongguan, a pleasure
city; Zhuhai, a golfing paradise; while the
old centre, Guanzhou (Canton), becomes a
kind of strange palimpsest, in which the
new is superimposed on an already existing
traditional economic centre. It is an extraordinary
travelogue into the future, and gives a more
concrete sense of China today and tomorrow
than most guidebooks (and many real tours).
Proteus goes shopping
The Guide to Shopping is something altogether
different, both in style and intent. Consumption
is, to be sure, a hot topic, but this is
no conventional study of it. Indeed, the
question of what this book is—an extraordinary
picture book; a collection of essays on various
urbanistic and commercial topics; a probe
of global space from Europe to Singapore,
from Disneyworld to Las Vegas; a study of
the shopping mall itself, from its first
ideologues all the way to its most contemporary
forms—corresponds to the more general ambiguity
of its object. Even if we stick to the initial
characterization of that object as ‘shopping’,
what kind of categorization is that? Is it
a physical one, involving the objects to
be sold? Is it psychological, involving the
desire to buy the objects in question? Or
architectural, having to do with the spatial
originality of those malls—which, famously,
trace their ancestry back to Walter Benjamin’s
nineteenth-century arcades; if not, as some
of the time charts in this book suggest,
back to the 7000 bc ‘city of Catalhöyük founded
for the trade of commodities’, or perhaps
the ‘invention’ of the retail trade in Lydia
in the seventh century bc? Or are we talking
here about the globalization of consumption
(consumerism)? Or the new trade routes and
production and distribution networks involved
in such globalization? (Or the businessmen
who organize those?) And what about the new
technologies evolved for commerce since Catalhöyük?
The prodigious increase in size of the merchandizing
companies and conglomerates, some of them
larger than many foreign countries? What
about shopping and the form of the contemporary
city—if there is one: significantly Koolhaas’s
collective project changed its name from
the ‘Project for what used to be the city’
to the plainer and more optimistic Project
on the City. To which may be added the question:
is a new kind of space emerging—control space,
junk space? And what does all this imply
for the human psyche and human reality itself?
(The first theoretician of advertising, Edward
Bernays, was Freud’s nephew.) What does it
imply for the future and for Utopia?
I am probably forgetting some of the other
modulations of this protean topic; but it
will be clear that it mobilizes, alongside
the obvious (and obviously anticipated) areas
of architecture and urbanism, such heterogeneous
disciplines as psychoanalysis and geography,
history and business, economics and engineering,
biography, ecology, feminism, area studies,
ideological analysis, classical studies,
legal decisions, crisis theory, et cetera.
Perhaps this kind of immense disciplinary
range is no longer quite so astonishing in
a postmodern era, in which the law of being
is de-differentiation, and in which we are
most interested in how things overlap and
necessarily spill across the disciplinary
boundaries. Or, if you prefer, in the postmodern
the distinction between the old specialized
disciplines is constitutively effaced and
they now fold back on each other, in the
most interesting studies—from Deleuze/Guattari’s
Thousand Plateaux to Caro’s Power Broker;
from Empire to Rembrandt’s Eyes; from Benjamin’s
Arcades to the Geschichte und Eigensinn of
Negt and Kluge; let alone SMXLX or even Space,
Time, and Architecture. Theory is here mostly
eschewed (although Baudrillard is mentioned
once, I believe), but you must not let that
tempt you into thinking that this is a non-theoretical
piece of cultural journalism, let alone a
coffee-table picture book. It is, as the
enumeration above might also suggest, a collective
volume; although not in the sense that experts
of the various disciplines mentioned above
are somehow judiciously assembled and their
contributions sampled in turn. This makes
it embarrassing for a reviewer to single
out specific names, although Sze Tsung Leong
has the most, and also the most philosophically
reflective, chapters, with Chuihua Judy Chung
a close follow-up for more concrete discussions.
As for Koolhaas, his role seems to have been
mostly organizational (that is to say, like
certain versions of the deity, nowhere and
everywhere all at once) save for an astonishing
appearance in his own name, which will be
discussed at the proper moment.
