Research
Question:
I propose
to conduct a visual investigation based on the theoretic principles of
Hauntology. Hauntology - the logic of the ghost, is ephemeral and
abstract. Spectres are unsettling because
they are never fully seen. Culturally accepted notions of a haunting occur when the present is
visited by a spirit from the past, usually with a warning about the future.
This manifestation of space disrupted by a time that is ‘out-of-joint’ is known
as a dyschronia.
Dyschronia is
manifest in the persistent traces of that which has never arrived, but which
will never go away. [Fisher 2006]
The term ‘
Hauntology’ was introduced by French philosopher Jacques Derrida in his 1993
publication ‘Spectres of Marx’. In it, Derrida postulated that following the
demise of ‘real socialisms’ in Europe and the displacement of leftist political
formations. The West will continue to be haunted by Marx’s spirit of radical
critique as an antidote to the apparent ‘death of ideology’.
“To haunt does not mean to be
present, and it is necessary to introduce haunting into the very construction
of a concept. Of every concept, beginning with the concepts of being and time.
That is what we would be calling here a hauntology”
[Derrida]
There is
some conjecture that Derrida may have used ‘hauntology’ as a near-homophone to
the word ‘ontology’. Ontology is the philosophical study
of all phenomena that have existed and will exist, visible and invisible. The
binary opposition of the concepts of hauntology and ontology, bears all the
hallmarks of Derrida’s earlier formulation of a type of semiotic
analysis, called ‘deconstruction’.
Deconstructionism
challenges the spectral space that exists between
polar opposites such as; ‘speech/writing’, ‘life/death’, ‘signifier/signified’. This process of metaphysical re
interpretation, involves overturning traditional hierarchies, adjusting
their structure and altering their functionality. Deconstruction questions how
the external representation of a concept can become part of its internal
essence - How the surface can get under the skin.
My research question is:
How can hauntological concepts be expressed in the specific fields of graphic design?
Aims
and Objectives:
Postmodernism as expressed in late capitalist society has instigated
a cultural malaise. The sterility of the political landscape represents ‘the
end of politics & ideology’. New technologies encourage an unwillingness
to commit to the present, fostering
a ghostly presence/absence or ‘non time’. The prosaic architectural
functionality of airports, retail parks, and other homogeneous buildings,
absent of any sense of identity are examples of ‘non-places’. Crucially, postmodernisms appetite for a
ceaseless diet of pastiche and revivalism, signifies the ‘loss of loss itself’, nothing dies anymore.
This lack of cultural momentum signals, for many, ‘the end of history’, as
Hamlet said to Horatio, time itself, is ‘out of joint’.
If history has run out, hauntology only grows more relevant
as years go on. Indeed, hauntology may be the
closest thing we have to a zeitgeist. [Fisher 2006]
The
present can only be viewed through the lens of the past, with occasional
glances into the future. Today’s cultural obsession with revivalism
(retromania) represents a denial of the future in favor of the comforting reassurance
offered by the ‘ghost’ of the past. This intellectual realignment of history is
unsatisfactory and untenable. Hauntology proposes a positive alternative to
postmodernity's 'nostalgia mode'.
What is nostalgia if
not an amnesia of the present (and future)? Amnesia of the present, is the
complement to hauntology's nostalgia for the future. [Fisher]
I have a passion for
visual innovation and digital experimentation. To have any substance, these
examination require the consolidation of solid theoretical rationale. My
recently completed Degree – Final Honours Project used Glitch Art to
communicate the Derridian theory of deconstruction. I believe hauntology could offer
the next logical step in that line of experimental enquiry.
Audience
Although the philosophical background of my subject matter
may be considered ‘high brow’ my intention is not present any solution which
might be considered elitist. Concepts of spiritualism and the supernatural have
a wider cultural appeal. I would hope that any final output that successfully
illustrates the sociological relevance of hauntology would have significant
resonance.
