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	<title>Ballardian &#187; alternate worlds</title>
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		<title>Review: Jeremy Reed&#8217;s West End Survival Kit</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/review-jeremy-reeds-west-end-survival-kit</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/review-jeremy-reeds-west-end-survival-kit#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Feb 2010 04:15:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CCTV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hawkwind]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[biology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body horror]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[A review-essay of Jeremy Reed's latest collection of poetry, West End Survival Kit. The review also discusses the long and enigmatic relationship Reed has with Ballard, who wrote the foreword to the collection, where he paid tribute to Reed's 'extraterrestrial talent'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /></p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed at the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/rick-mcgraths-letter-from-london-jg-ballard-memorial">JG Ballard Memorial</a>, 2009. Photo: Rick McGrath.</em></p>
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<p><em>West End Survival Kit, by Jeremy Reed. Furze Hill, Hove: Waterloo Press, 2009. ISBN: 978-1-906742-07-2.</em></p>
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<p><strong>JEREMY REED IS A HUGELY PROLIFIC</strong> poet, novelist, biographer and spoken-word musician, the author of 15 novels, 16 poetry collections and 14 works of non-fiction since 1984. Yet despite that phenomenal output, he remains an exile in British letters. <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">According to Reed</a>, ‘People have reacted so nastily to me and tried to airbrush me out of the picture…  The establishment never forgave me, because I used to give readings in heavy make-up’. That’s not a working method that was ever going to appeal to Sir Andrew Motion, the former Poet Laureate, who famously dubbed Reed ‘that effete little pseud’. He also sledged him as the ‘David Bowie of the poetry circuit’, an especially backhanded insult, given Reed’s sartorial style and the fact that among his back catalogue are biographies on Lou Reed, Marc Almond and Brian Jones. In fact, the latter provided one very revealing insight into the mind of Jeremy Reed. Once asked what he thought was the defining moment of the 60s, <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">he replied</a>: ‘I&#8217;d say it was the first time Brian Jones wore a girl’s polka-dotted blouse. It had never been done before’. In the same interview, he derided ‘the barbiturate poetry of Andrew Motion and those post-Larkin poets. Very grey, very drab’. And so the stage is set.</p>
<p>Following the pattern of this exile, whenever there is talk about the latter-day British writers who enjoyed the friendship, patronage or thematic repertoire of J.G. Ballard, invariably the same names are mentioned: <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/this-most-astonishing-penumbra-will-self-on-jg-ballard">Will Self</a> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/his-personal-horizon-sinclair-and-self-on-ballard">and</a> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iain-sinclair-when-in-doubt-quote-ballard">Iain Sinclair</a>. Not Reed. Yet Reed and Ballard enjoy a long and very intriguing relationship. Reed’s science-fiction novel <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FDiamond-Nebula-Jeremy-Reed%2Fdp%2F0720609224%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265596967%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Diamond Nebula</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> (1994), set in the 23rd century, even featured a film-director character obsessed by Bowie, Ballard and Warhol:</p>
<blockquote><p>Her eye was arrested by an open photograph album … David Bowie at the Rainbow Theatre, 1972; at the LA Forum in 1976; Hiroshima, 1973; LA Amphitheatre, 1974; Wembley, 1976: the images seeming to have been chosen for their visual diversity and metamorphoses. Over the page were weirdly angled shots of Ballard getting into his car at Shepperton after the publication of Crash; and then the publicity photographs of him that had appeared on the jackets of High-Rise and Myths of the Near Future, together with a series of solarized images in the manner of Man Ray, in which the writer’s head was superimposed on Brancusi sculptures. Cindy flicked through the obsessive preoccupations: Warhol screened by black glasses on a couch at the Factory, and then seen filming Edie Sedgwick and Gino Persicho in Beauty 2; and a few pages on, isolated, filming Chelsea Girls.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, Diamond Nebula.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>These aren’t the ordinary images of Ballard (let alone Bowie) that get bandied about. They are cult snapshots, taken by a writer with a fan’s eye for obscure detail surrounding the object of worship. As an alternative biography, then, of its three avant-garde celebrities, Diamond Nebula is a tantalising work, drawing on Reed’s main obsessions: style, flashy pop, mutation (both psychic and physical), cult fame, inner space … and Ballard.  In the preface to the book, Reed describes ‘Ballard as the chief proponent of the futuristic novel … seen as the person most receptive to occupying a colony that looks towards the arrival of mutants from another galaxy’. Reed talks of creating an environment in which ‘the external world provides a backdrop to the exploration of inner space, a vanishing-point rather than a structure for continuous reference’, and with further reference to the ‘geography of the unconscious’, it’s easy to realise the superficial similarities with Ballard’s own working methods and obsessions.</p>
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<p><em>Jeremy Reed speaking to Nicky Singer at the ICA.</em></p>
<p>In interview, too, Reed always pays his dues, <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">recording his writerly debt</a> to Ballard’s ‘visionary present’ – an especial act of linguistic engagement that ‘transform[s] the universe into its imagined equivalent’ and provides an instruction manual in ‘blowing up the social structure’. <a href="http://www.3ammagazine.com/litarchives/2005/dec/interview_jeremy_reed.shtml">He sees</a> Ballard’s work as a hotwire to the pure, uncut imaginative spirit that also powers the work of Stephen Barber and Edmund White:</p>
<blockquote><p>They all have that very charged language. When I began as a writer, Ballard was the writer who had a new language that I was looking for, the way he crystallised the modern world into images. It’s something that he has never lost. Ballard is not part of literature at any level, he’s got no concern about it at all. He&#8217;s a rogue gene which is what attracted me to him from the start. And work is all he is, what he writes is so integral to him. That’s all he does all day, write all day and live in Shepperton.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/west_end_kit.jpg" class="picleft" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /> But the admiration cut both ways. According to <a href="http://www.jgballard.ca">Rick McGrath</a>, Ballard provided blurbs for 12 of Reed’s books and wrote forewords to two others, more JGB endorsements than for any other writer. One of the forewords was for Reed’s latest collection of poetry, <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk/pages/poetry-shop.php">West End Survival Kit</a> (2009), possibly the last writing Ballard had published, in which he enthuses about Reed’s ‘talent … almost extraterrestrial in its brilliance’. For Ballard, Reed is ‘Rimbaud reconfigured as the Man who fell to Earth, a visitor from deep space whose time machine was designed by Lautréamont and de Sade, and powered by the most exotic fuels the imagination has ever devised’. That’s a very dense sentence, pricking imagistic sensors of recognition in almost every one of its 36 words: Bowie, Roeg, symbolism, science fiction, surrealism, film, sadomasochism, inner space…</p>
<p>And so it is with these poems, which are compacted like diamonds, an intent signalled by this excerpt:</p>
<blockquote><p>firing ideas at me like big hitters<br />
for work we do<br />
shape-shifting architecture into words,</p>
<p>the way 10 million atoms colonize<br />
an inked full stop.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, ‘Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream’, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The back cover gives no real description of the contents, save for general endorsements from a stellar cast: Ballard, David Gascoyne, David Lodge and Seamus Heaney. We are led to believe that this is a collection of free-standing poems, and reading them is simultaneously exhilarating and exhausting. Reed is obsessed with both surface flash and the hidden layers of meaning inherent in modern urban life, with which we constantly negotiate and are in dialogue with: the meaning of ‘junk DNA’ and the enigma of Michael Jackson, the sigils in corporate signage, the mental cross-chatter engendered by rapid communications technology. His street-level descriptions are often as unfathomable as conspiracy theory, and shot through with a selection of barely glimpsed, constantly rotating characters (including a first-person narrator), invariably described within a mesh of techy jargon:</p>
<blockquote><p>meditating in front of his mezzanine.<br />
His girlfriend paints her toes<br />
in Howard Hodgkin moods,</p>
<p>reads Holy Anorexia and grooves<br />
at being air<br />
she&#8217;s molecules wired to neuronal drive.</p>
<p>He&#8217;s into &#8216;dark matter&#8217;, lab neutrinos,<br />
thermonuclear fusion<br />
generating energy in the sun.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, ‘Astroparticle Physicist Chills’, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The writing is a rush, a blur. It&#8217;s slippery, emphasised by quick-fire, three-line stanzas:</p>
<blockquote><p>They share headphones on the new R.E.M.:<br />
a shimmering slice of post-modern pop,<br />
impersonal as an airport lounge,</p>
<p>riffy, mid-tempo anomie<br />
for the 21st century.<br />
He wears a Titian red Gucci jacket,</p>
<p>as though it&#8217;s cut out of the sun,<br />
and she two dollops of mauve eye shadow<br />
co-ordinating with her top.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Endgames&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Certain motifs begin to gestate a picture in the mind as you gradually learn through half-remembered, diaphanous glimpses that Mars and the moon have been colonised; dispossessed astronauts wander the Earth; drugs are rampant; and technological virtuality is encoded into the very fabric of everyday life. By the end, you are left with the inkling that the poems are perhaps not free-standing, but part of a continuous (albeit fractured) narrative, illuminated snapshots of a mordant near-future world seen from multiple, cross-linked perspectives. They could be interior hallucinations, or the exterior unspooling vision of CCTV cameras all over the city, but whatever they are, they are engendered by Reed’s very effective trick of repeating a motif, phrase or word from one poem to the next, but never more than two poems in a row. Subliminally, you become aware of a deep, unfolding narrative, even if consciously you assess that you are reading two poems with very different characters:</p>
<blockquote><p>ten miles above Cape Canaveral.<br />
He journeys back in his neurology<br />
to pink skies over the oxygen plant,</p>
<p>graffiti discovered on a rock face &#8211;<br />
RAD51D &#8212; the king&#8217;s returned &#8212;<br />
and gantried higher up a gold statue</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Red Planet Blues&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Someone&#8217;s got the dangling hexagonal<br />
molecule RAD51D<br />
under scrutiny for cell death</p>
<p>like a registration number<br />
on a top security Jeep.<br />
She&#8217;s paid to disinform. Each day</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Drug Giant PA&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Given all the Ballard associations, it’s tempting to read Ballardian themes into the work (the damaged astronauts fit well) and the densified prose method strives to convey as much meaning as the ‘condensed novels’ in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a>. Vaughan from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> (and Atrocity) even makes an appearance, enmeshed in a shady deal with the clone of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/chariot-of-fire-death-diana-princess-of-wales">Princess Di</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>H.R.H. has a contract out<br />
on this blonde afterlife simulacrum:<br />
Di as an endlessly repeatable clone.</p>
<p>Vaughan knows he&#8217;s watched. The Jeep outside<br />
has on-board machine guns, a snoop<br />
positioned in it with a cold black eye.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;The Reckoning&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed3.jpg" class="picleft" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /></p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed &#8211; photograph courtesy Waterloo Press.</em> </p>
<p>But in the end, the most obvious reference point seems to be the glistening, cypher-filled, pop-artefact worlds of William Gibson. The characters in West End Survival Kit come on like Case from <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FNeuromancer-William-Gibson%2Fdp%2F0006480411%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265598487%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Neuromancer</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> crashlanding in London (which has merged with Tokyo, as it did in Reed’s 2008 novel <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FGrid-Jeremy-Reed%2Fdp%2F0720613035%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265606462%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Grid</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />), as if Case was too burnt out to even care about fixing his damaged neurosystem, too jaded to even muster up any more passion for his beloved cyberspace. In <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-grid-by-jeremy-reed-942328.html">her review</a> of The Grid, Bidisha wrote that ‘one wishes Reed would produce a scholarly work about Jacobean theatre instead of an inexpert cyber-romp. His next work should be excellent, but it shouldn&#8217;t meddle with the future. Reed&#8217;s seriousness and intelligence emerge when he drops his coolness and cleaves to the past’. But this sounds more like the kind of genre snobbery Ballard was forced to endure when he, too, dared to write science fiction. Reed does post-cyberpunk very well: he has a real feel for the imagery, the characters and the worldview, and like both Gibson and Ballard, he is interested in the next 5 minutes rather than the next 500 years. For Reed, too, science fiction is the sociological study of the present. Yet he infuses this with his own ‘extraterrestrial’ brand of theatricality, poetic sensibility and mutant, gender-bending attitude to create a hybrid form. As science-fiction poetry, it recalls the work of <a href="http://www.aural-innovations.com/robertcalvert/index.htm">Robert Calvert</a>, the late Hawkwind lyricist and lead singer, and another tortured anti-hero whose own life story could easily inhabit the Reed pantheon. </p>
<p>Towards the end of West End Survival Kit, Reed ties it all up with two poems about, of all things, the history of Pink Floyd. And given all of the above, it makes perfect sense. As the poem identifies, the classic-era Floyd, despite being saddled with what people assumed was an intergalactic persona, was always more about inner space than outer (like Ballard’s anomie-infested astronauts), producing a brace of albums that reflected with sensitivity on battered individuals like their founder Syd Barrett, as in Wish You Were Here, and the assorted lunatics in the cast of Dark Side of the Moon. The Floyd poems make a fitting coda to Reed&#8217;s painful folio of snapshots from a numb world. They solidify his eulogy to people too disconnected, too exiled in their own minds to ever tread ‘meaningful’ paths through life, but who nonetheless retain a unique sense of self allied to their damaged intelligence:</p>
<blockquote><p>
Barrett’s the rock astronomer<br />
boating the Cam’s lime green spine,<br />
wristing downriver like a water-boatman</p>
<p>listening to voices, his schizophrenia<br />
big in the mix<br />
like invasive radio.<br />
…<br />
Echoing slide. It’s paranoia synthesised –<br />
their moon trip – dark side in reverse.<br />
Barrett’s still running through a corridor</p>
<p>As undertow, a brain damaged psycho.<br />
The music road maps inner space.<br />
It’s like a river knocking at the door.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, ‘Brain Damage: a short history of the Pink Floyd&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>It&#8217;s out there somewhere, while the London rain</p>
<p>slashes the light-polluted scuzz,<br />
wacks down fried leaves, keeps me inside<br />
this rainy, orange October day,<br />
retrieving the Floyd&#8217;s mission to locate<br />
the alien in the psychopath.<br />
Outside my window a wet jay</p>
<p>jabs at a red berry gash.<br />
I go out on their dimension,<br />
beamed by the music&#8217;s escalating curve,<br />
back to my youth and Apollo<br />
cargoing human hardware to the moon &#8211;</p>
<p>their weighted boots grating on dust,<br />
Pink Floyd the terrestrial soundtrack<br />
to space conquest, a white plateau<br />
opening out to three astronauts<br />
learning by hesitant degrees to trust.</p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed, &#8216;Wish You Were Here&#8217;, West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>West End Survival Kit is not wholly successful (although it&#8217;s pretty close). It briefly falls flat, for example, when Reed makes reference to ‘psychogeography’, a loaded concept degraded through cultural overuse that, although undoubtedly inherent within the work, sounds inauthentic when actually named and nudged up against his own dream geographies. Yet mostly, Reed’s innate ability to explore new genres, new forms and new plans of attack in the hope of creating something extreme and unique makes the work well worth reading. As Bidisha implies, it is probably this genre slippage that is the real cause of Reed’s exile, but somehow, given the figures with which he identifies, you get the impression that on some level that&#8217;s how he likes it.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘Video surveillance sights the street. The city leaks pathology&#8230;’ We know exactly what Jeremy means, though we may never have thought of our everyday world in these terms. The poet is our extraterrestrial visitor, calmly surveying everything, the highspeed neural networks of his poetic gift assessing the landscape, making only the most important connections, linking the present moment to the most vital possibilities of itself … Use this volume of poems as a guide-book to the present, to the real world of possibility that most of us ignore. It&#8217;s the poet&#8217;s job to be a seer, to seize us by the shoulders and force us to out-stare the mirage. Reading these poems, I find myself marvelling at their cleverness and brilliance, and saying: ‘&#8230;yes, yes, absolutely.’</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, foreword to West End Survival Kit.</em></p></blockquote>
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<p>West End Survival Kit can be purchased <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk/pages/poetry-shop.php">direct from the publisher</a>.</p>
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<p><em>Jeremy Reed performing with Itchy Ear as The Ginger Light, &#8216;a progressive poetry act&#8217;.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /> <img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jeremy_reed4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Jeremy Reed" /></p>
<p><em>Jeremy Reed &#8211; photographer(s) unknown.</em> </p>
<p><em>Thanks to Shane for help with research for this article.</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: More information:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.jeremyreed.co.uk">Jeremy Reed</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk">Waterloo Press</a></p>
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<p><strong>REFERENCES</strong><br />
Bidisha (2008). <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-grid-by-jeremy-reed-942328.html">&#8216;The Grid, by Jeremy Reed&#8217;</a>. The Independent, 28 September.<br />
Carter, Randolph (2006). <a href="http://www.3ammagazine.com/litarchives/2005/dec/interview_jeremy_reed.shtml">&#8216;Dreaming with his eyes open&#8217;</a>. 3am Magazine.<br />
Lachman, Gary (2006). <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/jeremy-reed-a-supernova-in-orange-and-purple-ink-409927.html">Jeremy Reed: A supernova in orange and purple ink</a>. The Independent, 30 July.<br />
Reed, Jeremy (1994) <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FDiamond-Nebula-Jeremy-Reed%2Fdp%2F0720609224%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1265596967%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Diamond Nebula</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. London: Peter Owen.<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;- (2008). <a href="http://www.waterloopresshove.co.uk/pages/poetry-shop.php">West End Survival Kit</a>. Furze Hill, Hove: Waterloo Press.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>The Office Park</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/the-office-park</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/the-office-park#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Jan 2010 12:51:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Nicholas Cobb</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CCTV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jean Baudrillard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=2311</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nicholas Cobb's architectural model of a corporate campus, photographed with a malevolent, dystopian flair, and exploring parallel themes to Ballard's Super-Cannes.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong>Nicholas Cobb</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb1.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb1.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p>The inspiration behind this body of work came from a growing curiosity about recent corporate developments of private space in London that apparently encourage the public to access them.  Typically these environments have beautiful landscaping around a canal or lake. An amphitheatre seems to be a further prerequisite as is CCTV which monitors everything including security guards who amble around these empty places. The hustle and bustle of neighboring streets feels a world away.</p>
<p>In the summer of 2008 I went for a series of walks along arterial routes heading out of London. That summer I had read several of J.G. Ballard’s novels including Super Cannes, which is about disturbing behaviour amongst the inhabitants of a gated community isolated from the world. On one of these ambles I chanced upon a recently completed building development. I felt compelled to enter this beautifully  landscaped glass and steel environment. It appeared as if no expense had been spared. What I encountered there helped to crystallize some vague ideas that became the photographs that are presented in this collection. The idyllic setting combined with the ever-present ’security’ got under my skin and left me wondering about a dystopian outcome for this kind of world.</p>
<p>I remember sitting down by the artificial lake. The sun was beating down and people casually wandered about. I gazed up at the office blocks. I thought it must be an idyllic place to work. London felt far away. I imagined that you could lift these acres up and deposit them in any city in the world and they would feel at home. This was an anti-Dickensian space, more an abstract one. It was a statement of how the world of work could be. The management ethos, proclaimed on various signs, was ‘enjoy.work’.</p>
<p>Enjoy.work. Arbeit macht frei. Freedom through work. I rose to the bait. Unease crept into my thoughts.</p>
<p>I found myself searching for the cracks. A variety of methods had been used to try to block the sun reaching the interior spaces.  It appeared as if, as each building had been erected, ever more elaborate ways had been devised to keep nature out. What was it really like to work in there? </p>
<p>I noticed that an algae bloom threatened the lake’s plant and animal life. Peering into one building’s reception area, I saw how the appearance of leisure had been carefully arranged. Bicycles, guitars and deckchairs in neat rows. An abandoned chess game and open magazines on the coffee table. A half-finished painting-by-numbers canvas on an easel. No one about. Why had everyone had to leave so suddenly? Or, were they  trying to hide something? Soon after, I was asked to leave for taking photographs without permission.</p>
<p>After some months I built an architectural model inspired by this corporate campus, and began photographing. I wanted a dystopian world, centred on a dark lake, that seemed to have the opposite effect on those that gazed into it than that intended by the landscape architect. So, some of the ant-like figures turn up to work, use the facilities and leave. Others seem to be employed in extracurricular activities of a more malevolent nature.</p>
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<p><em>Nicholas Cobb, 2009.</em></p>
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<p><em>The Office Park book, featuring many more images, <a href="http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/770925">is available at blurb</a> as well as <a href="http://www.blurb.com/search/site_search?search=nicholas+cobb&#038;filter=all&#038;commit=Search">a number of other books</a> by  Nicholas Cobb.</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb2.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb2.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Lured by tax concessions and a climate like northern California&#8217;s, dozens of multinational companies had moved into the business park that now employed over ten thousand people. The senior managements were the most highly paid professional caste in Europe, a new elite of administrators, énarques and scientific entrepreneurs. The lavish brochure enthused over a vision of glass and titanium straight from the drawing boards of Richard Neutra and Frank Gehry, but softened by landscaped parks and artificial lakes, a humane version of Corbusier&#8217;s radiant city. Even my sceptical eye was prepared to blink.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a> (2000).</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb3.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb3.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>The advertising displays in the estate office overlooking the roundabout on the RN7 had the look of museum tableaux, and the artist&#8217;s impression of a concourse as crowded as the Champs-Elysées, lined with boutiques and thronged by high-spending customers, seemed to describe a forgotten twentieth-century world. Only the cyber-cafe next door was serving any customers. The computer terminals facing the bar were out of use, but three bikers in metallized boots and Mad Max leathers sat at the outdoor tables. They formed a feral presence in the hyper-modern complex, like carrion-birds on a skyscraper cornice, filling an unplanned niche in the ecology of the future.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb4.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb4.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>An almost drugged air floated across the lake, a rogue cloud that had drifted down the hillside, carrying the scent of office-freshener from a factory in Grasse. I walked along the water&#8217;s edge, attracting the attention of two security men in a Range Rover parked among the pines. One watched me through his binoculars, no doubt puzzled that anyone in Eden-Olympia should have the leisure to stroll through the midday sun.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb5.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb5.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>As if to encourage the fantasies of the stranger sitting nearby, she kicked off her high-heeled shoes and hitched up her skirt to scratch her stockinged insteps, exposing a satisfying glimpse of white thigh. Despite the smart suit, her blonde hair was a little too blown, giving her the look of a nervy and intellectual tart. Was she a call-girl, computerized like everyone else at Eden-Olympia?</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb6a.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb6a.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>A black Range Rover clumsily straddled a flowerbed, its tyres flattening the rose bushes. Isolated figures patrolled the lawns, like shadows free to play among themselves for a few hours each night. Behind the shrubbery sounded the low-pitched murmur of radio traffic, a soft anatomy of the night.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb7.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb7.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Halder stood with his back to me, searching the upstairs windows, and I could see his reflection in the glass doors of the sun lounge. He was smiling to himself, a strain of deviousness that was almost likeable. Behind the brave and paranoid new world of surveillance cameras and bulletproof Range Rovers there probably existed an old-fashioned realm of pecking orders and racist abuse.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb8.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb8.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Crowds strolled under the palms, enjoying the warm autumn day, like citizens of another world who had come ashore for a few hours. Wilder Penrose had been right to say that there was something unreal about them.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb9.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb9.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Were assassins aware of the contingent world? I tried to imagine Lee Harvey Oswald on his way to the book depository in Dealey Plaza on the morning he shot Kennedy. Did he notice a line of overnight washing in his neighbour&#8217;s yard, a fresh dent in the nextdoor Buick, a newspaper boy with a bandaged knee? The contingent world must have pressed against his temples, clamouring to be let in. But Oswald had kept the shutters bolted against the storm, opening them for a few seconds as the President&#8217;s Lincoln moved across the lens of the Zapruder camera and on into history.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb6.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb6.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Prostitutes came out at dusk, usherettes in the theatre of the night, shining their miniature torches at any kerb that threatened their high-heels. Two of them entered the Rialto and sat at the next table, muscular brunettes with the hips and thighs of professional athletes. They ordered drinks they never touched, killing time before they set off to trawl the hotels.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb11.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb11.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;There&#8217;s a remarkable need for punitive violence hidden away in the senior executive mind.&#8217;<br />
&#8216;And sex tends to release it?&#8217;<br />
&#8216;It&#8217;s meant to, for sound biological reasons. Sex is such a quick route to the psychopathic, the shortest of short cuts to the perverse. We aren&#8217;t running an adventure playground, but a forcing house designed to expand the psychopathic possibilities of the executive imagination. It needs to be carefully monitored. Sadomasochism, excretory sex-play, body-piercing and wife-pandering can easily veer off into something nasty.  </p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb12.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb12.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>The glass and gun-metal office blocks were set well apart from each other, separated by artificial lakes and forested traffic islands where a latter-day Crusoe could have found comfortable refuge. The faint mist over the lakes and the warm sun reflected from the glass curtain-walling seemed to generate an opal haze, as if the entire business park were a mirage, a virtual city conjured into the pine-scented air like a son-et-lumière vision of a new Versailles.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb13.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb13.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Homo sapiens is a reformed hunter-killer of depraved appetites, which once helped him to survive. He was partly rehabilitated in an open prison called the first agricultural societies, and now finds himself on parole in the polite suburbs of the city state. The deviant impulses coded into his central nervous system have been switched off. He can no longer harm himself or anyone else. But nature sensibly endowed him with a taste for cruelty and an intense curiosity about pain and death. Without them, he&#8217;s trapped in the afternoon shopping malls of a limitless mediocrity. We need to revive him, give him back the killing eye and the dreams of death. Together they helped him to dominate this planet.&#8217;</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb14.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb14.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>I needed to escape from Eden-Olympia, with its ceaseless work and its ethic of corporate responsibility. The business park was the outpost of an advanced kind of puritanism, and a virtually sex-free zone. Jane and I rarely made love. The flair she had shown during my days as a virtual cripple had been smothered by a sleep of eye-masks and sedatives, followed by cold showers and snatched breakfasts. </p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb15.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb15.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Places like Eden-Olympia are fertile ground for any messiah with a grudge. The Adolf Hitlers and Pol Pots of the future won&#8217;t walk out of the desert. They&#8217;ll emerge from shopping malls and corporate business parks.&#8217;</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb16.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb16.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p> ‘Who are the tenants? Big international companies?&#8217;<br />
&#8216;The biggest. Mitsui, Siemens, Unilever, Sumitomo, plus all the French giants – Elf Aquitaine, Carrefour, Rhone-Poulenc. Along with a host of smaller firms: investment brokers, bioengineering outfits, design consultancies. I sound like a salesman, but when you get to know it you&#8217;ll see what a remarkable place Eden-Olympia really is. In its way this is a huge experiment in how to hothouse the future.&#8217;</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb17.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb17.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Between the security building and the Elf-Maritime research labs was an open-air cafeteria, a facility intended to soften the public face of the business park and give it a passing resemblance to an Alpine resort. Tired after my meeting with Zander, I sat down and ordered a vin blanc from the young French waitress, who wore jeans and a white vest printed with a quotation from Baudrillard.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb18.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb18.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>The future was a second Eden-Olympia, almost twice the size of the original, the same mix of multinational companies, research laboratories and financial consultancies. Hyundai, BP Amoco, Motorola and Unilever had secured their plots, investing in long-term leases that virtually financed the whole project. The site-contractors were already at work, clearing the holm oaks and umbrella pines that had endured since Roman times, surviving forest fires and military invasions. Nature, as the new millennium dictated, was giving way for the last time to the tax shelter and the corporate car park.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb19.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb19.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Work and the realities of corporate life anchored Eden-Olympia to the ground. The buildings wore their ventilation shafts and cable conduits on their external walls, an open reminder of Eden-Olympia&#8217;s dedication to company profits and the approval of its shareholders. The satellite dishes on the roofs resembled the wimples of an order of computer-literate nuns, committed to the sanctity of the workstation and the pieties of the spreadsheet.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb20.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb20.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>High above me, fluted columns carried the pitched roofs, an attempt at a vernacular architecture that failed to disguise this executive-class prison. Taking their cue from Eden-Olympia and Antibes-les-Pins, the totalitarian systems of the future would be subservient and ingratiating, but the locks would be just as strong.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb21.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb21.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>I stepped from the car-park lift onto the overheated roof, a cockpit of sun and death. In the mirror curtain-walling of the office building I could see myself reflected like an unwary tourist who had strayed through the wrong door into the danger-filled silences of a bullring. </p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb22.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb22.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>This was the first office building to be constructed at the business park, but after a bombastic overture the architecture that followed was late modernist in the most minimal and self-effacing way, a machine above all for thinking in.</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb23a.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cobb23a.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: The Office Park" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;We ought to move on. Ghosts are walking around Eden-Olympia&#8230;&#8217;</p>
<p>Ballard, Super-Cannes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><em>The Office Park book, featuring many more images, <a href="http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/770925">is available at blurb</a> as well as <a href="http://www.blurb.com/search/site_search?search=nicholas+cobb&#038;filter=all&#038;commit=Search">a number of other books</a> by  Nicholas Cobb.</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: MORE INFORMATION:</strong><br />
+ Interview with Nicholas Cobb <a href="http://www.londonphotography.org.uk/showcase/">about The Office Park</a>.<br />
+ Nicholas Cobb&#8217;s <a href="http://www.nickcobb.co.uk">website</a>.</p>
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		<title>A Near Future: Nic Clear&#8217;s Tribute to JG Ballard</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/a-near-future-nic-clears-tribute-to-jg-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/a-near-future-nic-clears-tribute-to-jg-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Dec 2009 00:46:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Nic Clear</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=2199</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[JG Ballard's writing encompassed topics as diverse as ecological crisis, technological fetishism, urban ruination and suburban mob culture. In this extract from the September-October issue of Architectural Design, Nic Clear explores how Ballard’s understanding of architecture and architects made him one of the most important figures in the literary articulation of architectural issues and concerns.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/clear_jgb1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Nic Clear" /></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ad_clear2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" class="picleft" /> <strong>JG BALLARD, 1930–2009</strong> </p>
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<p><em>Originally published in <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FArchitectures-Near-Future-Architectural-Design%2Fdp%2F0470699558&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Architectures of the Near Future: Architectural Design</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> (ed. Nic Clear), September-October 2009. pp. 5, 6-11. Reproduced with permission.</em></p>
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<p>James Graham Ballard was one of the most original and distinctive authors of the last part of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century. His writing encompassed topics as diverse as ecological crisis, technological fetishism, urban ruination and suburban mob culture, and he pursued these topics with a wit and inventiveness that is without equal.</p>
<p>Ballard’s understanding of architecture and architects, and his prophetic visions, made him one of the most important figures in the literary articulation of architectural issues and concerns.</p>
<p>From the description of futuristic houses that empathise with their inhabitants, to the bleak characterisation of gated communities consumed by sex, drugs and violence, Ballard’s world is highly prescient and ruthlessly unsentimental. At a time when architectural discourse has become wholly subsumed by the moneymaking pre-occupations of the architectural profession, the writings of JG Ballard serve as reminder that architecture is about people, the things that they do and the places where they do them. Sometimes architecture will involve terrible people doing terrible things in terrible places, but the enduring nature of the human species is that we will always carry on; there is, after all, always the future.</p>
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<p><em>Nic Clear, 2009.</em></p>
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<p><strong>Introduction: &#8216;A NEAR FUTURE&#8217;, by Nic Clear</strong>. </p>
<blockquote><p>Of all the arts, architecture is the closest constitutively to the economic, with which, in the form of commissions and land values, it has a virtually unmediated relationship.</p>
<p><em>Frederic Jameson, Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, 1991, p 5.<a href="#1">[1]</a></em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Later, as he sat on the balcony eating the dog, Dr Robert Laing reflected on the unusual events that had taken place within this huge apartment building during the previous three months. </p>
<p><em>JG Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a>, 1975, p 7.<a href="#2">[2]</a></em></p></blockquote>
<p>Architectural design is always about the future; when architects make a proposition they always assume that it takes place in some imagined future. Architects nearly always assume that this future will be ‘better’ than the present, often as a consequence of what is being proposed. Architecture is, by its very nature, utopian.</p>
<p>Contemporary architecture, unlike earlier models of ‘utopian’ architecture, or perhaps because of the stigma attached to those models, has resisted an explicitly social and political agenda. Instead it has become driven by ‘ideal’ formalist agendas facilitated by the ‘shape-making’ potential of new computer-based design tools and funded by speculative finance.</p>
<p>Indeed, the most important transformations that have occurred in architecture over the last 30 years have not been in the shifts in fashion marking out new typologies, new forms of representation, new materials or new forms of manufacture; the biggest single shift has been in the new economic relations within the building industry and the new forms of contractual relationships that this has brought about. The rise of fast-track construction in the 1980s heralded a major change in the motivations for construction and brought about a homogenisation of building output largely predicated on maximising the economic value of the project, often with little regard for its social value.</p>
<p>And with the introduction of the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) the current UK government has turned even health-care and educational building programmes into a speculative enterprise. PFI has always been presented as a cost-effective way of financing large infrastructural projects; however, like the government’s recent bail out of the banks, it works on the principle of the public financing the risk while the private sector skims off the profit.<a href="#3">[3]</a></p>
<p>For a number of years the single model that has shaped the type of future that the architectural profession has based its assumptions on is one of unfettered consumer expansion. The majority of recent architectural debates have not tried to call into question the economic imperatives of late capitalism that drive financial speculation and generate the context within which private development is presented as the only option. Even the avant-garde architectural firms of the 1980s are now operating as large international commercial practices, and the Deconstructivists have proved to be more than enthusiastic capitalists. The critical and intellectual ambitions inspired by Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze and Guy Debord have been replaced with the monetarist ideologies of Milton Friedman and Alan Greenspan.</p>