After the mall
I will try to put the theory back into all
this; but it would first be better to work
through some of the detail of the layers
or strata of the book, whose alphabetical
table of contents is quite misleading in
this respect; and thus a veritable tour de
force in its own right. For a few previews
on the mall are the way in here: they will
return, far more developed, in a variety
of contexts later on. But it is as though
the shopping mall is the spatial and architectural
wedge into this immense topic. Few forms
have been so distinctively new and so distinctively
American, and late-capitalist, as this innovation,
whose emergence can be dated: 1956; whose
relationship to the well-known decay-of-the-inner-city-rise-of-the-suburb
is palpable, if variable; whose genealogy
now opens up a physical and spatial prehistory
of shopping in a way that was previously
inconceivable; and whose spread all over
the world can serve as something of an epidemiological
map of Americanization, or postmodernization,
or globalization. So the mall focuses the
inquiry and serves as the frame for the prodigious
enlargement of all this later on. Meanwhile,
pages of chronologies, colour-coded cross-referencing
systems and innumerable thematic indexes
already train us in the rhizomatic form of
that enlargement; while a first set of comparisons
between retail areas all over the world,
and between national GDPs and retail revenues
of the top corporations, help us begin to
map the process in our minds and to form
a picture, not only of the relative hierarchies
of globalization, but also of a view of ‘shopping’
that will shortly become, dare I say, not
merely a political but also a metaphysical
issue.
At once, however, we are pulled up short,
and a fundamental difference between this
work and the proliferation of new and excellent
cultural-studies volumes on shopping, malls,
consumption and the like, becomes clear.
Before we even get to the thing itself, we
come upon the mall in crisis, losing money
and tenants, and on the verge of replacement
. . . by what? Benjamin took his snapshot
of the nineteenth-century arcade at the moment
of its decay—and thereby developed a whole
theory about history: that you could best
understand the present from the standpoint
of an immediate past whose fashions were
already just a little out of date. Crisis
puts us on notice that we have here to do,
not merely with the archeology or prehistory
of shopping, nor even its present but rather
its future. Whatever the future of the mall
as such, however, ‘“there’s lots of trash
out there”. Many cavernous old malls are
dinosaurs that can’t compete with the convenience
of drive-up value retailers in power centres
or strips’—to which one now needs no doubt
to add eBay.
Something has evidently happened to the preconditions
for the existence of malls in the first place.
But what were those preconditions? As in
Aristotelian causality, they come in a variety
of forms and shapes: the physical or engineering
preconditions are staged for us at once,
in the very first letter of this abc of shopping:
namely, air-conditioning—to which we will
return shortly in a more appropriate place.
As for the pre-history, we have certainly
been treated, in recent years, to a host
of interesting predecessor forms, if not
generally going as far back as Catalhöyük.
Most notably the arcade itself, essentially
developing in the early nineteenth century
and reaching its crisis in the 1850s and
60s—exactly the moment when the next form
comes along: the modern department store,
whose emergence Zola immortalized in Au bonheur
des dames ( Ladies’ Delight is a fictionalized
version of real-life names like Au printemps
and La Samaritaine, which have also been
exhaustively studied in recent years, for
their urbanistic as much as their commercial
consequences: for one thing, they are roughly
contemporaneous with Haussman’s immense transformation
of Paris). As for our form—now falling into
decay in its turn?—we will come to it in
a moment; indeed we will even put names and
faces to it. Like a novel or a poem, it actually
has an inventor or author, although the inventor
of a whole genre is a more appropriate parallel;
something one does not come across very often.
Delirious technologies
First, we leap ahead to measure the scope
and transformations of this protean form—into
airports, for example, which have now, all
the new ones, also become shopping malls;
into museums; finally into the city itself.