Context
Hauntology is an aesthetic effect, a way of reading and understanding
design. Works which might hauntological frequently incorporate optimistically archaic
imagery such as those associated with ‘retrofuturism’ or ‘steampunk’. These are
often represented using discordant ‘lo-fi’ effects, surrealism, fragmentation or
collage.
Hauntological imagery is generally comprised of two opposing
layers. The first layer (‘the past’) might express hope and confidence, but can
only be seen through the lens of the second layer (‘the present’) which casts
doubt on the ‘truth’ of the first layer by expressing a satirical doubt and
disillusionment. This process of obfuscation is a metaphor for memory.
There is a long-standing link between ghosts and modern technology.
A plethora of contemporary horror films
have featured the demonic possession of digital or analogue technologies. An
examination of ‘ghosts in the machine’, or the echos of JPEG compression
artifacts may be appropriate avenues of enquiry.
Other rich fields of hauntological examination are; the enigma
of the ‘non place’ and placelessness, memorial and longing, transitional
beings, displacement and disappearance, demonic manifestations, auras, elegies
of nature, and the translucency of the psyche. At its most basic level, hauntology has associations with
faux-vintage photography, a genre of atmospheric, electronic music, movies such
as ‘Inception’ or ‘The Shining’ and TV series like ‘Life on Mars’.
Although the
philosophical field of hauntology is relatively nascent and doesn’t have a huge
epistemology. I believe there may be sufficient research material concerning
related fields. Rather than a focused study on dyschronia, I may be able to use
hauntology as a lens through which I can analyze graphic design processes that
interrogate perceptions of life/death, future/past and presence/absence.
Related
fields of study that I intend to study:
• Semiotics
• Psychogeography
• Retro futurism
• Philosophy (esp. post structuralism)
• Sociology
• State Censorship
• Samizdat
• Public information broadcasting
• Moving image and film studies
• X-ray photography
• Glitch art and databending
• Spiritualism and witchcraft
Action
Plan
Methodology:
Derrida’s hauntology is defined by its ambiguity; that is, it hovers in the
spectral space, the threshold of being and presence, life and death, departure
and return. Today, hauntology
inspires many fields of investigation, from the visual arts to philosophy
through electronic music, politics, fiction and literary criticism. It covers issues of postmodernism, metafiction and retro-futurism, dyscronia, spiritualism and
phantoms, displacement and longing. It can even be seen as a way of describing the
fluidity of identity among individuals, marking the dynamic and inevitable
shades of influence that link one person’s experience to anothers, both in the
present and over time.
My
task during unit 2 will be to rationalize the potential of these disparate
zones to yield opportunities for visual dialogue. I will need to conduct secondary and tertiary research into
examples of hauntological design in order to chart its development as a visual
language. This will no doubt take the form of a visual audit that identifies
examples of design which bear the hallmarks of hauntological rationalization.
Once these examples have been typologized it should be possible to analyze and critique
their methodologies as well as quantifying their cultural resonance.
If during the course of my research I encounter a
practitioner, whose work I find particularly insightful, I may take the
opportunity to instigate some form of dialogue in order to enhance my research
findings.
Throughout
each stage of the research process it will be necessary to conduct continuous
visual experimentation in order to test findings and generate ideas for the output
stage. Although I’m keen to adopt an output solution which is a departure from
traditional print techniques, I need to take an even-handed approach in order to
identify the appropriate field of graphic design for each line of enquiry.
Output ideas:
Although, at this point, I wouldn’t like to predict the
format of any final outcome. This
could take the form of a single project, multiple linked experiments or a
thesis. I am confident that the subject matter will allow me to
scope to demonstrate all the major learning outcomes: experimentation/ research, subject knowledge / analysis, personal and
professional development, technical
competence/ communication and presentation skills.