<p>The architectural profession has embraced the late capitalist model enthusiastically and uncritically, while all the time pandering to the concepts of social and environmental responsibility. The fact is that this model has been funded through speculative investment, and now that the money has run out the profession is bereft of alternatives.</p>
<p>The promise of an ‘urban renaissance’ has left buildings empty and negative equity is becoming once again the dominant economic value across the property world.</p>
<p>The architectural world has proved completely incapable of suggesting what the future may hold; can one still believe in the shiny renders of the corporate architectural complex when this world has replaced a vision of the future with an image of the future?</p>
<p>But the profession is resourceful and in the same way that all contemporary architects play the ‘sustainability’ game, whether they are designing sustainable airports, sustainable shopping centres, sustainable luxury hotels, sustainable office blocks, sustainable cities in the middle of deserts or sustainable single private dwellings for the ultrarich, we will, no doubt, see a gritty ‘new realism’ starting to appear in architectural discourse that responds to the new economic conditions.<a href="#4">[4]</a></p>
<p>Exactly how these new imperatives will drive the formal shape- making methodologies that have filled so many glossy pages for so long we shall see; and how will the interactive and responsive landscapes interact with, and respond to, bankruptcy, increasing unemployment and a general sense of despair?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/clear_jgb2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Nic Clear" /></p>
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<p><em>Nic Clear, &#8216;Game with Vestiges: After Ballard Triptych, 2009&#8242;. The series of drawings here was set up in the same way as any standard CAD drawing in VectorWorks using layers, classes and libraries of objects. The drawings work as a narrative triptych, bringing together a number of elements &#8212; cityscapes, high-rise buildings, surrealist curios, fetish and banal objects &#8212; all in keeping with the memory of ‘Jim’, to whom the drawings are dedicated.</em></p>
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<p><strong>Progress</strong><br />
Contemporary culture has put its faith in the ideology of progress; progress will make things better, as well as making things faster and smaller (or bigger depending on the value system). This faith in progress and betterment fails to ring true in the light of economic downturn, environmental catastrophe, increased levels of crime, the threats of terrorism and global pandemics.<a href="#5">[5]</a> If the future cannot be guaranteed, where does that leave architecture?</p>
<p>However, a loss of faith is only a problem if that faith exists in the first place.</p>
<p>Within literature there is a major strand that looks at the future in a completely different way; science fiction can also be seen as a ‘utopian’ genre,<a href="#6">[6]</a> and in works by writers ranging from Jules Verne and HG Wells, through to Aldous Huxley and George Orwell and more latterly Philip K Dick, JG Ballard, Neal Stephenson and William Gibson, the future is depicted in a variety of different hues, not all of them as rosy as the futures promised by the architectural profession. As a result such speculations are often more believable.</p>
<p>While these writings appear to reflect on the future, more often than not they are actually concerned with issues contemporaneous to their production. To cite two obvious examples, Huxley’s Brave New World (1932) and Orwell’s 1984 (1949) are political reflections on the societies around them, and in Huxley’s case it is not altogether clear whether he is entirely critical of the world that he describes.</p>
<p>However, the writings of JG Ballard are of particular interest here as they filter through a number of the texts contained in this issue, either directly or lingering in the background.<a href="#7">[7]</a> Ballard is of special significance largely due to the fact that in so much of his writing architecture and architects play such a pivotal role.</p>
<p>The prescience of Ballard’s writing is obvious; his early works encompass environmental disaster, both drought and flooding; in the 1970s, novels such as <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a><a href="#8">[8]</a> and High-Rise<a href="#9">[9]</a> dealt with technological fetishisation, urban anomie and alienation, and, long before such issues hit the mainstream, he looked at the links between consumerism and social collapse. In his recent writings, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-millennium-people">Millennium People</a><a href="#10">[10]</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>,<a href="#11">[11]</a> Ballard depicts a Britain bereft of social values other than those of daytime TV and the shopping centre, and while his central characters can lack credibility his general description of the cultural landscape is far more accurate than almost anything that has been published in the pages of any recent architectural publication.</p>
<p>The future as presented by Ballard is often stark, bleak and uncompromising. There are few happy endings in his future. However, his faith in our collective ability to endure almost any hardship, drawn almost certainly from his experiences in Shanghai during the Second World War, leads us to believe that despite whatever is thrown at us we will adapt and we will survive.<a href="#12">[12]</a></p>
<p>Like Ballard, let us not despair; though the future may be uncertain, uncertainty is not without its attractions.</p>
<p>The current economic situation offers great potential for developing a new agenda in architecture. The fact that the discipline of architecture has become synonymous with the architectural profession is something that will no doubt become contested as unemployment rises throughout the building industry<a href="#13">[13]</a> &#8212; those of us who can remember previous recessions can also remember them as highly creative periods. The fact that architects may have to redefine their operations is potentially a wonderful opportunity to recalibrate and reconsider who and what architecture is actually for.</p>
<p>This will bring to life the obvious gulf between expectation and reality that permeates architectural practice. Architecture is a wonderful discourse and training; however, it can be a very tedious job. Of course it does not have to be like this. Freed from the limitations of the profession, architectural projects can offer fantastic opportunities to develop narratives that can help us understand why we are doing the things we do.<a href="#14">[14]</a></p>
<p>The fact that architects may have to redefine their operations is potentially a wonderful opportunity to recalibrate and reconsider who and what architecture is actually for.</p>
<p>In particular these uncertain times may be a blessing for a younger generation of designers; equipped with a vast array of technical skills and understanding they are almost certain to cope with the vagaries of future practice. As the skills demonstrated in many of the projects collected in this issue suggest, future architects may be just as adept at web design, graphics and film-making as they are at producing information for buildings.</p>
<p>The last few years have witnessed a gradual disenchantment within architectural education with the goals espoused by the architectural profession. Increased levels of student debt coupled with a creeping homogenisation of architectural practice have resulted in there being a darker aspect to student projects. Rather than shrinking away from the potential difficulties, the younger generation of architects may use information technologies to create new sites of architectural endeavour and give a whole new meaning to the term ‘architectural design’.</p>
<p>The essays and projects gathered together here cover a wide variety of positions. Many develop the themes suggested by Ballard and others, while some give the current situation a broader historical perspective, suggesting that certain of the scenarios that we face are not without precedent.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/clear_jgb3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Nic Clear" /></p>
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<p><em>Nic Clear, &#8216;Game with Vestiges: After Ballard Triptych, 2009&#8242;. The series of drawings here was set up in the same way as any standard CAD drawing in VectorWorks using layers, classes and libraries of objects. The drawings work as a narrative triptych, bringing together a number of elements &#8212; cityscapes, high-rise buildings, surrealist curios, fetish and banal objects &#8212; all in keeping with the memory of ‘Jim’, to whom the drawings are dedicated.</em></p>
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<p>Matthew Gandy’s ‘Urban Flux’ gives a historical perspective to our current situation and argues that we need to recover the urban imagination in order to enrich 21st-century public culture. Michael Aling returns to his home town of Swindon, statistically the most average town in Britain, to find people sharing identities, stricken with gout and going to a deserted shopping centre for no real reason other than to fulfil a forgotten collective desire. And John Culmer Bell looks at the nature of electromagnetic radiation as a shaper of 19th- and 20th- century urban form, provocatively questioning whether sacrificing the pleasures of ‘noctambulism’ simply on environmental grounds is actually a good thing.</p>
<p>Bastian Glassner of uber-trendy video directors Lynn Fox presents a series of luxurious images, hybridising the body as meat, a clear homage to Francis Bacon (pun intended) with a bit of Roland Barthes’ A Lover’s Discourse thrown in.</p>
<p>Soki So reimagines Piranesi’s Carceri as a near-future Hong Kong with a series of appropriately spectacular and sumptuous images that also address real concerns over the concept of urban intensity and vertical sprawl. Rubedo send out a provocative declaration concerning the omnipresence of technological systems and the necessity of developing transdisciplinary tactics to negotiate the immersive hybridised spaces of late capitalism.</p>
<p>Richard Bevan constructs a worryingly believable scenario whereby Heathrow airport becomes a carbon casino trading in carbon credits with air-mile-hungry oligarchs gambling to stay aloft, and Geoff Manaugh explores and questions the use of the term ‘feral city’. In ‘London After the Rain’, Ben Marzys presents a beautiful graphic Surrealist landscape, a posthuman picturesque. In ‘L.A.W.u.N Project #21: Cybucolia’ the Invisible University suggest that the near future may carry with it many of the seeds sown with 19th-century Romanticism; and Dan Farmer suggests that the near future may be all in the mind with excerpts from his research on cortical plasticity. Ben Nicholson reflects on his 2004 book The World Who Wants It?, one of the finest pieces of satirical writing of recent years, and presents a series of images that were absent from the original publication.</p>
<p>Simon Sellars and George Thomson explore the most explicitly Ballardian line, with Sellars looking at the aural nature of the urban environment, beautifully illustrated with Michelle Lord’s exquisite assemblages, and Thomson reimagining Ballard’s ‘Sound-Sweep’ as a community occupying a derelict M25.</p>
<p>Finally, Art in Ruins show work from installations that are 20 years old, an important conceptual reminder that none of the ideas in this issue are particularly new.</p>
<p>This issue was first conceived in 2007; the proposal was put forward in early 2008 and most of the text written late 2008/ early 2009. You will be reading this, at the very earliest, in autumn 2009. Like any other architectural project its relevance is shaped by a number of external forces far beyond the control of its authors; the economic events that are taking place as this text is being written (and rewritten) make any allusion to future certainties look foolish. The severity of the current economic situation makes any attempt to try to predict what light, if any, is at the end of this particular tunnel seem absurd. However, what happens if we imagine a number of scenarios, not necessarily the usual convivial scenarios that mainstream architecture usually relies on, but scenarios where the traditional certainties are replaced by something less predictable? Like the heroes of many of Ballard’s stories, the authors of the essays in this issue face the future with a sense of resigned stoicism and the ability to create beauty wherever they find it.</p>
<p>In many ways the near future could be very much like the past, with one obvious exception &#8212; it will be completely different.</p>
<p><strong>Notes</strong><br />
[1]<a name="1"></a> Frederic Jameson, Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, Duke University Press (Durham, NC), 1991, p 5.<br />
[2]<a name="2"></a> JG Ballard, High Rise, Jonathan Cape (London), 1975, p 7.<br />
[3]<a name="3"></a> See George Monbiot, ‘The Biggest Weirdest Rip Off Yet’, Guardian, 7 April 2009. In this article, Monbiot references a paper published in 2002 in the British Medical Journal in which five key criticisms were made of the PFI funding of hospitals: 1) that PFI brings no new capital investments; 2) that the assessments of value for money are skewed in favour of private finance; 3) the higher costs of PFI are due to financing costs which would be incurred under public financing; 4) any PFI schemes only show value for money after ‘risk transfer’, for risks that are not justified; 5) PFI more than doubles the cost of capital as a percentage of annual operating income. From Allyson M Pollock, Jean Shaoul and Neil Vickers, ‘Private finance and “value for money” in NHS hospitals: a policy in search of a rationale?’, BMJ, Vol 324, 18 May 2002, pp 1205–09.<br />
[4]<a name="4"></a> One can imagine that such texts have already begun to emanate from Rotterdam and Boston.<br />
[5]<a name="5"></a> For a critique of ‘progress’, see John Gray, Heresies Against Progress and Other Illusions, Granta Books (London), 2004.<br />
[6]<a name="6"></a> See Frederic Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions, Verso (London and New York), 2005.<br />
[7]<a name="7"></a> Ballard has been a central interest of my diploma unit at the Bartlett School of Architecture where I have been running a programme entitled ‘Architecture of the Near Future’ for several years. The work of Michael Aling, Richard Bevan, Dan Farmer, Ben Marzys, Soki So and George Thomson, all contributors to this issue, came out of this programme.<br />
[8]<a name="8"></a> JG Ballard, Crash, Jonathan Cape (London), 1973.<br />
[9]<a name="9"></a> JG Ballard, High Rise, op cit.<br />
[10]<a name="10"></a> JG Ballard, Millennium People, Flamingo (London), 2003.<br />
[11]<a name="11"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, Fourth Estate (London), 2006.<br />
[12]<a name="12"></a> Beautifully described in his memoir Miracles of Life: Shanghai to Shepperton, Fourth Estate (London), 2008.<br />
[13]<a name="13"></a> Job losses in architecture between February 2008 and February 2009 were reportedly up by 760%. See Will Hirst, ‘Architect Job Losses up by 760%’, Building Design, 20 March 2009, p 3.<br />
[14]<a name="14"></a> The drawings that accompany this essay come from my sheer enjoyment of producing CAD drawings simply because they are something I like doing.</p>
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<p><em>Text © 2009 John Wiley &#038; Sons Ltd. Images © Nic Clear.</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/clear_jgb4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Nic Clear" /></p>
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<p><em>Nic Clear, &#8216;Game with Vestiges: After Ballard Triptych, 2009&#8242;. The series of drawings here was set up in the same way as any standard CAD drawing in VectorWorks using layers, classes and libraries of objects. The drawings work as a narrative triptych, bringing together a number of elements &#8212; cityscapes, high-rise buildings, surrealist curios, fetish and banal objects &#8212; all in keeping with the memory of ‘Jim’, to whom the drawings are dedicated.</em></p>
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<p><strong>&#8230;:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/stereoscopic-urbanism-jg-ballard-and-the-built-environment">Stereoscopic Urbanism: JG Ballard &#038; the Built Enviroment</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear-interview">&#8216;Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;: An Interview with Nic Clear</a></p>
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<p>Information on <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FArchitectures-Near-Future-Architectural-Design%2Fdp%2F0470699558&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Architectures of the Near Future: Architectural Design</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />.</p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ad_clear.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" /> </p>
<blockquote><p>In this highly pertinent issue, guest-editor Nic Clear questions received notions of the future. Are the accepted norms of economic growth and expansion the only means by which society can develop and prosper? Should the current economic crisis be making us call into question a future of unlimited growth? Can this moment of crisis – economic, environmental and technological – enable us to make more informed choices about the type of future that we want and can actually achieve? Architectures of the Near Future offers a series of alternative voices, developing some of the neglected areas of contemporary urban life and original visions of what might be to come. Rather than providing simplistic and seductive images of an intangible shiny future, it rocks the cosy world of architecture with polemical blasts.</p>
<p>* Draws on topics as diverse as synthetic space, psychoanalysis, Postmodern geography, post-economics, cybernetics and developments in neurology.<br />
* Includes an exploration of the work of JG Ballard.<br />
* Features the work of Ben Nicholson.</p>
<p>Editorial (Helen Castle ).<br />
Introduction: A Near Future (Nic Clear).<br />
Urban Flux (Matthew Gandy).<br />
Postindividualism: Fata Morgana and the Swindon Gout Clinic (Michael Aling).<br />
Urban Otaku: Electric Lighting and the Noctambulist (John Culmer Bell).<br />
The Groom’s Gospel (Bastian Glassner).<br />
Hong Kong Labyrinths (Soki So).<br />
Distructuring Utopias (Rubedo: Laurent-Paul Robert and Vesna Petresin Robert).<br />
The Carbon Casino (Richard Bevan).<br />
Cities Gone Wild (Geoff Manaugh).<br />
London After the Rain (Nic Clear).<br />
L.A.W.u.N. Project #21: Cybucolia (Samantha Hardingham and David Greene).<br />
Cortical Plasticity (Dan Farmer).<br />
The Ridiculous and the Sublime (Ben Nicholson).<br />
Stereoscopic Urbanism: JG Ballard and the Built Environment (Simon Sellars).<br />
The Sound Stage (George Thomson).<br />
Recent History – Art In Ruins (Hannah Vowles and Glyn Banks/Art in Ruins and Nic Clear)</p>
<p><strong>Practice Profile.</strong><br />
Snøhetta (Jayne Merkel).<br />
<strong>Interior Eye.</strong><br />
Biochemistry Department, University of Oxford (Howard Watson).<br />
<strong>Building Profile.</strong><br />
St Benedict’s School, West London (David Littlefield).<br />
<strong>Unit Factor.</strong><br />
Migration Pattern Process (Simon Beames and Kenneth Fraser).<br />
<strong>Spiller’s Bits.</strong><br />
Mathematics of the Ideal Pavilion (Neil Spiller).<br />
<strong>Yeang’s Eco-Files.</strong><br />
Computational Building Performance Modelling and Ecodesign (Khee Poh Lam and Ken Yeang).<br />
McLean’s Nuggets (Will McLean).<br />
<strong>Userscape</strong><br />
Scaleable Technology for Smart Spaces (Valentina Croci).</p></blockquote>
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		<title>&#8220;Driven by Anger&#8221;: An Interview with Michael Butterworth (the Savoy interviews, part 1)</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/driven-by-anger-butterworth-interview</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/driven-by-anger-butterworth-interview#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 11:07:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike Holliday</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ambit magazine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Savoy Books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[William Burroughs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[censorship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[humour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[punk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surrealism]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The story of Savoy Books is one of the strangest in publishing history: a tale of lost opportunities, missed opportunities, repression, censorship, imprisonment ... and, most importantly, an incredible legacy of work that continues to disturb, challenge and confront. Mike Holliday talks to Savoy co-founder Michael Butterworth about all this and more, including the guidance Butterworth received as a young writer from J.G. Ballard.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/butterworth98.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>Michael Butterworth in the Savoy office, 1998 (photo by Ben Blackall).</em></p>
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<p>Interview by <strong><a href="http://www.holli.co.uk">Mike Holliday</a></strong>.</p>
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<p><em>This is the first of a proposed 3-interview series. Parts 2 and 3, featuring David Britton and John Coulthart, will discuss Savoy&#8217;s musical, spoken word and visual/comics/graphics output. To coincide with this series, please enter the Savoy Books Microfiction competition! Win super-rare Savoy books, comic books and CDs by writing a short story of 100 words or less on &#8216;Savoyesque&#8217; or &#8216;Ballardian&#8217; themes. Details <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/savoy-ballardian-microfiction-competition">here</a>.</em></p>
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<p><a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/index.html">Savoy Books</a>, which bills itself as &#8220;England&#8217;s only <em>truly</em> alternative and autotelic publishing company&#8221;, was started by <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/dave.html">David Britton</a> and <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/mike.html">Michael Butterworth</a> in 1976.  For more than 30 years, Savoy have published books based on the sole criterion of admiration for the content or the author, and their roster includes many writers who appeared alongside Ballard in the heady days of New Worlds magazine &#8212; Michael Moorcock, Harlan Ellison, Charles Platt, Samuel R. Delany, Langdon Jones, and M. John Harrison. </p>
<p>By 1980, Savoy were publishing almost 20 titles a year and would surely have been a good match as a publisher of Ballard, but alas it was not to be. Savoy had the bad luck to be based in Manchester, whose Chief Constable &#8212; &#8216;God&#8217;s Cop&#8217;, James Anderton &#8212; had the looks of a biblical prophet and was prone to righteous denunciation of what he saw as good, old fashioned sin. Helping to fund Savoy&#8217;s publishing were a string of bookshops, and these quickly became a target for Manchester&#8217;s Vice Squad, suffering more than fifty raids over a period of 20 years, during which time David Britton served two sentences in Strangeways prison for selling obscene publications. By 1981 the combined effect of the police raids and the collapse of a distribution agreement had forced Savoy&#8217;s publishing business into liquidation, just as they were planning a U.K. paperback edition of William Burroughs&#8217; Cities of the Red Night.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/britton.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" class="picleft" /></p>
<p><em>LEFT: David Britton.</em> </p>
<p>Whilst Ballard was being embraced by the mainstream following Empire of the Sun, Savoy were moving in the opposite direction, becoming near-untouchable mavericks of the publishing world. By 1984, Britton and Butterworth had entered what they termed their &#8216;moral ambiguity&#8217; phase, and Savoy had transmuted into a rather different creature, concentrating for the next ten years or so on records &#8212; many featuring vocals by P. J. Proby &#8212; and comics rather than books, although there was, of course, Lord Horror (1989), written by Britton with assistance from Butterworth, an extreme and deliberately distasteful novel about fascism and those aspects of the twentieth century that contributed to it. Lord Horror was the last novel to be successfully prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Acts as likely to corrupt and deprave those who read it (the decision was finally overturned on appeal). In addition, over the years Savoy have re-published the likes of A Voyage to Arcturus by David Lindsay, Henry Treece&#8217;s Celtic fantasy novels, Ken Reid&#8217;s &#8216;Fudge and Speck&#8217; cartoons from the Manchester Evening News and Maurice Richardson&#8217;s compendium of light-hearted surrealist tales The Exploits of Engelbrecht (one of Ballard&#8217;s favourite books)</p>
<p>The links between Savoy and Ballard are not immediately obvious, but run deep. In this interview, Michael Butterworth discusses Savoy&#8217;s adventures in book publishing, starting with the late 1960s, when both he and Ballard wrote for New Worlds. Later interviews will look at Savoy&#8217;s musical and spoken word recordings, and at their visual/comics/graphics output, especially the work of the illustrators <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/kris.html">Kris Guidio</a> and <a href="http://www.johncoulthart.com">John Coulthart</a>, who joined forces with Britton and Butterworth during the 1980s.</p>
<p>Savoy&#8217;s <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/bookcov.html">books</a>, <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/1comic.html">comics</a> and <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/artind.html">records/CDs</a> are available <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/1orders.html">directly from the publishers</a>.</p>
<p><em><strong>Mike Holliday.</strong></em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballard_linnett.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, 1974. Photo from Corridor magazine (#5), published and edited by Michael Butterworth.</em></p>
<p><strong>MIKE HOLLIDAY: Michael, several of your own short stories appeared in New Worlds between 1966 and 1970: to what extent did Ballard influence you at that early stage?</strong></p>
<p>MICHAEL BUTTERWORTH: It’s more a question of how he didn’t influence me! Coming across his work for the first time in the mid-60’s, I remember thinking, ‘He’s saying what I didn’t know I wanted to say!’ I read ‘The Voices of Time’, and ‘Mr F is Mr F’ and other stories, which led me to discovering <a href="http://www.ballarian.com/biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind From Nowhere</a> and <a href="http://www.ballarian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a>, and later his ‘fractured’ narratives: ‘You: Coma: Marilyn Monroe’ and ‘The Terminal Beach’. These stories crossed the blood-brain barrier. They seemed to step right inside me, to be totally relevant to my experiences as an individual and what I was striving after as a writer. Between Ballard and Burroughs, and Moorcock (his Elric short stories), and small amounts of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/borges-y-ballard">Borges</a>, I was ‘catered’ for, and looking back it did lessen the imperative to find a vehicle of my own, perhaps inducing a kind of complacency.</p>
<p>The things in Ballard’s work with which I identify are the ‘psychological landscapes’ – the deserted swimming pools and lagoons – and the outgrowths of time in <a href="http://www.ballarian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">The Crystal World</a>.  But what makes him compelling is the fact that despite the cataclysms, people are still able to lead recognisable lives. His stories mirrored my own obsession with post-atomic fantasy landscapes, in which the narrator is freed from the humdrum world. The backdrop of nearly all my New Worlds stories, mostly written when I was seventeen or eighteen at a time when you went to sleep at night wondering whether you would wake up to World War Three, were concerned with just this kind of survival and the resulting creative possibilities. They were written very coolly, very detachedly, very sardonically – saying, well if <em>this</em> is what <em>you</em>, mankind want to do with the world, then <em>this</em> is how it will be.</p>
<p>As a writer I was strongly attracted to what I call &#8217;simplified emotional landscapes&#8217;, end-scenarios where there is the opportunity for clarity of feeling and thought and picaresque happenings; or, as in Ballard’s stories, where you can just sit and stare into the setting sun above a flooded basin, becoming increasingly internalised. Reading Ballard and Burroughs, and entering into these landscapes myself, was a way of freeing the mind of complexity.</p>
<p>I first heard about Burroughs&#8217; cut-ups about the same time as Ballard’s ‘fragmented’ stories began appearing. Cut-up became terribly exciting for me: it was a new way of ‘breaking out’, a way of actually embracing complexity instead of fleeing it. There seemed to be a correlation with the emergence of South American concrete poetry, which I had also just discovered. As Jim pointed out, writing was now beginning to catch up with art. A post-Duchamp New Wave of conceptual art was happening in the late 60’s and early 70’s … and probably we were all running off the same energies and currents. But there was little conscious interaction between all these practices, and looking back the New Wave of SF could have had more of an influence on the mainstream at that point. Ballard’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballards-adventures-in-advertising-1">advertisements</a> and <a href="http://www.slashseconds.org/issues/001/001/articles/13_sford/index.php">crashed car exhibition</a> at the ICA in the late 60s pointed to it.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jgb_letter.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jgb_letter.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Letter from Ballard (1967), discussing the editing of Butterworth&#8217;s stories (click to enlarge).</em></p>
<p><strong>I believe there was collaboration with Ballard whilst you were writing your &#8216;Concentrate&#8217; stories. How did that come about?</strong></p>
<p>I was <a href="http://www.ambitmagazine.co.uk">Ambit</a>’s Manchester and Salford distributor for quite a few years until I got fed up tramping round, and I knew Jim was the Prose Editor, and I sent some pieces to him. Through appearing in New Worlds I’d met him at least once, at one of the New Worlds parties, where he had urged me just to be &#8216;more prolific&#8217;.  He responded very positively to my work. A correspondence began, and he took the time to edit some of the longer pieces I had sent him. He was generally very kind to me, showing how Burroughs &#8217;subbed down&#8217; his work from much longer pieces. He went through my manuscripts with a pen, underlining the sentences he thought ‘worked’. No one of his competence had taken this time with me before, and we ended up with half a dozen pieces. Martin Bax, the editor of Ambit, didn’t like them enough to publish them, and they ended up appearing in New Worlds instead, in three parts.</p>
<p><strong>By the early 1970s, both yourself and David Britton were publishing amateur or semi-professional magazines under a variety of titles &#8212; <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/presavoy.html">Corridor, Weird Fantasy, Crucified Toad</a>, and so on. To what extent were you aiming to fill the gap left by the demise of New Worlds as a large-format magazine in 1970? Presumably it was a strong influence at this stage &#8212; you had written for the magazine, and several of the first books that Savoy published were by authors who had appeared in its pages &#8211; Charles Platt&#8217;s The Gas, Langdon Jones&#8217; The Eye of the Lens, Delany&#8217;s Tides of Lust, and several titles by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/angry-old-men-michael-moorcock-on-jg-ballard">Michael Moorcock</a>.</strong></p>
<p>We weren’t consciously trying to fill a gap &#8212; some of the contributors were the same because I knew many of the New Worlds writers and artists. Rather, we were <em>inspired</em> by New Worlds, and had started the zines when it was still in its prime &#8212; I published <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/concent.html">Concentrate</a> in 1968, and David published <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/weird1.html">Weird Fantasy</a> in 1969. Concentrate was distributed inside New Worlds and Ambit, as a give away. All things Moorcock were in our blood. I first encountered his work in Science Fantasy magazine in the early 1960s, but it was through Charles Platt (who I met at school) that I was introduced to him. David was a reader from even earlier, from Michael’s own amateur press days, and had met him to speak to at early science fiction conventions.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/concentrate.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: The first (and only) issue of Michael Butterworth&#8217;s magazine Concentrate (1968).</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/weird_fantasy2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
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<p><em>The second issue of David Britton&#8217;s &#8216;Weird Fantasy&#8217; (1971).</em></p>
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<p><strong>What was it that brought yourself and David together as book publishers? Or did you start the bookshops before going into publishing?</strong></p>
<p>The publishing came first. Then, around 1972 David started the House on the Borderland bookshop in Manchester. This was down a back street in central Manchester, and happened to be close to where I worked as a copywriter. I became in the habit of spending my lunch breaks in the shop, although we didn’t know each other personally until our printer, the printer-publisher John Muir, introduced us. When David moved to a busier location in 1974, changing the name of the shop to Orbit Books, turnover increased and more serious publishing became a possibility. For the fourth issue of <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/corr4.html">Corridor</a>, in 1972, I had got hold of an original Jerry Cornelius story from Michael Moorcock, ‘The Swastika Set-Up’, which David illustrated. David published #4 of his magazine and then became the Art Editor of Corridor. By Corridor #7, in 1976, we had become co-publishers. Around the same time, David published an oversized graphic work, <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/stormc.html">Stormbringer</a>. Adapted by James Cawthorn from Moorcock’s story, this was the first Savoy book, and led to us doing <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/jewelc.html">The Jewel in the Skull</a>, the first UK graphic novel, in 1978.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/house_border.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>Poster (1972) for David Britton&#8217;s first shop, House on the Borderland.</em></p>
<p>So we became full partners around 1976/77. David had the Stormbringer title under his belt, a very productive cash-generator in the form of a bookshop, and he had the beginnings of a publishing ideology worked out. I had a name, and knew Michael Moorcock and the New Worlds writers. As a single parent, having started a career as a freelance writer so I could work from home, I also had some experience of the mainstream publishing world, and had made a few business connections. From the outset we were both of one mind; we wanted to publish books, and wanted to see how far we could go.</p>
<p><strong>The bookshops were a lot more than just books and magazines, weren&#8217;t they? You also stocked records, tapes, and videos, especially hard-to-find material. How did running the shops influence the way you went about the publishing business?</strong></p>
<p>To pay for Savoy, the bookshop had to be expanded, and as Savoy grew, we opened more of them, until we had a string of bookshops across the North West of England, selling comics, science fiction, horror, rock books, back issues, rare books, adult mags, bootleg records and all the perennially cult works and authors like A Clockwork Orange, the Illuminatus trilogy, the NEL Richard Allen Skinhead books, and so on. David operated a ‘part-exchange’ policy as well as selling new titles, so across the counter came a very wide mixture of things. Seeing all this material gave us ideas, of course, especially in the way we packaged our books, but the shops’ main purpose was to provide for Savoy financially, which they did right up until the final one closed around 2005 in Leeds. They also acted as shop windows for our titles and for authors we admired.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/basement_books.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>Basement Books in Manchester, one of the shops which helped fund Savoy&#8217;s publishing.</em></p>
<p><strong>What lessons had you taken from Savoy&#8217;s difficulties of the early 80s? And what drove the two of you to keep going?</strong></p>
<p>Savoy went into liquidation in 1981. I was bankrupted the same year. David was jailed in 1982. With those events, the first phase of Savoy was over. After a period spent packaging books for other publishers, in the year of Orwell’s Big Brother we published <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/savdrea.html">Savoy Dreams</a>, which unconsciously signposted the way forwards for us. Looking back, it is a watershed book, half catalogue, half anthology, that provided a résumé of what we had achieved and, at the same time, by reprinting Kris Guidio’s comic strips of the Cramps and introducing P J Proby, we sounded our intentions for the future. This was also the book that contained the last stand-alone piece of fiction I published.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/savoy_dreams.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>The second Savoy anthology, Savoy Dreams (1984), which included a selection of the letters which Michael Moorcock wrote to J G Ballard from Los Angeles (later published as Letters from Hollywood), with the drug references left in.</em></p>
<p>David’s term of imprisonment had been for 21 days, but the real aim of the police raids was books such as Charles Platt’s <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/gas.html">The Gas</a>, Samuel Delany’s <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/tides.html">The Tides of Lust</a> and Jack Trevor Story’s <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/screw.html">Screwrape Lettuce</a>, a satirical story about the police that Jack had written (and David had illustrated) following a terrible ordeal Jack had at the hands of the London police during the Christmas of 1968. The police used ‘back door’ tactics against us, so that while making it plain that it was Savoy material they were concerned about (by seizing it and eventually destroying it after due process of law), they actually prosecuted us for other material we had on sale in the shops, a series of Grove Press ‘readers’ that had long passed their sell-by date, which the police had seized from us on numerous different occasions and returned &#8212; but after we had published The Gas they needed to make something stick. These were American books, so could be made to look like clandestine imports. The police were convinced we were major publishers of erotica, that they had stumbled on an international distribution network of pornography.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/the_gas.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>Savoy erotica: The Gas by Charles Platt (1980).</em></p>
<p>The main lesson we took from David’s imprisonment was really taken by him. He used the opportunity to rein in and focus down on the people and things that really mattered to him. Before this, I think, the publishing direction had largely been left open, as I attempted to build something he wasn’t really happy with &#8212; a mainstream publishing house. We had assembled a raft of writers and genres, ranging from science fiction, historical fiction, erotica &#8212; even a Savoy cookery line &#8212; to my real interests, Burroughs and Gysin. But these all got lost in the reorganisation. In our insolvency we lost control of our published titles, and the main lesson we learned was to, in future, own the copyright on everything we did, even if it meant creating the books ourselves. We have always regarded ourselves as creative publishers, and the direction we then embarked on saw David’s blossoming as a writer. Being in prison had also helped; in some ways, the experience had done him a favour, as it made him realise he didn’t want to waste more of his life on ‘inconsequences’, as he saw it.</p>
<blockquote><p>Hours passed.</p>
<p>A sickly light, errant and pellucid, thrilled above him. In a drama close to somnia turbula, ganglias of cables and wires, nerve fibres and raunchy buzzing lights radiated down at him from a ceiling, meshed together in a flue. His body felt tropical, infusing him with a chimerical dread.</p>
<p>He woke fitfully, his limbs heavy and somnambulant. He was back in his room. During the long night the hotel&#8217;s central heating had switched itself on. The heat was terrific. His head throbbed, full of virulent stuffs and old memories. He thought he could hear the sound of boiling broth close by. Sulphurous fumes filled the room, and a bittersweet almond taste prevailed in his mouth.</p>
<p>He peered from a single drained eye. His room at the Chelsea looked as though the mad hand of a god had transposed it into an everglade sarcophagus. He lay on his side, his head awkwardly positioned on a once-white pillow. Stuck next to him was a single hank of hair that pushed an umber stain into the cotton. He tried to lift his left hand to remove the hair. The hand moved slowly, as though pulling through treacle, then stopped. He raised his head slightly and peered over his naked white shoulders down the length of the bed. Despite an intense light, he could not see clearly. From his chest downwards he appeared to be encased inside a blackish nitrate crust similar to a moth&#8217;s chrysalis. Beneath this dark surface he could feel a moist second layer that pressed warmly against his skin, snugly cocooning him.</p>
<p>Futilely, Horror tried to rise up from his bed of excrement. The chrysalis skin broke, and the smell almost made him faint. From his neck he retched a yellow waxen glue. Defeated, he lapsed back in his warm prison.</p>
<p>During the night, monstrously huge poppies, torture-coloured roses and pain-white petunias had grown around him. At his feet, nettles had sprouted from the dark skein. Weeds muffled the metallic clicking of shite flies. Dung beetles scurried everywhere over the crust&#8217;s surface.</p>
<p>Neon tubes wrapped in bald flex pushed through the shite and added their burning light to the room. Myriad phalanxes of wasps had taken possession of the upper cornices. They swarmed about the ceiling like dense waves of black hair. For a moment, he thought he was mad, lying with fallen soldiers in the fields of Flanders, Ypres or the Somme.</p>
<p>The bed giggled and sighed. It heaved with an almost sentient life. It let off a series of swaggering farts that echoed ominously round the room in search of an exit.</p>
<p>The lights shook, and a swell of steam rose from the bed. Back it came to him. He remembered packing the enema bags tightly about his body before falling asleep. In the hothouse of the night, they had burst.</p>
<p><em>Excerpt from David Britton&#8217;s novel Lord Horror, published in 1989 by Savoy Books of Manchester, England.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lh_map.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lh_map.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Savoy Books" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>The (somewhat) tongue-in-cheek map of influences leading up to Britton and Butterworth&#8217;s Lord Horror (click to enlarge)</em></p>
<p><strong>Can I move on to <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/lhorror.html">Lord Horror</a>, which in a way was a response to the police raids and David&#8217;s first spell in prison. This is a novel whose subject matter includes Nazism and racism, yet I was struck by the lack of any explicit moral position within the book. This reminded me of Ballard&#8217;s comment that <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> would have been meaningless if he had incorporated some sort of explicit moral justification: the whole point of Crash was to get the reader to consider for themselves tendencies that already exist within the world that we live in, and therefore any moral framework has to be provided by the reader. And in fact Crash appears in the map of influences for Lord Horror.</strong></p>