The older city centre—blighted by suburbs
and the new supermarkets, and then the malls
themselves—now, with postmodernity and gentrification,
catches up: not only by housing huge new
malls within itself, but by becoming a virtual
mall in its own right. Indeed, something
fundamental begins to happen to it (as is
fitting in a volume from the Project on the
City):
In 1994 the mall officially replaced the
civic functions of the traditional downtown.
In a New Jersey Supreme Court case regarding
the distribution of political leaflets in
shopping malls the court declared that ‘shopping
malls have replaced the parks and squares
that were “traditionally the home of free
speech,”’ siding with the protesters ‘who
had argued that a mall constitutes a modern-day
Main Street’.
But if ‘this return of shopping to the city
has been nothing short of triumphant’, the
authors find themselves obliged to add: ‘To
be saved, downtowns have had to be given
the suburban kiss of death’.
Back now to preconditions: could the bar
code itself—the Universal Product Code—be
one of these? Analyse its functions, and
one begins to see how the statistics it immediately
provides the retailer transform the whole
structure of inventory, resupplying, marketing
and the like. Brand names may well be more
of a cultural consequence of this kind of
shopping than a precondition, for their zones,
the flagship boutiques, mark ‘the sacred
precincts of the last global religion—capitalist
consumerism’. They also underscore a new
kind of dynamic, itself consumerized under
the Singapore logo ‘co-opetition’, which
celebrates the tide that lifts everybody’s
boats, including those of the competitors.
But with this we are off on a tour of the
world, or rather shopping’s world tour as
it touches one spot after another and gets
transformed by the local culture. Singapore
is an old fascination of Koolhaas’s (see
SMLXL), but its dynamics remain an extraordinary
object lesson—not only in development, but
also in the way in which a city-state fits
first into the region and then into the world
itself. The Crystal Palace takes us back
to origins once again (and to the signature
of an individual, Joseph Paxton). The Depato,
or Japanese department store, flings us,
if not into the future, then at least into
an extraordinary cultural mutation, intimately
connected with the logic of Tokyo’s growth
along the various private railroad lines
that fan out from the world’s third largest
city. And finally: Disney himself. For no
study of any innovations in this area can
be complete without a comprehensive recognition
of everything—all the various things, from
a new urbanism to a new kind of shopping,
a new kind of globalization, a new kind of
entertainment industry, even a new kind of
Utopia itself—that Walt invented. Indeed,
perhaps Disney and Disneyfication is better
studied in this new comparatist and globalized
context than as a sport or typically American
singleton.
But what about the mall itself, its space
for example? There is a psychology of space
in the mall—the patch, the corridor, the
matrix—just as there is an ecology of the
thing. And here the preconditions flow back
in with a vengeance: not only air-conditioning
and its very interesting history (more zany
inventors and creative and obsessive dreamers);
but also the escalator—the elevator had been
a crucial operator in Koolhaas’s early book
on the skyscraper landscape, Delirious New
York—with its momentous consequences for
shopping space and building possibilities;
this whole rich section takes up some thirty
pages. And also, somewhat later on, the skylight
and the sprinkler system; not to speak of
the way the new space can hide its service
systems out of sight—and not even to mention
the precursor ‘technologies’: counter, display
window, mirror and mannequin.
But let’s get on into the ideologies of the
matter, for here at last we rise from the
body to the soul: poor Jane Jacobs, for example,
is cast as something of a Hegelian ruse of
history in her own right for defending the
fundamental features of a true city experience
against the various urban and architectural
modernisms, and thereby enumerating ‘the
ingredients by which shopping could stand
in for urbanity and creat[ing] a “city lite”
that became the model for resuscitating America’s
ailing downtowns’. This seems a little harsh,
but it is certain that Jacobs—credited by
many architects and urbanists as triggering
the postmodern revolution in their field—is
no anti-capitalist and lays a good deal of
stress on (small) business.