Potential output ideas:
• Ghosts in the machine - digital
compression
• Audiovisual piece based on
hauntalogical soundtrack
• Echo’s - ancient radio waves from
space
• Hauntalogical typographic study
• X-ray imagery based on
Rotentgenizdat / Samizdat
• Presence / absence, etching on
acrylic materials
Bibliography
Derrida, J. (1993) Specters of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work
of Mourning & the New International. Paris: Éditions Galilée
Fisher, M. (2006)
Hauntology as
neurology December 24, 2006. Available online at http://k-punk.abstractdynamics.org/archives/2006_12.html
Harper, A. (2009) Hauntology:
The Past Inside The Present Tuesday, 27 October 2009. Available online at http://rougesfoam.blogspot.co.uk/2009/10/hauntology-past-inside-present.html
McNeil, J. (2011) Past and Present in
"Strange Simultaneity": Mark Fisher Explains Hauntology at NYU.
Available online at: http://rhizome.org/editorial/2011/may/18/hauntology/
Fisher, M. (2006)
Hauntology as
neurology December 24, 2006. Available online at: http://k-punk.abstractdynamics.org/archives/2006_12.html
casualagent
(2011) HAUNTOLOGY –
preliminary notes Posted: December 7, 2011. Available online at: http://project47.org/2011/12/07/hauntology-preliminary-notes/
Gallix, A. (2011) Hauntology: A not-so-new critical
manifestation 17 June 2011. Available online at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2011/jun/17/hauntology-critical
Hewicker, S. (2010) Hauntology
Exhibition 2010 . Available online at: http://www.bampfa.berkeley.edu/exhibition/hauntology
Gildersleeve, J. (2007) An Unnameable
Thing: Spectral Shadows in Elizabeth Bowen’s The Hotel and The Last September,
University of Bristol egjeg@bristol.ac.uk
Dunn, M D. (2007) On Emediacy: The
Internet as Occult Space / Perceiving the Human in the Electronic Realm
mddunn@shaw.ca
Jameson, F. (1991) Postmodernism,
or the cultural logic of late capitalism. London: Verso
Lacan, J. (1977) Écrits: A
Selection*, transl. by Alan
Sheridan, New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1977, and revised version, 2002,
transl. by Bruce Fink
Derrida, J. (1967) Of Grammatology. English translation 1976.
Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press
Darian Leader: Introducing Lacan: A Graphic Guide
Slavoj Zizek: Enjoy Your Symptom!: Jacques Lacan in Hollywood and Out
Slavoj Zizek: Living in the End Times
Francis Fukuyama: The end of history and the last man
Simon Reynolds: Retro mania: Pop Culture's Addiction to its Own Past
Esther Peeren and Maria del Pilar Blanco: Popular Ghosts: The Haunted Spaces of Everyday Culture
Stuart Sim: Derrida and the End of History (Postmodern Encounters)
Mark Simon Riley: An Aesthetics of Hauntology
Thomas Mical: Hauntology, or Spectral Space
Colin Davis: Hauntology, spectres and phantoms
Marc Augé: Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity
David King: The Commissar Vanishes
Nick Vasey: X-Ray – See Through the World Around you
Ann Komaromi: The Material Existence of Soviet Samizdat.
Darian Leader: Introducing Lacan: A Graphic Guide
Slavoj Zizek: Enjoy Your Symptom!: Jacques Lacan in Hollywood and Out
Slavoj Zizek: Living in the End Times
Francis Fukuyama: The end of history and the last man
Simon Reynolds: Retro mania: Pop Culture's Addiction to its Own Past
Esther Peeren and Maria del Pilar Blanco: Popular Ghosts: The Haunted Spaces of Everyday Culture
Stuart Sim: Derrida and the End of History (Postmodern Encounters)
Mark Simon Riley: An Aesthetics of Hauntology
Thomas Mical: Hauntology, or Spectral Space
Colin Davis: Hauntology, spectres and phantoms
Marc Augé: Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity
David King: The Commissar Vanishes
Nick Vasey: X-Ray – See Through the World Around you
Ann Komaromi: The Material Existence of Soviet Samizdat.
I really like your article, esp this one! thx :D
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