<p>As soon as you define something, it becomes that thing. We wanted to write something that wasn’t definable, and in a weird way more true. Although, like Crash, Lord Horror is composed in conventional narrative, it is not what it seems; it is an intricate tableau, or rather a series of tableaux, a florescence from a central <em>idea</em>, which we expanded into picaresque forms that really make no overall narrative sense. It was also David’s first novel. He isn’t, any more than I am, a natural storyteller. He would hand me very dense pages of text, together with dislocated dialogue, actually descriptions of ‘pictures’ that he was seeing in his head. I had to open this up, and make it run in sequence. Lord Horror took four years and twelve rewrites on a portable manual typewriter to get it exactly as we wanted it.</p>
<p>The stories I wrote for New Worlds leave the reader to deduce how the post-disaster deserts came about. They are ironic metaphor, in the sense that the first person narrator accepts the devastation as a given, and by being so cool he is actually conveying the opposite of what he really feels. This ‘double distancing’ protects from the horror, but it also enables the reader to interpret what is really being said. In Lord Horror, morally, it’s crucial that what results from the actions of its characters is presented in a similar way, as a given &#8212; and on top of this to keep an ironic or sardonic tone. The characters themselves aren’t morally defined, as they are in a work like, say, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maus">Maus</a>. Making it clear that Lord Horror is ‘bad’ would have lost the possibility of empathy, and therefore the point of the novel. It would have perpetuated the image of Hitler-as-universal-scapegoat. Of course, it might also have appeased the judges and prevented much angst for David and I.</p>
<blockquote><p>The faith in reason and rationality that dominated post war thinking struck me as hopelessly idealistic, like the belief that the German people had been led astray by Hitler and the Nazis. I was sure that the countless atrocities in eastern Europe had taken place because the Germans involved had enjoyed the act of mass murder, just as the Japanese had enjoyed tormenting the Chinese. Reason and rationality failed to explain human behaviour. Human beings were often irrational and dangerous </p>
<p><em>J. G. Ballard, Miracles of Life (2008).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hch5.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>John Coulthart&#8217;s portrayal of the death camps in Hard Core Horror #5. The text panels are deliberately left blank &#8230; words are superfluous.</em></p>
<p><strong>I&#8217;d like to mention here Brian Stableford&#8217;s suggestion that Lord Horror is actually designed &#8216;to excite revulsion and anxiety&#8217;. In effect, it&#8217;s an invitation to the reader to reflect on just what it is in the book that causes those feelings. For example, when I asked myself some months after first reading the novel what it was that I found repulsive about it, the thing I recalled was the use of racist epithets&#8230; Which is really rather strange, I mean here we have a book that looks at the reasons behind the deaths of millions in the Nazi concentration camps, a book which contains lengthy descriptions of people being abused, dismembered, murdered in the most foul ways, even eaten, yet what seems to cause me difficulty is the use of certain words. It&#8217;s an extreme <em>reductio ad absurdum</em>, but one in which the reader does not sit above what&#8217;s going on, nodding and smiling to himself, but actually <em>inside</em> the bloody thing, with all the stress and confusion that&#8217;s implied by being part of it. That is similar, it seems to me, to another of Ballard&#8217;s comments about Crash: &#8216;I wanted to write a book where the reader had nowhere to hide.&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>In Lord Horror, not only does the reader have nowhere to hide, but also, if he or she perseveres with the book &#8212; which Colin Wilson <a href="http://www.artandpopularculture.com/Lord_Horror">famously wouldn’t</a> &#8212; they find that they are at risk of becoming the character, which can be even more discomforting. The protection offered by the third person narrative breaks down in several places, with what seem to be very brief passing racist comments of the author casually inserted, a technique that is more refined in the third novel in the &#8216;Horror&#8217; sequence, Baptised in the Blood of Millions. In Lord Horror they are so brief that you may at first miss them, or perhaps think they are typos. But it soon becomes apparent that this may be happening deliberately, and readers may find themselves in the uncomfortable dilemma of deciding whether they should continue reading the book, and if so how are they to read it? Is the author a racist, or isn’t he? Should I continue to be amused by his black-humoured jokes, or are his detractors right: is this just poor art, camouflaged by quasi-learning, as the magistrate decisively pronounced of the <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/horrpage.html">Hard Core Horror</a> comics? A nihilistic, sadistic ‘playfulness’ operates at every level in the book, even in the narrative conventions. Further, the author seems not to care, to subvert whatever credibility the bravest readers and critics give to him.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reverb6_chew.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reverb6_chew.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Savoy Books" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Lord Horror broadcasts to the people (from Reverbstorm #6): art by John Coulthart (click to enlarge).</em></p>
<p>The novel is designed to be morally offensive, and also physically offensive. It is highly visceral, often repellent, as when the dried outer skin of the shit cocoon encasing Horror cracks open. When at work on the book, it was a common experience to feel queasy. With succeeding Lord Horror works, each one aims to out-do the preceding one in grossness. If you read one of David&#8217;s later books, <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/mofo.html">Motherfuckers: The Auschwitz of Oz</a> and <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/bapt.html">Baptised in the Blood of Millions</a>, and nod sagely, thinking that a clue may now be found that will dispel the cloud of ambiguity hanging about the author, you will not find it. Every chink has been firmly filled, hasn’t even been allowed to be open in the first place. There seems to be, at every turn, an imperative to escalate the crudity of the violence and racism &#8212; to <em>avoid</em> numbing the reader, to find ways of not allowing the writing the dread anathema of becoming safe.</p>
<p><strong>Ballard&#8217;s work has always reflected his interest in surrealist art. And in a way, Lord Horror is a surrealist text, possibly more so than anything by Ballard, who&#8217;s always been concerned to &#8216;tell a story&#8217;. A penis that grows so large as to encompass the Earth; a person being devoured whole &#8212; that isn&#8217;t exactly fantasy, it seems to me &#8230; it&#8217;s surrealism. The same applies to the way in which the book is written, with rapid stylistic changes &#8212; from philosophical disquisition to horrific description &#8212; and paragraphs of text lifted from elsewhere and put into the mouths of the characters. To me, the book makes more sense considered as a surrealist novel; if it&#8217;s read as an alternative-history fantasy, or as a satire, then I think the reader misses much of what is in there.</strong></p>
<p>Writing about Lord Horror in A Serious Life, Dave Mitchell compared the book to Bataille and Lautréamont and de Sade, and he may be right, but we see ourselves as belonging more in the absurdist camp, with nods to surrealism. Before we knew each other, two of our heroes were Alfred Jarry and P J Proby. I was also influenced by satirical writers like Rabelais, where key figures are exaggerated to ludicrous extremes. David’s ‘surrealism’ was more William Hope Hodgson and Frank Randle than the more formal manifestations in Max Ernst or Salvador Dali. Francis Bacon has always been a strong muse for him, and latterly Paula Rego has excited us both. Michael Moorcock threw in Maurice Richardson, while I also brought the sometimes existentialist bizarreness of the Beats. The ‘absurdism’ of ordinary life, and popular culture such as fifties rock’n’roll and Creole patois was another rich source for Lord Horror &#8212; you know, &#8216;Sleepin&#8217; on his mugwump, playing on his Jew&#8217;s harp, music crawlin&#8217; into your skin, Daddy in his Zoot suit, mammy playin&#8217; skin flute, sister makes a swine-hair grin, <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/mugwump.html">Doin&#8217; that crazy Cajun cakewalk dance</a>!&#8217; What could be more ‘surreal’ than that? The Mugwump character in Lord Horror is from P J Proby, not Burroughs.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lord_horror.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>David Britton&#8217;s first novel, Lord Horror (1989)</em>.</p>
<p>So Lord Horror could be seen a ‘surrealist’ novel, but it is a very personal surrealism, I think, with specifically working-class Manchester roots. William Hope Hodgson once rode a bicycle down the steepest steps in Blackburn. David once saw Roy Rogers riding Trigger through cobbled, terraced streets in North Manchester in 1951. These must have seemed like eruptions from a different universe. The ‘alternative history’ theme, as you have correctly seen, is not the book’s main point; for us it’s a purely theatrical device. And the book isn’t intended as satire. It is more Grand Guignol than satirical.</p>
<p>To our initial mystification, Ballard didn’t like Lord Horror. Possibly it had far too much gaudy end-of-the-pier working-class English ‘surrealism’ for him, rather than the purer, more polite surrealism he did like.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reverb4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>Reverbstorm #4. Cover art by John Coulthart (after Burne Hogarth).</em></p>
<p><strong>What about Ballard&#8217;s use of unconventional narrative structure? I&#8217;m thinking particularly of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a>, and of Moorcock&#8217;s Jerry Cornelius stories, where iconic personalities and historic events appear, bringing along their own narratives. There&#8217;s a lot of that, it seems, in Savoy&#8217;s work &#8211; especially in the <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/revpage.html">Reverbstorm</a> magazines, with the cultural references incorporated into John Coulthart&#8217;s artwork, and dialogue consisting largely of quotations &#8230; so that the reader is no longer spoon-fed a narrative but has to do most of what Ballard once referred to as &#8216;the hard work&#8217;.</strong></p>
<p>If ‘fragmentation’, non-linear and cut-up writing are responses to complexity as I have suggested, then Reverbstorm is certainly this. The ‘story’ of Reverbstorm, like the ‘story’ of The Atrocity Exhibition or Naked Lunch or Captain Beefheart’s Trout Mask Replica, is really its form. It is emblematic of a certain time in the 20th Century and in the mental processes of David, John and I. The use of such forms by Ballard and Burroughs was a way of dealing with personal trauma, but such new chaotic forms in literature and art seemed to suggest that by ‘breaking down reality’, more appropriate new ways of looking at it might be found.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reverb7.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reverb7.jpg" alt="" title="Ballardian: Savoy Books" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>John Coulthart&#8217;s artwork from the Reverbstorm magazines, of which Alan Moore wrote: &#8216;Like Baudelaire, Beardsley and Breughel meeting in a crack house, &#8220;Reverbstorm&#8221; presents, with diamond focus, a portrait of the incoherent, incandescent rot at the heart of the Twentieth Century. Highly recommended.&#8217; (Click to enlarge.)</em></p>
<p><strong>But there&#8217;s a difference here, isn&#8217;t there, to using a &#8216;cut-up&#8217; technique? How would you characterize that distinction?</strong></p>
<p>In Moorcock&#8217;s multiverse, fragmentation occurs during the mixing up of narrative threads, due to the way the threads appear and reappear in space-time from the perspective of an observer. But the results of this apparently random selection are very controlled. I don’t know how Ballard went about achieving non-linearity, but his experiments also seem very controlled. Even Burroughs’ cut-up techniques are controlled because, as Jim showed me, they are edited afterwards, and so they are narratives assembled from cut-ups. Much editorial control and direction is shown in works like Nova Express. Between cut-ups and Ballard’s non-linear experiments, or Moorcock’s multiverse stories, there are big differences in technique in the way material is gathered together, although the outcome can often be the same.</p>
<p>For almost a decade after first reading Burroughs, I could not read linear writing. But I did find that I got very adept at <em>writing</em> in cut-up; I could mimic the ‘unintelligibility’ of random cut-up, and produce text that had randomness to a varying degree. It was this ‘stream of consciousness’-kind of writing I was producing that Ballard helped me to edit, which became the Concentrate pieces.</p>
<p><a name="concentrate"><br />
<a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/concentrate3.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/concentrate3.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>The final &#8216;Concentrate&#8217; piece: written by Butterworth, edited by Ballard and published in New Worlds #197 (click to enlarge).</em></p>
<p><strong>David was originally the artist and yourself the writer, yet it&#8217;s Dave&#8217;s writings that have appeared in Savoy from Lord Horror onwards. How did that reversal come about?</strong></p>
<p>To write well, you need to be driven by anger or some other strong emotion. What drove me in my earlier days was anger I felt at mankind’s failings, but this voice I’d found was already fading by the time David and I met. David’s anger is different &#8212; he has never given it up. He has always been angry per se, at existence. Though he is ultimately optimistic he feels a great frustration at life. His perception has always been of the glass half-empty variety. I am the opposite.</p>
<p>The turning point for me as a writer was Lord Horror. It was a collaborative book, and was to have been published under a joint byline, but at the last moment, I gave David the byline. At the end of my last published piece of fiction, written under my own name (‘A Hurricane in a Nightjar’, Savoy Dreams 1984), I wrote directly from the postatomic deserts to the reader: &#8216;For the time being, thank you&#8217;. I knew my voice had gone, although I hoped it wouldn’t go for good. But though it hasn’t returned, happily it has led me to other things.</p>
<p><strong>The result of the publication of Lord Horror and the associated Hard Core Horror and <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/mengpage.html">Meng &#038; Ecker</a> comics was another series of police raids, and the prosecution of Savoy under the Obscene Publications Acts. The charge was justified in Court on the grounds of the anti-Semitism displayed in the publications, a rather strange claim since the racial hatred laws were designed specifically for such purposes but were ignored by the police and prosecutors. There was then yet another prosecution, for non-Savoy material kept in the shops, as a result of which David spent a second period in Strangeways prison. How did Savoy cope with this second &#8216;crisis&#8217;? The changes in the business seem to have been less dramatic than those in the early &#8217;80s&#8230;</strong></p>
<p>The second time David was jailed, it was his reward for writing Lord Horror. The book was seized and found to be obscene by the magistrates. I conducted the appeal with <a href="http://www.geoffreyrobertson.com">Geoffrey Robertson</a> and this resulted in the charge against it being overturned. The local Vice Squad were very bitter about this. Early in the proceedings, two members were caught airing their views about Lord Horror in an ‘undercover’ interview for The Observer, saying there was an urgency to act against Lord Horror because they &#8216;might be the last generation with a moral viewpoint&#8217; and therefore the last people with the capability to do it. They were officers, guys in their 30s, saying they had a moral sense that might be denied later generations, therefore they had a duty to act now to protect ‘common decency’ on behalf of the public. That was their reason for banning the book. They were hoping for the heaviest penalty. At about the same time as the Observer article we were hauled to the main police headquarters, Stretford House, and grilled separately about our publications, both books and comics. We were told we were racially and morally degenerate. We ran some of this interview in one of the Meng &#038; Ecker comics. Later, we heard that <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Anderton">Chief Constable Anderton</a> himself had been listening in to the interview, overseeing it, in fact, in his office above where we had been sitting.</p>
<p>It was quite clear to us that the target was Savoy and not, as the police were continually maintaining, what we were selling in the shops &#8211; which was largely mainstream fiction, literary, fantasy, rock books, bootlegs and so on. Only a very small percentage of the shop stock was erotica, and none of this was what was called ‘hard’. But because of the unusual zero tolerance climate being generated in Manchester by police Chief ‘God’s Cop’ James Anderton, they could get away with doing us for it.</p>
<blockquote><p>Anderton was a creature that could only have existed in the slightly surreal atmosphere of Thatcher Britain; repressively conservative, of dubious competence, and given to worrying statements about hearing God’s voice while Manchester filled up with guns and pushers. LORD HORROR was strong drink, to be sure: a hallucinated vision of Lord Haw-Haw, the English traitor who broadcast Nazi propaganda into Britain during World War 2. It was difficult, horrifying work, the Nazi atrocities made superreal with the tools of DeSade and Bataille, very much an extension of the “New Worlds school” and its intent to use fantasy as a way to present the real world in a new light for our consideration. Britton is neither a self-hating Jew nor a childish monster. He is clearly haunted by the pre-1945 world.</p>
<p>And they sent him to prison.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.warrenellis.com/?p=948">Warren Ellis</a>.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/anderton.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>&#8216;God&#8217;s Cop&#8217;: Chief Constable James Anderton.</em></p>
<p>The police prosecuted us for Lord Horror on the grounds of obscenity because that was the decision taken by the local office of the DPP (Director of Publication Prosecutions). Many people thought it strange, but he thought the Crown stood a better chance of prosecuting us that way. The DPP only charged us under Section 3 of the obscenity laws, which allowed Lord Horror to be condemned by the magistrates but did not allow us the option of a jury trial. However, under Section 3, they could only destroy the book &#8212; we could not be jailed. The police used the same tactics as in 1981, trumping-up charges on non-Savoy material that was really very tame, and it was these which led to Dave&#8217;s second prison sentence. After the experiences of <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/cinema/features/chatterley-affair.shtml">Lady Chatterley</a> and <a href="http://www.lawreports.co.uk/Newsletter/OnlineArticles/TheLawvsLiterature06.html">Last Exit to Brooklyn</a>, they knew that if they went after our more literary titles then the attack would backfire on them; as indeed proved to be the case when they went after Lord Horror and we won the appeal.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/central_books.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" class="picleft" /></p>
<p><em>LEFT: Raided! One of the Savoy shops in the late 80s.</em></p>
<p>This time David’s imprisonment was for four months, and we coped less well. We were in the middle of an intensive phase of work rather than at a natural turning point as we had been on the previous occasion, and our fighting spirit wasn’t the same. I had managed to make publicity out of the Lord Horror case, but the victory we’d won felt hollow. On the previous occasion there had been genuine surprise by all parties, even by the prosecution, that the judge had thought to jail David &#8212; something rarely done &#8212; rather than fine him.</p>
<p>Prison terms are automatically reduced by a half; you only do the full term if you misbehave. Although David did not do the full four months, it was still a very long time. One hour is a long time in a place where anything can go wrong, and where few may know if it does. How best to survive, where survival is a moment-to-moment question? There were no changes to Savoy; when David was released we had a gathering of the clans in the local Pig and Porcupine, and then just carried on. If anything, it had the effect of firming our resolve, so possibly the one ‘change’ we made was &#8212; never to change!</p>
<p>Our final large court case directly involved Savoy titles &#8212; the Meng &#038; Ecker and Hard Core Horror comics that the police seized when they seized the novel. The authorities felt themselves to be on much firmer ground with these, because of the ‘link’, as they saw it, with children. They even returned to conduct a second raid before the outcome of the first was known, and seized thousands more comics. I conducted the defence for this also, and took the case as high as I could. It dragged on for six years, but at its end, in the High Court in London, the local Manchester magistrate who had originally found the comics obscene was vindicated &#8212; even though a child has never read them and never will.</p>
<p><strong>You&#8217;ve spoken out in previous interviews about the politically correct mindset of both left and right &#8212; and Savoy has suffered from both versions, <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/savdrea.html">rejected by Compendium Books</a> and by Rough Trade Records at the same time as it was being raided again and again by the Manchester Police. Ballard labeled the growth of this type of reaction in the 1980s &#8216;the New Puritanism&#8217;. How do you see the position in 2009 &#8212; is there more timidity, more unthinking rejection, than there was 20 or 30 years ago?</strong></p>
<p>We haven’t had a police raid in ten years &#8212; after twenty-five years of constant raids. On the last raid, in 1999, the police personally admitted that their game with us was over. Their concerns about Lord Horror and the Meng &#038; Ecker comics had been eclipsed by the Internet and world events. Until Lord Horror, it was popularly believed that the successful Last Exit to Brooklyn appeal in 1968 was the final nail in the coffin of police repression of serious books, but it wasn’t. When the magistrate’s charge of obscenity against Lord Horror was overturned in the High Court in 1992, <em>that</em> genuinely was the end, in the UK.</p>
<p>You don’t see the same kind of heavy-handed repression happening here now. Rather than laws dealing with reading matter, there are laws restricting movement and access, something <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iain-sinclair-when-in-doubt-quote-ballard">Iain Sinclair</a> is documenting. There is also less inclination on the part of writers to go over the same ground. ‘Taboo’ books may not be progressive or relevant any more.</p>
<p><strong>In his history of Savoy, A Serious Life, D. M. Mitchell suggests that the police raids and obscenity trials have directed attention away from your wider achievements, such as the publication of The Exploits of Engelbrecht, A Voyage to Arcturus, <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/gstran.html">Henry Treece</a>&#8217;s Celtic Tetralogy, and the work of <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/fudgbu.html">Ken Reid</a> and of <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/eyeof.html">Langdon Jones</a>. To what extent do you think this is true, and if so, are you bothered by it?</strong></p>
<p>The court cases diverted attention away from our early intentions as publishers and writers, and I think they still colour public perception. I think the police raids stopped us in our tracks at a pivotal moment, and for me it was a great frustration. In 1981, when we went in liquidation, we were poised to become mainstream publishers. Up until this time I was still convinced that we could do so, but in the end our uncompromising, eclectic natures and the politically incorrect nature of the bookshops, meant we couldn’t. After the ‘Savoy Wars’, as we termed the skirmishes during the 80s, we found ourselves stuck in &#8216;a weird place, like one of those soldiers lost in a forest and still fighting the war after it’s over&#8217;, to quote <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/panegyric.html">Keith Seward</a>).</p>
<p>Certain critics can’t get past the subject matter, or they don’t see the work as being part of a literary tradition. We’ve been defined at a very simple level as transgressors who got into trouble with the law &#8212; it’s much easier to understand us this way &#8212; or one-offs who shouldn’t be paid serious attention. In our earlier bookshop days, we were cast as pornographers and bootleggers who had fallen foul of the law. This can work for us, of course, and means we are at least assured of a lasting profile of a kind. We have a cultural trademark, like P J Proby’s split trousers or Fenella Fielding’s husky voice.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reverb6.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>John Coulthart&#8217;s portrayal of the 20th-century city in Reverbstorm #6.</em></p>
<p><strong>All along, you&#8217;ve published authors whom you admire, especially where their work is otherwise unavailable or unduly neglected. But is there, do you think, some element in common between the authors and artists that Savoy publish or with whom you collaborate? Is there something that links Michael Moorcock and P. J. Proby with Henry Treece and Fenella Fielding?</strong></p>
<p>That ‘element’ is something we’ve tried hard to define in books like <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/serious.html">A Serious Life</a>. As in anything, it is who and where &#8212; who you grow up with, and where you grow up. Being Mancunians, David and I were both exposed to the work of people like Ken Reid, whose 3-panel Fudge and Speck strips appeared nightly in the Manchester Evening News when we were kids. As we got older, we both became aware of Proby, a stricken star who had fallen to earth in the Northern workingmen’s club scene, who became an equally potent conductor for fantasies skewed from the mainstream. Ours has not been the normal ‘expression’ of growing up &#8212; our allegiance has been to too many ‘odd’ things for that. Savoy is a stitch of David and I. David’s obsession to preserve youthful influences and to put a different emphasis on the art and culture of his time to the one that has become the consensus; my desire for the radical and new &#8212; these link the various, on the surface, disparate Savoy writers, artists and artistes.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/serious_life.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" class="picleft" /></p>
<p><em>A Serious Life: D M Mitchell&#8217;s marvelous history of Savoy &#8212; the books, the records, the comics, plus interviews with Butterworth, Britton and Coulthart.</em></p>
<p><strong>Did you have much in the way of dealings with Ballard after starting Savoy? You haven&#8217;t published anything by him, unlike Moorcock and other New Worlds writers, though I believe a limited edition of Crash was suggested at some point.</strong></p>
<p>We began by publishing Michael Moorcock, and we just seemed to go along that axis. Plus the fact that Jim wasn’t in need of a publisher, so he didn’t fall into our other category of books at that time: he wasn’t a neglected giant of fantasy, as we saw it, like Henry Treece or <a href="http://www.jacktrevorstory.co.uk">Jack Trevor Story</a>. Nor was he in the position of Burroughs, whose ‘lesser’ books like The Job or Dutch Schultz, I thought, were in need of greater exposure, or Brion Gysin, who was in need of documenting as an artist in his own right. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Pringle">David Pringle</a>, and later Vale at <a href="http://www.researchpubs.com/Blog">Re/Search</a>, were documenting Ballard’s work. And as time went by, our options ran out anyway. When I finally did figure out a way of <a href="http://realitystudio.org/interviews/david-britton-and-michael-butterworth-on-william-s-burroughs">publishing Burroughs</a> and Gysin, the police raids on Savoy reached a crescendo, and I had to relinquish them.</p>
<p>We were disappointed when Jim turned down the <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/the-lady-vanishes-what-ever-happened-to-fenella-fielding-785265.html">Crash/Fenella Fielding</a> package. Fielding has the allure of Hollywood about her, while having an eccentric English demeanor, and has what we think is the perfect voice for reading Crash. It took us a great deal of effort to get her to do it. At first, she was cautious, because she didn’t want to do anything that she thought might demean women. After protracted discussion, which went on for about a year, she finally took the advice of an ex-BBC director friend, who assured her that it would be OK. She did the reading, but would not read some of the more violent heterosexual sex scenes involving women.</p>
<p>We saw Crash as part of a new Savoy deluxe hardback fantasy reprint series we had started, with new editions of Maurice Richardson’s <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/engelb.html">The Exploits of Engelbrecht</a> (2000) and David Lindsay’s <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/arcturus.html">A Voyage to Arcturus</a> (2002). We sent Jim the finished reading, together with samples of these books, with a proposal to release it together with a special edition of Crash. But he claimed that he had always disliked &#8216;book worship&#8217; in any form, and did not subscribe to the &#8216;industry of limited editions&#8217;; he thought books should be mass-produced and disposable. When I asked whether he would mind us releasing just the Fielding reading on its own, he said not, preferring that &#8216;a book should just be a book&#8217;. He was very courteous and kind, asking me not to take this the wrong way, but I did come away with the feeling that the Savoy chemistry was wrong for him and that we had misjudged him once again &#8212; he had reacted very similarly to Lord Horror. It sounds silly, but the incident increased my feeling that in some way I had not lived up to his expectation, after he had gone out of his way to encourage my early writing. I had not received such encouragement or understanding off my own father, and when Jimmy passed away it felt like a father had gone.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/exploits_engel.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>The Exploits of Engelbrecht, republished by Savoy in 2000, with this commendation on the cover from Ballard: &#8216;The Exploits of Engelbrecht is English surrealism at its greatest. Witty and fantastical, Maurice Richardson was light years ahead of his time. Unmissable.&#8217;</em></p>
<p><strong>Mike Moorcock has said that one of his ambitions for New Worlds was to cross-fertilize the popular and literary traditions. I take it that&#8217;s an aim with which you&#8217;d concur?</strong></p>
<p>Yes, but that’s something that was always going to come much more easily to Michael than to us! For a start, as a writer he is a natural storyteller. Audience is very important to him. In his publishing projects he took over existing magazines with ready audiences rather than attempt to start up something from scratch.</p>
<p>His charismatic personality had attracted to New Worlds already-established authors, Ballard, Aldiss, et cetera. When Savoy began, influenced by New Worlds or, more particularly, by Michael’s enthusiasm for certain writers &#8212; Jack Trevor Story, M John Harrison, Langdon Jones &#8212; these writers readily allowed us to do their books as paperbacks. As we developed, we became a more gaudy, cross-pollinating rock’n’roll publishing/recording outfit, top-and-tailing Ken Reid and T S Eliot, P J Proby and New Order, or joining up like-minded souls, Burne Hogarth and Cawthorn, Fielding and Colette, The Tides of Lust and The Gas. Gradually, we seemed to find an identity. It perhaps helped that we stayed in the North, away from the temptations of the London publishing scene. On the other hand, if we had carried the battle South we might perhaps have succeeded as a legitimate company. Who knows.</p>
<p>To consciously set out to marry the popular with the literate is beside the point, really. Did Dickens set out to do that? He just did it. A basic rule of adventurous writing is to leave in a certain amount of cliché, so you don’t lose the reader. I think that was something Michael Moorcock taught me: you should not take people too far too quickly or you will lose them. But I think if you are a truly great writer &#8212; or a great editor or publisher &#8212; you will naturally have popular appeal. Once Michael had ‘trained’ his initial SF readership and attracted new readers &#8212; each issue contained a reducing amount of traditional SF &#8212; New Worlds became a blend of the popular and literary quite naturally. It was second nature to everyone involved: editors, designers, artists and writers. By contrast, the much later Modern Review, say, which had a declared policy of mixing high and low, seemed contrived.</p>
<p>New Worlds was dependent on its editor’s vision and drive, and when he decided to move on it lost its direction. Charles Platt ran it well for a while, but then he also moved on, alas. Just think what could have been achieved had Michael been able to devote his time to keeping New Worlds going as a monthly magazine, acting as a kind of mainstream Counterblast to the various movements and groups that have come and gone since the sixties.</p>
<blockquote><p>Only one alternate history series confronted Nazism with appropriate originality and passion. Published by the independent Manchester firm Savoy, David Britton&#8217;s surreal <strong>Lord Horror</strong> and its sequels entered the mind of a deranged surviving Hitler whose visions grew increasingly insane&#8230; Soon after they appeared, Hard Core Horror and Lord Horror were seized by Manchester&#8217;s vice squad. The books were destroyed and their author went to Strangeways, suggesting that successful Nazi alternate histories must take profound psychological, moral and physical risks. </p>
<p><em><strong>Michael Moorcock, <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3644962/If-Hitler-had-won-World-War-Two.html">The Daily Telegraph</a>.</strong></em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/media_web.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" class="picleft" /> <strong>What about the future? How much have Savoy got in the locker? There&#8217;s a collection of Mike Moorcock&#8217;s non-fiction due for publication, I believe. And what about the final issue of the Reverbstorm series &#8212; will that actually be published? It&#8217;s been &#8216;forthcoming&#8217; for several years!</strong></p>
<p>There is a lot left in the locker, but whether we produce it or not is a question of what financial resources we have left. Since losing the bookshops we have been forced to raise money in less exciting, more legitimate ways. As a result we are vulnerable to things like economic recessions, and this present one has hit us badly as it has hit others. David and I are both now in our sixties. But while we can, we will keep going. John Coulthart is designing Into the Media Web, the collection of Moorcock non-fiction, at the moment. We hope it will appear in 2010, together with the promised second Savoy edition of Engelbrecht. John is also at work re-mastering the Reverbstorm part-series as a graphic novel. This will contain the long promised final installment. A collection of articles about Savoy is underway, Tales From the Savoy, as is David’s newly completed Lord Horror novel, La Squab: The Black Rose of Auschwitz, which will be illustrated by Kris Guidio. He is also at work on a new novel, more a short coda to the other books, called Invictus Horror. Plus all the work we did with Fielding is still to be released: Fenella Fielding: The Savoy Sessions (a new album of songs, and companion album to <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/savses.html">P J Proby: The Savoy Sessions</a>), a double album reading from Colette, as well as readings of Four Quartets and La Squab.</p>
<p><strong>Finally, you&#8217;ve also been involved, outside of Savoy, with the launch of a new magazine, Corridor8, which revives the title of your early magazines but concentrating on contemporary visual art. How did the new magazine come about, and what are your hopes for it?</strong></p>
<p>It grew out of an interest in conceptual art, and wanting to do a magazine again. I’d begun publishing a small line of print-on-demand books featuring work which didn’t fall into Savoy’s remit, but which I was in the habit of being offered from time to time by people who knew I was a publisher. One of these books was an interview with <a href="http://www.michael-butterworth.co.uk/colinwilson/home.htm">Colin Wilson</a> by the writer and journalist Brad Spurgeon, about Wilson’s philosophy as an optimist. Another, which arrived anonymously one morning, was a surreal oddity &#8212; a full libretto for <a href="http://www.michael-butterworth.co.uk/jacksonpollock/home.htm">an imaginary musical about Jackson Pollock</a> written by an artist friend, Roger McKinley. Although his libretto took the conventional form of a book, it worked as a piece of conceptual art, and it was seeing the possibilities of this that got me interested.</p>
<p>When my father died, my partner, Sarajane Inkster, who had once interviewed David and I after Burroughs’s death about <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk/HTML/wsb.html">our meeting with him in the Bunker</a> in the early 80s, in a mood of mad creativity generously suggested I use part of my inheritance to produce a magazine. Corridor8 derives its name from the small-press magazines I started out doing, and the first issue is dedicated to J.G. Ballard and New Worlds, although I wouldn’t say it is recognisably in the Ballard/New Worlds or even Savoy moulds.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/corridor8.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><em>Michael Butterworth&#8217;s new magazine, &#8216;Corridor8&#8242;, launched in July 2009.</em></p>
<p>Corridor8 appears annually &#8212; the next issue comes out September 2010 &#8212; and the intention is to make its publication an event. The launch this year had a talk by Iain Sinclair, who used Issue 1 as a springboard for a new work set outside the capital, and also an art installation by the arte povera maverick Michelangelo Pistoletto. As subsequent issues appear, I can see the ‘launches’ growing and becoming more like mini-arts festivals. The magazine itself will continue to be North-of-England-based, on a speculative tip with an international outlook and still focusing on contemporary visual art and writing. Issue 1 focuses on art inside <a href="http://www.urbis.org.uk/page.asp?id=2921">Will Alsop’s ‘SuperCity’</a> &#8212; Alsop’s concept of a linear city running raggedly across the neck of England from Liverpool to Hull and beyond. Sinclair’s work in the same issue explores the corridor in two long psychogeographical journeys, East-West by car and then West-East by bus pass, debunking Alsop&#8217;s concept. It was also the first time Alsop’s work as a canvas artist was featured in-depth, since when he has announced that he has retired from his architectural practice to devote his time to painting.</p>
<p>There are also interviews with Peter Saville about his new position as Creative Director of Manchester, and with Yorkshire artist and art catalyst Paul Bradley who produced the Pistoletto installation for us, an article by Jon Savage about the Haçienda nightclub, another article about the Danish art group Superflex’s project ‘tenantspin’ &#8212; a web-based television venture to empower residents in Liverpool tower blocks threatened with demolition &#8212; as well as, all importantly, profiles of eight artists who live and work in the SuperCity region. For Issue 2, we plan to move the geographical focus further north, towards Cumbria, Newcastle, and the Scottish borderlands &#8212; it will have a borderland theme &#8212; and on artists who work outside the centre. I am hoping one of the artists will be David Hockney, while the main writer for this issue I hope will be Jenny Diski, another favourite writer, who has some thematic similarities with Sinclair.</p>
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<p><em>Thank you, Michael Butterworth.</em></p>
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<p><em>Don&#8217;t forget the Savoy Books Microfiction competition! Win super-rare Savoy books, comic books and CDs by writing a short story of 100 words or less on &#8216;Savoyesque&#8217; or &#8216;Ballardian&#8217; themes. Details <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/savoy-ballardian-microfiction-competition">here</a>.</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/savoy_logo.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Savoy Books" /></p>
<p><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/james-cawthorn-rip-1929-2008"> James Cawthorn, RIP: 1929-2008</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballardcraft-ballardlovecraft">Ballardcraft: Ballard/Lovecraft</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/get-lost-burroughs-on-curtis">&#8216;Get Lost&#8217;: Burroughs on Curtis</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/bunker-tales">Bunker Tales</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/horror-panegyric">Horror Panegyric</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/home-and-a-grave">A Home and a Grave: Mike Holliday on The Unlimited Dream Company</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/angry-old-men-michael-moorcock-on-jg-ballard">Angry Old Men: Michael Moorcock on J.G. Ballard</a></p>
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		<title>Conference paper on Ballard and &#8216;circular time&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/conference-paper-on-ballard-and-circular-time</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/conference-paper-on-ballard-and-circular-time#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Sep 2009 11:34:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[airports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Deleuze]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lunghua]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I'm giving a paper on Ballard, circular time and the nouvelle vague this Thursday, October 1, at 3pm at ACMI in Melbourne, as part of the time.transcendence.performance conference. Come and say hello.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/la_jetee_ttp.jpg" alt="Ballardian: La Jetee" /></p>
<p><em>Still from La Jetée (1962), dir. Chris Marker.</em></p>
<p>If you&#8217;re in Melbourne this Thursday, come and say hello! I&#8217;m giving a paper on Ballard, circular time and the nouvelle vague this Thursday, October 1, at <del datetime="2009-10-01T04:54:46+00:00">3pm</del> 3.45pm at ACMI in the city. It&#8217;s part of the <a href="http://arts.monash.edu.au/drama-theatre/conferences/ttp/2009">time.transcendence.performance conference</a>, held over three days at ACMI and Monash University&#8217;s Caulfield campus. Guests include Stelarc (very exciting, for me), Brian Massumi and more. Here&#8217;s the conference blurb, followed by the abstract for my paper:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>time.transcendence.performance</strong> brings together artists, designers and thinkers who work with time, to explore how they might inform each other. How do performers think time? How do thinkers perform time? What shared or different understandings are at work in the different practices?</p>
<p>Even before Aristotle wrote that time is the number of motion with respect to before and after, and Heraclitus observed that it was impossible to step into the same river twice, philosophers &#8211; Eastern and Western &#8211; have wondered about time. Is it real or just an abstraction? Is it reversible? Does it pass? Do we experience it directly? Is it relative or constant? Does it exist? So far, the consensus is that we do not have satisfactory answers to these questions.</p>
<p>More than an academic conference: the three-day program features public performances, exhibitions, installations, screenings and workshops.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>‘CONFRONTING OURSELVES’: J.G. BALLARD &#038; CIRCULAR TIME</strong><br />
Dr Simon Sellars<br />
School of English, Communication &#038; Performance Studies<br />
Monash University, Clayton</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard’s oeuvre features numerous examples of self-contained societies that many critics perceive as disguised versions of Lunghua, the insular WWII camp he was interned in as a child. His novel, Empire of the Sun, widely seen as Ballard’s ‘authentic’ autobiography and the key to decoding his fiction, activated this perception. However, by cross-examining his body of work, I will argue that there is no definitive reconstruction of this wartime experience – rather, Empire should be viewed as Ballard’s life seen through the holograph of his fiction – and that, moreover, this holistic recycling of memory forms the model for a program of resistance to late capitalism. In wider terms, Ballard positions time as an artificial construct imposing control on the chaotic subconscious: the clock stops, past and future collapsed in the drive to homogenise the planet. Liberation derives from circular time – revisiting memory – and even sideways time, restaging and reinhabiting parallel worlds. </p>