But with Victor Gruen we are at origins (we
can’t call it ‘ground zero’ any more; what
about Harold-Bloomian genius?). For the mall
was his brainchild, and it is certain that
our experience of contemporary American space
or non-space is to a certain degree disalienated
by finding out that someone had the idea
for all this, and that it is not just some
weird accumulation of market-historical accidents
but the result of human production. To stress
Gruen’s achievement, however, is also at
once to set off the canonical reaction and
to recall, voluntarily or not, how few of
the great modernists ever designed such things,
let alone theorized them in the first place
(whereas they have become a staple of the
postmodernists). It is also to impose some
reflexion on that contemporary auteur who
is the garish or mass-cultural equivalent
of all these loftier aesthetic projects,
and a true phenomenon in his own right: Jon
Jerde, builder of Horton Plaza in San Diego
and much else. The high art/mass culture
split becomes unavoidable here too, as much
as in every other contemporary cultural field.
But just as we are about to reflect a bit
on that, and to go on to other related global
phenomena—the Lippo Group in Indonesia; a
return to the old Venturi–Scott-Brown notion
of ‘learning from Las Vegas’, and a rich
interview with the authors; feminism too
(women and shopping are an old and scurrilous
topic); artificial landscapes; the relation
of all this to psychology and psychoanalysis;
the European resistance to the mall and its
Americanizing consequences; and many other
interesting topics raised by the second half
of the alphabet—suddenly we come upon a black
hole, generating prodigious energies in all
directions.
Down with the junkspace virus
It is Rem Koolhaas’s contribution, ‘Junkspace’,
an extraordinary piece of writing that is
both a postmodern artefact in its own right,
and—a whole new aesthetic perhaps? unless
it is a whole new vision of history. In the
light of this serried text, we must pause
and rethink the entire project. But first
we have to look at the writing itself, whose
combination of revulsion and euphoria is
unique to the postmodern in a number of instructive
ways. We knew Koolhaas was an interesting
writer—in this, comparable to any number
of distinguished contemporary architects;
his books, in particular Delirious New York
and SMLXL, combining formal innovation with
incisive sentences and characteristically
provocative positions. But no single text
in those books prepared us for this sustained
and non-stop ‘performance’ of the built space,
not just of the contemporary city, but of
a whole universe on the point of fusing into
a kind of all-purpose indeterminate magma.
This goes much further than the querulous
culture-critical complaints about standardization
(or Americanization). It starts with junk
as the classical remainder (what is left
over after the dialectic, or after your psychoanalytic
cure): ‘If space-junk is the human debris
that litters the universe, junk-space is
the residue mankind leaves on the planet’.
Very soon, however, junkspace becomes a virus
that spreads and proliferates throughout
the macrocosm:
angular geometric remnants invading starry
infinities; real space edited for smooth
transmission in virtual space, crucial hinge
in an infernal feedback loop . . . the vastness
of Junkspace extended to the edges of the
Big Bang.
But this by itself could be little more than
Baudrillard or television theory—the critique
of virtuality as a promise (like the passing
critique of Deleuzian ‘flows’): the point
of the exercise is rather to find synonyms,
hundreds upon hundreds of theoretical synonyms,
hammered one upon the other and fused together
into a massive and terrifying vision, each
of the ‘theories’ of the ‘postmodern’ or
the current age becoming metaphorical to
the others in a single blinding glimpse into
the underside:
Junkspace exposes what previous generations
kept under wraps: structures emerge like
springs from a mattress, exit stairs dangle
in didactic trapeze, probes thrust into space
to deliver laboriously what is in fact omnipresent,
free air, acres of glass hang from spidery
cables, tautly stretched skins enclose flaccid
non-events.
As a tendency, Junkspace has been around
for some time, at first unrecognized; again,
like a virus undetected:
Architects thought of Junkspace first and
named it Megastructure, the final solution
to transcend their huge impasse. Like multiple
Babels, huge superstructures would last through
eternity, teeming with impermanent subsystems
that would mutate over time, beyond their
control. In Junkspace, the tables are turned:
it is subsystems only, without superstructure,
orphaned particles in search of framework
or pattern. All materialization is provisional:
cutting, bending, tearing, coating: construction
has acquired a new softness, like tailoring.
It would be too simple to say that architecture
and space are here metaphors for everything
else: but this is no longer architectural
theory; nor is it a novel whose point of
view is that of the architect. Rather it
is the new language of space which is speaking
through these self-replicating, self-perpetuating
sentences, space itself become the dominant
code or hegemonic language of the new moment
of History—the last?—whose very raw material
condemns it in its deterioration to extinction.
Aging in Junkspace is nonexistent or catastrophic;
sometimes an entire Junkspace—a department
store, a nightclub, a bachelor pad—turns
into a slum overnight without warning: wattage
diminishes imperceptibly, letters drop out
of signs, air conditioning units start dripping,
cracks appear as if from otherwise unregistered
earthquakes; sections rot, are no longer
viable, but remain joined to the flesh of
the main body via gangrenous passages.
These alarming ‘Alzheimer-like deteriorations’
are realizations of the nightmare moments
in Philip K. Dick, when reality begins to
sag like a drug hallucination and to undergo
vertiginous transmutations, revealing the
private worlds in which we are trapped beyond
time. But these moments are no longer terrifying;
they are in fact by now rather exhilarating;
and it is precisely this new euphoria that
remains to be explained.
Empire of blur
To be sure, Koolhaas means no more than perpetual
renovation, and not only the tearing down
of the old but also the perpetual recycling
to which the once noble (and even megalomaniacal)
vocation of the Master Builder has been reduced:
‘Anything stretched—limousines, body parts,
planes—turns into Junkspace, its original
concept abused. Restore, rearrange, reassemble,
revamp, renovate, revise, recover, redesign,
return—the Parthenon marbles—redo, respect,
rent: verbs that start with re—produce Junkspace’.
This is the disappearance of all the ‘originals’
no doubt, but along with them, of History
itself:
the only certainty is conversion—continuous—followed,
in rare cases, by ‘restoration’, the process
that claims ever new sections of history
as Junkspace. History corrupts, absolute
history corrupts absolutely. Colour and matter
are eliminated from these bloodless grafts;
the bland has become the only meeting ground
for the old and the new.
We are henceforth in the realm of the formless
(Rosalind Krauss, out of Bataille); but ‘formlessness
is still form, the formless also a typology’.
It is not quite the ‘anything goes’ of the
new generation of computer-generating ‘blob
architects’ (Greg Lynn, Ben van Berkel):
‘in fact, the secret of Junkspace is that
it is both promiscuous and repressive: as
the formless proliferates, the formal withers,
and with it all rules, regulations, recourse’.
Shades of Marcuse and repressive tolerance?
Junkspace is a Bermuda triangle of concepts,
a petri dish abandoned: it cancels distinctions,
undermines resolve, confuses intention with
realization. It replaces hierarchy with accumulation,
composition with addition. More and more,
more is more. Junkspace is overripe and undernourishing
at the same time, a colossal security blanket
that covers the earth in a stranglehold of
care . . . Junkspace is like being condemned
to a perpetual Jacuzzi with millions of your
best friends . . . A fuzzy empire of blur,
it fuses high and low, public and private,
straight and bent, bloated and starved to
offer a seamless patchwork of the permanently
disjointed.
There are no doubt still ‘trajectories’ with
their magical moments:
Postmodernism adds a crumple-zone of viral
poché that fractures and multiplies the endless
frontline of display, a peristaltic shrink-wrap
crucial to all commercial exchange. Trajectories
are launched as ramp, turn horizontal without
any warning, intersect, fold down, suddenly
emerge on a vertiginous balcony above a large
void. Fascism without dictator. From the
sudden dead end where you were dropped by
a monumental, granite staircase, an escalator
takes you to an invisible destination, facing
a provisional vista of plaster, inspired
by forgettable sources.
There are also, in this churning pseudo-temporality
of matter ceaselessly mutating all around
us, moments of rare, of breathtaking beauty:
‘railway stations unfold like iron butterflies,
airports glisten like cyclopic dewdrops,
bridges span often negligible banks like
grotesquely enlarged versions of the harp.