<p>To illustrate this, the paper analyses Ballard’s affinity with nouvelle vague cinema &#8212; non-linear film technique, which, incorporated into the fabric of his work, reveals the &#8216;true&#8217; nature of perception, time and memory. Ballard&#8217;s fiction is the fictional doubling of Deleuze’s work on the cinema of the &#8216;time-image&#8217;: both locate &#8216;nodes of resistance&#8217; in post-war cinema, deploying the nouvelle vague as revealing the truth of the merger between the virtual and the actual. Focusing on repetition and déjà vu, the critical concept of revisiting and reinhabiting memory emerges in Ballardian and Deleuzian philosophy. Ballard’s malleable, circular Lunghua memories become a mutant psychopathology that focuses on inner mental states as reality and the external world of media and consumerism as irreality – a reversal that his work posits as the only viable antidote to an increasingly stylised and mediated post-war realm, the only effective form of resistance to totalising, naturalised systems of control.</p>
<p><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:<br />
+</strong> <a href="http://ballardian.com/confronting-ourselves-ballard-and-circular-time">&#8216;Confronting Ourselves&#8217;: Ballard and Circular Time</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">Ballard and the Vicissitudes of Time</a></p>
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		<title>“Extreme Possibilities”: Mapping “the sea of time and space” in J.G. Ballard’s Pacific fictions</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/extreme-possibilities-jgbs-pacific-fictions</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/extreme-possibilities-jgbs-pacific-fictions#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Aug 2009 11:44:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Japan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pacific]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inner space]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[micronations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nuclear war]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[war]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[What's the connection between J.G. Ballard, Hakim Bey and Fredric Jameson? Tracking Ballard's surreal visions of nuclear conflict to Ground Zero in the Pacific, the paper maps his peculiar, irradiated sense of “affirmative dystopias", a template for his more enduring urban works (famously, Crash) that, finally, intersects in striking ways with the writings of Bey and Jameson.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong><a href="http://www.simonsellars.com">Simon Sellars</a></strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_terminal.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The Terminal Beach. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.brookings.edu/projects/archive/nucweapons/runit.aspx">Brookings</a>: &#8220;Beneath this concrete dome on Runit Island (part of Enewetak Atoll), built between 1977 and 1980 at a cost of about $239 million, lie 111,000 cubic yards (84,927 cubic meters) or radioactive soil and debris from Bikini and Rongelap atolls. The dome covers the 30-foot (9 meter) deep, 350-foot (107 meter) wide crated created by the May 5, 1958, Cactus test. Note the people atop the dome&#8221;.</em></p>
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<p><em>This essay was first published in <a href="http://colloquy.monash.edu.au/issue017">Colloquy no. 17</a>, August 2009, pp. 44-61. Reprinted with permission.</em></p>
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<p>One of the more enduring misconceptions surrounding the work of J.G. Ballard is that it operates in the classical dystopian narrative mode, <a href="#1">[1]</a> supposedly mining pessimism, repression and the negativity of a post-industrial age. Robert Collins’s commentary is typical, placing Ballard’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> (1973) at number three in a list of &#8220;the top 10 dystopian novels&#8221;:</p>
<blockquote><p>Fictional dystopias are almost always cautionary tales – warnings of where our political, cultural and social surroundings are taking us. The novels [on this list] share common motifs: designer drugs, mass entertainment, brutality, technology, the suppression of the individual by an all-powerful state – classic preoccupations of dystopian fiction. These novels picture the worst because, as Swift demonstrated in his original cautionary tale, Gulliver’s Travels, re-inventing the present is sometimes the only way to see how bad things already are. <a href="#2">[2]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>However, to locate Ballard within this literary tradition is a fundamental misreading. The &#8220;state,&#8221; for example, barely features in his writing, and politicians or any kind of external authority are almost wholly absent. This is amplified to comical proportions when the police make a token appearance in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> (1975), which depicts the breakdown of the social order in a high-tech apartment block. At first suspicious about the building’s car park, with its damaged vehicles and debris thrown from balconies, they are quickly turned away by a group of residents, who set about &#8220;pacifying the policemen, reassuring them that everything was in order, despite the garbage and broken bottles scattered around the building&#8221;; <a href="#3">[3]</a> the police duly leave and are never seen again, even as the high-rise descends further into anarchy. The residents prefer to remain within their &#8220;dystopia,&#8221; rather than reacting against it, embracing the &#8220;brutality and technology&#8221; that Collins suggests they should be reacting against – there is no external &#8220;Big Brother&#8221; forcing their hand. For the residents:</p>
<blockquote><p>even the run-down nature of the high-rise was a model of the world into which the future was carrying them, a landscape beyond technology where everything was either derelict or, more ambiguously, recombined in unexpected but more meaningful ways. <a href="#4">[4]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This dynamic is even more apparent in the subset of &#8220;Pacific fictions&#8221; in Ballard’s oeuvre, stories set on abandoned Pacific islands where there is no need to even allude to the presence of the State, for these are stateless worlds – &#8220;between owners.&#8221; They are neither straight utopia nor classical dystopia, but an occupant of the imaginative space between: what might be termed &#8220;affirmative dystopias,&#8221; which reach similar conclusions as to the question of how to &#8220;revive the spirit of utopia&#8221; that Fredric Jameson does in his exhaustive study, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FArchaeologies-Future-Desire-Science-Fictions%2Fdp%2F1844675386%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1251015561%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. As such, they provide an enduring template for Ballard’s more well-known urban works, of which Crash is the exemplar.</p>
<p>Ballard’s fascination with the Pacific stems from his childhood in Shanghai, where he was born and where he lived until he was 16. His semi-autobiographical novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> (1984) draws on his experiences as an internee in the Lunghua civilian camp, and it ends with Jim (the character based on the young Ballard) witnessing the atomic flash over Nagasaki, enabling a potent metaphor for the post-war era that Ballard would consistently return to throughout his career:</p>
<blockquote><p>The B-29s which bombed the airfield beside Lunghua Camp, near Shanghai, where I was interned during the Second World War, had reportedly flown from Guam. Pacific Islands, with their silent airstrips among the palm trees, Wake Island above all, have a potent magic for me. The runways that cross these little atolls, now mostly abandoned, seem to represent extreme states of nostalgia and possibility, doorways into another continuum. <a href="#5">[5]</a></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/wake_boom.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Wake Island" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Wake Island. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/30248805@N05/2943989456">USMCFLYR</a>: &#8220;A boom from a KC-135 Stratotanker over Wake Island&#8221;.</em></p>
<p>In Ballard’s short story &#8220;My Dream of Flying to Wake Island&#8221; (1974), he returns to these &#8220;extreme states of possibility,&#8221; which overwhelm the account. The story remains in perpetual fugue – a concrete narrative arc never coalesces, and there is perpetual yearning enveloping the central character, Melville, a former astronaut who flew a solitary mission in space, during which he suffered a mental breakdown broadcast live to millions of viewers on Earth. Humiliated, he resolves to fly to remote Wake, fascinated by the island’s geographical isolation and &#8220;psychological reduction&#8221; (deriving from its real-world role as a former World War Two military base; Wake has never had a permanent indigenous population), which mirrors his own. For Melville, Wake Island is a portal. Referring to photographs of the military airstrip, he enthuses: &#8220;‘Look at those runways, everything is there. A big airport like the Wake field is a zone of tremendous possibility – a place of beginnings, by the way, not ends’.&#8221; <a href="#6">[6]</a> The story is indicative of Ballard’s deployment of the rich seam of metaphor provided by the region, and the manner in which he uses abandoned Pacific islands as sites of radical reinvention, imagistic buffer zones representing the sovereignty of the imagination.</p>
<p>According to the anarchist author Hakim Bey, classical utopias – &#8220;from Plato’s republic to Brook Farm&#8221; – depend on abstraction, which renders them susceptible to &#8220;a correspondingly high level of authoritarian control. As a result, most Utopias in practice have proven oppressive and deadening – ‘social planning’ would seem to be an offense by definition against the ‘human spirit’.&#8221; <a href="#7">[7]</a> In the novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-rushing-to-paradise">Rushing to Paradise</a> (1994), Ballard is also concerned with social planning, which, similarly, is seen as eventually numbing and destroying the human spirit. In fact, the novel indicts the very idea of utopia.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/rushing_big.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Rushing to Paradise is set on the remote (and fictional) Pacific atoll of Saint-Esprit, claimed by France as a site for possible nuclear testing, where the renegade Dr Barbara has gathered a ragtag crew on the premise of saving the island’s endangered albatross (the French have relocated the original inhabitants and set up their nuclear equipment, but abandoned the island for Muroroa). Although the mission is initially pitched as environmentalist, each crewmember has wildly differing, concealed motives for making the journey, thus rendering impossible the idea of a genuinely shared utopia. The Hawaiian, Kimo, dreams of establishing an independent Hawaiian kingdom, &#8220;rid forever of the French and American colonists,&#8221; <a href="#8">[8]</a> while the boy Neil is obsessed with the relics of a bygone nuclear age, and excited by the news that the French might be returning to the island for testing:</p>
<blockquote><p>For all Dr Barbara’s passion for the albatross, the nuclear testing-ground had a stronger claim on his imagination. No bomb had ever exploded on Saint-Esprit, but the atoll, like Eniwetok, Muroroa and Bikini, was a demonstration model of Armageddon, a dream of war and death that lay beyond the reach of any moratorium. <a href="#9">[9]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Dr Barbara has her own, highly secretive, and ultimately destructive, reasons – not to save the albatross, but to establish Saint-Esprit as a radical feminist enclave. She is determined to achieve this by any means: &#8220;If Saint-Esprit, this nondescript atoll six hundred miles south-east of Tahiti, failed to match her expectations, it would have to reshape itself into the threatened paradise for which she had campaigned so tirelessly.&#8221; <a href="#10">[10]</a> Superficially, this echoes Ballard’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a> (1974), in which the architect Robert Maitland, after a car accident, is stranded on a triangle of wasteland underneath a busy motorway. Feverish from his injuries, he imagines the physical environment as an outcrop of his psyche: &#8220;More and more, the island was becoming an exact model of his head.&#8221; <a href="#11">[11]</a> Yet the fundamental difference is that Dr Barbara wants the island of her mind to reshape everyone else’s reality, too. This makes Rushing to Paradise, at one level, an allusion to utopian gurus such as David Koresh and Jim Jones, similarly charismatic leaders who built isolated, essentially micronational, communities and coerced others into joining them, before destroying everything as the authorities closed in. As one character says to Neil, after the boy asks whether Dr Barbara’s mission is how new religions start: &#8220;there’s nothing new here. It’s the oldest religion there ever was – sheer magnetic egoism.&#8221; <a href="#12">[12]</a></p>
<p>In Archaeologies of the Future, Jameson devotes considerable space to analysing failures in the wider utopian imagination. In his attempt to re-map the potential of utopian desire, he concludes:</p>
<blockquote><p>What is Utopian becomes … not the commitment to a specific machinery or blueprint, but rather the commitment to imagining possible Utopias as such, in their greatest variety of forms. Utopia is no longer the invention and defense of a specific floorplan, but rather the story of all the arguments about how Utopia should be constructed in the first place. It is no longer the exhibit of an achieved Utopian construct, but rather the story of its production and of the very process of construction as such. <a href="#13">[13]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Re-placing Rushing to Paradise within Jameson’s framework, it becomes possible to read the story of Saint-Esprit as &#8220;the story of all the arguments&#8221; about how the Pacific should be constructed.</p>
<p>The region has always had an unstable identity and an especially volatile sense of nationalism, from perpetually coup-ridden Fiji in the South Seas to the perpetually colonised islands north of the equator. The Republic of Palau in Micronesia is sometimes cited as an archetypal tropical utopia, but could in fact embody the root definition of &#8220;utopia,&#8221; as &#8220;no place.&#8221; It has been used as a pawn by various colonial powers almost continuously since the late 17th century, rapidly lost its traditional culture and become a melange of other cultures. It has changed hands between Spain, which enforced Christianity on the Palauans; Germany, which commanded them to work as plantation slaves; Japan, which forced them to speak a subservient form of Japanese and turned the main island into a closed-off, heavily fortified military base; and the US, which bombed the islands to get at the Japanese in a series of bloody World War Two battles and then claimed them as American territory until 1994.</p>
<p>Mimicking the Pacific’s jagged history, Ballard populates Saint-Esprit with idealistic Germans, scientifically-minded Japanese and single-minded Americans, as well as Kimo, symbol of an oppressed indigenous people, Dr Barbara, an archetypal British colonialist, and, crucially, Neil, an echo of young Jim himself, both teenagers obsessed with dreams of nuclear war and of holding their own among deluded and dangerous adults in an artificial community. After the death of the character Mark Bracewell, the American, Carline, verbalises a metaphor that neatly sums up these duelling versions of utopia:</p>
<blockquote><p>Contrary to the general belief, no-one’s death diminishes us. Nature in its wisdom created death to give each of us our unique sense of life. We’re not part of the main. Each of us is an island, every bit as real as Saint-Esprit, and death is the price we pay to keep ourselves from drowning in the larger sea. Like Kimo here, we’re all island people … especially young Neil, dreaming about another kind of island. Mark Bracewell lived for twenty-seven years, and his island still floats in the sea of time and space. <a href="#14">[14]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This seems to correspond with Jameson, who proposes to &#8220;think of our autonomous and non-communicating Utopias … as so many islands: a Utopian archipelago, islands in the net, a constellation of discontinuous centers, themselves internally decentred.&#8221; <a href="#15">[15]</a> This discontinuity suggests the ideal resting state for Ballard’s ideal of a neural, free zone of the imagination – a &#8220;morally free psychopathology of metaphor, as an element in one’s dreams,&#8221; <a href="#16">[16]</a> which, although powerful and liberatory, has a dark underside. If one tries to apply it to other people, then Micronationalism <a href="#17">[17]</a> – the utopian imagination, no less – turns into dangerous cultism through which lives can be destroyed, a very real danger that arises when the metaphor is literalised into &#8220;the domain where it has no place, an id-driven psychopathology that lays waste to human life.&#8221; <a href="#18">[18]</a> Neil’s surreal, internalised visions of nuclear war therefore contrast markedly with Dr Barbara’s hard, external authoritarianism, further corresponding to Jameson’s conception of utopian desire, which &#8220;must be marked as Utopian and thereby as partaking in a specific and very special kind of aesthetic unreality: otherwise it falls into the world and, particularly if realized, spells the end of Utopias in the way wryly distinct from the usual prognoses of their current disappearance.&#8221; <a href="#19">[19]</a> Subsequently, the novel sours traditional utopian thought by highlighting the oppressive hypocrisy of its &#8220;abstracted authoritarianism,&#8221; to appropriate Bey’s term. Once Kimo has used his muscle to build the community and Neil his youth to impregnate the idealistic women who flock to the island, they become expendable, with no place in a feminist paradise.</p>
<p>Indeed, Dr Barbara manages to kill off almost all the men (although Neil survives) when they contract fever and she administers fake medicine. By the novel’s end, she is feverish and hiding out in the forest, burrowing deeper and further away from the French authorities that have come to retake the island. This seems a deliberate reference to the legendary stories of Japanese soldiers hiding out in the Pacific jungles of Guam long after the war had ended, terrified, as is Dr Barbara, at the prospect of an imperialism perishing with the onslaught of newer, more localised and &#8220;internally decentred&#8221; voices, American-led globalism, no less – overrun by an &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; imagination (again, after Jameson, in opposition not to straight dystopia, but to unworkable utopia) that has evolved organically from the discontinuities and disjunctions of the modern world, and that is centrally represented by Neil. As Jameson writes of the wider dynamic:</p>
<blockquote><p>Multiplicity becomes the central theme of this imaginary resolution, whose conceptual dilemma remains that of closure. Yet we may well suppose that this new development will have had some impact on the Utopian form itself, accounting for the seeming extinction of the traditional kinds and the emergence of newer more reflexive forms. <a href="#20">[20]</a> </p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_1958_hardtack.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Observers at Operation Hardtack nuclear test (1958) on Enewetak.</em></p>
<p>Neil, with his dreams of nuclear war, symbolises this &#8220;more reflexive form&#8221; and the perverse and paradoxical &#8220;absolute freedom&#8221; it brings. He comes to embody the &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; spirit of the book, or, more accurately, he embodies the Ballardian sense of &#8220;affirmative dystopia,&#8221; a sense of which is given by Gregory Stephenson’s overview:</p>
<blockquote><p>The themes of transcendence and illusion inform nearly all of Ballard’s work, and have often been misconstrued by critics as representing a nihilistic or fatalistic preoccupation on the part of the author with devolution, decay, dissolution and entropy … these themes represent neither an expression of universal pessimism nor a negation of human values and goals, but, rather, an affirmation of the highest humanistic and metaphysical ideal: the repossession for humankind of authentic and absolute being. <a href="#21">[21]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Rushing to Paradise is not a disaster novel per se, but in his reimagining of the apocalypse, Neil virtually wills the disaster to happen. In so doing, he does not &#8220;colonize the future with Utopian blueprints,&#8221; as the Pacific’s invading powers have so wilfully done (indeed, as Dr Barbara has done), but rather, embodies what Jameson defines as:</p>
<blockquote><p>Disruption … the name for a new discursive strategy … which insists that its radical difference is possible and that a break is necessary. The Utopian form itself is the answer to the universal ideological conviction that no alternative is possible, that there is no alternative to the system. But it asserts this by forcing us to think the break itself, and not by offering a more traditional picture of what things would be like after the break. <a href="#22">[22]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Jameson briefly touches upon this strain of disruption in Ballard, without referring directly to the stories under discussion here: &#8220;Ballard’s work – so rich and corrupt – testifies powerfully to the contradictions of a properly representational attempt to grasp the future directly.&#8221; <a href="#23">[23]</a></p>
<p>Extrapolating from there, my contention is that, in his Pacific fictions, Ballard &#8220;forces us to think the break&#8221; by repeatedly drawing on the spectre of nuclear testing, of which there are numerous real-world examples in the region. French Polynesia, for instance, was employed as a testing site for almost 10 years, with the result that high radiation levels were detected 4,500km away in Fiji. Bikini Atoll was rendered uninhabitable by American nuclear tests, its inhabitants forcibly relocated, like those of Saint-Esprit, never to return. The inhabitants of Eniwetok were also forcibly relocated in 1948 to make way for American atomic bomb tests; only comparatively recently has the US government, under overwhelming global pressure, cleared the island of active waste, allowing the islanders to resettle the southern part of the atoll after 33 years in exile. In Ballard, the thermonuclear age brings with it an advanced technology that renders objective perception meaningless, thus beginning the era of simulation, an increasingly abstracted, stylised and mediated realm, riding on the decline of Japanese imperialism and the rise of American-led globalisation.</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: Nuclear testing on Bikini Atoll. Music by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard">Cousin Silas</a>.</em></p>
<p>To examine this motif, it is interesting to contrast Ballard’s reworking, and remapping, of the region to that of the travel writer Simon Winchester, whose <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FPacific-Simon-Winchester%2Fdp%2F0091734851%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1251015828%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Pacific</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> provides a thorough history of changes since the war. Ballard has written: &#8220;I used to dream of the runways of Wake Island and Midway, stepping stones that would carry me back across the Pacific to the China of my childhood.&#8221; <a href="#24">[24]</a> Compare with Winchester’s account of American mariners at the start of the 19th century, seizing and settling &#8220;Midway, Wake, Guam … thus creating a series of stepping-stones, a lifeline of tropical islands that led all the way to that greatest and most elusive prize, the Middle Kingdom, China&#8221; <a href="#25">[25]</a> – a process that leads eventually to the bombing of Japan and subsequent irradiation of Pacific islands like Eniwetok. The similarities (references to Wake Island, Midway, China, especially &#8220;stepping stones&#8221;) are startling, yet these positions are opposed nonetheless. Ballard wants to resettle, and bulwark, the imagination, where the American forces wanted to colonise and wipe clean whole territories. One wishes to explore hidden folds within the map, the other to claim every available point on the map; both coexist in paradoxical dreams of the Pacific. The paradox is even rooted in temporal reality, as Winchester notes, when he visits the island of Tonga. There, he ponders the arbitrary division of the dateline, which ensures that Tonga sees the world’s first dawn each day:</p>
<blockquote><p>I had imagined … that I would be able to catch a glimpse of Mount Silisili [in Samoa] … just a few miles away across the water. [It] would be enjoying precisely the same clock time as here in Tonga, but exactly one day before. The simultaneous sighting of two periods of time separated by an entire 24 hours seemed a paradox well worth experiencing. <a href="#26">[26]</a> </p></blockquote>
<p>In Ballard, these paradoxical time tracks form a lasting metaphor for a certain nexus of confusion in the post-war world, a notion made explicit in the note that begins Empire of the Sun: &#8220;The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour took place on Sunday morning, 7 December 1941, but as a result of time differences across the Pacific Date Line it was then already the morning of Monday, 8 December in Shanghai.&#8221; <a href="#27">[27]</a> For Ballard, the bomb signifies the end of history and the coming of an age of surfaces, a recombinant age of planing identities, as he makes clear in the introduction to Crash, which applies the metaphor of chronological confusion to the mediated reality of the Western world:</p>
<blockquote><p>Increasingly, our concepts of past, present and future are being forced to revise themselves. Just as the past, in social and psychological terms, became a casualty of Hiroshima and the nuclear age, so in its turn the future is ceasing to exist, devoured by the all-voracious present …  Options multiply around us, and we live in an almost infantile world where any demand, any possibility, whether for life-styles, travel, sexual roles and identities, can be satisfied instantly. <a href="#28">[28]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The past &#8220;as a casualty of the nuclear age&#8221; would be reframed 11 years after Crash, in Empire of the Sun, the latter part of which is set in a destroyed stadium filled with prisoners and the detritus of war. Suddenly, the stadium is illuminated by light from the atom bomb exploding on Nagasaki – a blinding, overwhelming orb. Andrés Vaccari correctly identifies the world &#8220;presided over by this nuclear sun&#8221; as the &#8220;real Empire of the Sun. It is the metaphoric birth of the post-war world, the omnipresent subject of Ballard&#8217;s fiction&#8221; <a href="#29">[29]</a> – the coming of a nihilistic world with no boundaries, no spatial coordinates except those of inner space, the cognitive remapping of a world that has lost its bearings in time and space. <a href="#30">[30]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_terminal2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The Cactus Dome on Runit Island, part of Enewetak Atoll. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.artificialowl.net/2008/11/nuclear-trash-can-of-pacific-on.html">Artificial Owl</a>.</em></p>
<p>This notion of planing identities (planing time tracks) is also embodied in Ballard’s short story &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; (1964), set on Eniwetok (also known as &#8216;Enewetak&#8217;), in which the character Traven, an ex-air force pilot, finds himself similarly searching for identity among the island’s abandoned concrete bunkers and blockhouses, which have been used for thermonuclear trials. He comes across plastic, human mannequins used in the weapons testing, with their &#8220;half-melted faces, contorted into bleary grimaces [gazing] up at him from the jumble of legs and torsos.&#8221; <a href="#31">[31]</a> Attempting to escape from US servicemen who appear on the island, he hides &#8220;in one of the target basins, lying among the broken bodies of the plastic models. In the hot sunlight their deformed faces gaped at him sightlessly from the tangle of limbs, their blurred smiles like those of the soundlessly laughing dead.&#8221; <a href="#32">[32]</a> When he scavenges among &#8220;the litter of smashed bottles and cans in the isthmus of sand separating the testing ground from the air-strip,&#8221; <a href="#33">[33]</a> we find layers of recent cultural history, buried and then recovered as if in an archaeological find. Confronted with this effacement of geographical and human boundaries (the latter effectively represented by the undifferentiated slagheap of molten mannequins), Traven is, in a sense, reborn, scrambling for meaning among the detritus of the old world.</p>
<p>The effect is replicated in Concrete Island, in which the patch of underpass comes to symbolise the archetypal liminal space of Ballardian fiction. It is a zone of buried layers of urban cartography comprising &#8220;the unintended, forgotten, abjected corners of town planning.&#8221; <a href="#34">[34]</a> In the fragmented post-war world, with its shifting national boundaries and national identities, Ballard seems to suggest the only effective strategy is to remake the world through bricolage, or what Andrzej Gasiorek terms &#8220;a kind of fugitive reappropriation of an otherwise seemingly monolithic set of structures and relations.&#8221; <a href="#35">[35]</a> In Concrete Island, Maitland, the architect, was all too willing to submit to the conformity of capitalism, favouring the demands of finance and big business over any sense of public obligation or civic duty. Gasiorek observes that he had &#8220;a predilection for modernism,&#8221; specifically &#8220;hard, affectless architecture&#8221; and &#8220;stylised concrete surfaces,&#8221; marked as &#8220;hostile to the forging of human relations … a kind of dead end for life.&#8221; <a href="#36">[36]</a> Before his crash, Maitland seemed a ruthless autocrat forcing people into inhumane living conditions to justify his ego, but he is confronted with the underside of this &#8220;dead end for life&#8221; when, marooned on the concrete island, he is required to come to terms with the tradition he wilfully discarded in his work. Like Traven, he uncovers historical layers paved over by the demands of the motorway system – the strictures of advanced technology:</p>
<blockquote><p>Parts of the island dated from well before World War II. The eastern end, below the overpass, was its oldest section, with the churchyard and the ground-courses of Edwardian terraced houses. The breaker’s yard and its wrecked cars had been superimposed on the still identifiable streets and alleyways.</p>
<p>In the centre of the island were the air-raid shelters among which he was sitting. Attached to these was a later addition, the remains of a Civil Defence post little more than fifteen years old. <a href="#37">[37]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Maitland meets the human equivalents of this discarded landscape in the form of Proctor and Jane, two homeless dwellers who have made the island their own, both on the run from oppressive systems of control. Jane is a victim of patriarchy, hiding from an apparently abusive husband and bitter memories of her father, and now working as a motorway prostitute. Proctor is an old tramp who has suffered ritual humiliation at the hands of the local police. The island, reconfigured by Ballard as a container of social debris (both geographical and human, as in &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221;) becomes a space where social relations can begin again, where the social order is decommissioned, recombined, reconstructed and reshaped in ways that subvert dominant systems of thought. Maitland comes to see the island much as Proctor and Jane do, as a psychic &#8220;go-zone&#8221; where he can escape the pressures of his relationships with his wife and mistress and of his job – free &#8220;to rove forever within the empty city of his mind.&#8221; <a href="#38">[38]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/concrete_cover.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" class="picleft" /> In his later career, immediately after Rushing to Paradise, Ballard embarked on a cycle of novels in which he would explore a much harder version of micronationalism, manifest in the savage gated communities of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a> (1996) through to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a> (2006). It would no longer be necessary to look to mythical lands to remake and remodel maps of alienation – instead he began to focus on a parallel examination of the type of urban &#8220;non-place&#8221; that has come to be associated with the anthropologist Marc Augé. For Augé, our world is so saturated by superabundant fictions that it produces a conception of simultaneous time, representative of a homogenous, mediated society. The physical result is non-place, transitional zones detached from history and culture, inorganic, in-between zones where individuals are linked by this superabundance of information and technology rather than community or historical awareness, which paradoxically creates a pervasive sense of inwardness and isolation. Examples of non-place include motorways, hospitals, airports (especially duty-free zones), gated communities, business parks and housing estates – rich Ballardian territory, as the &#8220;urban disaster trilogy&#8221; of Crash, Concrete Island and High-Rise makes abundantly clear.</p>
<p>Ballard anticipates Augé, whose anthropological studies turned away from the &#8220;foreign field [towards] more familiar terrain,&#8221; due to the fact that &#8220;the contemporary world itself, with its accelerated transformations, is attracting anthropological scrutiny: in other words, a renewed methodical reflection on the category of otherness.&#8221; <a href="#39">[39]</a> In &#8220;The Terminal Beach,&#8221; Ballard describes Eniwetok as &#8220;synthetic, a man-made artefact with all the associations of a vast system of derelict concrete motorways.&#8221; <a href="#40">[40]</a> This is a description that foreshadows Concrete Island, and in the introduction to the latter, Ballard makes the link explicit: &#8220;The Pacific atoll may not be available, but there are other islands far nearer to home, some of them only a few steps from the pavements we tread every day. They are surrounded, not by sea, but by concrete, ringed by chain-mail fences and walled off by bomb-proof glass.&#8221; <a href="#41">[41]</a></p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8220;A clip of the Hydrogen Bomb test at Enewetak Atoll on November 1, 1952, and the first time one was exploded. The fireball was big enough to cover most of Manhattan Island. This clip shows more of the aftermath of the nuclear cloud than most films.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Just as Traven declares Eniwetok a &#8220;state of mind,&#8221; <a href="#42">[42]</a> so, too, does Maitland, indirectly, in Concrete Island when he insists: &#8220;I am the island.&#8221; <a href="#43">[43]</a> Here, &#8220;state&#8221; has a double meaning, as a condition of being, but also as a sovereign, independent territory. Both locations are potent symbols of the post-war era: Eniwetok, a tabula rasa of nationalism and patriotism; the motorway underpass, the archetypal non-place of supermodernity. As Traven’s existence in Eniwetok’s &#8220;thermonuclear noon&#8221; becomes increasingly hallucinatory (it is not clear whether he is dead, dying or feverish from irradiation), he finds that by saying goodbye in his mind to the disasters of the external world, he can come to terms with it. Standing among the abstract concrete blocks of the testing bunkers, he produces a strange incantation:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Goodbye Eniwetok&#8221; … Somewhere there was a flicker of light, as if one of the blocks, like a counter on an abacus, had been plucked away.<br />
Goodbye Los Alamos. Again, a block seemed to vanish. The corridors around him remained intact, but somewhere in his mind had appeared a small interval of neutral space.<br />
Goodbye, Hiroshima.<br />
Goodbye, Alamogordo.<br />
Goodbye, Moscow, London, Paris, New York … <a href="#44">[44]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The opening up of this &#8220;small interval&#8221; of neu(t)ral space represents a kind of psychological DMZ, an imaginative form of resistance that, along with Neil’s apocalyptic dreams, symbolises an intent that is the polar opposite to that of Dr Barbara (who, we recall, literalised a megalomania that proved unstoppable, and fatal). Traven surmises that time on Eniwetok has become &#8220;quantal,&#8221; an eternal present obliterating past and future. But is Ballard’s sense pejorative? <a href="#45">[45]</a> As Traven declares: &#8220;For me the hydrogen bomb was a symbol of absolute freedom. I feel it’s given me the right – the obligation, even – to do anything I want.&#8221; <a href="#46">[46]</a> This may well be the defining statement of the author’s career, brought into sharp relief by John Gray’s perceptive appraisal that Ballard’s &#8220;achievement is not to have staked out any kind of political position. Rather it is to have communicated a vision of what individual fulfilment might mean in a time of nihilism.&#8221; <a href="#47">[47]</a> It is a concept Ballard has alluded to in interview, when asked if his writing is interested in decadence:</p>
<blockquote><p>Decadence? I can’t remember if I ever said I enjoyed the notion, except in the sense of drained swimming pools and abandoned hotels, which I don’t really see as places of decadence, but rather … as psychic zero stations, or as &#8220;Go,&#8221; in Monopoly terms. <a href="#48">[48]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Here, Ballard appears to inform the concept of the &#8220;Temporary Autonomous Zone&#8221; (TAZ), codified by Bey in 1985 and enormously influential on anarchists, musicians and a myriad of underground artists. The TAZ calls for a mode of radical intervention in the form of creation of temporary spaces – whether &#8220;geographic, social, cultural, imaginal&#8221; <a href="#49">[49]</a> – that will serve to confound formalised control systems. Bey’s main focus was on the liberation of mind states, what he terms &#8220;psychotopology (and -topography)&#8221; as an antidote to the State’s &#8220;psychic imperialism&#8221;:</p>
<blockquote><p>Only psychotopography can draw 1:1 maps of reality because only the human mind provides sufficient complexity to model the real. But a 1:1 map cannot &#8220;control&#8221; its territory because it is virtually identical with its territory. It can only be used to suggest, in a sense gesture towards, certain features. <a href="#50">[50]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This particular strategy within the TAZ can be traced to Alfred Korzybski’s oft-repeated remark that &#8220;the map is not the territory,&#8221; since duplication is simply simulation, and able to be recouped as such. In opposition, Bey suggests that these sovereign mindscapes are enfolded within the folds of the cartographical matrix: &#8220;We are looking for ‘spaces’ with potential to flower as autonomous zones – and we are looking for times in which these spaces are relatively open, either through neglect on the part of the State or because they have somehow escaped notice by the mapmakers, or for whatever reason.&#8221;<a href="#51">[51]</a></p>
<p>Ballard actually paraphrases Korzybski in Empire of the Sun: &#8220;Never confuse the map with the territory,&#8221; <a href="#52">[52]</a> while the patch of underpass in Concrete Island, built over the leavings of industrial culture, has been neglected by the State, and is so far off the map as to be invisible. Moreover, Maitland liberates an area of land or imagination (depending how we read the novel), without ever engaging directly with systems of control, with the State. As Ballard makes clear in the introduction: &#8220;What would happen if, by some freak mischance, we suffered a blow-out and plunged over the guard-rail onto a forgotten island of rubble and weeds, out of sight of the surveillance cameras?&#8221; <a href="#53">[53]</a> For Bey, confrontation with the State occurs through &#8220;the Spectacle,&#8221; in Guy Debord’s sense, where images rule by virtue of their monopoly of social space. Because society defines itself through the dissemination and experiencing of this space, the process appears natural, a self-contained feedback loop: &#8220;What appears is good; what is good appears.&#8221; <a href="#54">[54]</a> Such confrontation is doomed to failure since the machinery of simulation will merely absorb any display of &#8220;spectacular violence&#8221;. For Bey, as for Ballard, radical action therefore lies not in the deployment of spectacular violence, but in withdrawal, in becoming invisible, in merging with, and therefore rehabilitating, the by-products of supermodernity.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/sonsorol.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sonsorol" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Sonsorol. Photo by <a href="http://www.sonsorol.com/gallery/index_Sonsorol060811.htm">Hisayuki Kubota</a>.</em></p>
<p>Elsewhere, Ballard’s prototypical Pacific fictions seem an obvious influence on Bey’s &#8220;Visit Port Watson!,&#8221; <a href="#55">[55]</a> which uses their cue to forecast similar micronational and imaginative possibilities in the region. Written as a faux travel guide, it describes the micronation of Port Watson on the Pacific island of Sonsorol (the island actually exists – it is part of Palau – but Port Watson does not). Bey charts the history of Sonsorol and its colonisation by Spanish, Dutch, Japanese, New Zealand and Australian forces. He writes that when the island finally gained independence, the Port Watson enclave was set up by the island’s &#8220;Sultan&#8221; (a legacy of Sonsorol’s fictional 17th-century invasion by Moorish pirates), who had been influenced by libertarian-anarchist philosophy while studying in America. Offshore banking funded the enclave: &#8220;the creation of wealth out of nothing, out of pure imagination.&#8221; <a href="#56">[56]</a> Port Watson therefore develops as a libertarian-anarchist micronation with no laws or currency save for a &#8220;computerised&#8221; barter system, where a hamburger stand is called &#8220;McBakunins,&#8221; most people refuse to work since everyone has stakes in the banking system, and &#8220;public fucking&#8221; is encouraged.</p>
<p>This notion of a libertarian-anarchist enclave powered by &#8220;pure imagination&#8221; has clear Ballardian overtones, <a href="#57">[57]</a> especially in light of Ballard’s career-long &#8220;libertarian and anarchic stance … [a] scepticism about all communal laws.&#8221; <a href="#58">[58]</a> As Ballard himself wrote in Empire of the Sun: &#8220;After three years in the camp the notion of patriotism meant nothing.&#8221; <a href="#59">[59]</a> And, like Ballard, Bey’s external mapping of utopian space can in fact be read as a travel guide to inner space, unlocking the potential of the imagination to transcend laws, authority and corporate structure, all built upon the metaphorical/micronational possibilities of the Pacific. In &#8220;Visit Port Watson!,&#8221; this is consummated in the final paragraph, where Bey &#8220;quotes&#8221; an editorial from the local gazette, written by the Sultan, in answer to whether such a utopia can exist only on a tropical island: &#8220;Sonsorol could be created anywhere – nothing stands in the way but false consciousness and the grim power of those rulers who feast on false consciousness like vampires … ‘Don’t despair: Port Watson exists within you, and you can make it real’.&#8221; <a href="#60">[60]</a></p>
<p>This internal collapse – this conflation of inner and outer space – reminds us of the power of Ballard’s original Pacific fictions, which reinhabit the frame to present a clearinghouse in which corporate and national governance is overthrown and regoverned as a &#8220;state of mind&#8221; – dystopia becomes the real utopia, and utopian ideals, typically represented as a stifling of the imagination, the true dystopia. But Ballard’s insistence that the imagination must remain sovereign territory – the &#8220;last nature reserve,&#8221; as he has termed it <a href="#61">[61]</a> – also aligns him once more with Jameson, who describes &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; thought as:</p>