To each rivulet its own Calatrava’. But such
moments are scarcely enough to compensate
for the nightmare, or to make the hallucinations
all worthwhile. Cyberpunk seems to be a reference
to grasp at here, which—like Koolhaas, only
ambiguously cynical—seems positively to revel
in its own (and its world’s) excess. But
cyberpunk is not really apocalyptic, and
I think the better coordinate is Ballard,
the Ballard of the multiple ‘end-of-the-worlds’,
minus the Byronic melancholy and the rich
orchestral pessimism and Weltschmerz.
For it is the end of the world that is in
question here; and that could be exhilarating
if apocalypse were the only way of imagining
that world’s disappearance (whether we have
to do here with the bang or the whimper is
not the interesting question). It is the
old world that deserves the bile and the
satire, this new one is merely its own self-effacement,
and its slippage into what Dick called kipple
or gubble, what LeGuin once described as
the buildings ‘melting. They were getting
soggy and shaky, like jello left out in the
sun. The corners had already run down the
sides, leaving great creamy smears.’ Someone
once said that it is easier to imagine the
end of the world than to imagine the end
of capitalism. We can now revise that and
witness the attempt to imagine capitalism
by way of imagining the end of the world.
Breaking back into History
But I think it would be better to characterize
all this in terms of History, a History that
we cannot imagine except as ending, and whose
future seems to be nothing but a monotonous
repetition of what is already here. The problem
is then how to locate radical difference;
how to jumpstart the sense of history so
that it begins again to transmit feeble signals
of time, of otherness, of change, of Utopia.
The problem to be solved is that of breaking
out of the windless present of the postmodern
back into real historical time, and a history
made by human beings. I think this writing
is a way of doing that or at least of trying
to. Its science-fictionality derives from
the secret method of this genre: which in
the absence of a future focuses on a single
baleful tendency, one that it expands and
expands until the tendency itself becomes
apocalyptic and explodes the world in which
we are trapped into innumerable shards and
atoms. The dystopian appearance is thus only
the sharp edge inserted into the seamless
Moebius strip of late capitalism, the punctum
or perceptual obsession that sees one thread,
any thread, through to its predictable end.
Yet this alone is not enough: a breaking
of the sound barrier of History is to be
achieved in a situation in which the historical
imagination is paralysed and cocooned, as
though by a predator’s sting: no way to burst
through into the future, to reconquer difference,
let alone Utopia, except by writing yourself
into it, but without turning back. It is
the writing that is the battering ram, the
delirious repetition that hammers away at
this sameness running through all the forms
of our existence (space, parking, shopping,
working, eating, building) and pummels them
into admitting their own standardized identity
with each other, beyond colour, beyond texture,
the formless blandness that is no longer
even the plastic, vinyl or rubber of yesteryear.
The sentences are the boom of this repetitive
insistence, this pounding on the hollowness
of space itself; and their energy now foretells
the rush and the fresh air, the euphoria
of a relief, an orgasmic breaking through
into time and history again, into a concrete
future.
Such is then the secret of this new symbolic
form, which Koolhaas is not the only one
of our contemporaries to mobilize (but few
do it better). To come back now slowly, to
reenter as in a decompression chamber the
more prosaic world of shopping that was the
takeoff point for this delirious adventure
is also to search for the occasion, for what
triggered it off, what provoked such a monumental
and truly metaphysical reaction. It was in
fact given to us early on, in an offhand
sentence of Sze Tsung Leong, at the end of
a more restrained and focused account of
the commercial transformation of the globe
which is, after all, the topic of the present
volume: ‘In the end, there will be little
else for us to do but shop’. The world in
which we were trapped is in fact a shopping
mall; the windless closure is the underground
network of tunnels hollowed out for the display
of images. The virus ascribed to junkspace
is in fact the virus of shopping itself;
which, like Disneyfication, gradually spreads
like a toxic moss across the known universe.
But what is this shopping we have been on
about for so long (and the authors even longer)?
Theoretically, it comes in many packages
(and predictably we can shop around for our
favourite theoretical version or brand-name).
The tradition of Western Marxism called it
‘commodification’, and in that form the analysis
goes back at least as far as Marx himself,
in the famous opening chapter of Capital
on commodity fetishism. The nineteenth-century
religious perspective is Marx’s way of foregrounding
a specifically superstructural dimension
in the market exchanges of capitalism. He
understood ‘the metaphysical subtleties and
theological niceties’ of the commodity as
the way in which the labour relationship
is concealed from the buyer (the ‘shopper’?)
and he thereby grasped commodification as
an essentially ideological operation, a form
of false consciousness which has the specific
function of masking the production of value
from the
(bourgeois) consumer. Georg Lukács’s philosophical
classic, History and Class Consciousness,
the inaugural text of so-called Western Marxism,
develops this analysis on the larger plane
of the history of philosophy itself, resituating
commodification at the centre of the more
general overall social process of mental
as well as physical reification.
After World War II, however, the ideological
orientation of this theme takes a somewhat
different turn, at a moment when the sale
of commodities and luxury items beyond those
of simple subsistence or social reproduction
becomes generalized throughout the increasingly
more prosperous First World areas of Western
Europe and the United States (and eventually
Japan). At this point, the situationists
and their theoretician Guy Debord invent
a new perspective on commodification in their
dictum that ‘the final form of commodity
fetishism is the image’. This is the takeoff
point for their theory of so-called spectacle
society, in which the former ‘wealth of nations’
is now grasped as ‘an immense accumulation
of spectacles’. With this perspective, we
are much closer to our current assumptions
(or doxa), namely that the commodification
process is less a matter of false consciousness
than of a whole new life style, which we
call consumerism and which is comparable
rather to an addiction than a philosophical
error or even an ill-advised choice of political
parties. This turn is part of the more contemporary
view of culture as the very substance of
everyday life (itself a relatively new postwar
concept, pioneered by Henri Lefebvre).
The images of the Guide to Shopping are thus
images of images, and should thereby enable
a new kind of critical distance, something
they do conceptually by returning the notion
of the commodity to its original situation
in the commercial exchange. What we do with
commodities qua images, then, is not to look
at them. The idea that we buy images is already
a useful defamiliarization of the notion;
but the characterization whereby we shop
for images is even more useful, displacing
the process onto a new form of desire and
situating it well before the actual sale
takes place—when, as is well known, we lose
all interest in the object as such. As for
consumption, it has been volatilized altogether
in this perspective; and, as Marx feared,
has become altogether spiritual. Materiality
is here a mere pretext for our exercise of
the mental pleasures: what is any longer
particularly material in the consumption
of an expensive new car one drives around
the local streets and has washed and polished
as frequently as one can?
‘In the end, there will be little else for
us to do but shop’. Does this not reflect
an extraordinary expansion of desire around
the planet, and a whole new existential stance
of those who can afford it and who now, long
since familiar with both the meaninglessness
of life and the impossibility of satisfaction,
construct a life style in which a specific
new organization of desire offers the consumption
of just that impossibility and just that
meaninglessness? Indeed, perhaps this is
the right moment to return to the Pearl River
Delta and Deng Xiaoping’s postmodern socialism,
in which ‘getting rich’ no longer means actually
making the money, but rather constructing
immense shopping malls—the secret of which
lies in the fact that to shop does not require
you to buy, and that the form of shopping
is a performance which can be staged without
money, just as long as its appropriate spaces,
or in other words Junkspace, have been provided
for it.
[1] Chuihua Judy Chung, Jeffrey Inaba, Rem
Koolhaas and Sze Tsung Leong, eds, Great
Leap Forward, Harvard Design School Project
on the City, 722 pp, Cologne 2002; and Guide
to Shopping, Harvard Design School Project
on the City, 800 pp, Cologne 2002.
[2] Mutations, Barcelona 2001.
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