<blockquote><p>a new form of thinking … a new dimension of the exercise of the imagination. It’s only when people come to realize that there is no alternative that they react against it, at least in their imaginations, and try to think of alternatives … [affording] a process where the imagination begins to question itself, to move back and forth among the possibilities. <a href="#62">[62]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Ballard’s reimagining of the Pacific archipelago – as a vast, disjunctive region of abandonment and reinvention, with multiple islands floating in the &#8220;sea of time and space&#8221; – and its subsequent superimposition onto urban landscapes, provides an excellent example of a pluralism of utopias (multiple subjectivities) steeped in an &#8220;aesthetic unreality&#8221;: affirmative dystopias that are finally, unmistakably, <em>Ballardian</em>.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_templeton.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sonsorol" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Enewetak today. Photo by <a href="http://pic.templetons.com/brad/photo/eclipse09">Brad Templeton</a>.</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/my-dream-of-flying-to-tinian-island">My Dream of Flying to Tinian Island</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/review-demanding-the-impossible">How to Build a Utopia in your Spare Time</a></p>
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<p><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<p>[1]<a name="1"></a> According to Tom Moylan: &#8220;The critical logic of the classical dystopia is … a simplifying one. It doesn&#8217;t matter that an economic regime drives the society; it doesn&#8217;t matter that a cultural regime of interpellation shapes and directs the people; for the social evil to be named, and resisted, is nothing but the modern state in and of itself.&#8221; Tom Moylan, &#8220;‘The moment is here … and it&#8217;s important’: State, Agency, and Dystopia in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Antarctica and Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Telling’ in Dark Horizons: Science Fiction and the Dystopian Imagination, eds Raffaella Baccolini and Tom Moylan (New York and London: Routledge, 2003) 136.<br />
[2]<a name="2"></a> Robert Collins, &#8220;Robert Collins&#8217;s top 10 dystopian novels,&#8221; The Guardian, 24 August 2008, date of access: 29 November 2008, < http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2005/aug/24/top10s.dystopian.novels >.<br />
[3]<a name="3"></a> J.G. Ballard, High-Rise [1975] (London: Flamingo, 1993) 131.<br />
[4]<a name="4"></a> Ballard, High-Rise 47. David Cronenberg, discussing his film version of Crash, identified this dynamic as a cornerstone of the Ballardian technique: &#8220;The police are a very minor presence in the book and in the film, because the exercise is not to see what would happen realistically now if people did this, it’s to allow them to do it unhindered, to see where it takes them psychologically … it’s still legitimate to say that the movie is not to be taken literally or realistically but as more metaphorically.&#8221; Chris Rodley, &#8220;Crash Talk: David Cronenberg and J.G. Ballard in conversation with Chris Rodley,&#8221; Guardian Lecture [transcript], British Film Institute, 10 November 1996, date of access: 29 November 2008, <http ://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/jgb_cronenberg_1996.html>.<br />
[5]<a name="5"></a> J.G. Ballard, The Atrocity Exhibition [1970] (London: Flamingo, 2001), annotations 52.<br />
[6]<a name="6"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;My Dream of Flying to Wake Island&#8221; [1974], The Complete Short Stories: Volume 2 (London: Flamingo, 2001) 337.<br />
[7]<a name="7"></a> Anonymous, &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; in Semiotext(e) SF, eds Rudy Rucker, Peter Lamborn Wilson and Robert Anton Wilson (New York: Autonomedia, 1989) 317.<br />
[8]<a name="8"></a> J.G. Ballard, Rushing to Paradise [1994] (New York: Picador, 1996) 12.<br />
[9]<a name="9"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 15-16.<br />
[10]<a name="10"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 10.<br />
[11]<a name="11"></a> J.G. Ballard, Concrete Island 1974] (London: Vintage, 1994) 69.<br />
[12]<a name="12"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 94.<br />
[13]<a name="13"></a> Fredric Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions [2005] (London and New York: Verso, 2007) 217.<br />
[14]<a name="14"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 74.<br />
[15]<a name="15"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 221.<br />
[16]<a name="16"></a> Graeme Revell, &#8220;Interview with JGB by Graeme Revell&#8221; in RE/Search #8/9: J.G. Ballard, eds V. Vale and Andrea Juno (San Francisco: Re/Search Publications, 1984) 47.<br />
[17]<a name="17"></a> In a forthcoming essay, I examine in detail Ballard’s mapping of micronational space, which I describe as &#8220;predicated on a vocabulary of secession, and &#8230; filled with depictions of colonies, anomalous enclaves, virtual city-states, ‘zones of transition.’&#8221; To quote further from that piece: &#8220;The political (or, rather, anti-political) potential of these spaces is interesting, since their structure and interaction with the outside world strongly parallels the successes and failures of the real-world phenomenon of micronations. The term ‘micronation’ refers to an attempt, usually by small groups of individuals, to found small, often ephemeral ‘nations’, often without land, but sometimes claiming the types of ‘non-space’ Ballard describes. Micronational enterprises can be satirical, or a component of an art project, but occasionally they can have serious political intent. Micronations are sometimes called ‘model nations’, since they mimic the structure of independent nations and states, but are not recognised as such by established states.&#8221; Simon Sellars, &#8220;‘Zones of Transit’: Micronationalism in the work of J.G. Ballard&#8221; in J.G. Ballard: &#8220;From Shanghai to Shepperton,&#8221; eds Jeannette Baxter, Mark Currie and Rowland Wymer (Palgrave, projected date of publication: 2009).<br />
[18]<a name="18"></a> Andrzej Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard (Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 2005) 212.<br />
[19]<a name="19"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 234.<br />
[20]<a name="20"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 216.<br />
[21]<a name="21"></a> Gregory Stephenson, Out of the Night and Into the Dream: A Thematic Study of the Fiction of J.G. Ballard (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1991) 2-3.<br />
[22]<a name="22"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 231-2.<br />
[23]<a name="23"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 288.<br />
[24]<a name="24"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;Airports,&#8221; The Observer, 14 September 1997.<br />
[25]<a name="25"></a> Simon Winchester, The Pacific (London: Arrow Books Limited, 1991) 17.<br />
[26]<a name="26"></a> Winchester, The Pacific 12.<br />
[27]<a name="27"></a> Ballard, Empire of the Sun [1984] (London: Grafton Books, 1988) 5.<br />
[28]<a name="28"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;Some words about Crash!: 1. Introduction to the French edition of Crash! [sic],&#8221; Foundation, The Review of Science Fiction 9 (November 1975) 47-8.<br />
[29]<a name="29"></a> Andrés Vaccari, Awakening the Entropy Within: The Novels of J.G. Ballard, unpublished monograph, 1996.<br />
[30]<a name="30"></a> This is core subject matter that would endure right across Ballard’s career, beginning with his 1962 short story, &#8220;Thirteen to Centaurus,&#8221; and his novel from the same year, The Drowned World. While treating very different subject matters, both feature central characters haunted by dreams of a beating, burning, amniotic sun, a super-enhanced inner landscape of the mind that begins to merge with the burning sun of the external, overheated world.<br />
[31]<a name="31"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; [1964] The Complete Short Stories: Volume 2 33.<br />
[32]<a name="32"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 44.<br />
[33]<a name="33"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 30.<br />
[34]<a name="34"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 110.<br />
[35]<a name="35"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 212.<br />
[36]<a name="36"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 120.<br />
[37]<a name="37"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 69.<br />
[38]<a name="38"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 142.<br />
[39]<a name="39"></a> Marc Augé, Non-places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity, trans John Howe (London and New York: Verso, 1995) 23-4.<br />
[40]<a name="40"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 30.<br />
[41]<a name="41"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 4.<br />
[42]<a name="42"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 30.<br />
[43]<a name="43"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 71.<br />
[44]<a name="44"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 45-6.<br />
[45]<a name="45"></a> Augé argues that non-space is a negative aspect of supermodernity, as Gasiorek indicates in his overview of Augé’s links to Ballard’s work: &#8220;[In] Ballard [the] future is a dead zone already destroyed by the relentless drive to reduce everything to the present moment and thus to collapse all the time that has passed and is still to come into the tyrannic embrace of the ever-same now, hence his claim that &#8220;the future is ceasing to exist, devoured by the all-voracious present&#8221; … Augé’s contention that the question of space has come to the fore because it is ‘difficult to make time into a principle of intelligibility, let alone a principle of identity’ fits well with Ballard’s concerns.&#8221; Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 110.<br />
[46]<a name="46"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 43.<br />
[47]<a name="47"></a> John Gray, &#8220;Modernity and its discontents,&#8221; New Statesman (10 May 1999) 42.<br />
[48]<a name="48"></a> Thomas Frick, &#8220;The Art of Fiction: J.G. Ballard,&#8221; Paris Review, 94 (1984) 138.<br />
[49]<a name="49"></a> Hakim Bey, &#8220;The Psychotopology of Everyday Life&#8221; in The Temporary Autonomous Zone (New York: Autonomedia, 1985), date of access: 29 November 2008 </http><http ://www.hermetic.com/bey/taz3.html#labelThePsychotopology>.<br />
[50]<a name="50"></a> Bey, &#8220;The Psychotopology of Everyday Life.&#8221;<br />
[51]<a name="51"></a> Bey, &#8220;The Psychotopology of Everyday Life.&#8221;<br />
[52]<a name="52"></a> Ballard, Empire of the Sun 129.<br />
[53]<a name="53"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 5.<br />
[54]<a name="54"></a> Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle [1967], trans Ken Knabb (London: Rebel Press, 2006) 9-10.<br />
[55]<a name="55"></a> Although this piece was published anonymously, it is generally agreed that Hakim Bey wrote it, given the identical stylistic and thematic consistencies to his work (&#8220;Hakim Bey&#8221; is the pseudonym of the Semiotext(e) SF co-editor, Peter Lamborn Wilson).<br />
[56]<a name="56"></a> Anonymous, &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; 317.<br />
[57]<a name="57"></a> The fact that &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; was published in an anthology along with two Ballard stories, along with an editorial acknowledgement of Ballard’s influence on the writers within, also seems to affirm, as with the links with the TAZ, Ballard’s shaping of Bey’s worldview.<br />
[58]<a name="58"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 1, 2.<br />
[59]<a name="59"></a> Ballard, Empire of the Sun 169.<br />
[60]<a name="60"></a> Anonymous, &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; 330.<br />
[61]<a name="61"></a> J.G. Ballard, Super-Cannes [2000] (New York: Picador, 2002) 264.<br />
[62]<a name="62"></a> Quoted in Joshua Glenn, &#8220;Back to utopia: Can the antidote to today&#8217;s neoliberal triumphalism be found in the pages of far-out science fiction?,&#8221; The Boston Globe (20 November 2005).</http>,&#8221; The Boston Globe (20 November 2005).</p>
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		<title>Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jul 2009 12:30:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brian Baker</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Readers hoping to solve the mystery of J.G. Ballard’s ‘The Beach Murders’ may care to approach it in the form of a card game. Some of the principal clues have been alphabetized, some left as they were found, scrawled on to the backs of a deck of cards. Readers are invited to recombine the order of the cards to arrive at a solution. Obviously any number of solutions is possible, and the final answer to the mystery lies forever hidden.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/confetti_royale.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>by <a href="http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/english/profiles/Brian-Baker">Brian Baker</a></p>
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<p><strong>Instructions/ Introduction</strong></p>
<p><em>Readers hoping to solve the mystery of J.G. Ballard’s ‘The Beach Murders’ may care to approach it in the form of a card game. Some of the principal clues have been alphabetized, some left as they were found, scrawled on to the backs of a deck of cards. Readers are invited to recombine the order of the cards to arrive at a solution.* Obviously any number of solutions is possible, and the final answer to the mystery lies forever hidden.</p>
<p>* You may find scissors a useful accessory</p>
<p>Brian Baker, 2009</em></p>
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<p><em>Originally published in 21: Journal of Contemporary and Innovative Fiction, <a href="http://www.edgehill.ac.uk/english/21/index.htm">Issue 1 (autumn/winter 2008/09)</a>. Reproduced with permission.</em></p>
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<p><strong>♣♠♥♦</p>
<p>Clubs ♣</p>
<p>Architecture (A♣).</strong> Physical space is crucial to the Ballardian imaginary, from the eponymous tower block in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> (1975) to the ‘gated communities’ and science parks of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a> (2000) and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-millennium-people">Millennium People</a> (2003). Counterposed to images of flight and transcendence found in many of his stories, the urban environment is often an imprisoning space. In his article <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-architectures-of-control">‘J.G. Ballard and the Architectures of Control’</a>, Dan Lockton argues that ‘One of the many ‘obsessions’ running through Ballard’s work is what we might characterise as <em>the effect of architecture on the individual</em>’, while complicating his argument by acknowledging the mutual implication of inner and outer, psychological and environment: this blurring being Ballard’s method of ‘reflecting the participants’ mental state in the environment itself’. [1] Lockton also suggests that ‘[t]he architecture […] acts as a structure for the story’ in locating the protagonist and ‘plot’ firmly in an ‘obsessively explained and expounded’ architecture. I would like to develop this argument by suggesting that the informing structural principles of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete-short-stories">Ballard’s short stories</a>, particularly that of the period beginning with ‘The Terminal Beach’ (1964) and embracing <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a> (1969) but also later short fictions, are spatial and iterative: geometry and algebra.</p>
<p><strong>Ballardian (2♣).</strong> On the BBC Radio 4 arts review programme Front Row, presenter Mark Lawson, in introducing a discussion of Ballard’s autobiography <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-miracles-of-life">Miracles of Life</a>, suggested that ‘he’s one of the few writers to have become an adjective — Ballardian’. [2] An author who attains the status of an adjective runs the risk of reduction to culturally received ideas of their work (often erroneous and masking the texts themselves) or, worse still, it makes them the object of caricature or burlesque. To become an adjective suggests a certain kind of cultural visibility (or even cultural power), but also indicates a possible ossification through repetition: another reduction, to a set of representative images, ideas and tropes. In this case, ‘Ballardian’ signifies a recurrent set of narrative structures, characters, and particularly iconic places and things, many of which were identified by David Pringle in his groundbreaking critical work of the 1970s:</p>
<blockquote><p>Such things as concrete weapons ranges, dead fish, abandoned airfields, radio telescopes, crashed space-capsules, sand dunes, empty cities, […] beaches, fossils, broken juke-boxes, crystals, lizards, multi-storey car-parks, dry lake-beds, medical laboratories, drained swimming-pools, […] high-rise buildings, predatory birds, and low-flying aircraft. [3]</p></blockquote>
<p>To assert a ‘Ballardian’ imaginary is to suggest a limitation to his work, a finite set of materials out of which a range of texts are worked (and re-worked). It is a critical commonplace to note the ‘obsessional’ return to key images, objects and concerns in Ballard’s work – from emptied swimming pools to a desire to transcend time – that could have reduced his texts to a set of symptoms of an identifiable pathology (and did, in the notorious judgement on <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-crash">Crash</a> by a publisher’s reader). At best, Ballard’s ‘obsessional’ return to a limited creative palette can be used to articulate a consistent and particular vision of the world – what Mark Lawson, characterising ‘Ballardian’, called a ‘way of looking at the world and describing it’ – or is, at worst, a boring and repetitive re-working of the same old material by a ‘minor’ (genre) writer who lacks a wider engagement with human life. ‘Ballardian’ is perhaps best understood (a) as a symptom of genre, and the repetition-with-difference pattern of much genre fiction; and (b) as an effect of Ballard’s structural reliance on iteration.</p>
<p><strong>Confetti Royale (9♣).</strong> The original title of the story collected in the 2001 Collected Short Stories as ‘The Beach Murders’ is ‘Confetti Royale’, signifying its intertextual relation to Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale (1953) and the Cold War spy or espionage narrative. The impenetrable motivations of the characters in ‘Confetti Royale’ – two Russian agents, on CIA operative, an ‘absconded State Department cipher chief’ and ‘American limbo dancer’ (whose actions entirely exceed this belittling characterization) – both anticipate the labyrinthine logic of Le Carré’s espionage fiction and compromises the more straightforward and linear adventures of Fleming’s secret agent. There has been <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/my-name-is-maitland-donald-maitland">some recent speculation</a> on the Ballardian website about the connection between Ballard and Fleming, particularly with regard to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind from Nowhere</a> (Ballard’s 1962 ‘disowned’ apprentice novel) and its megalomaniacal industrialist Hardoon, who could be seen as a an analogue of the Bond super-villains who seek the chimera of ‘world domination’. [4]  While ‘Confetti Royale’ is a playful iteration of espionage fiction, its card-game structure raises to a formal principle the centrality of the game between Bond and Le Chiffre in Casino Royale. Here, the 27 textual elements (Introduction plus 26 alphabeticized titled paragraphs) are strewn as ‘confetti’, compromising the ordering principles of the baccarat tables or Cold War ideologies.</p>
<p><strong>Diamonds Are Forever (6♣).</strong> The 1969 James Bond film On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (OHMSS) was the first to be made without Sean Connery. The opening 15 minutes is suffused by a self-reflexivity which marks out the problematic nature of generic repetition-with-difference. The new Bond, George Lazenby, looks directly at the camera at the end of the pre-credits sequence, when the ‘girl’ he has been fighting for drives off, and says ‘This never happened to the other fellah’; the film’s title sequence replays scenes from earlier Bond films; and when Bond ‘resigns’ and clears his office drawer, key objects from earlier films are introduced with <em>aide-memoire</em> musical leitmotifs from previous Bond films overlaid on the soundtrack. Anxiety-provoking difference is suppressed by reference to the recognisable and familiar, even at the risk of disrupting the film diegesis. In 1971, not only did Bond return, but so did Connery. Diamonds Are Forever is Bond’s ‘revenge’ mission for the death, in OHMSS, of Bond’s wife Tracey (the ‘girl’ who escaped him at the beginning), and is largely set in Nixon’s USA. A morally rotten, bloated film (featuring two sadistic homosexual assassins as an index of its gender sensitivities), Diamonds Are Forever’s main location is Las Vegas, the ‘old’ Vegas of the Dunes and the Sands, the excessive, corrupt Vegas of Bugsy Siegel and the Mob.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/diamonds_forever.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p>Diamonds Are Forever plays the megalomaniacal Blofeld – murderer of Bond’s wife and manipulator of the diamond trade to create a laser-bearing ‘killer’ satellite – against one ‘Willard Whyte’, a helpful billionaire resident of a Las Vegas penthouse suite. This character’s good-ole-boy persona fails to mask the fact that he is a Whyte-washed reiteration of a real-life Las Vegas resident, Howard Hughes, who in real life more nearly approximated Blofeld. Unlike Fleming’s Casino Royale (1953) and the 2006 film version of this Bond narrative, where the high-stakes card games function as a trope for ideological conflict and the dangerous fluidity of capital markets and financial flows, Diamonds Are Forever makes little or no play with the casino chronotope. Ballard’s own Las Vegas novel is <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a> (1981), the most generically ‘science fiction’ of his later works. This novel narrates a journey by a European exploratory mission to a depopulated, post-apocalyptic United States, where they find a self-anointed (and self-named) President Charles Manson, who has assumed command of the remainder of America’s nuclear arsenal. Hello America uses the Las Vegas gambling icon of the roulette wheel, rather than the card table, to critique the logic of Mutually Assured Destruction. As Ken Cooper suggests, ‘self-destruction […] is the inevitable payoff of atomic roulette’. [5]</p>
<p><strong>Experimental Fiction (7♣).</strong> Ballard’s most formally experimental period lies between ‘The Terminal Beach’ and The Atrocity Exhibition. Although his later novels are iterative in their narrative and textual patterning, they are much closer to ‘mainstream’ literary fiction’s spatial continuity and temporal causality. However, in his short fiction Ballard did return to formally experimental or innovative texts, often playing with textual conventions. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/indexed-out-of-existence">‘The Index’ (1977)</a> consists of just that, ‘the index to the unpublished and perhaps suppressed autobiography of a man who may well have been one of the most remarkable figures of the 20th century’, one Henry Rhodes Hamilton, but the mystery of who he was and the status of the text remains unresolved; ‘Notes Towards a Mental Breakdown’ (1976) consists of annotations to the subtitle of the story (‘A discharged Broadmoor patient compiles “Notes Towards A Mental Breakdown”, recalling his wife’s murder, his trial and exoneration’), each word of which is footnoted; and in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/unique-visual-complexities-a-review-of-grande-anarca">‘Answers to a Questionnaire’</a> (1985) the respondent implies that he has assassinated the second incarnation of Christ in 100 ‘answers’. [6] These texts are organised by absence or ellipsis, the architecture of the stories signifying a missing central element or text that reader must configure or enunciate for herself/himself. Non-linear, spatial in design, Ballard’s later experimental short stories are textual games that posit a foundational enigma, a mystery that the reader must work to decode.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/memories_potter.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Artwork by Jeffrey K. Potter for ‘Memories of the Space Age’ (commissioned for the collection Memories of the Space Age).</em></p>
<p><strong>Fugue Fiction (5♣).</strong> The ‘fugue fictions’ are <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">three connected short stories</a> that Ballard published around the turn of the 1980s: ‘News from the Sun’ (1981), ‘Memories of the Space Age’ (1982) and ‘Myths of the Near Future’ (1982). A close examination of these stories discloses the iterative principle at work even in Ballard’s later texts, where formal fragmentation has given way to more linear narrative models. A paragraph from ‘A Question of Re-Entry’ (1962) pinpoints the shared emphases of these stories:</p>
<blockquote><p>The implication was that the entire space programme was a symptom of some inner unconscious malaise afflicting mankind, and in particular the Western technocracies, and that the space-craft and satellites had been launched because their flights satisfied certain buried compulsions and desires. [7]</p></blockquote>
<p>In ‘Memories of the Space Age’, the protagonist Mallory, a doctor in the NASA program, confesses to his unconscious complicity in the first orbital murder, by a borderline-disturbed astronaut named Hinton. This act produced a kind of ‘space-sickness’ of fugue-states and loss of temporal awareness that is centred on Cape Canaveral: ‘he had torn the fabric of time and space, cracked the hour-glass from which time was running’. [8]  The fugues experienced by Mallory and the protagonists of the two other stories are a kind of congealing of time, a transcendence of clock time; in ‘News from the Sun’, these fugues are explicitly typed as a return to a pre-lapsarian state of consciousness. In ‘Myth of the Near Future’, the protagonist Sheppard pursues his terminally ill wife to Canaveral, where the time-effect may ultimately revivify her. All three stories are patterned on a triangulation between the protagonist, his wife (or lover), and an antagonist; a fourth figure is present, outside of the primary triangulation, who is either an astronaut or connected to the space program.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘News from the Sun’: Franklin-Ursula-Slade (Trippett)<br />
‘Memories of the Space Age’: Mallory-Anna-Hinton (Gale Shepley)<br />
‘Myths of the Near Future’: Sheppard-Elaine-Martinsen (Anne Godwin)</p></blockquote>
<p>The triangulations suggests a geometric/architectural emphasis, but the sense that these three fictions, published in sequence, are reworkings of the same conceptual material and re-deploy the same motifs (flight, the space programme, fugue states and time) signifies their centrality to the Ballardian iterative complex.</p>
<p><strong>Gemini. (4♣)</strong> The Space Age is a crucial source for <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/walking-on-the-moon">the Ballardian imaginary</a>, from the negotiations of cargo-cult imperialism in ‘A Question of Re-Entry’ (1963) to the assassination of a messianic astronaut in ‘The Object of the Attack’ (1984). The icon of the astronaut is central to the ‘fugue fictions’ and their sense that NASA’s manned space programs were a cosmic transgression, an hubristic leap out of biological time which has catastrophic psychological consequences. Many of Ballard’s texts are centred on Cape Canaveral, from ‘The Illuminated Man’ (1964) (itself later incorporated – reiterated – into <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">The Crystal World</a> (1965)), where time crystallizes, to ‘Memories of the Space Age’ (1982), where the Cape is the epicentre of a kind of ‘space sickness’. However, it is not Apollo imagery – the Moon landings – that regulate Ballard’s Space Age imaginary. His astronauts have orbital trajectories. In ‘The Dead Astronaut’ (1968) and ‘The Cage of Sand’ (1962) orbiting capsules containing dead astronauts form a kind of artificial constellation in the night sky, while the protagonists wait at Canaveral for their orbits to decay. It is not Apollo, but the Mercury and Gemini programs – manned orbital missions that grew in complexity and duration, but stayed within the ambit of Earth – that provide the backdrop for Ballard’s Space Age. This is no New Frontier, no ascension to other planets, but a limited, problematic endeavour.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino_titles.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>Hearts and Minds (8♣).</strong> The title sequence of the 2006 Casino Royale plays with the centrality of the card game and the casino to its narrative. In motion-capture animation (where computer-generated graphics are overlaid on live action), a silhouetted polygon Bond fights, shoots, and is finally shown (in a live-action ‘reveal’) to be Daniel Craig, the ‘new’ Bond. The roulette wheel becomes a sniper-scope target in these graphics, as clubs, diamonds and spades become weapons embedded in the torsos of antagonists, ‘blood’ flowing across the screen from their wounds. Bond is himself ‘cut’ by playing cards in one animated sequence, but is invulnerable; no blood seems to flow there. The interrelationship of the casino, the roulette wheel and the playing card with the neo-colonial adventurism represented by the Bond imaginary invites us to read the film itself as a kind of spectacle or game, masking its ideological premises.</p>
<p><strong>Iterative (3♣).</strong> Crucial to the idea of a ‘Ballardian’ text is patterning or what I have suggested as iterability. It would be difficult to deny that Ballard returns to similar ideas, or narrative structures throughout his work: it is the effectiveness of the patterning that is crucial, the combination and re-combination of elements to work through a coherent world that provides Ballard’s texts with imaginative power. David Punter, in Modernity, concurs, stating: ‘What is most significant […] is that Ballard is a repetitive writer, a writer of repetition.’ [9] The first formally ‘iterative’ Ballard short story is ‘The Terminal Beach’ (1964), in which the textual fabric of the story is fragmented, split into 22 sections (21 of them subtitled), echoing the psychological fragmentation of the protagonist Traven (the earliest incarnation of the ‘T-‘ figure who recurs, as ‘Tallis’ or ‘Talbot’ or ‘Trabert’) who can also be found in Ballard’s iterative masterwork, The Atrocity Exhibition. ‘The Terminal Beach’ and particularly the Atrocity Exhibition texts are non-linear and non-causal in terms of narrative; in ‘The Terminal Beach’, the concrete blocks of the nuclear testing site Eniwetok Island form a maze, ‘their geometric regularity and finish [seeming] to occupy more than their own volumes of space, imposing on him a mood of absolute calm and order.’ [10]  Here the spatial ordering of the text is more properly geometric rather than algebraic (iterative), but the repetitive, disorienting regularity of the field of blocks is a figure for a space that repeats itself endlessly. This motif can also be found in the more classically dystopian short story ‘The Concentration City’, where the urban ‘build-up’ has no boundary, no end, and a train journey to find its limits returns the protagonist to the starting point is a regressive, looping trajectory; and in the repeated face of Cordobès on the deck of cards placed upon Quimby’s balcony table in ‘Confetti Royale’.</p>
<p><strong>James (10♣).</strong> J.G. Ballard’s first names are James Graham. Only in his Crash alter-ego is Ballard ‘James’, a knowing self-implication in that text’s transgressive sexual material; he was ‘Jimmy’ as a boy, ‘Jim’ to his adult friends. The diminutive, ‘Jim’, humanises Ballard, and it is this name which is given to his ‘autobiographical’ selves in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> (1985) and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-the-kindness-of-women">The Kindness of Women</a> (1991). Opposing this is the self-alienated ‘J.G.’, a not-quite <em>nom de plume</em> that masks the ‘real’ Jim Ballard. Ballard’s textual interrogation of unitary subjectivity is reflected in this circulation of names, and the surnames of his protagonists – Sheppard, Maitland, Franklin, Sinclair – are themselves iterative signs. James Bond, by way of contrast, is never ‘Jimmy’, ‘Jim’ or ‘Jamie’: always ‘James’.</p>
<p><strong>Kennedy (J♣).</strong> After his assassination in 1963, President John F. Kennedy’s name was given to the Cape where the NASA space program still has its operational base: Canaveral. This naming has now been reversed, but the Space Center still bears JFK’s name. It is Kennedy who is seen to be the ‘author’ of Apollo, giving the political and economic impetus to reach the Moon through the rhetoric of the ‘New Frontier’ and a sustained arms race (symbolically as well as militarily), though it could be argued that it is Lyndon Johnson who was most committed to the American space program in the 1950s and 1960s. Kennedy’s assassination is, in some sense, a ‘ground zero’ for contemporary American culture, and he looms large in the algebra of icons that Ballard constructs in the period of The Atrocity Exhibition, along with the president’s widow, Jackie. The implication of glamour, celebrity and violent death is embodied in the icon of JFK; in ‘The Assassination of John F. Kennedy Considered as a Downhill Motor Race’, a key text in The Atrocity Exhibition, the moment of assassination also becomes a fatal game.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/split_ballard.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><em>‘Continuously creating his own image’: J.G. Ballard self-portrait, double exposure, 1950 (photo via RE/Search Publications).</em></p>
<p><strong>Lunghua (Q♣).</strong> With the publication of Ballard’s autobiography, Miracles of Life, it became apparent that, as much as I would like to resist a biographical reading of Ballard’s work, it is Ballard’s own childhood that has had a fundamental regulatory effect on the Ballardian imaginary. In Empire of the Sun, Ballard playfully encouraged the reader to ‘spot’ the Ballardian icon in an autobiographical context – the drained swimming pool, the crashed plane – while simultaneously denying that autobiography provided any kind of key or code to understanding his work. His life, as represented in both Empire of the Sun and The Kindness of Women, is filtered through the medium of fiction. In the light of Miracles of Life, I would now like to suggest that it is Lunghua, the resettlement camp into which he, his parents and his sister were interned during the Japanese occupation of Shanghai in World War Two, that is the model for the Ballardian social environment. Lunghua is enclosed, fenced off from the outside world; it is a place where work is scarce; where a system of social codes and conventions regulate personal interaction; where games, hobbies, organised events schedule the lives of its inhabitants; and where existence shades inevitably into a slow decline unto death. A place to rebel against, if space can be found; a space to escape from, if escape is possible. Lunghua is the model for the high-rises, gated communities, science parks and suburban dormitory towns of Ballard’s later fiction.</p>
<p><strong>Metacriticism/metatext (K♣).</strong> ‘What is distinctive about The Arcades Project – in Benjamin’s mind, it always dwelt apart – is the working of quotations into the framework of montage [….] the transcendence of the conventional book form would go together, in this case, with the blasting apart of pragmatic historicism – grounded, as this always is, on the premise of a continuous and homogenous temporality. Citation and commentary might then be perceived as intersecting at a thousand different angles, setting up vibrations across the epochs of recent history, so as to effect “the cracking open of natural teleology.” And all of this would unfold through the medium of hints or “blinks” – a discontinuous presentation deliberately opposed to traditional modes of argument.’ [11]</p>
<p><strong>Spades ♠</p>
<p>(A♠) Macro-economic tidal systems.</strong> B sat down in the oak-panelled room of state opposite Sir Richard Markham. Markham assessed this loose-limbed man in the ragged flying jacket. A constellation of scars around his mouth and jaw-line traced the trajectory of his chequered history as an agent. Markham accepted the logic of the situation – an agent lasted a few years in the field, no more – but B had gone further than most, much further in many ways. The grey, haunted eyes that looked through Markham scanned the ocean bottom of his psyche, cut adrift from the time system of Whitehall.<br />
	‘You’ve been away, B,’ said Markham.<br />
        B’s eyes refocused.<br />
	‘In a manner of speaking.’</p>
<p><strong>(2♠) Auto-intentional displacement.</strong> B realised, as he stood on the moving walkway in the inner hub of Charles de Gaulle airport, that the geometry of the architecture expressed a latent psychopathology. The concrete tunnels of the travellators indicated a profound desire to return to the amniotic peacefulness of the womb, the octagonal central atrium and suspended Perspex walkways revealing a fascist worship of the late General in the form of an architectural homage to his nasal septum and zygomatic arch. B found himself profoundly identifying with the unknown would-be assassin who had missed his opportunity to be the French Oswald in 1965. It was clear to him that the French, for all their insistence on <em>grands projets</em> like CDG, inhabited a fundamental and psychotic cultural landscape in which the tension between their embrace of modernity and their nostalgia for empire went unresolved.</p>
<p><strong>(3♠) Goldeneye.</strong> As he dipped the clutch of the Aston and thrust the gearstick into fifth, B remembered the death of his wife. It was, he now understood, a special form of automobile accident. Blauveldt and Blunt, whom he had previously recognised as enemies, were in fact the agents of an underlying logic of necessity. Since the death of his wife, B had slipped further and further out of time, occupying fugue states where hours slipped by. Now, as blades of sodium light accelerated across his windshield, B felt himself again returning to the fugue state that had plagued him since her death, the Aston congealing in a viscid block of time.</p>
<p><strong>(4♠) Operation Grand Slam.</strong> B opened the attaché case. In it he found what Markham had called his ‘assassination weapon’. It consisted of: (a) reproductions of Marcel Duchamp’s ‘Nude Descending a Staircase’; (b) a pulp spy novel by one Richard Markham; (c) Eadweard Muybridge’s series photographs of horse and rider; (d) soft inner flying helmet and communication rig of B-29 navigator, USAAF issue; (e) November 1963 edition of Time magazine; (f) an unused prophylactic wrapped in a tin foil sachet; (g) black-box voice recording of co-pilot, Concorde air disaster, Charles de Gaulle Airport, Paris; (h) .25 Beretta pistol.</p>
<p><strong>(5♠) Heliotropic.</strong> Dr Catherine Penny waited in the secure car park of the Jodrell Bank radio telescopes, as the man in the ragged flying jacket paced the grounds, where the massive volumes of the dishes sprouted like some monstrous alien crop. Dr Penny thought of B‘s grey, haunted eyes, and turned the heating in the MGC up a notch. What B was looking for, he could not find amongst the files and despatch boxes of Whitehall. Could he find it here, among the constellations?</p>
<p><strong>(6♠) Index of Alienation.</strong> B calculated the angle between Dr Penny’s rigid torso and her splayed thighs, as she sat like an ill-propped mannequin on the edge of his bed. The conjunction between her naked body, the vintage bottle of Bollinger and the torn foil of the prophylactic sachet brought back disconcerting memories of the buckled armcove on Monaco race day. He turned back to the light box he was building to display x-ray plates of his own fractured clavicle, femur, and kneecap.</p>
<p><strong>(7♠) Quantum theory.</strong>  ‘Pay attention, B,’ said Quinn, the head of the special quartermaster stores. ‘One day these things could conceivably save your life.’<br />
	He placed another card on the desk and invited B to respond.<br />
	‘Come on,’ said B. ‘What will it be next? Solitaire? The Tarot pack?’<br />
	‘This is for the good of your health, not mine,’ replied Quinn, ‘though God knows it’s difficult enough to tell the difference these days. How did you find Switzerland?’<br />
	B smiled. ‘The facilities were excellent. The doctors pronounced me in fine physical shape.’ The lie was automatic, almost unconscious, thought Quinn.<br />
	B’s eyes defocused, the deck of cards indecipherable sigils beneath his hands.</p>
<p><strong>(8♠) Beretta .25.</strong> Sitting on the balcony of his room in the Loew’s hotel in Monte Carlo, B watched the workmen fix road markings for the motor racing that would take place next week. The late afternoon sun painted the harbour with gold as he finished the club sandwich and drained the last of the glass of Johnny Walker Black Label. On his knees was the conference pack of the neurosurgery symposium he was attending, where he hoped to catch up with Blufeldt. Blufeldt had assumed the legitimate identity of a specialist doctor and had attached himself to a radical clinic in Bern, Switzerland. He was giving a paper on neurology, brain injury and fugue states. B stood up, brushed the crumbs from his knees, and pinned his identification tag onto his shirt. At least the others would know who he was supposed to be.</p>
<p><strong>(9♠) Jackie O.</strong> As B entered Catherine Penny from behind, he registered the way her hips, flaring out from the waist, repeated the sensual curves of the mouthpiece of the telephone. Her back, bent rigidly over Markham’s desk, echoed the planes of the reclining chair that sat, as in a psychiatrist’s consulting room, to one side of the grand office. As he moved inside her, B thought of the coil that sat in Catherine’s womb like an ironic plastic echo of the DNA double-helix. He held Catherine’s hips as if he were piloting the Aston at high speed down the autobahn between Köln and Berlin.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/flem_ball.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>(10♠) Neverland.</strong> ‘Blaufeld is in Florida,’ said Markham, looking at B carefully. ‘Down at the Cape, the disused launch site. We don’t think he’s interested in the physical possibilities of the gantries, but…’<br />
	‘I always wanted to be an astronaut,’ said B. ‘The NASA program drew a lot of astronauts from Navy fliers, like Sheppard. I met him once. A difficult man. He told me flatly that no Royal Navy Commander could ever make NASA grade.’<br />
	‘Space,’ Blaufeld had said, ‘is money.’</p>
<p><strong>(J♠) Solar Transits.</strong> The strip lighting haloed from Bluffield’s large, pink, shaven skull as he looked up at B from under cerebrotonic brows.<br />
	‘You’ve never understood my work, James. God knows I’ve tried to explain. But I knew you’d come. Particularly here, of all places.’<br />
	B looked out of the office windows and saw the rusted, half-ruined gantries propped like a disused stage-set against the Florida sky. He could feel the .25 Beretta in its clam-shell holster beneath his left arm, but knew he would never use it now. The cool afternoon seemed to stretch forever, like the nearby glades.<br />
	‘How long have you been having these fugues, James?’ asked Bluffield.</p>
<p><strong>(Q♠) Restitution.</strong> Karen Blunt sat astride the Yamaha, revving it slowly, her aviator shades reflecting the parking lot where B sat in the open-top Pontiac. One side of B’s face was turning coral in the intense afternoon sun, as he lived out a waking dream, his memory tapping out the algebra of his past. Karen’s dark hair cascaded onto her sturdy shoulders and chest, which were buttoned up in a grubby NASA flight suit scavenged from Kennedy. Here at Cocoa Beach, outside the bar where the astronauts once dreamed of flight, B and Karen pitched in the oceanic tides of time.</p>
<p><strong>(K♠) Pinewood to Shepperton.</strong> In the attaché case B found his instructions from Markham, consisting of a sequence of defaced postcards posted to B by Bloveldt, from Cape Kennedy, Florida; the Alamagordo testing grounds, New Mexico; Utah Beach, Normandy, France; and Fort Knox, Kentucky. They read, in date order: ‘(1) Maiden flight of Concorde (2) Abbey Road (3) Rolling Thunder (4) Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong walks on moon (5) The Wild Bunch (6) Inauguration of President Richard Milhous Nixon (7) Medium Cool (8) d.o.b 20 March (9) Let It Bleed (10) The Stones in the Park (11) Tommy (12) The election of French President Georges Pompidou, succeeding General de Gaulle (13) Woodstock (14) Altamont Speedway (15) On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (16) The Atrocity Exhibition.’</p>
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<p><strong>..:: CONTINUED: >> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text-2">Part 2</a> ::&#8230;</strong></p>
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		<title>Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text, part 2</title>
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		<dc:creator>Brian Baker</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[
&#8216;Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text&#8217;
by Brian Baker


..:: CONTINUED from >> Part 1 ::&#8230;


♣♠♥♦
The Joker. The Joker in the pack is the card that, in some games, can replace (or substitute for, take the place of) any of the others. In this sense, the Joker is the empty sign.
♣♠♥♦
Hearts ♥
(A♥) Time Drill. ‘I don’t remember much [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/confetti_royale.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>by <a href="http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/english/profiles/Brian-Baker">Brian Baker</a></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>..:: CONTINUED from >> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text">Part 1</a> ::&#8230;</strong></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>♣♠♥♦</p>
<p>The Joker.</strong> The Joker in the pack is the card that, in some games, can replace (or substitute for, take the place of) any of the others. In this sense, the Joker is the empty sign.</p>
<p><strong>♣♠♥♦</p>
<p>Hearts ♥</p>
<p>(A♥) Time Drill.</strong> ‘I don’t remember much about my father,’ replied B.<br />
	‘No, I’m sorry, you misunderstand,’ said Bluefield. ‘I meant Markham, Sir Richard Markham.’<br />
	‘Ah…’ B looked a little confused, then passed a thin, sunburnt hand across his eyes. Bluefield thought B looked exhausted after his ordeal in the Pontiac. Karen Blunt had finally rescued the half-blistered scarecrow figure in his ragged flying jacket, and at least the soft flying helmet had prevented too much sunstroke. Even now, after a week’s rest and medical attention, Bluefield could see the sores around B’s dirty neckline, beneath the leather collar of his jacket.<br />
	‘Are you really a doctor?’ asked B, looking up.<br />
	‘Of a special kind.’</p>
<p><strong>(2♥) Unwritten histories.</strong> ‘You’ve been in Florida before?’ asked Karen.<br />
B was surprised to hear her speak in light, rather melodious accentless English.<br />
	‘Yes, some time ago. I met a man by the name of Scaramanga.’<br />
Blowfield smiled gently and looked down at his large, soft hands. Pink and scrubbed, they looked out of place on the dusty grey melamine table-top. They sat in a red vinyl horseshoe-shaped booth in the abandoned diner, three Coca-Colas in green bottles growing ever closer to blood heat in front of them.<br />
	‘I read that case,’ said Blowfield. ‘You weren’t quite yourself to begin with, I recall.’<br />
	B’s eyes flickered as he began to enter another fugue.<br />
	‘And who am I now, doctor?’</p>
<p><strong>(3♥) Whisky and soda.</strong> The fugues seemed to take the place of any true dream sleep, but that afternoon B drew up a sun-lounger beneath an overgrown palm, and drifted to sleep by the side of the drained swimming pool. He dreamed of flight. Propeller blades flashed from his shoulders in the golden sunlight as he ascended into the Florida sky, below him the gantries and concrete aprons of Canaveral. A space-age archangel, clothed in light, he rose until he could see the curvature on the blue rim of the earth and the vault of the sky deepened to a crushing black. Turning on his back, in coronation armour flashing like a new star, he awaited blissful deliverance.</p>
<p><strong>(4♥) Kuomintang.</strong> B sat in the wrecked Aston, its red leather trim burst like a rotten scarecrow. He toyed with the broken instrument stalk as he stared at the cracked dials and buckled binnacle, the Aston’s instruments frozen at the crash speed of a hundred and twenty. Feeling his cracked kneecap, B pressed down on the accelerator pedal and saw, through the frosted windshield, the roads of the International Settlement in Shanghai, where he sat on his father’s lap as they drove down empty boulevards in the grandiose Packard that his father bought to impress high-ranking Chinese officials.</p>
<p><strong>(5♥) Viennese Benediction.</strong> ‘Who do you want to be, James?’ asked Blovelt.<br />
	‘Is it a matter of choice, doctor?’<br />
	‘For you, it’s a matter of necessity,’ said Blovelt, drawing aside the Styrofoam cup of coffee.<br />
	‘I think you may have the question wrong, if I may say so,’ said B. ‘It’s not a matter of who do I want to be, but why?’<br />
	Blovelt slowly traced the parabola of his pink skull with his left palm.<br />
	‘Have you seen her, again?’<br />
	B seemed, with an effort of will, to come to himself, and looked searchingly at Blovelt, certainty and horror at home in the grey eyes.<br />
	‘She’s out there on the gantries, doctor,’ said B. ‘She keeps escaping me, and I don’t have much time left. But I’ll find her.’</p>
<p><strong>(6♥) X-1.</strong> In one of his increasingly rare periods of physical activity, B walked towards the Apollo gantry and heard the spluttering engine of the Cessna. Through the cockpit window, as the aircraft circled the gantry, B could make out the habitual white coat, red shirt and pink skull of Blyfield, the man who had murdered his wife, but who had now somehow brought her back to him. Blyfield was waving, pointing to the top of the gantry, and as B looked up, he saw a figure clambering among the rusted geometry of the access platforms. There she was. As B made his way to the stairwell on aching, sore legs, he heard the Cessna’s engine cut out, and watched as Blyfield wrestled the aircraft to a controlled crash landing on the concrete apron.</p>
<p><strong>(7♥) Cobalt Blue.</strong> B and Blueweldt met in the mezzanine of the Monte Carlo convention centre, which presented itself as a provincial casino without the formal wear. The foyer was crowded with middle-aged men in light summer suits.<br />
	‘Dr. Blueweldt, I assume?’ asked Bond, peering at a name tag.<br />
	‘My dear James! How lovely to see you here!’ Blueweldt warmly clasped B’s hand. ‘How have you been?’<br />
	B looked searchingly into Blueweldt’s eyes for signs of dissimulation.<br />
	‘Have you been to any of the panels?’ asked Blueweldt ruefully. ‘Second rate, to a man. As you can see, they all look like middle-management executives. Appearances, in this case, are not deceptive.’<br />
	Blueweldt’s own light-blue three-piece blended him in perfectly with the crowd, but B’s worn leather jacket, cracked aviator glasses and khaki pants identified him either as a media don or a stray patient. B opened his conference pack and scanned the schedule of panels.<br />
	‘Nothing of interest next, doctor. Shall we step outside for a sundowner and a talk?’</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/potter_myths.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Artwork by Jeffrey K. Potter for ‘Myths of the Near Future’ (commissioned for the collection Memories of the Space Age).</em></p>
<p><strong>(8♥) Yarrow Stalks.</strong> As he finally stepped onto the access platform near the top of the rusting Apollo gantry, legs shaking and a fugue beginning to come on, B saw his wife looking at him from a pool of silver sunlight. His wife pointed away from Canaveral, out into the light and air. He wondered if she was beckoning him to step out into the æther and join her. He edged further along the platform towards the open end, feeling the pull of the light airs that breathed past the gap. As he approached, time slowing, he realised what his wife was pointing towards – there he seemed to see, in the far distance, the light shining on the Everglades, a burnished mirror of the sun. He stared, the reflected light searing an image onto his retina. Turning, slowly turning, he realised that his wife had gone.</p>
<p><strong>(9♥) Dilation of the Iris.</strong> Ordinarily, B only found motor vehicles interesting if he was behind the wheel, and despite the glamour of the grand prix circus that had now arrived in Monaco, this week was no exception. He had lost track of Blaufield some time before the end of the neurology conference, having become bored by the presentations of the delegates and unimpressed by the exhibits and displays. He had drifted off into strolling the streets of the city principality, unwilling to return to London and admit – perhaps to himself most of all – that he had lost the urgency of the hunt. He haunted the harbour, obsessed with the Mediterranean light playing upon the water and the large white motor yachts that now filled the marina. Time, here in this piece of France that was not France, seemed to stretch into a long, martini-filled afternoon.</p>
<p><strong>(10♥) Emergency Procedures.</strong> Using his conference accreditation to flash the security staff, B made his way with the crowd onto the deck of a large motor launch and accepted a glass of champagne from a waiter. His worn leather jacket and aviator sunshades gave him just the right kind of down-at-heel glamour so that the crowd accepted him as an out-of-work American character actor or throwback racing driver, scion of a far less technical and bureaucratic age. Bored by the upscale small talk, he drifted to the stern rail of the launch and looked back across the marina. At his elbow, a young woman in matching aviator glasses coughed slightly, and said, ‘Thinking of jumping?’<br />
	He turned and looked at the self-possessed young woman in the pale blue silk dress who leaned into him, looking up, and saw his own rather ragged features reflected in her glasses. She was a head shorter than B, but held herself with a kind of rakish confidence that marked her difference from the crowd behind them.<br />
	‘No, of flying,’ he said.<br />
	‘You’re not a race driver, then?’<br />
	‘I can’t say I’m much of anything.’<br />
	‘You do, however, have a name?’<br />
	‘It’s James. James B.’</p>
<p><strong>(J♥) Facts in the Case.</strong> They stood arm in arm as the fumes from the high-octane engines hazed the sidewalk, pressed as it was with spectators. Their ill-timed stroll had locked them into the very circus they had hoped to avoid. The falsetto roar of the factory-team racing cars blasting past the barriers stilled their conversation, and they communicated by way of near-hysterical mime, raised eyebrows, pointedly directed eye movement and clasps of the hand. Both wore smiles that the crush and the noise could not erase. B motioned with his head to cut past the end of a run-off area to walk away from the crowds and up into the town away from the circuit. As they disengaged themselves from the crowd and walked past a race marshall frantically waving a red flag, B was suddenly conscious of a blast of engine-hot air that lifted him bodily then slammed him back onto the asphalt. Time and space wheeled like a burst tyre. His ears full of the roar of the dying high-performance engine, he turned his head to the right and saw her propped up against the buckled armcove, smiling slightly at him and tenderly brushing away the drops of blood that spilled from a graze in her scalp onto the white cotton dress.</p>
<p><strong>(Q♥) Left Luggage Office.</strong> ‘Come in,’ said Markham.<br />
	‘Thank you,’ replied Professor Blowfield with a slight bow. ‘You would like to discuss the case of James B?’<br />
	‘Yes. Although when he came back from Switzerland, he professed the desire to return to active service, his behaviour has been erratic to say the least. Here is a record of the surveillance that one of our top female operatives has been conducting.’<br />
	Blowfield took up the file that had been slid across the desk to him, and scanned down the list of B’s movements and activities. His eyebrows, beneath the dome of his naked forehead, raised in surprise once, then again. ‘Here?’<br />
	M smiled ruefully. ‘I thought that once B’s dalliance with a wife had been ended, he would come back to us. It seems he has, in fact, gone much further away. Is there anything else we can do?’<br />
	Blowfield winced, and dipped his head. Looking up at Markham, he said, ‘There’s one more thing we can try. After that…’</p>
<p><strong>(K♥) Zoëtropic.</strong> B drove out to one of the abandoned small towns on the edge of the glades, looking for an airboat. He finally found one in the late afternoon, one that started after a little tinkering, and seated high in the driver’s chair, he powered up the caged propeller and swung the airboat out into the middle of the reed-choked creek. He throttled back and let the engine idle as the boat skimmed out into the glades proper, skirting the causeway he had driven on. Once out into flat water, he opened the airboat up, skimming at a speed that seemed literally unearthly, a dream of flight, airborne on water, airborne on light. He glanced to his left and saw his wife sitting beside him looking forward into the sun, dark hair streaming behind her, light cotton dress swept against her breasts and torso. He looked ahead, feeling the fugue coming on him again, and pointed the airboat towards the sun that dipped molten gold into the Everglades.</p>
<p><strong>Diamonds ♦</p>
<p>New Worlds (6♦).</strong> Under <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/angry-old-men-michael-moorcock-on-jg-ballard">Michael Moorcock’s editorship from 1964</a>, New Worlds magazine became the home of the science fiction ‘New Wave’. The archetypal New Wave science fiction story was textually experimental and formally and/or generically self-conscious; alienated from the mores and conventions of contemporary mainstream culture (and mainstream ‘literary’ writing); and infused with a cynical, dystopian or counter-cultural politics, signified in the recurrent use of the scientific concept of entropy. Moorcock has written about New Worlds:</p>
<blockquote><p>Style and technique was merely a means to an end – frequently a very moral means to some very moral ends. We were looking at the Vietnam War, Kennedy&#8217;s assassination, the computer revolution, the armaments industry, the manipulations of the media, the profound hypocrisies of the liberal bourgeoisie, the appalling condition of the majority of human beings on the planet, the useless currency of outmoded or inappropriate political language. But our response was scarcely a puritan one and neither did we recoil from experiencing our subject matter. We relished and embraced change, we celebrated the advent of new technologies and theories which opened up the multiverse for further exploration, which helped us understand our own behaviour and which provided us with some profound and spectacular metaphors! If the world was going to hell, we were determined to see how, but we were also determined to enjoy it while it was happening. Our curiosity was considerably greater than our uncertainty. [12]</p></blockquote>
<p>The iterability of Ballard’s work makes him a central player in the ‘New Wave’ and in New Worlds.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/from_russia.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>Out There (8♦).</strong> James Bond is crucially implicated in the social and ideological practices of tourism and consumerism; but Bond is ‘at home’ anywhere, as in From Russia, With Love, where he is accepted in the Turkish gypsy caravanserai as a kind of ‘brother’ and is even accorded the honour of judging the outcome of a dispute between women. As Vivian Halloran notes in ‘Tropical Bond’, the issue of ‘passing’ for local recurs in Bond texts which consistently, she argues, ‘complicate Bond’s whiteness’; following Edward Said’s argument about Kipling’s Kim in Culture and Imperialism, I would like to stress here that Bond can ‘pass’, even as a non-white other, where the ethnically troubling ‘villain’ (from Dr No onwards) most assuredly cannot. [13] Ballard’s protagonists are alienated everywhere, even ‘at home’; the fragmentation of the Traven/ Talbot/ Tallis figure is of a different order to the disguises that Bond affects, under which the ‘real’ James Bond still exists. In The Atrocity Exhibition, there is no such foundational unitary subjectivity. Where the Ballardian protagonist travels to different parts of the world, he only ‘passes’ in that the indigenous people recognise such a radical psychological dislocation in him that he is not really there at all.</p>
<p><strong>Pleasure Periphery (7♦).</strong> Ballard and Fleming share an interest in what Michael Denning calls the ‘pleasure periphery’, ‘the tourist belt surrounding the industrialized world’: the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, or certain parts of East Asia. The centrality of tourism and travel to Bond texts is echoed in such Ballard texts as ‘Having a Wonderful Time’ (1978) or, more importantly, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a> (1996).  Denning writes, after quoting from a scene in Fleming’s From Russia, With Love:</p>
<blockquote><p>Here we find the epitome of the tourist experience: the moment of relaxed visual contemplation from above, leaning on the balustrade; the aesthetic reduction of a social entity, the city, to a natural object, coterminous with the waves of the sea; the calculations of the tourist’s economy, exchanging physical discomfort for a more “authentic” view; and the satisfaction of having made the ‘right’ exchange, having “got” the experience, possessed the “view”. [14]</p></blockquote>
<p>It is no coincidence, argues Denning, that the Bond narratives find their location in the ‘pleasure periphery’: Fleming’s texts articulate the ‘tourist gaze’ (analysed by John Urry), the mobile gaze of consumption embodied by jet-age travellers to ‘exotic’ tourist destinations. [15] In Ballard’s fictions, the ‘pleasure periphery’ is the location for what <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/review-jg-ballard-by-andrzej-gasiorek">Andrzej Gasiorek</a> diagnoses as ‘a world dominated not by work but by leisure’, although in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a> (2007) and elsewhere, the ‘pleasure periphery’ has now been imported to the centre. [16]</p>
<p><strong>Queens and Kings (3♦).</strong> In ‘Confetti Royale’/‘The Beach Murders’, Quimby, who is identified several times as the ‘dealer’ of the deck of cards that ‘he set out […] on the balcony table’, both plays a card game alone (with which he ‘amused himself in his hideaway’) and, by extension, with the other characters in the story. [17] Each card has two aspects: the number or face upon it (denoting its value), and on the reverse or back, a picture of the bullfighter Cordobès, whose image is thereby repeated fifty-two times across the table, another figure of iteration. There are no easy homologies between Queen, King and Jack and the characters in ‘Confetti Royale’, however (even though there is a Princess): what is important is the role of the dealer, and the game itself. The game as metaphor for espionage informs this short story as it has the spy genre since Kipling’s Kim (1901) and the colonial ‘Great Game’ played by Britain and Russia for domination of the Indian subcontinent. Kim’s fluid and liminal subjectivity is an index of the instability of the spy-subject at the centre of espionage narrative: the secret agent becomes the ‘double agent’. [18]</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/you_coma.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><em>Illustration by Michael Foreman for the original Doubleday edition of The Atrocity Exhibition.</em></p>
<p><strong>Reified Subjects (4♦).</strong> David Punter, in The Hidden Script, identifies the centrality of subjectivity to Ballard’s concerns in his fiction. Punter writes:</p>
<blockquote><p>The long tradition of enclosed and unitary subjectivity comes to mean less and less to him as he explores the ways in which person [sic] is increasingly controlled by landscape and machine, increasingly becomes a point of intersection for overloaded scripts and processes which have effectively concealed their distant origins from human agency. [19]</p></blockquote>
<p>Punter’s assessment of Ballard’s critique of subjectivity can be exemplified most clearly in The Atrocity Exhibition, where the Traven/Tallis/Talbot figure, whose ‘breakdown’ is materialised in the fragmented form of the text and in the iterated (‘obsessional’) motifs, is a liminal or fractured subject. Ballard’s critique of contemporary life is articulated largely through his destablisation of unitary subjectivity, a fragmentation which leads to the release of ‘unconscious’ forces and desires which remain obscure (as conscious ‘motivation’) to the subject that enacts them. Figures for the fragmented or replicated subject can be found in ‘Confetti Royale’, for instance, in the repeated image of the bullfighter Cordobès on the backs of the cards, or in the first paragraph, where Princess Manon sees herself in the mirrors: ‘In the triptych of mirrors above the dressing table she gazed at the endless replicas of herself’. [20] Ballardian subjects are rarely agents in their own narratives; agency is displaced on to the ‘provocateur’ antagonist, Vaughan or Wilder Penrose, the third point in the Ballardian triangulation.</p>
<p><strong>Secret Agent (5♦).</strong> Fleming’s Bond, by way of contrast with the Ballardian subject, seems <em>all</em> agency, however ‘secret’. Bond, though, is acted upon in the death of his wife in OHMSS, and is subjected to a beating of his genitals, administered by Le Chiffre, in Casino Royale. There are limits to Bond’s agency. Also in Casino Royale, Bond is at first ‘defeated’ by Le Chiffre and the cards and is only saved in his mission by the offer of ‘Marshall aid’ (American finance) by the CIA operative Felix Leiter. His rescue from Le Chiffre is also <em>ex machina</em>, as a Smersh agent enters and kills Le Chiffre and his crew, only to leave Bond alive as he has no orders to kill the British agent. The fantasy of total agency represented by the figure of Bond, an expression of Cold War and decolonisation-era anxieties about Britain’s geopolitical role and influence, is destabilised by the texts themselves.</p>
<p><strong>The Beach Murders (2♦).</strong> At the missing centre of ‘Confetti Royale’, the 1966 short story that was renamed ‘The Beach Murders’, is Quimby, the ‘absconded cipher chief’ from the US State department, who is the ‘dealer’ of the pack of cards that feature throughout the narrative. Quimby is an encoder, the master of this textual game, though he himself remains an enigma (his motivations obscure even to himself: ‘what these obsessives in Moscow and Washington failed to realize was that for once he might have no motive at all’). [21] The retitling of the story – the text becoming its own double – emphasises the murders rather than the Cold War espionage milieu, placing the enigma ‘who killed?’ at the heart of the generic recoding: the text becomes a detective fiction rather than a spy fiction. As the ‘Introduction’ to the text suggests, the form of the story is an invitation to the reader to decode the narrative, recombine the 26 alphabeticized paragraphs and narrative events to resolve the text by identifying the murderer(s). No such resolution can take place. Of the murders, the following can be stated:<br />
	1. the Russian agent Kovorski murders the Romanoff Princess Manon (with certainty: her death is described).<br />
	2. the ‘American limbo dancer’ Lydia is killed (accidentally) by a bomb planted in the CIA agent Statler’s Mercedes by Kovorski (paragraph ends at the point at which she presses the starter and sets off the device)<br />
	3. Quimby kills the Russian agent Raissa (less certain, but probable)<br />
	4. Kovorski is shot and killed by an unknown assailant<br />
	5. Statler is killed in an unknown manner by an unknown assailant<br />
	6. Quimby and Sir Giles are left alive at the end of the narrative (probable, because there is no narrative of their deaths)</p>
<p>Of the murders, then, one is known; two are probably ascribable; two remain mysteries. The fate of two characters, including Quimby the ‘dealer’, in unknown. The recombinatory game ‘fails’ because there is, and can be, no solution to this criminal narrative. We might suspect that Quimby, as the ‘dealer’, is responsible, but the murderer(s) might also include Sir Giles or other (unknown) figures. The ‘Introduction’ also suggests that the textual game of deduction is doubled: the ‘solution’ to the ‘mystery of the Beach Murders’ requires a ‘key’, perhaps the very phrase that Lydia lifts from Kovorski’s Travel-Riter ink ribbon. As the text foregrounds from the very beginning, ‘any number of solutions is possible, and a final answer to the mystery […] lies forever hidden.’ [22]</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino_first.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" class=picleft" /></p>
<p><strong>Upwardly Mobile (10♦).</strong> James Bond is a curiously classless figure, despite the over-coded aristocratic connoisseurship purveyed by the Roger Moore film incarnation. In the film of Casino Royale, Bond and Vesper Lynd travel by high-speed train to Montenegro (the re-location of the casino). After dinner, the two swap character assessments/ character assassinations. After Bond essays a rather trite analysis of an anxious, beautiful-but-brainy femininity, Lynd reverses the trick: Bond is an orphan, the product of a public school and Oxford education (where he never ‘fitted in’), and MI6 via the SAS. Lynd then asks how his lamb was for dinner; ‘Skewered,’ says Bond. ‘One sympathises.’ Bond may be embarrassed by the ease in which Lynd is able to ‘skewer’ his character, but its detail signifies how dis-located he is in terms of social structures: he is an outsider, ‘maladjusted’, a status which in fact generates his mobility as a secret agent. Bond’s popularity can partly be read as a reflection of the aspirational, economically mobile, consumption-oriented imperatives of the British middle class in the 1960s and afterwards – the period of the Bond film phenomenon. Ballard’s own life history echoes Bond’s: not an orphan, but with distanced parents and Chinese servants in <em>loco parentis</em>; public school in England post-war (the Leys School in Cambridge), then Cambridge University; a short spell in the RAF, then marriage and life as a professional writer. Ballard’s connection to, and insight into, the mores and aspirations of the affluent British middle class is clear throughout his writings. Ballard is, in some ways, as exemplary a twentieth-century Englishman as is Bond, even though both are ‘outsiders’.</p>
<p><strong>Vesper Lynd (Q♦).</strong> The second point of the Ballardian narrative triangulation, the wife or lover, is often unfaithful or even lost to the protagonist. Even Crash’s Catherine Ballard is no <em>femme fatale</em>, however; sexual infidelity is less a matter of betrayal than of a mirror-image of the protagonist’s own personal trajectory of (self)alienation and (self)discovery. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, drawing upon the critical work of Rene Girard in her text Between Men, writes of an ‘erotic triangle’ in texts, where the (unspoken) relationship between two rival males predominates over, and regulates, the relationship each has with the ‘third’ point of the triangle, the female. The female thus becomes a counter or marker in a system of exchange: a medium or locus of repressed male desire. [23] Ballard’s triangulations are a geometry of homosociality and homoeroticism, made most explicit in Crash, but present everywhere.</p>
<p><strong>War Fever (J♦).</strong> The title of Ballard’s last short story collection, ‘war fever’ symbolises the underlying pathology at work during the Twentieth century: an implication of desire, destruction and death.</p>
<p><strong>X = ? (A♦).</strong> Ballard’s texts tend to work particularly through the recognition of the component. This is most evident in The Atrocity Exhibition, where each chapter is itself a ‘condensed novel’ and each titled paragraph thereby a ‘chapter’. Here, the architectural/ iterative imperatives of the Ballardian text are at their fullest extent. Brian McHale, in Postmodernist Fiction, suggests that ‘a pattern of repetition-with-variation’ is a central compositional motif in Ballard’s 1960s disaster fiction, and goes on to propose that ‘a fixed repertoire of modules, many of them repeated from the earlier apocalyptic novels, are differently recombined and manipulated from story to story’. ‘All this suggests,’ argues McHale, ‘the game-like permutation of a fixed repertoire of motifs – “art in a closed field”’. [24] Ballard’s ‘modular’ texts are therefore devices to work another iteration on the Ballardian algebra, the triangulation of protagonist, wife and provocateur/antagonist. Where P is the protagonist, A is alienation, V is the provocateur, W is the wife, and T is time:</p>
<blockquote><p>X (Transcendence, Escape, Death) = ((P/A x V) +/- W) –T</p></blockquote>
<p>It is not the aesthetic of the fragment that is central to the Ballardian text; it is the algebra of the iterative component or module.</p>
<p><strong>You Know My Name (9♦).</strong> The title song of the 2006 Casino Royale was written by Chris Cornell and David Arnold, and performed by Cornell. Its rock dynamics give the title sequence a kinetic edge, and is one of the more memorable of recent times. Its title and refrain, ‘You Know My Name’, signifies that the Bondian imaginary, like the Ballardian, is recognisable without (necessarily) being explicitly named.</p>
<p><strong>Zones of Transit (K♦).</strong> The Ballardian protagonist is often in movement, physically and metaphysically; between one place and another, between one state and another. Cast in the role of detective in Cocaine Nights, Super-Cannes and Kingdom Come, what is revealed by the protagonist’s investigations is of less importance than the progressive shedding of the layers of repression, self-delusion or unknowingness that constitute the protagonist’s world-view, compromised by the experiences the investigation leads him into. Just as there is no solution to ‘The Beach Murders’, only a game to be played, Ballard’s texts remain unresolved, in transit.</p>
<p><strong>♣♠♥♦</p>
<p>The Joker.</strong> There are two jokers in the pack; like Gemini, twins, red and black. They do not conform to one of the four suits, but take their colours. They are part of the pack but not part of it, always present but unused in many card games. The extra two cards, a kind of supplement, disrupt the seductive numerology of 13 that otherwise attends the ‘French deck’ of cards: 52 cards, in 4 suits, 13 to a suit; 13 x 2 = 26, the letters in the alphabet; 13 x 4 = 52, the number of weeks in a year; 13 is the number of disciples present at the Last Supper, the unluckiest of numbers. The extra two cards, the jokers, the twins, indicate that all this significance is but a game. The jokers are the fly in the ointment, the empty sign, the absent code.</p>
<p><strong>♣♠♥♦</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino_cards.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
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<p>Notes</strong></p>
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<p>[1] Dan Lockwood, ‘J.G. Ballard and the Architectures of Control’, Ballardian: The World of J.G. Ballard, 3 January 2008 <http :// www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-architectures-of-control>. Accessed 18 February 2008.<br />
[2] ‘Obeying the surrealist formula’: Iain Sinclair &#038; Hermione Lee on Ballard’, Ballardian: The World of J.G. Ballard, transcription of discussion between Mark Lawson, Hermione Lee and Iain Sinclair on Front Row, broadcast BBC Radio 4 5 February 2008 </http><http ://www.ballardian.com/obeying-the-surrealist-formula-iain-sinclair-hermione-lee-on-ballard>.  Accessed 18 February 2008.<br />
[3] David Pringle, Earth is the Alien Planet: J.G. Ballard’s Four-Dimensional Nightmare (San Bernadino CA; The Borgo Press), p.16.<br />
[4] Simon Sellars, ‘My name is Maitland, Donald Maitland’, Ballardian: The World of J.G. Ballard, 9 February 2008 </http><http ://www.ballardian.com/my-name-is-maitland-donald-maitland>. Accessed 19 February 2008.<br />
[5] Ken Cooper, ‘“Zero Pays the House”: The Las Vegas Novel and Atomic Roulette’, Contemporary Literature 33:3 (Fall 1992), 528-544 (p.539).<br />
[6] J.G. Ballard, ‘The Index’, The Complete Short Stories (London: Flamingo, 2001), pp.940-945; ‘Notes Towards A Mental Breakdown’, The Complete Short Stories, pp.849-855; ‘Answers to a Questionnaire’, The Complete Short Stories, pp.1101-1104.<br />
[7] J.G. Ballard, ‘A Question of Re-Entry’, The Complete Short Stories, pp.435-458 (p.453).<br />
[8] J.G. Ballard, ‘Memories of the Space Age’, The Complete Short Stories, pp.1037-1060 (p.1049).<br />
[9] David Punter, Modernity (Houndmills: Palgrave, 2007), p.137.<br />
[10] J.G. Ballard, ‘The Terminal Beach’, The Complete Short Stories, pp.589-604 (p.595).<br />
[11] Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin, ‘Translator’s Foreword’ to Walter Benjamin, The Arcades Project, trans. Howard Eiland and Kevin McLaughlin (Cambridge MA and London: Belknap Press, 1999), pp.ix-xiv (p.xi).<br />
[12] Michael Moorcock, &#8216;Introduction&#8217; to The New Nature of the Catastrophe, Moorcock and Langdon Jones, eds. (1993) (London: Orion, 1997), pp. viii-ix.<br />
[13] Vivian Halloran, ‘Tropical Bond’. Ian Fleming and James Bond: The Cultural Politics of 007, Edward P. Comentale, Stephen Watt and Skip Willman, eds. (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2005), p. 158-177 (p.165).<br />
[14] Michael Denning, Cover Stories: Narrative and ideology in the British spy thriller (London and New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1987), p. 105; p.104.<br />
[15] John Urry, The Tourist Gaze, 2nd edition (London: Sage, 2002).<br />
[16] Andrzej Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2005), p.26.<br />
[17] Ballard, ‘The Beach Murders’, The Complete Short Stories, p.663.<br />
[18] See Brian Baker, Masculinity in Fiction and Film: Representing Men in Popular Genres 1945-2000 (London and New York: Continuum, 2006), chapter 2.<br />
[19] David Punter, The Hidden Script (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1985), p.9.<br />
[20] Ballard, ‘The Beach Murders’, The Complete Short Stories, p.663.<br />
[21] J.G. Ballard, ‘The Beach Murders’, The Complete Short Stories, pp.663-668 (p.664).<br />
[22] Ballard, ‘The Beach Murders’, The Complete Short Stories, p.663.<br />
[23] I have myself written on this in relation to Crash: Brian Baker, ‘The Resurrection of Desire: J.G. Ballard’s Crash as a Transgressive Text’, Foundation 80 (November 2000), pp.84-96.<br />
[24] Brian McHale, Postmodernist Fiction (London: Methuen, 1987), p.69; p.70.</http></p>
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<p><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-dna-of-the-present-jg-ballards-cold-war">The ‘DNA of the Present’ in the Fossil Record of the Cold War Through the Imagery of JG Ballard, Related Sources and Documents in Various Media</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/my-name-is-maitland-donald-maitland">&#8216;My name is Maitland, Donald Maitland&#8217;</a></p>
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		<title>Michael Jackson&#039;s Facelift</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/michael-jacksons-facelift</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/michael-jacksons-facelift#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2009 10:31:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ballardian</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Jackson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[celebrity culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[medical procedure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pastiche]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA["As Michael Jackson reached middle age, the skin of both his cheeks and neck tended to sag from failure of the supporting structures. His naso-labial folds deepened, and the soft tissues along his jaw fell forward. His jowls tended to increase. In profile the creases of his neck lengthened and the chin-neck contour lost its youthful outline and became convex."]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michael_jackson.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Michael Jackson" /></p>
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<p><em>From the files of Dr Ricardo Battista&#8217;s assistant, School of Specialization in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Melbourne, Australia.</em></p>
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<p>&#8220;As Michael Jackson reached middle age, the skin of both his cheeks and neck tended to sag from failure of the supporting structures. His naso-labial folds deepened, and the soft tissues along his jaw fell forward. His jowls tended to increase. In profile the creases of his neck lengthened and the chin-neck contour lost its youthful outline and became convex.</p>
<p>The eminent plastic surgeon Ricardo Battista has remarked that one of the great misfortunes of the cosmetic surgeon is that he only has the technical skill, ability and understanding to correct this situation by surgical means. However, as long as people are prepared to pay fees for this treatment the necessary operation will be performed. Incisions made across the neck with the object of removing redundant tissue should be avoided. These scars tend to be unduly prominent and may prove to be the subject of litigation. In the case of Michael Jackson the incision was designed to be almost completely obscured by his hair and ears.</p>
<p>Surgical Procedure: an incision was made in Michael Jackson’s temple running downward and backward to the apex of his ear. From here a crease ran toward his lobule in front of the ear, and the incision followed this crease around the lower margin of the lobule to a point slightly above the level of the tragus. From there, at an obtuse angle, it was carried backward and downward within the hairy margin of the scalp.</p>
<p>The edges of the incision were then undermined. First with a knife and then with a pair of scissors, Jackson&#8217;s skin was lifted forward to the line of his jaw. The subcutaneous fatty tissue was scraped away with the knife. Large portions of connective tissue cling to the creases formed by frown lines, and some elements of these were retained in order to preserve the facial personality of the King of the Pop. At two places the skin was pegged down firmly. The first was to the scalp at the top of his ear, the second was behind the ear to the scalp over the mastoid process. The first step was to put a strong suture in the correct position between the cheek flap anterior to the first point, and a second strong suture to the neck flap behind the ear. The redundant tissue was then cut away and the skin overlap removed with a pair of scissors.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michael_jackson2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Michael Jackson" class="picleft" /></p>
<p>At this point the ear was moved forward toward the chin, and the wound was then closed with interrupted sutures. It did not matter how strong the stitches were behind the ears because that part of the King of Pop’s scarline was invisible in normal conditions.</p>
<p>Complications: haematoma formation is a dangerous sequela of this operation, and careful drainage with polythene tubing was carried out. In spite of these precautions blood still collected, but this blood was evacuated within 48 hours of the operation. It was not allowed to organize. In the early stages the skin around the area that had been undermined was insensitive, and it was not difficult to milk any collection of fluid backward to the point of drainage.</p>
<p>Scarring was hypertrophic at the points where tension was greatest: that is, in the temple and the region behind the ear, but fortunately these were covered by the King of Pop’s hair. The small fine sutures which were not responsible for tension were removed at 4 days, and the strong sutures removed at the tenth day. The patient was then allowed to have a shampoo to remove the blood from his hair. All scarlines are expected to fade, and by the end of three weeks the patient was back in social circulation.</p>
<p>At a subsequent operation after this successful face lift, Michael Jackson’s forehead wrinkles were removed. An incision was placed in the hairline and the skin lifted forward and upward from the temporal bone. The skin was then undermined and the excess tissue removed. The immediate result was good, but as a result of normal forehead movements relapse may occur unduly early after the operation. To remove the central frown line, the superciliary muscle was paralysed by cutting the branches of the seventh nerve passing centrally to it. A small knife-blade was inserted from the upper eyelid upward for 3 cm and then pressed down to the bone. External scars on the forehead often persist, and even in the best hands results are not always reliable. It was explained to Michael Jackson where the scars would lie, and the object of the intervention.&#8221;</p>
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<p><em>Based on &#8216;Princess Margaret&#8217;s Facelift&#8217;, by J.G. Ballard.</em></p>
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<blockquote><p>&#8220;I feel a tremendous rapport with pop artists and in a lot of my fiction I&#8217;ve tried to produce something akin to pop art. For instance, I&#8217;ve just published a piece in New Worlds called &#8216;Princess Margaret&#8217;s Facelift&#8217;, in which I&#8217;ve taken the text of a classic description of a plastic surgery operation, a facelift, and where the original says &#8220;the patient&#8221;, I&#8217;ve inserted &#8220;Princess Margaret&#8221;. So I&#8217;ve done precisely what the pop painters did, using images from everyday life &#8212; Coca-Cola bottles, Marilyn Monroe &#8212; and manipulated them. The great thing about pop painters is their honesty. They&#8217;ve turned their backs on the traditional subject matter of the fine arts &#8212; which had hardly changed since the Renaissance &#8212; and looked at their own environment and decided: yes, the shine on domestic hardware, like the refrigerator or the washing machine, the particular gleam on the mouldings of a cabinet, the moulding of doorhandles, are of importance to people, because these are the visual landscapes of people&#8217;s lives, and if we&#8217;re going to be honest we&#8217;re going to use reality material instead of fiction. I want to do the same.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>&#8216;Sci-fi Seer&#8217;, interview with J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.jgballard.ca/interviews/penthouse_barber_1970.html">Penthouse Magazine, 1970, Vol. 5 No. 5 (pp. 26-30)</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;The relationship between the famous and the public who sustain them is governed by a striking paradox. Infinitely remote, the great stars of politics, film and entertainment move across an electric terrain of limousines, bodyguards and private helicopters. At the same time, the zoom lens and the interview camera bring them so near to us that we know their faces and their smallest gestures more intimately than those of our friends.</p>
<p>Somewhere in this paradoxical space our imaginations are free to range, and we find ourselves experimenting like impresarios with all the possibilities that these magnified figures seem to offer us. How did Garbo brush her teeth, shave her armpits, probe a worry-line? The most intimate details of their lives seem to lie beyond an already open bathroom door that our imaginations can easily push aside. Caught in the glare of our relentless fascination, they can do nothing to stop us exploring every blocked pore and hesitant glance, imagining ourselves their lovers and confidantes. In our minds we can assign them any roles we choose, submit them to any passion or humiliation. And as they age, we can remodel their features to sustain our deathless dream of them.</p>
<p>In a TV interview a few years ago, the wife of a famous Beverly Hills plastic surgeon revealed that throughout their marriage her husband had continually re-styled her face and body, pointing a breast here, tucking in a nostril there. She seemed supremely confident of her attractions. But as she said: ‘He will never leave me, because he can always change me.’</p>
<p>Something of the same anatomizing fascination can be seen in [this] present piece&#8230; which also show[s], I hope, the reductive drive of the scientific text as it moves on its collision course with the most obsessive pornography. What seems so strange is that these neutral accounts of operating procedures taken from a textbook of plastic surgery can be radically transformed by the simple substitution of the anonymous ‘patient’ with the name of a public figure, as if the literature and conduct of science constitute a vast dormant pornography waiting to be woken by the magic of fame.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>Annotations: &#8220;Princess Margaret’s Face Lift&#8221;, J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a> (1970), RE/Search edition, 1990.</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>..:: <em>Previously on Ballardian</em>:</strong><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jimmy-ballards-hospital-review">Jimmy Ballard&#8217;s Hospital Review</a><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/chariot-of-fire-death-diana-princess-of-wales">Chariot of Fire: Preliminary Analysis &#038; Damage Reconstruction of the Death of Diana, Princess of Wales</a></p>
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		<title>Crown Casino: &#8216;A snarling, digitised mutilation&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/crown-casino-a-snarling-digitised-mutilation</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/crown-casino-a-snarling-digitised-mutilation#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 May 2009 03:13:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars Melb Psy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CCTV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[advertising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[boredom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[death of affect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deep time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[micronations]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[perception]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychogeography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[schizophrenia]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=1666</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Simon Sellars, Mel Chilianis and Melb Psy take an audiovisual tour of Melbourne's Crown Casino, seeking to map the coordinates of this micronational zone -- consumer-driven control space with a raging need.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong>SIMON SELLARS</strong> &#038; <strong>STEVEN</strong> from <strong><a href="http://mappingmelbourne.blogspot.com">MELB PSY</a></strong></p>
<p>Soundwalk by <strong><a href="http://melchil.wordpress.com">MELANIE CHILIANIS</a></strong>; photography by Simon Sellars.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino1.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino1.jpg" alt="" title="" width="500" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;The consumer society is a kind of soft police state. We think we have choice, but everything is compulsory. We have to keep buying or we fail as citizens. Consumerism creates huge unconscious needs that only fascism can satisfy. If anything, fascism is the form that consumerism takes when it opts for elective madness.&#8221;</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a> (2006).</p></blockquote>
<p>We took a recent jaunt to Melbourne&#8217;s Crown Casino, prime Ballardian space, in order to map the coordinates of this micronational zone, this city state &#8212; consumer-driven control space. We took photos on a Nokia 6288 &#8212; photography disguised as furtive texting &#8212; while Mel Chil performed a secret sound walk. Her head bowed and her eyes averted (for soundwalkers must not allow the other senses to interfere with the keen art of listening), she strode silently behind us through the Zone, her super-powered, omidirectional microphone and optimal recording unit stuffed into her bag to note the results.</p>
<p>Her sound file* is below &#8212; play it loud while reading for maximum effect, for clearly the audiospatial disorientation engendered by Casino space plays a critical role in maintaining the illusion of languid disconnectedness.</p>
<p>* Note: you won&#8217;t see the audio player in Google Reader.</p>
<blockquote><p>Crown Casino increases people’s perception of frequency of winning not only by having big visual displays and advertisements but also by having announcements over a loudspeaker of a poker machine jackpot winner. If every gambler who has lost everything is announced over the loudspeaker in the same way, problem gambling would be greatly reduced. Moreover, the promotion of the illusion of winning is also built into a poker machine in which a winning pay out is made with a loud noise as coins come crashing into the metal pay out tray to remind nearby players that winning is a real possibility.</p>
<p>Public Gambling Enquiry, <a href="http://www.pc.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0016/50137/sub086.pdf">Australian Vietnamese Women&#8217;s Welfare Association</a>.</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>It’s a unique phenomenon&#8230; [a] metropolis &#8230; utterly devoted to leisure, something close to suspended animation. And it’s very inviting. But people lying on their backs are very vulnerable to predators.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-live-in-london">&#8216;Live in London&#8217;</a>, 1996.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino2.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino2.jpg" alt="" title="" width="500" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p>The signage declares, &#8216;We&#8217;re creating a new world at Crown&#8217;, a come-on none can resist. But even before entering the Casino, we were aware that we were no longer in the world of quotidian politeness. The first task was to pass through the borderzone, out on the concrete apron surrounding the complex, where brutal expediency in combat with pornographic greed meant that even bag ladies had to secure their shopping trolleys if left unattended.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino3.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino3.jpg" alt="" title="" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>But this isn’t reality, it’s not even a dream. It’s sort of a halfway house between the two.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-live-in-london">&#8216;Live in London&#8217;</a>, 1996.</p></blockquote>
<p>Opposite the Crown Entertainment Complex, bordering the west side, is the Melbourne Exhibition Centre. Its constructivist lines slice the sky like an obsolete, forward-thinking city of the immediate retro-future to come, a take-off ramp into the ozone that seems to suggest the only way out is through an ascent to heaven, or … this way, down, deep into the east, into Crown — into half-life.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino4.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino4.jpg" alt="" title="" width="500" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>He stared at the silent aisles, working out his challenge to this eventless world. We left the liquor store and paused by a Thai restaurant, whose empty tables receded through a shadow world of flock wallpaper and gilded elephants. Next to it was an untenanted retail unit, a concrete vault like an abandoned segment of space-time.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a>, 1996.</p></blockquote>
<p>We enter, &#8216;<a href="http://www.crowncasino.com.au">wearing the Crown</a>&#8216;, instantly absorbed by the otherworldliness of the Casino. The effect is total &#8212; there are no clocks anywhere to be seen, creating a timeless zone in which the breakdown of the <em>biological</em> clock (the legend of old ladies urinating at poker tables, rather than missing a hand, for example) is the only indication of chronometry. Perhaps the only remaining link to temporality is the schedule of the televised horse racing. <em>A horse &#8212; horses? &#8212; seem to haunt the interior&#8230;</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino4b.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>There is no natural light of any kind, no windows. Mirrors take up entire walls, distending the innards of the place into infinity. The long walk between the mid-section of poker machines and blackjack tables seems to never end. Hovering alien ectoplasm, the sickly UV of Giger-style nightmares, falls into view. Magic mushrooms hang from the ceiling, glowing lysergically. We are in a bunker, <em>are we in a bunker</em>? Miles below the Earth&#8217;s surface, <em>below the Earth&#8217;s surface</em>? Drinking, gambling and watching spooling sports. Palms itchy.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino5.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino5.jpg" alt="" title="" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>The first shrines had begun to appear, wayside altars for passing shoppers, places of pause and reflection for those making endless journeys within the universe of the dome.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>, 2006.</p></blockquote>
<p>Hanging from the ceiling, a plaster-cast altar of motorcycle fascism, its strident coat of arms larger than the machine itself. Lest the devotees become too overwhelmed and seize the handlebars, a sign warns: <em>&#8220;Display Model Only&#8221;</em>. Trinkets pile up on the carpet around the altar, burnt offerings of cigarette butts, an unused condom packet, coins, keys. No passing cleaner makes an effort to clean this up and it seems arranged in a perfect concentric ring. Skin hurts.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino6.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino6.jpg" alt="" title="" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p>The resilient carpet is custom designed and can soak up blood, vomit and semen without leaving visible trace. A crazy man says he knows the man who made it and he makes a fortune, too. He also designs bodybags for prom queens addicted to cocaine and ultraviolent bondage. <em>Did a crazy man really say that he knew a man?</em> (Bringing new meaning to the game of &#8216;craps&#8217;, another urban legend tells of sliding compartments in the toilets that can quickly open to dispose of suicidal high-rollers who lost everything without bringing the corpse back through the main arena.) Very near by, another man looks over suspiciously at our furtive photographic activity, but then he seems distracted by what would appear to be an insect buzzing around his head. He bats at it but there is no insect anywhere to be seen. As we walk away, he seems to be madly shaking invisible bugs out of his hair. <em>Is he shaking invisible bugs out of his hair?</em></p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino7.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino7.jpg" alt="" title="" width="500" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p>The people no longer wish to be freed from their chains, preferring to use them to accessorise their designer handbags instead. Eyes pop.</p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino8.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<blockquote><p>The neon façades of the casinos and hotels were now so many cataracts of white lava, walls of incadescent pink and purple that seemed to set alight the surrounding jungle, turning the Strip and the downtown casino centre into an inflamed, shadowless realm through which the occasional armoured car would appear like a spectral dragon on the floor of a furnace.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a> (1981).</p></blockquote>
<p>This green-skinned hepcat appeared to us as if in a dream, doffing his cap with sleazy grace. &#8216;Come with me to the Food Court&#8217;, he moaned in our already twitching ears. &#8216;I know a mystical place &#8212; a snack bar &#8212; where they spike the Alcoholic Super Slushies with Viagra, and where cyborg men with vat-grown muscle can inflate their pecs with a bicycle pump to 150psi. It&#8217;s called Food &#038; Booze Express City and it&#8217;s open 24/7, natch, because you know it, don&#8217;t you, man, that Dreamland never sleeps. Oh, and dig: the women are unFUCKINGbelievable&#8217;.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino9.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino9.jpg" alt="" title="" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>Crawford gazed across the peninsula at the gutted shell of the Hollinger house.<br />
‘A year from now some hotel or casino complex will stand there. On this coast the past isn’t allowed to exist.&#8217;<br />
‘Why not keep the house as it is?’<br />
‘As a tribal totem? A warning to all those time-share salesmen and nightclub touts? That’s not a bad idea&#8230;’</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, Cocaine Nights.</p></blockquote>
<p>The final sane act of Nietzsche, that great admirer of self-serving individualism, was one of pity &#8212; to collapse to the floor and cradle a beaten horse. In this one compassionate act, he disavowed a lifetime of celebrating self-interest. At Crown, they have decapitated the horse and mounted its suffering head as a totem of gambling law: &#8216;Let he who is strong fill his pockets, and he who is weak empty his&#8217;.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino10.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino10.jpg" alt="" title="" width="500" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p>This glowing tube filled with inanimate coin is in actuality a super-computer that runs on pure cash. Pulsing throughout that pile of super-compacted currency is a liquid charged with megawatts of electricity and data, a new breed of viscous fibre optics that draws upon the inordinate strength of abstract social wealth to create simulated neurological pathways with highly complex processing power greater than military mainframes. This super-computer runs the whole operation here at Crown Casino and it is called &#8216;Mr Severin&#8217;. Mr Severin&#8217;s word is law and he will not tolerate any deviance from that law at any time.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino10b.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino10b.jpg" alt="" title="" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>A lake of neon signs formed a shimmering corona, miles of strip-lighting raced along the porticos of the casinos, zipped up the illuminated curtain-walling of the hotels and spilled over into mushy cascades. Under the ultramarine sky, so dark now that the tone had left their faces, the spectacle of this sometime gambling capital seemed as unreal as an electrographic dream.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, Hello America.</p></blockquote>
<p>We became touched by a presence that was almost entirely indescribable except in rhyming couplets of ever-increasing incredulity, ridiculous-sounding as we mouthed them aloud, like cod Shakespeare. An alien intelligence reaching deep into our souls to finger our pathetic humanity with a cold machinic rationalism that was actually a little bit naughty and a little bit nice. A mystical vision appeared &#8212; for we were in the circuit, now &#8212; a monolith slowly, slowly descending from the ceiling. White light grew and grew. In the zone.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino11.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino11.jpg" alt="" title="" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Remember, Richard, consumerism is a redemptive ideology. At its best, it tries to aestheticize violence, though sadly it doesn’t always succeed.&#8217;<br />
&#8230;<br />
&#8216;Every shopping mall and retail park turning into a local soviet. A popular uprising that starts at the nearest Tesco. It’s possible. There’s a hunger for violence, that’s why sport obsesses the whole country. Everyone’s suffocating &#8212; too many barcode readers, too many CCTV cameras and double yellow lines. That second bomb really got them going.&#8217;</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, Kingdom Come.</p></blockquote>
<p>While their wives indulged in the more passive pursuits of bingo and fruit machines, the mankind gathered in their pit to drink, watch high-volume, biff-and-bash contact sports and back their armchair punditry with hard cash. The more they drank, the more they lost. The more they lost, the more they drank. A gloom began to permeate the air, so much so that condensation seemed to drip from the walls like Amityville house blood, and one sensed that sporadic, remorseless violence might break out at any moment. On the sport screen, some rugby players tore off their clothes and compared biceps and for a moment it seemed the crowd might follow suit. Only one measure could prevent this &#8212; a variety show. Mr Severin: <a href="http://www.crowncasino.com.au/Content.aspx?topicID=1272">call on Elvissey</a>!</p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino13.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Completely Elvis: The Elvises are in the building! Their uncanny sound and appearance will make you feel as if you are watching the King himself. Amazing musicianship elevates the entertaining and genuine portrayals of the famous songs we all know and love. The incredible authenticity of the show takes you on a ride that is unprecedented. Costumes, charisma and charm are coupled with the songs that made Elvis the undisputed ‘King of Rock and Roll’. This combination of artists is not like any ever seen in Australia before.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.crowncasino.com.au/Content.aspx?topicID=1272">Crown Casino</a>, 2009.</p></blockquote>
<p>This man, this fat, tubular, tubercular man – his impersonation was no longer of Elvis, but of a thousand other Elvis impersonators. A discount simulacrum. His women had feathers up their bums and on their heads, and these vixens liked to conga-line to within an inch of some men&#8217;s lives. Beer boiling in the glass.</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino12.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino12.jpg" alt="" title="" width="500" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;The Circus-Circus is what the whole hep world would be doing on Saturday night if the Nazis had won the war. This is the Sixth Reich&#8221;</p>
<p>Hunter S. Thompson.</p></blockquote>
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<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino14.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino14.jpg" alt="" title="" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p>Projected above our heads, 20 feet high, on the big sports screen: the manifestation of schizoid hyperactivity.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino14b.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Fleeting impressions, an illusion of meaning floating over a sea of undefined emotions. We’re talking about a virtual politics unconnected to any reality, one which redefines reality as itself. The public willingly colludes in its own deception.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, Kingdom Come.</p></blockquote>
<p>The horse equine reporter man reads the racehorse results, stutters in vertical hold, image flickers and splits straight down the middle to finally reveal the really real reality underneath. A snarling, digitised mutilation. Mr Severin has had a breakdown &#8212; someone, somewhere in here has won far too much cash. The system cannot cope, gets stuck in an infinity loop, cracks and breaks. The noise of clinking coin and tolling fruit-machine bells seems to increase to unbearable levels. But that is the great release, for we have pierced the veil, seen beyond, out into the desertified Racecourse of the Real. No gears and pulleys behind the mask, Phil K Dick-style, but a roiling, raging black void of utter nothingness.</p>
<p>Headaches and a necessary evacuation followed.</p>
<blockquote><p>One day there would be another Metro-Centre and another desperate and deranged dream. Marchers would drill and wheel while another cable announcer sang out the beat. In time, unless the sane woke and rallied themselves, an even fiercer republic would open the doors and spin the turnstiles of its beckoning paradise.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard, Kingdom Come.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>JGB: A &#039;billionaire&#039; in Shepperton?</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/jgb-a-billionaire-in-shepperton</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/jgb-a-billionaire-in-shepperton#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2009 00:25:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=1367</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Thoughts on Ballard, fame and reclusiveness, and Shepperton.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I thought I&#8217;d share <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/paradigm-of-nowhere-shepperton-photo-essay-1#comment-117474">a lovely comment</a> from Vicky, a reader of my <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/paradigm-of-nowhere-shepperton-photo-essay-1">Shepperton photo essay</a> (which reminds me: I&#8217;m still to post the second part. I hope to do that very soon, even if it is almost a year late):</p>
<blockquote><p>Growing up [in Shepperton] from 1987&#8211;1998 I knew the mysterious J G Ballard lived in the house next door to my sister’s best friend Tara. Your beautiful photographs bring back so many memories for me, especially the curly bridge from the end of my road. Living there and walking past his house every day I never once laid eyes on the man himself but so many stories circulated about him that he was almost like a mythical character. We believed he was a billionaire but he refused to leave his semi in Shepperton and that he had a car in his living room. I’m sure there were some nudist rumours too. Does he still live there?</p></blockquote>
<p>A billionaire! <a href="http://www.tomorrowmuseum.com/2008/11/25/literary-novels-and-fan-culture-some-thoughts-following-the-future-of-entertainment-3">Not quite</a>&#8230;</p>
<p>One of the things I really love about Thomas Cazals&#8217; <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-oracle-of-shepperton">Ballard docudrama</a> is the way it taps into this mythical strata, exaggerating it for supreme comic effect (but still with all the affection due our favourite writer). I think I agree with Toby Litt, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-landing-gear">who said on his panel at Kosmopolis</a> that he sometimes wishes Ballard had never excavated at length his Shanghai background in interviews.</p>
<p>What would we be left with? How should we fill in the gaps, answer the questions asked of us by his work, without the distorting lens of biography? With musings similar to Vicky and Thomas, trying to make sense of this warped genius who seems to have drifted into our reality from a parallel dimension, where he is indeed enjoying a hearty laugh at our expense.</p>
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		<title>Dubai Ballard World</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/dubai-ballard-world</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/dubai-ballard-world#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Dec 2008 00:19:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dubai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[theme parks]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=997</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Announcement of the new Ballard World theme park in Dubai, following on from the Egypt, London and Shanghai versions.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dubai_ballardworld1.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Over at the Transatlantis blog, there is <a href="http://www.transatlantis.net/blog/archives/2008/11/the_drowned_wor.html">an announcement</a> of a new theme park patterned after Ballard&#8217;s work:</p>
<blockquote><p>A new theme park is coming soon to Dubai. Named The Ultimate City, its theme will be the the world refracted through the many faceted crystal-like mind of writer J.G. Ballard. It will be distributed throughout the city to make it&#8217;s experience as much part of the urban fabric as possible. Some of the attractions will include:</p>
<p>• The Drowned World water park where guests can experience the rising sea levels of global warming as an aesthetic pleasure of the first order.<br />
• As oil rapidly becomes a scarce commodity, Crashland will become the only place to partake in the visceral and intoxicating power of the internal-combustion engine.<br />
• Get closer to the nuclear power of the sun over the ozone free Terminal Beach, or descend into the cool shade of vintage Bikini Atoll concrete nuclear blast bunkers scattered among it&#8217;s sandy dunes.<br />
• In a special arrangement with the Burj Dubai, a large section of the world&#8217;s tallest skyscraper has been reserved for High Rise: a paint-ball arena where guests struggle for advantage as they try to reach the top of the building.<br />
• Other attractions will include: The Burning World, Concrete Island, and more.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dubai_ballardworld2.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Of course, this is not the first Ballard Park. As Ballardian readers will be aware, the original in Egypt <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-world-set-for-2008-opening">closed due to entropy</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Egyptian Ballard World, developed by loyal Ballard fans for loyal Ballard fans, had everything the discerning JGB fan could possibly require: abandoned water bodies; derelict technology; dead monorails hanging against the sky like guillotines; construction works half finished, as if some terrible disaster had wiped out all traces of human life; masses of rubble and twisted metal forming complex cryptograms, their meaning inscrutable and remote, as if they were designed not for man, but for man’s absence…</p></blockquote>
<p>More recently, however, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-angle-between-two-worlds">British and Chinese versions are being planned</a> to fill the void:</p>
<blockquote><p>Ballard World will be the perfect day trip for stressed out Londoners. Advertised as “Families exploring inner space”, there’s enough going on for every age group; The little ones play hide and seek in an abandoned Shanghai mansion and roam around the inevitable empty swimming pool. Dad fingers the dented side panel of Jayne Mansfield’s crashed 1966 Buick Electra, while mom has a pina colada in a cocktail party that’s permanenently on the brink of getting out of hand.</p>
<p>Another Ballard resort on the outskirts of Shanghai, expected to open its doors in 2009, will consist of a minute replica of the London suburb Shepperton, with the Heathrow Hilton atrium as an entrance building. Other cities as diverse as Detroit and Rome have shown interest in opening a Ballard Park&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<p>With all of these Ballard Worlds in development, the future is looking not so bleak after all: dystopia as aesthetic pleasure of <em>the highest order</em>, indeed.</p>
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		<title>&#039;Confronting Ourselves&#039;: Ballard and Circular Time</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/confronting-ourselves-ballard-and-circular-time</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/confronting-ourselves-ballard-and-circular-time#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 12:10:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Andrei Tarkovsky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Marker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[YouTube]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inner space]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[temporality]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=884</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Time-travel, according to Ballard, Marker, Tarkovsky and Godard. Some thoughts on memory retrieval and personal mythology. Ballard and Marker's 'fusion of science fiction, psychological fable and photomontage … in its unique way a series of potent images of the inner landscapes of time'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Solaris (last scene)</strong> (1972), directed by <strong>Andrei Tarkovsky</strong></p>
<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Jorf-2o5YfU&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Jorf-2o5YfU&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object></p>
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<blockquote><p>&#8216;&#8221;We do not move in one direction, rather do we wander back and forth, turning now this way and now that. We go back on our own tracks&#8230;&#8221; That thought of Montaigne&#8217;s reminds me about something I thought of in connection with flying saucers, humanoids, and the remains of unbelievably advanced technology found in some ancient ruins. They write about aliens, but I think that in these phenomena we are in fact confronting ourselves; that is our future, our descendants who are actually traveling in time.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Andrei Tarkovsky</em></p>
<p>[via <a href="http://www.chrismarker.org">Notes from the Era of Imperfect Memory</a>, a site dedicated to the work of Chris Marker]</p></blockquote>
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<p>If a purely biographical study were undertaken, it could feasibly be argued that Ballard&#8217;s work is a variation on the one theme of his wartime experience. To take some examples from his oeuvre: the fake space station in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/thirteen-to-centaurus">&#8216;Thirteen to Centaurus&#8217;</a>, the patch of waste land in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-real-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a>, the degraded apartment block in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a>, the motorway system in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a>, the abandoned New York in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">&#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;</a>, the secessionist house in <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lk0H3AnjyOA">&#8216;The Enormous Space&#8217;</a>, the ecotopia in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-rushing-to-paradise">Rushing to Paradise</a>, the gated communities in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-running-wild">Running Wild</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kafka-with-unlimited-chicken-kiev-jg-ballard-on-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a>, the micronational shopping mall in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/its-an-ad-ad-ad-world">Kingdom Come</a> – all could reasonably be seen as iterations of the insular and self-contained conditions of Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/shanghai.html">Lunghua childhood</a>. But as Roger Luckhurst asserts, therein lies the danger of reductionism, a retrospective, contextual dilution:</p>
<blockquote><p>Once Ballard published his two &#8216;autobiographies&#8217;, Empire of the Sun and The Kindness of Women, they were seized on, in effect, as signed confessions, detached from fictional space but working as decoding machines to render autobiographically readable the body of his work… The logic of this repeated argument is a retrospective rereading of the prior science fiction as encrypted autobiographical performance.</p>
<p><em>Luckhurst, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FAngle-Between-Two-Walls-Liverpool%2Fdp%2F0853238316%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1228992062%26sr%3D1-3&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Angle Between Two Walls</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Luckhurst aims to recoup Ballard&#8217;s standing as a writer of SF rather than &#8216;downgrad[ing] the &#8220;science fiction&#8221; texts to drafts of a final &#8220;literary&#8221; text&#8217;, as he sees other commentators doing in the wake of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a>. However, during the course of my research it has never been my intention to downgrade these texts by relating them to Ballard&#8217;s personal history or to Empire&#8217;s fictionalised personal history. Instead, I&#8217;m especially interested in tracking a motif that reoccurs across Ballard&#8217;s work (including interviews as well as short stories and novels) and to extrapolate what this might mean in the context of memory retrieval and personal myth. As Luckhurst later qualifies, both Empire and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-kindness-of-women">The Kindness of Women</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>mythologize, which is to say that they take elements of the same compulsively repetitive landscapes, scenarios, and images and recombine them in fictions which yet teasingly and forever undecidably play within the frame of the autobiographical. There is no authenticity here, no revelatory discourse of (in Gusdorf&#8217;s insistent phrase) &#8220;deeper being&#8221;. </p></blockquote>
<p>For Ballard, his art &#8212; his writing &#8212; has remodelled the scenario, replaying and recreating a series of parallel worlds that recycle biography and memory as something approaching myth:</p>
<blockquote><p>Art is the principal way in which the human mind has tried to remake the world in a way that makes sense. The carefully edited, slow-motion, action replay of a rugby tackle, a car crash or a sex act has more significance than the original event. Thanks to virtual reality, we will soon be moving into a world where a heightened super-reality will consist entirely of action replays, and reality will therefore be all the more rich and meaningful. Art exists because reality is neither real nor significant.</p>
<p><em>Ballard in interview, <a href="http://disturb.org/ballardeng.html">&#8216;Theatre of Cruelty&#8217;</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Perhaps we should consider Ballard&#8217;s novels and short stories as &#8216;carefully edited, slow-motion replays&#8217; of the Lunghua camp (and Empire as Ballard&#8217;s life seen through the prism of his fiction) &#8212; or as virtual-reality projections, in which anything goes in any combination. In <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a>, T-&#8217;s obsessive need to restage, recreate and reinvent scenarios (the &#8217;sex death&#8217; of his mistress; his own initiation into crash culture) is a microcosm of Ballard&#8217;s entire career strategy, a fragment of a hologram rose that in its holistic incarnation seems designed to function hypertextually, in the sense that each piece of writing operates as a portal to another. The anti-linear style encourages the reader to follow pathways of her own device. This goal is embedded in Atrocity&#8217;s paragraph headings, some of which are named after earlier Ballard short stories such as &#8216;The Concentration City&#8217;, some of which refer to other chapters in the book such as &#8216;Notes Towards a Mental Breakdown&#8217;, some of which refer to stories yet to be written such as &#8216;The Sixty Minute Zoom&#8217;. The accompanying paragraphs have nothing to do with the stories after which they are (or would be) named; they are parallel universes of the mind that resist integration, challenging the primacy of the &#8216;text&#8217;. They inhabit the non-space of the interstice, the neural interval prised open when two disparate, yet interrelated parts rub together, creating new meanings, new connections, new portals that themselves split into infinite parallel worlds. As Corin Depper identifies, this strategy bears strong resemblance to Deleuze and Guattari&#8217;s overarching sense of &#8216;rhizomatic&#8217; cultural theory:</p>
<blockquote><p>The &#8216;rhizome&#8217; … operates against linear and dialectical ideas. This is mirrored in the formal structuring of [Deleuze and Guattari's] books as a series of seemingly unconnected sections, which force the reader to abandon earlier experiences of reading philosophy in favour of a radically decentred process, almost inevitably skipping across sections and creating new pathways of meaning… these … works could easily be seen as companion pieces to … The Atrocity Exhibition, which proffers a similarly unstable ground on which new notions of history and identity are endlessly being constructed and destroyed.</p>
<p><em>Depper, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FJ-G-Ballard-Contemporary-Critical-Perspectives-Continuum%2Fdp%2Ftoc%2F0826497268&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">&#8216;Death at Work: The Cinematic Imagination of J. G. Ballard&#8217;</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em></p></blockquote>
<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Nw0UIhLArTM&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Nw0UIhLArTM&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: La Jetée. Apologies for the English narration – it proved difficult to locate an online version in the original French, with English subtitles.</em></p>
<p>Unsurprisingly, Ballard was an advocate of <a href="http://www.jonathanrosenbaum.com/?p=8173">Chris Marker&#8217;s</a> 1962 &#8216;photo roman&#8217;, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/la-jetee">La Jetée</a>, a film concerned with <em>nothing but</em> the confusion of physical and mental time, and the eternal cycle of revisiting, overwriting and reinhabiting memory. Shot almost entirely in stills, La Jetée depicts an inmate of a prisoner-of-war camp in post-apocalyptic Paris. The man&#8217;s captors select him for a time-travel experiment in which he is returned to the pre-war. He is judged to be a suitable candidate for time travel since he has a particular recollection of the peacetime era that won&#8217;t leave him, the memory of a woman he briefly glimpsed as a boy on the jetty at Orly Airport, her face creased in horror as they both watch a man inexplicably shot and killed before them. It is thought that this memory will cushion the shock of his awakening in the past:</p>
<blockquote><p>This man was selected from among a thousand for his obsession with an image from the past. Nothing else, at first, but stripping out the present, and its racks&#8230;</p>
<p>On the tenth day, images begin to ooze, like confessions. A peacetime morning. A peacetime bedroom, a real bedroom. Real children. Real birds. Real cats. Real graves.</p>
<p>On the sixteenth day he is on the jetty at Orly. Empty. Sometimes he recaptures a day of happiness, though different. A face of happiness, though different. Ruins.</p>
<p><em>Chris Marker, La Jetée.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>When he is sent back he seeks out the woman, but is never really sure whether he is travelling through time, dreaming, or remembering the past and reinhabiting the memory. The denouement reveals that the man, due to the paradoxes of time travel, had as a child witnessed his own death, blurring past, present and future in profound flux. Time tracks exist simultaneously, recording, reflecting and contaminating each other.</p>
<blockquote><p>Time is like a circle, which is endlessly described. The declining arc is the past. The inclining arc is the future.</p>
<p>Everything has been said, provided words do not change their meanings, and meanings their words.</p>
<p><em>Jean-Luc Godard, Alphaville.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>For Ballard, as it clearly is for Marker, film is a crucial tool for excavating simultaneous time (which of course is also circular time &#8230; may the circle never be broken):</p>
<blockquote><p>I define Inner Space as an imaginary realm in which on the one hand the outer world of reality, and on the other the inner world of the mind meet and merge. Now, in the landscapes of the surrealist painters, for example, one sees the regions of Inner Space; and increasingly I believe that we will encounter in film and literature scenes which are neither solely realistic nor fantastic. In a sense, it will be a movement in the interzone between both spheres.</p>
<p><em>Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/munich-round-up-interview-with-jg-ballard">Munich Round Up</a>, 1968.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>In 1966 Ballard wrote an appreciative review of La Jetée for New Worlds, commenting on its &#8216;fusion of science fiction, psychological fable and photomontage … in its unique way a series of potent images of the inner landscapes of time&#8217;. For Ballard, Marker&#8217;s technique of using almost entirely still frames creates a &#8217;succession of disconnected images … a perfect means of projecting the quantified memories and movements through time that are the film&#8217;s subject matter&#8217;.  Elsewhere, reflecting on the process of repetition and memory retrieval in The Atrocity Exhibition, Ballard might almost be reviewing La Jetée:</p>
<blockquote><p>[Atrocity's] mental Polaroids form a large part of our library of affections. Carried around in our heads, they touch our memories like albums of family photographs. Turning their pages, we see what seems to be a ghostly and alternative version of our own past, filled with shadowy figures as formalized as Egyptian tomb-reliefs.</p>
<p><em>Ballard, annotations to The Atrocity Exhibition, RE/Search edition (1990).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FJ-G-Ballard-Contemporary-British-Novelists%2Fdp%2F0719070538%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1228994086%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Andrzej Gasiorek&#8217;s</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> view is that Empire and Kindness are concerned with the imagination&#8217;s &#8216;ambiguous role&#8217; in identity formation: &#8216;The truth-telling status of both narratives is thereby called into question – both are to be read as versions of the past, not as definitive reconstructions&#8217;.</p>
<p>Like La Jetée&#8217;s protagonist, then, Ballard has been fixated by a moment he was given to witness as a child &#8212; the stasis of Lunghua, interned in suspended time; the atomic flash heralding the post-war era of simulation and planing identity &#8212; revisiting it, revising it and re-enacting it in multiple retro-forward scenarios, so that the terms &#8216;past, present and future&#8217; become inconsequential, irreparably meaningless.</p>
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<p><strong>..:: PREVIOUSLY ON BALLARDIAN:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">Ballard and the Vicissitudes of Time</a></p>
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		<title>Eternal Layover</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/eternal-layover</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/eternal-layover#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Nov 2008 02:36:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[airports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=881</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Man survives for three months in airport terminal; doesn't know why he's there...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/new_man.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Airports" /></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Like the suspended state of duty-free malls, a zone at once inside and yet outside the legal parameters of the country it exists in, Vaughan and [Crash's narrator] Ballard experience the motorways as weirdly detached from an embedded culture or history or morality&#8217;.</p>
<p><em>Roger Luckhurst, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FAngle-Between-Two-Walls-Fiction%2Fdp%2F031217439X%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1227493771%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Angle Between Two Walls: The Fiction of J. G. Ballard</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>From <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/travel/japanese-travellers-airport-layover-lasts-three-months-20081124-6fbg.html">today&#8217;s news</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Japanese tourist Hiroshi Nohara is on a layover at the Mexico City airport. It has lasted almost three months, and he has no plans to leave&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand why I&#8217;m here,&#8221; he said through a visiting interpreter originally hired by a television station. &#8220;I don&#8217;t have a reason.&#8221;</p>
<p>The embassy can&#8217;t force him to leave, and since Nohara&#8217;s visa is valid all Mexican officials can do is wait for it to expire in early March. For reasons he can&#8217;t explain, Nohara has been in Terminal 1 of the Benito Juarez International Airport since September 2, surviving off donations from fast food restaurants and passengers and sleeping in a chair.&#8217;</p></blockquote>
<p>Yes, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-switching-stations">I know</a> precisely <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/k08-sequel-galactic-eyes">how he feels</a>.</p>
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		<title>Kosmopolis 08: Landing Gear</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-landing-gear</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-landing-gear#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2008 04:46:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barcelona]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Futurists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lou Reed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salvador Dali]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[crime]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[I've finally captured my impressions of Barcelona and Kosmopolis, with main ingredients: Lou Reed, Claire Walsh, Laurie Anderson, Kafka, Brecht, Dali, brilliant public space, Ballard, and the sheer unbridled thrill of one of the most amazing cities in Europe.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kosmo_banner.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>Sorry for the long absence &#8212; I promised <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08">&#8216;daily updates&#8217;</a>, well, that didn&#8217;t happen. It&#8217;s taken me ages to get my thoughts down about Barcelona and <a href="http://www.cccb.org/kosmopolis/en">Kosmopolis</a> because the experience was so rich, but contributing factors included jet lag, computer problems and a lengthy spell of writer&#8217;s block. But mainly it was the richness and how to process it. Kosmopolis was the best literary festival I&#8217;ve attended for the intrigue in the program as well as for the organisation &#8212; even as one of the lesser participants (in terms of career and achievements), I was made to feel like a king. The Kosmopolis team are a genuinely interesting, creative and dedicated bunch and this transmits into every facet of the show. Thank you Jordi, Miquel, Barbara, Teresa, Juan, Marta and everyone else!</p>
<p>Arriving in Barcelona is a sensory delight. The rhythm of the city is completely different to Melbourne. You get a valid sense of this via traffic flow, the true index of civility. In Barcelona cyclists are treated as road vehicles with equal rights on the tarmac, and traffic signals for both vehicles and pedestrians are adhered to insofar as it facilitates smooth egress for all. This does not mean a nation of automata. When there are no cars, for example, pedestrians cross against the lights, and vice versa it&#8217;s the same with vehicles. The police don&#8217;t seem to mind. It&#8217;s organised chaos (the traffic flow is dense and perpetual, and seemingly balancing on a knife&#8217;s edge) and it works. This idea of ensuring harmonious flow by treating rules as <em>guidelines</em>, with the safety of right of way observed above all, seems a simple and obvious point, but in Australia in inner-city areas traffic flow can often be bloody chaos with everyone lockstepping onto their neural GPS to the total exclusion of the rights of others. When I compare the two situations, I think of Barcelona as an organism that knows how to breathe in, and when to breathe out, and that can regulate its breathing for an easier life and stress-free relaxation; I think of urban Australia as a heart-attack victim with fatty arteries and severely constricted breathing.</p>
<p>This can also be indexed by the approach to alcohol. If people were drunk and out of control on the streets of Barcelona, they kept it very well hidden. Is binge drinking popular there? I wouldn&#8217;t have thought so. In Melbourne, smashed beer bottles are a common sight on the streets and broken glass is everywhere in the inner city following Friday and Saturday nights. In Australia the government wants to tax alcohol to combat this, to make it so expensive that it will be prohibitive to have more than a few drinks, thereby taking out as collateral damage those who are responsible and who can handle their drink. This is the Nanny State in motion, proffering band-aid solutions that do nothing to get to the heart of the problem, which is cultural and is rooted in Australia&#8217;s frontier approach to binge drinking. Try to limit people&#8217;s enjoyment of wine in Spain and see how far you get. Alcohol is not the problem in Australia &#8212; the problem is social. I felt safe walking around Barcelona at midnight, because there&#8217;s none of the paranoia and edginess that is increasingly a feature of Melbourne street life. Instead, there is <em>conviviality</em> &#8212; more on that later. I&#8217;ll even declare this despite having my wallet stolen on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Rambla,_Barcelona">La Rambla</a> just two days into my stay. I was with <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/author/mike-b">Mike Bonsall</a>, who was in town for the festival as a punter (along with <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/author/timc">Tim Chapman</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/author/mike">Mike Holliday</a>; great to see you all!). We&#8217;d ingested a few drinks and I just didn&#8217;t think. Stupidly, I put my wallet in my back pocket, even though I&#8217;ve worked as a travel writer and I&#8217;ve written on travel scams and dangers &#8212; including putting your wallet in your back pocket on La Rambla. So, before we knew it, we were running the gauntlet of a large group of young women who began groping us (!) &#8212; &#8216;Oooh la la, come home with me, baby&#8217;. We would have been in their clutches for no longer than a minute before breaking free, but I knew straight away my wallet had gone. The girls had gone, too, melted away into the crowd. But it didn&#8217;t ruin my trip because Barcelona&#8217;s delights far outweigh its petty crime. Every city has its hazards and I was warned about this one, but I let my guard slip. I don&#8217;t think I should blame Barcelona for that idiotic lapse in concentration. Besides, there was an upside. The next day, Teresa from Kosmopolis took me to the police station and gave me a guided tour of the neighbourhoods we passed through, pointing out beautiful historical architecture on the way and filling me in on the unique character of each area. Thank you so much, Teresa &#8212; for your wonderful company, it was worth losing my wallet.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/tim_hispano.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>Detail from Andrés Hispano&#8217;s &#8216;Autoscan&#8217; installation, at the &#8216;Autopsia del nou Mil.leni&#8217; exhibition at CCCB, Barcelona. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/2ubh/2981469126/in/set-72157608450330733">Tim Chapman</a>.</em></p>
<p>For the first few days I explored <a href="http://www.cccb.org/en/exposicio?idg=16452">the Ballard exhibition</a>. Unfortunately I had an unfamiliar camera with me so my most of my shots, taken in low light, were unsatisfactory. Of course, Rick McGrath was at the opening of the exhibition back in July and he took <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/rick_mcgrath/collections/72157606428935539">many excellent photos</a>, so please refer to his batch in lieu of mine. As for descriptions, I won&#8217;t go into too much detail given that McGrath has covered the ground thoroughly in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/letter-from-barcelona-exquisite-corpse">his report</a>, so well in fact that much of it felt very familiar on first visit. What I will say though is that it is an impressive achievement, and one of the most imaginative displays of its type that I&#8217;ve seen. I saw <a href="http://www.stanleykubrick.de/eng.php?img=img-l-6&#038;kubrick=news-eng">the Kubrick exhibition</a> when it came to Melbourne and this matches it, perhaps even surpasses it, because it gives free reign to creative interpretation of Ballard&#8217;s metaphors, and all on a budget a fraction of the Kubrick. Jordi and his team have allowed their imaginations to run wild and this has resulted in something quite stunning, in particular the skeletal car body buried in sand. One thing Rick didn&#8217;t really comment on was Ann Lislegaard&#8217;s black-and-white computer-art rendition of themes from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">The Crystal World</a> &#8212; I spent almost an hour sitting in a darkened room watching this creation, with its looped 3D scenes of interiors and outdoor scenes bathed in an ambience that morphs from light to shade, seemingly crystallising at the meridian into shards of solid, jagged matter. Punctuated with quotes from Crystal, one of Ballard&#8217;s most lyrical works, this was a stunning monument to the fashion in which JGB attempts to reorder the senses to provide a deeper, more meaningful existence that cuts against the grain of convention.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/los_muchachos.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>Jordi Costa on the left, me on the right. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/2ubh/2984579212/in/set-72157608450330733">Tim Chapman</a>.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/claire.jpg" class="picleft" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>LEFT: Claire Walsh, circa 1968.</em></p>
<p>In a very pleasant surprise, Claire Walsh, JGB&#8217;s partner, was a last-minute guest of the festival and I was thrilled to meet the face of two of Ballard&#8217;s advertiser&#8217;s announcements. <a href="http://www.cccb.org/kosmopolis/en/participant?idg=5614">Jordi Costa</a> and the CCCB&#8217;s Miquel Noques took Claire on a guided tour of the exhibition and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/vale-blog">V. Vale</a> and I were able to tag along. Claire was full of interesting background regarding some of Ballard&#8217;s most famous works. For example, discussing Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.slashseconds.org/issues/001/001/articles/13_sford/index.php">crashed-car exhibition</a>, a focus of one of the autopsy rooms, she echoed JGB&#8217;s description of the confrontational aspects of the show. Claire was at the event and she emphasised that it was meant to shock, that it was meant to jolt people out of their complacency. According to her, JGB&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/perverse-technology-jgballard-hardmag-interview">oft-repeated descriptions</a> of a drunk, confused and enraged audience were no exaggeration &#8212; the public had never butted up against a man of Ballard&#8217;s dark intelligence before. Intriguingly, the effect was echoed in the present exhibition, held under similar circumstances &#8212; I&#8217;m told that in Spain Ballard is virtually unknown, and that many people attending this exhibition were witnessing his work for the first time. Combine this with the fact that Jordi and his team pulled no punches in framing Ballard&#8217;s work, presenting often queasy images of medical procedure, wartime horrors and mediated violence, and the effect sometimes approached a similar level of outrage. In the guestbook, there were examples of patrons expressing their anger at the imagery on display &#8212; &#8216;The worst exhibition I&#8217;ve ever seen!&#8217; (on the same page as another quote: &#8216;This is the best exhibition ever&#8217;); &#8216;Scandalous!&#8217;; &#8216;This man is sick!&#8217; &#8212; nestling comfortably alongside the words of praise (which far outweighed the negatives, of course). There were also, perhaps predictably, just a few too many examples of mutilated and mutated penises.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/supercock.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>&#8216;Frank Ghery [sic] rules&#8217;: guestbook hijinks at the Ballard exhibition. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>Before we entered the exhibition, I realised I&#8217;d forgotten my camera battery so I raced back to the hotel to get it. Downstairs I saw Lou Reed, Kosmopolis&#8217;s star guest, sloping laconically through the CCCB lobby followed by a tightly coiled media scrum. He looked very bored in that distinct Lou Reed way, and I was struck by the image of him standing stock still against a Kosmopolis banner while scores of paparazzi took pictures, their flashes firing simultaneously. At one point Reed stretched his palms slightly outwards, while retaining the same rigid face, before puffing his chest out. This image made me recall old interviews where he would talk about channelling feedback from his guitar in the same breath as he would eulogise the mech-human jolt of messing with the nervous system through systematic methamphetamine abuse. Watching him bathed in a hundred flashes, I saw him as a creature raised under electric light, feeding off the popping bulbs, absorbing the photo-synthetic light into his body, allowing it to course through his veins to produce a pure artificial being harnessed to the electric sun and to the raw power of the media. The ever-popping flashes illuminating his body were so rapid and intensive, I expected his bones to start glowing beneath wafer-thin skin.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lou_kosmo.jpg" class="picleft" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /> <em>LEFT: Lou Reed: electro-shock therapy. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/kosmopolis/2966080445">courtesy Kosmopolis</a>.</em></p>
<p>This was on the Thursday, and until his performance with Laurie Anderson on Friday night, I kept seeing him out of the corner of my eye, in and around the CCCB courtyard, heading his entourage, a study in &#8216;jaded&#8217;, causing a commotion with the crowds, at one stage roped off in an enclosure like a zoo exhibit, bored and expressionless, waiting while the fans lined up for his book signings and while rubberneckers like me watched him studying his fingernails. I&#8217;m not the biggest fan of his music, save for the Velvets, but his real-life presence was so inorganic, so bloodless in a completely compelling way, it had to be tracked and followed. It was pure celebrity reaction in action (although, funnily enough, I&#8217;d never imagined Lou Reed as inhabiting that rarefied level; he always seems &#8216;cult&#8217; to me&#8230; let&#8217;s face it, he&#8217;s no Jagger) and I noted the delicious juxtaposition of the virtual Ballard on the top floor of the CCCB, a man who has dissected the celebrity process with clinical and unerring precision. I imagined his presence radiating pure waves of insight down on the proceedings below.</p>
<p>On Friday night Lou and Laurie read Catalan poetry and writing, which was utterly bizarre. I&#8217;m not sure of the background of this event, or of how and why it happened. Do Lou and Laurie have a connection to Catalonia? I can&#8217;t say. All I can tell you is that Lou was on stage at Kosmopolis while Laurie was at the University of California, Berkeley, reading her parts in a live video feed projected on a massive screen behind him. No music, no singing. Lou sounded as if he was reading from the usual tales of heroin, transvestites and Warhol back in NYC &#8212; there was that same, familiar raspy drawl that everyone associates with him &#8212; whereas Laurie was more engaging and injected multiple personalities into her reading. The whole set up was so strange. When Lou would turn to her, dwarfed by her image, and she would smile benevolently back at him, it seemed like a fairy tale in which Lou, a dark knight, had been shrunk to size by a Queen who wanted to keep him all for herself. But they are in love, I know it&#8217;s not like that, I just had a sensory blipvert channel jump induced by the scale distortion and the jumbled spatial dynamic.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lou_laurie.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>Lou and Laurie: telepresent love. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/kosmopolis/2966080445">courtesy Kosmopolis</a>.</em></p>
<p>There was a funny moment when Lou mispronounced a list of Spanish surnames and place names, and the audience erupted into laughter. But the biggest cheer was reserved for the duo&#8217;s reading of the Yellow Manifesto (1928), written by Salvador Dali, Lluis Montanyà and Sevastià Gasch. A futurist ode to the extremes of the imagination and to the beauty of machinic art, it occurred to me that it was surely an influence on Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://kickingandsquealing.wordpress.com/2008/09/14/what-i-believe-j-g-ballard">&#8216;What I Believe&#8217;</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>We have eliminated from this MANIFESTO all courtesy in our attitude. It is useless to attempt any discussion with the representatives of present-day Catalan culture, which is artistically negative although efficient in other respects. Compromise and correctness lead to deliquescent and lamentable states of confusion of all values, to the most unbreathable spiritual atmospheres, to the most pernicious of influences&#8230; Violent hostility, in contrast, clearly locates values and positions and creates a hygienic state of mind. </p></blockquote>
<p>After reading through the Manifesto, with its litany of things to be smashed, Lou quipped: &#8216;I wonder what they&#8217;d think of the internet?&#8217; With its call to dismantle bourgeois complacency and the blandness of youth in favour of Catalan independence based around the beauty of enigmatic art, the Yellow Manifesto is a powerful call to arms that clearly still has relevance in today&#8217;s political climate. Indeed, I saw anarchist and independence graffiti everywhere in Barcelona, as in the following example, which was stencilled onto a series of mobile-phone advertisements. At first I thought it was actually part of the ad, in a depressingly familiar instance of corporations co-opting revolution, because it was so accurately placed in the exact same spot each time, until I twigged that the stencil artist had actually targeted this particular ad for whatever reason.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/barce_anarchy.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>&#8216;Anarchy in Catalonia, it&#8217;s coming sometime and maybe&#8230;&#8217;. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>When they&#8217;d finished their performance, Lou looked up at Laurie and they had a little telepresent moment together, strong love coursing through a hi-def internet link; Laurie gave Lou a radiant smile and made little pincer-like movements with her fingers at him, clearly some kind of secret sign, and he smiled sheepishly at her, this woman who is perhaps the only person in the world that can make Lou Reed self-conscious.</p>
<p>The Ballard segment of the festival kicked off with a panel, &#8216;Postcards from the Interior Space&#8217;, chaired by Jordi and featuring Marcial Souto, Agustin Fernandez Mallo, Marta Peirano and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-stuff-of-now-toby-litt-on-jg-ballard">Toby Litt</a>. Unfortunately no one told Mike B and I that the translation of the Spanish/Catalan speakers was being transmitted through portable headsets, so we sat through most of the session in bemusement, perking up when Litt spoke in English. This was a Ballardian experience in itself. Understanding Litt only, we attempted to decode the questions and replies from other speakers that led to Toby&#8217;s answers. Sometimes we got it and sometimes the old brain would go into freefall, much the same as it does when it reads Ballard and must submit to the process of unworking the similes and parallel narratives that form the shifting strata of his work. Litt told the audience that the foreword he wrote to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/contemporary-critical-perspectives-jg-ballard">a forthcoming volume of academic essays</a> had been rejected on the grounds that it wasn&#8217;t likely to entice people to read more Ballard, given his position, which is that it&#8217;s impossible to truly understand or truly &#8216;get&#8217; Ballard&#8217;. From there, Toby suggested that all academics have got Ballard wrong. He then read the rejected foreword (which he revealed was finally accepted as the afterword to the book), which built an extended metaphor around the notion of Ballard tunnelling out from the ground under his Shepperton house. Funnily enough, perhaps even appropriately enough, given Toby&#8217;s main point about academia, I can&#8217;t pretend I fully understood the analogy.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/postcard_panel.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>&#8216;Postcards from the Interior Space&#8217;: Marcial, Agustin, Marta, Jordi and Toby. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/kosmopolis/2970159724">courtesy Kosmopolis</a>.</em></p>
<p>Litt also referred to psychogeographical interpretations of Ballard, mentioning <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/this-most-astonishing-penumbra-will-self-on-jg-ballard">Will Self</a>, but said he had problems with this angle, with writing about London in this way. I have sympathies with both academic/theoretical and psychogeographic readings of Ballard, but I also agree with Litt when he says that Ballard translates because he maintains a floating parallel world on top of the &#8216;physical&#8217; world of his novels. It&#8217;s a good point, but why then criticise specific readings of Ballard? Surely the indeterminate, open-ended nature of JGB&#8217;s writing supports, even encourages, this in its drive to resist categorisation? Well, that&#8217;s my position anyway, that this open-endedness generates a program of resistance. Litt also critiqued readings of Ballard that accept Ballard&#8217;s version of his life as the truth &#8212; I presume <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> is the reference &#8212; and said he wished that Ballard had never expanded upon his Shanghai childhood in interviews, so that readers would be forced to confront his parade of surrealist war imagery and violent technofutures on their own terms. I do understand what he means &#8212; I&#8217;d read <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">Atrocity</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-crash">Crash</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a> before Empire or the bulk of the interviews, and they did seem like the work of mad genius bleeding through into the frame from a parallel dimension. But even now, with the full weight of Ballard&#8217;s history informing my study of his work, I see his autobiographical retellings as another fiction to be decoded. His obsessive restaging of the Lunghua theatre is a form of circular time that again resists definition, resists commodification, resists classification &#8212; a guerrilla war against the type of &#8216;eventless present&#8217; that he sees as a by-product of consumer capitalism and its drive to erase history and collapse the future into the present.</p>
<p>There, I&#8217;ve just given you the gist of what I spoke about on the panel the next day with Jordi, Vale and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/sterling-on-ballard">Bruce Sterling</a>, where I felt unusual, but happy, appearing as the &#8216;academic&#8217; among two larger-than-life personalities. Vale showed a 10-minute film of his work with RE/Search and the relationship with Ballard he has forged, and then talked about Ballard&#8217;s role as visionary and dreamer. Bruce talked about Ballard&#8217;s influence on his own writing and on cyberpunk. But I&#8217;ll leave further summaries for now, as I believe Tim C is preparing a transcript of the talk which I hope to post here soon.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/myths_panel.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>&#8216;Myths of the Near Future&#8217;: Me, Bruce, Vale, Jordi. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/kosmopolis/2971974693">courtesy Kosmopolis</a>.</em></p>
<p>After the panel, we had a beer in the courtyard. In another welcome surprise, Iraklis from Athens showed up, with his mate Antony! Iraklis is a long-time reader of ballardian.com, from around 2005 onwards, so it was great to meet him. We had an interesting chat about the public perception of Ballard; it seems the situation in Greece is the same in Australia in that he is still regarded as a &#8216;cult&#8217; author. Perhaps he is. I think Mr Ballard should be proud of getting under people&#8217;s skins so thoroughly.  It was here that we saw Robyn Hitchcock wandering around with his guitar. He was due on stage that night but was serenading random strangers in the meantime, and we watched him perform a Doors song for a small child, who was clearly delighted and/or bemused by this colourful man. The next night I saw a selection of Catalan poets at the CCCB&#8217;s Cafe Europa, and they were doing very interesting things with collage sound and sampled voices. My favourite was the guy who attempted to replicate the way we hear our own voices and the process by which it is filtered through the vibrations of the skull and ear canals, rendering it completely different when heard on a recording. I hate hearing my recorded voice, so this was repellent and fascinating for me. He related all this to the way we cannot trust our own interior voices and memories, which may or may not be creations and constructs of the media &#8212; <em>Catalan poet, meet J.G. Ballard</em>. Another poet repeated combinations of words and phrases and looped them through a bank of samplers, creating music from the beauty of the Catalan language. I find it a nice language to listen to, and I chose not to hear the translations on the portable headsets this time. I wanted to free-float and concentrate solely on the musicality of the phrases and intonations, the meaning of which I was clueless, but the poetry of which I immediately and instinctively responded to.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_hitchcock.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>Robyn Hitchcock does his wandering troubadour thing in the CCCB courtyard. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/2ubh/2984580088/in/set-72157608450330733">Tim Chapman</a>.</em></p>
<p>Afterwards, talking to the MC, this poet said something interesting, about how he prefers &#8216;ignorance&#8217; to &#8216;knowledge&#8217; because with ignorance, interesting ideas emerge. He gave the example of people who believe that white wine removes blackberry stains or that spirits are good for headaches; in the gap between perception and recognition, ignorance occurs and new and surreal juxtapositions emerge that inspire radical art and thought processes. These performances again put me in mind of the Yellow Manifesto and how it really sums up the appeal of Kosmopolis, with its focus on grassroots, independent, innovative and creative literary ideas. There were no real superstars at this festival, but instead successful writers and artists who have proved that you don&#8217;t need to sell your soul to make it. In this respect Ballard, a true maverick, is the perfect fit.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kosmo_lydia.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>Lydia Lunch at Cafe Europa. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/kosmopolis/2987103023">courtesy Kosmopolis</a>.</em></p>
<p>Lydia Lunch was also appearing on this night, as she now lives in Barcelona. She performed a spoken-word piece to a fractured jazz-rock soundtrack, typically angry and very &#8216;fuck you&#8217; and all about the war on terror and global conflict tied in with Spain&#8217;s history of conflict. After, she said to the MC that she chooses to live in Barcelona because in the US she would be reminded every day of the hypocrisy of that society and the violence it wreaks on its citizens. In Barcelona, by contrast, she says that every day people wake up and forget about the horrors of the past because each day is seen as a new chance to drink, fuck and forget. To my surprise, I found myself agreeing with this angry and loud American called Lunch: there is indeed a mood of relaxed optimism in this city and it touched me even on my brief stay. It invigorated me in fact, and in the week-and-a-half since my return I&#8217;ve been inspired to make a number of important and long-delayed changes to my life and lifestyle, which are already in motion, a direct result of my nine days in Barcelona and the deep impact it and Kosmopolis had on me and the possibilities I can now envisage for creative work that is symbiotic with a healthy inner life.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kafkaesque.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Kafkaesque. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/brechtian.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Brechtian. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>If you are a writer, or literary minded, how could you fail to love this city? I came across stencils of Kafka, and graffiti that quoted large chunks of Brecht. It&#8217;s a city made for walking, for inspiring thought. The back alleys and side streets are immersive and the architecture across all styles is superb. I walked many kilometres each day, directionless but always finding something to inspire. I did so much walking and uncovering of back streets that I didn&#8217;t make it to any of the Gaudi attractions (I&#8217;ve been to Barcelona before, and did the whole Gaudi thing, so I&#8217;d subconsciously made the decision this time around to see the more of the quotidian fabric of the city instead).</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dali_lady.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>Gala, is that you? Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>It was during one foray into a back street that the lady in this shot came into view. She saw me taking photos of buildings and stopped right in front of me, extending her walking stick out towards me, smiling radiantly all the while but not saying a single word. Look at the amazing way she is dressed and that face that knows all: she looks like a female Dali. She struck this pose as soon as she saw me, as if to say: &#8216;Hey! What about me? I&#8217;m the finest architecture here&#8217;. For a moment I wasn&#8217;t sure what she was doing and then I realised she was offering herself as a model to be photographed. As soon as the shutter clicked, she turned on her heel and walked briskly away, still smiling that same brilliant smile, still uttering not one word. And that is what I love about Barcelona, the casual surrealism that is woven into the fabric of the place. Included with the pack given to Kosmopolis participants was a series of monographs published by the CCCB that explored urban space and the need for a vital public space in order to maintain a healthy society. One, &#8216;Collective Culture and Urban Public Space&#8217; by <a href="http://www.dur.ac.uk/geography/staff/geogstaffhidden/?mode=staff&#038;id=326">Ash Amin</a>, is especially relevant. Amin writes about the need for a &#8216;post-human perspective&#8217; on urban space that brings together &#8216;the most promising examples of surplus made to work as such&#8217;:</p>
<blockquote><p>These would include bazaars and shopping malls in which difference is treated as a virtue, streets and squares of free and safe mingling, parks and other recreation spaces resonating with vitality and mixed use, libraries and schools that sustain public interest and reach out to the reluctant,  bus shelters and car parks that are not the dumping ground for the dregs of society, buses and trains that work and offer a pleasant experience to the travelling public. Here, the qualities of multiplicity, conviviality, solidarity and maintenance can be expected to crowd out malfeasance, reinforcing a sense of shared space. </p></blockquote>
<p>It is no accident that Amin had been commissioned by the CCCB to write about public space. He repeatedly emphasises conviviality as the key to a healthy and dynamic urban fabric, and as I was reading this, I thought, &#8216;That is Barcelona&#8217;. Whatever problems there may be with the Spanish government or economy, what Barcelona in particular has is convivial public space, and I, like Lydia Lunch, would be willing to give up many other things to experience that on a daily basis.</p>
<p>I have a final observation about Barcelona: I have never seen so many young men on crutches in any city I&#8217;ve visited. Are Catalan males very sporty, are they just really clumsy, or do they have very brittle joints?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dali_museum.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>The Dali Museum. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>On my last full day in Spain, I travelled to Figueres to see the Dali museum. I am staggered by how popular his work continues to be. The queues and crowds were massive and the whole complex was like a warped theme park, Disneyland nightmares for the masses. There were plenty of school groups there and I could only think that being introduced to Dali at a very young age must be a very good education indeed, exposed to images of young virgins being auto-sodomized by their own chastity and labia-faces. This is what I mean by casual surrealism, which appears to be threaded into the Catalonian DNA.</p>
<p>And now it&#8217;s encoded into mine. On the way home, I picked up some British newspapers at Heathrow to find that the UK was in the midst of the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/oct/30/russell-brand-ross-baillie-sachs">Jonathan Ross/Russell Brand/Andrew Sachs scandal</a>.</p>
<p>And every time I read the name &#8216;Georgina Baillie&#8217;, I was convinced they were referring to &#8216;Georges Bataille&#8217;.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/barce_street.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Barcelona street scene. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/port_olympic.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The thrill of it all: nu-architecture at Port Olympic, Barcelona. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p><strong>..::</strong> <em>Soundtracks to inner space: Future Engineers, &#8216;Studio Mix 2007&#8242;; Underground Resistance, &#8216;First Galactic Baptist Church&#8217;; The Martian, &#8216;The Stardancer&#8217;; Simple Minds, &#8216;Themes for Great Cities&#8217;; PiL, &#8216;Radio Four&#8217;; Lalo Schifrin, &#8216;Jaws Theme&#8217;; Ennio Morricone, &#8216;Come Maddalena&#8217;.<br />
</em></p>
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		<title>Kosmopolis 08: Switching stations</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-switching-stations</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-switching-stations#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2008 09:04:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barcelona]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Marker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[psychopathology]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=862</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here are some preliminary thoughts from the city of Barcelona, where I am appearing on a panel to talk about the work of J.G. Ballard as part of the Kosmopolis literary festival.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kosmo_sydney.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>Thermonuclear noon at Sydney airport (photo: Simon Sellars).</em></p>
<p>Further to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08">this</a>&#8230;.</p>
<p>You cannot claim to be truly versed in international travel until you have taken a flight from Australia to Europe. Flying to Spain took me the better part of 24 hours and shunted me through no less than five airports: Melbourne, Sydney, Singapore, London, Barcelona. I have travelled  to Europe before, but never, as far as I can recall, through so many terminals.</p>
<p>It was absurd. Little parts of my brain leaked at every stop. In Sydney I thought I was in Melbourne; in Melbourne I thought I was home. I was reading Irvine Welsh&#8217;s <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FPorno-Irvine-Welsh%2Fdp%2F0099422468%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1224921288%26sr%3D8-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Porno</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /><br />
 on the flight and I began to think wholly in the flourescent Leith dialect that peppers the book. Welsh manages this narrative technique so well, and combined with the cognitive sponge-wipe that is a 24-hour plane flight, immersion was complete. From Sydney to Singapore I sat next to a guy whose nose was constantly running, and himself constantly sniffling. He just would not blow it. I was so very tired and borderline hallucinating. The noise of his honker was destroying me, some kind of water torture. I dozed off and dreamt that I actually turned to him and screamed, &#8216;Blow yer f****** nose, ya radge, yis nipping ma heid, so ye are!&#8217; When I awoke, although he still did not blow his nose, he refused to look at me for the rest of the way to Singapore and seemed visibly nervous. Even now, I am just a little paranoid that I may have actually spoken (Irvine) Welsh to this poor man in my sleep.</p>
<p>Ballard has said that his work, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> in particular, is not meant to evoke specific examples of place (in the case of that book, reacting to reports that it is a &#8216;London&#8217; work). Instead he says he is interested in an international zone of the type that you find around motorways and airports, areas geographically distant but interchangeable and, essentially, eventless. Thus, the experience of passing through five international terminals in 24 hours &#8212; none more Ballardian. I had the sense of progression through a giant airlocked tube connecting every country on the planet, the outside world a geodesic dome perhaps, or as an irradiated landscape sealed off out of harm&#8217;s way. Time folded in on itself. I forgot to change the time on my phone with each stop. It didn&#8217;t matter. The physiological morning was encased in an environmental night. Stumbling through Singapore Airport&#8217;s dutyfree shopping zone, I had the sixth sense that I might bump into <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/if-i-had-a-pound-jg-ballard-conference">a version of myself from one year ago</a>, passing through on the way home from London to Melbourne. Maybe I had always been here. I have lost a serious amount of weight in the space of the past year and to people who have not seen me for a while, there is often considerable surprise expressed at the extent of the transformation. I imagine that I, too, would be shocked to run into this past version of myself, itself casually strolling through Singaporean non-space, perhaps even as shocked as the man at the end of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/la-jetee">La Jetée</a> confronting his younger self. In these circumstances, in transit, in-between, freefloating in interstitial space, it is just so hard to keep one&#8217;s molecules oscillating wildly enough to form a coherent body and therefore avoid complete disintegration, but one does the best one can.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kosmo_sydney2.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>Sydney airport &#8230; or so it would seem (photo: Simon Sellars).</em></p>
<p>From Heathrow, I caught the British Airways redeye special to Barcelona at 7am on Wednesday morning. The jet was suit city; in jeans and a t-shirt, I felt like a zoo exhibit, a savage allowed to sit up the front. Onboard, the papers were all British. I picked one up and began to read of feverish intrigue about businessmen and society elite conspiring on Greek islands about something shadowy and unavailable to the rest of us. The last front-page story I read in the local paper before leaving home was about a sportsman who had lost his pants while drunk. Truly I am out of place as well as time. Almost as soon as the plane touched down at Barcelona, virtually every businessman and woman on the jet reached for their Blackberries and began tapping away furiously. The man next to me, in a slick charcoal grey suit with gleaming black Crackberry dancing to the tune of his fingers, was intent on beaming himself into the future. I cannot sleep much on planes. I was tired, I&#8217;m telling you. Jellied, floating crabs danced in my field of vision. They evaporated and I looked up and there was an identical man in the aisle as the one sitting next to me, with exact same hairstyle, suit and Blackberry, similarly tripping on subwire desire. And I mean an exact double, or so it seemed. Once inside the terminal I went to a mirror to check if I, too, had similarly transformed &#8212; would Barcelona for me prove to be the final stage in the globally linked Switching Station for the New Man? But no &#8212; oozing back at me was still the same doughy, jetlagged face with the same rudimentary stubble and also there was the same shabby t-shirt and jeans.</p>
<p>I have now been in Barcelona for three days. Later, I will write to you about my impressions of <a href="http://www.cccb.org/kosmopolis/en">Kosmopolis 08</a>, of the city itself, of the virtual reality of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/letter-from-barcelona-exquisite-corpse">the Ballard exhibition</a> and of my encounters with the ghosts of Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed. But first, at 5pm today, there is <a href="http://www.cccb.org/kosmopolis/en/activitat?idg=24786">the panel I am appearing on</a> with Jordi Costa, Bruce Sterling and V. Vale. I will wait until after that to record these further thoughts as I would like to spend today prepping myself.</p>
<p>Until later then,<br />
Simon in Barcelona for Kosmopolis 08</p>
<p><em>Soundtracks to inner space: Roxy Music &#8212; &#8216;Out of the Blue&#8217;, &#8216;Mother of Pearl&#8217;, &#8216;Prairie Rose&#8217;; Fleetwood Mac &#8212; &#8216;Big Love&#8217;, &#8216;Landslide&#8217;, &#8216;Tusk&#8217; [USC intro mix], &#8216;You Make Loving Fun&#8217;; Future Engineers &#8212; &#8216;Future Engineered&#8217; mix; Temple Records &#8212; &#8216;Wax Label Showcase&#8217;</em></p>
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		<title>&#039;Like Alice in Wonderland&#039;: Solveig Nordlund on J.G. Ballard</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/like-alice-in-wonderland-nordlund-on-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/like-alice-in-wonderland-nordlund-on-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 24 Aug 2008 05:48:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rick McGrath</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barcelona]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Solveig Nordlund]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[YouTube]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=840</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Rick McGrath interviews Solveig Nordlund about her feature film, Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude (2002). Based on JGB's short story, 'Low-Flying Aircraft', it's arguably the best Ballard adaptation of them all, although it has rarely been shown outside Portugal. Included with the interview are clips from the film as well as from Solveig's previous Ballard adaptation, 'Journey to Orion' (based on 'Thirteen to Centaurus').]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>&#8216;Like Alice in Wonderland&#8217;: Solveig Nordlund on J.G. Ballard</strong><br />
Interview by <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html">Rick McGrath</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/aparelho1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude" /></p>
<p><em>Margarida Marinho in Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude (dir. Solveig Nordlund, 2002).</em></p>
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<p><strong>An interview with Solveig Nordlund follows this review, plus clips from Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude.</strong></p>
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<p>In 2002 the Ballardian feature-film universe expanded substantially with the release of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0190975">Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude</a>, Solveig Nordlund’s artfully rendered riff on JG Ballard’s 1976 <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete-short-stories">short story</a>, &#8216;Low-Flying Aircraft&#8217;. Seen mainly at film festivals, this Portuguese-Swedish co-production was a welcome addition to the Ballard filmography.</p>
<p>Ballard&#8217;s story receives its power from its fantastic setting (an abandoned Spanish resort in the future), his trio of representative characters – Dr Gould, the iconoclast visionary, Richard Forrester, the horny bureaucrat, and Judith Forrester, the mannequin-like mother – and the dark irony of ignoring Mother Nature. Ballard slowly teases out the plot, revealing that humankind has been systematically killing off its deformed newborn (called &#8216;Zotes&#8217; in the film) for the past thirty years, seemingly unaware they were slaughtering the first generation of a new variation of homo sapiens. The story’s genius lies in its deft and subtle details and immaculate timing, leading the reader blindly along with Forrester through sex hotels of irony to the oddly optimistic ending, where the culture of one empire again crumbles and the children of the world begin to assume control of their new universe.</p>
<p>Culture’s fear of the unknown and special revulsion toward the sexually deformed is analyzed in psychological and artistic terms in &#8216;Low-Flying Aircraft&#8217;. These babies aren’t born with deformities of the limbs, such as the thalidomide babies of the 1960s, but with optic-nerve-exposed eyes and deformed genitals, aberrations guaranteed to register high on the psychological disgust scale. In this otherworld, mothers will kill, not nurture, their abnormal babies. Forrester sees these sexual deformities as &#8216;grim parodies of human genitalia&#8217;, and he cannot go beyond the &#8216;nervousness and loathing&#8217; they elicit. All is now subject to an irrational norm. Blind but sighted, sexually deviant but innocent, these doomed children offer up a Dorian Gray portrait of civilisation’s obsessions which everyone is only too willing to rip and burn, horrified at seeing their true selves revealed at last.</p>
<p>In the following interview, Nordlund says, &#8216;I centred the story on the woman, on her fears and longings&#8217;. By inverting the masculinity of the short story, the film reclaims the natural bond of mother and baby and corrects the errors of civilisation as Ballard imagines it. As Nordlund explains: &#8216;When I did the film I thought very much about parents who want to educate their children into copies of themselves and don’t see the beauty of difference.&#8217;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/solveig_nordlund.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude" class="picleft" /> <em>LEFT: Solveig Nordlund (photo by Rick McGrath).</em></p>
<p>The basic plot is still there – the deformed baby is given to Carmen after the epiphany that these newborn aren’t monsters – but pretty well everything else, save the location, is changed to a feminine perspective, a parallel version of Ballard&#8217;s original. In Ballard’s story Judith is essentially a baby incubator, reflecting culture’s taboos and fears about abnormality. She immediately forgets all after the child is born and presumed killed, leaving the resort &#8216;with the amiable and fixed expression of a display-window mannequin&#8217;. Nordlund re-creates her as the driving force behind the story, from her desire to have the baby through her troubled pregnancy to her transformative encounters with Carmen and her ultimate &#8216;correct&#8217; decision. She and Carmen bond to the point where they start looking the same. In a world of generational warfare, this is definitely an act of peace. Gould changes from Ballard’s observant biker hippie pilot into a surrogate mother &#8212; thus retaining a slight echo to Ballard’s Gould &#8212; and Nordlund is forced to compensate for his philosophic posturings by greatly enlarging the role of Carmen. A black-shawled, hand-signing mongoloid waif in Ballard, found by Gould and herded by silver paint, she’s transformed by Nordlund into a complex mystery, an exotic beauty in slink who wanders the dark halls like a hologram from the future. Forrester&#8217;s role is also diminished – he either makes passes at Judite or is combing the deserted grounds, talking with Gould, or stalking Carmen.</p>
<p>Nordlund keeps her eye firmly on the social by replacing Ballard&#8217;s Dali references with state-produced posters showing Zotes on the one hand (baby head with dark, wormy areas where the eyes should be, and the menacing ZOTE written underneath) and normal babies on the other (complete with slogans such as “This Is Us” and “I Believe In The Future”). Nordlund has created the same psychological war zone as Ballard, pitting Eros against Thanatos, but she uses a much less psychologically sensitive path, replacing personal “newsreels from Hell” and the attendant disgust with “monsters” one should fear because they’re seen as grotesque throwbacks to an earlier, more primitive time. The sense of disgust, so prevalent in the short story, is not given any kind of deep psychological examination by Nordlund, although flushing a Zote down the toilet is some recognition of the feeling’s psychological roots.</p>
<p>The film is a marvellous treat for eye and ear. Carmen’s psychedelic cave-room, for example, with its watches and fluorescent lighting is amazing. The cinematography of Acácio de Almeida is often breathtaking in its subtle love affair with light, and the music by Johan Zachrisson is evocative and emotional. The special effects are often highly foregrounded to maximise the intimate effect, and art direction is helped immeasurably by the found set, an abandoned seaside resort in Spain. This is a strong, punchy movie that emphasises the flow of the action in carefully crafted edits.</p>
<p>I made contact with Solveig Nordlund during the July opening ceremonies of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/letter-from-barcelona-exquisite-corpse">J.G. Ballard: Autopsy of the New Millennium exhibition at Barcelona’s Museum of Contemporary Culture</a>, where Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude was (and will be) screening. We met for a chat and coffee on our final day there, but unfortunately circumstances made it impossible to do any kind of formal interview. Fortunately, Solveig graciously agreed to conduct the following email Q&#038;A after we had settled down from the Millennium Autopsy rush.</p>
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<p><em>&#8211; Rick McGrath.</em></p>
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<p><em>Opening 10-minute sequence from Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude. Two further 10-minute extracts are available: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2w2QR6T5lw">Part 2</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5pJUrY5tfU">Part 3</a>.</em></p>
<p><strong>RICK McGRATH: Solveig, can you tell us when you first became interested in film, and about the beginnings of your career?</strong></p>
<p><strong>SOLVEIG NORDLUND:</strong> I was always interested in film, since I was a child, and I wanted to become a filmmaker. I just didn’t know how. To satisfy my mother I studied at the University of Stockholm and participated in a film made by a theatre group, but I had already met my Portuguese husband and wanted to leave Sweden. My Portuguese husband studied film in London and I followed him there and so it began. I began to work with him and only later did I make proper studies, with the French director Jean Roch in Paris from 1972 to 74.</p>
<p><strong>Do you remember when you first became aware of Ballard?</strong></p>
<p>I read Ballard for the first time in the late 60s in a Portuguese science-fiction collection. I think the first story of his I read was <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcg_b6M00I0">&#8216;Thirteen to Centaurus&#8217;</a>. It must have had a great impact. I began to read all his books and later I made a short film based on this story, called <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wyJY1F_ZS4U">&#8216;Journey to Orion&#8217;</a>. It was totally shot in one of those big ferries between Stockholm and Helsinki. The idea was that the inside of ferryboats and spacecrafts look more or less the same: a closed world with no exit. Made to last for a long time and endure tough weather. After that I obtained the rights to shoot &#8216;Low-Flying Aircraft&#8217;.</p>
<p>When I had the opportunity in 1986 to propose programs about different writers for Swedish television, I proposed Ballard and managed to convince the board. I went to London in order to visit him at his house in Shepperton. I did a series of portraits of my literary favourites, another one was Marguerite Duras. In Sweden the JG interview was called <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lA8lXDcA8KA">&#8216;Future Now&#8217;</a> and everybody was impressed with his intensity. JG himself liked it very much. For me it was an opportunity to get to know him and the beginning of a kind of friendship.</p>
<p><strong>What kind of friendship can you have with J.G.? I think I’d always have the feeling he was sizing me up as a potential character. In <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-kindness-of-women">The Kindness of Women</a>, the family renting the apartment beside the Ballards in Spain are called the Nordlunds. Did you think J.G. was thinking of you?</strong></p>
<p>I feel befriended with Ballard and his universe. That’s the kind of friendship it is. I think he wrote The Kindness of Women at the same time as I made the interview with him. He probably needed a name and took mine.</p>
<p><strong>Was he as you expected?</strong></p>
<p>I expected to meet a tall military-like man and got very surprised when a small, jovial and round man came out of the house. He asked if I had a hat and made me think of Alice in Wonderland. He invited me in and as it was already six in the afternoon he was authorized to begin to drink. We talked and planned the interview for the following day. J.G. Ballard is a fascinating storyteller, also when he is telling his own story.</p>
<p><strong>When you first read &#8216;Low Flying Aircraft&#8217;, did it strike you as filmable?</strong></p>
<p>I think all J.G. Ballard’s stories are filmable and I think I have thought of them all as films. I was on a film festival in Troia, Portugal, the seaside resort that I later used in Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude. I think it was in 1987. Troia was a tourist investment that was interrupted by the revolution in 1974, and this abandoned place struck me as the perfect set for a Ballard story. I thought of stories from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-vermilion-sands">Vermillion Sands</a> and <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FLow-flying-Aircraft-Other-Stories-Ballard%2Fdp%2F0586045031%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1219535033%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Low-Flying Aircraft</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. It took me 15 years to concretise the project.</p>
<p><strong>That’s amazing, that these big lumps of resort would still be vacant after all those years. You must have been amazed. How did you first get in? With permission, or as a trespasser?</strong></p>
<p>It was a tourist project that had begun to be built before the revolution with Brazilian money and that was nationalised after the revolution. Some buildings were used but they never finished the big hotels. They were a kind of unfinished ruins, that you could enter trespassing.</p>
<p><strong>How did Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude come about?</strong></p>
<p>After having done the Swedish television program &#8216;Future Now&#8217; with Jim, I did &#8216;Journey to Orion&#8217;. After that I obtained the rights to film &#8216;Low-Flying Aircraft&#8217;. The film is a Portuguese-Swedish low budget co-production. At the beginning I thought of shooting it in English, with international actors, but the budget didn’t allow it. And as there were threats that they were going to reconstruct the seaside resort Troia, I had to hurry with the film. It was shot in 2002 and one or two years later the towers were imploded.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/wyJY1F_ZS4U&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/wyJY1F_ZS4U&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object></p>
<p><em>&#8216;Journey to Orion&#8217; (dir. Solveig Nordlund, 1987). Part 2 is <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgmXoZQz8cU">also available</a>.</em></p>
<p><strong>When did you decide to make the alterations to J.G.’s basic plot?</strong></p>
<p>Ballard’s story is a short story and I had to do a feature film. In Ballard’s story everything is in the head of the husband who is waiting for his wife to come back with the results of the scan. I centred the story on the woman, on her fears and longings. I participated in a workshop directed by the English script doctor Colin Tucker in order to elaborate the script in that sense. It works in the way that a group of people with scripts criticise each other’s works. Colin Tucker directed us.</p>
<p><strong>How did you choose the cast and crew?</strong></p>
<p>The crew was chosen among technicians I normally work with, Acácio de Almeida for example. The cast was chosen among Portuguese actors once it was decided that there was no possibility to have an international cast. I think we shot for eight weeks. And edited for another six weeks. There were some complementary shots and a rather long digital post-production. From the start of shooting till the film finished, it was nine months more or less.</p>
<p><strong>I was slightly surprised by the Orwellian society you use as a backdrop. Where did that idea come from?</strong></p>
<p>I think it comes from Jim Ballard. When I asked him if it was something he thought I should think about when writing the script, he mentioned the laws of genetic cleaning that until very recently were in use for example in Sweden, and the fear of global epidemics, for example, AIDs.</p>
<p><strong>Interesting. Governments are vaguely mentioned in the short story, but in your version they actively seek out and destroy the newborn, which you call Zotes. I like your slogan, too: &#8216;We Believe In The Future. This is Us.&#8217; Where did that come from?</strong></p>
<p>From nowhere especial. Just sounded right.</p>
<p><strong>How often did you consult with Ballard over the film?</strong></p>
<p>Only in the beginning, when I asked if he had something he wanted to point out in the story.</p>
<p><strong>What do you think is J.G.’s point in the short story? Given the variations in the film, do you feel it still represents Ballard’s vision, or your own? </strong></p>
<p>I think J.G.’s point is to show that humans make everything to transform and dominate nature but that nature always will find new dimensions in order to survive. When I did the film I thought very much about parents who want to educate their children into copies of themselves and don’t see the beauty of difference.</p>
<p><strong>Has J.G. seen it?</strong></p>
<p>Yes, and he liked it very much. He wrote a very enthusiastic letter where he mentioned especially the cinematography and the actress, Margarida Marinho.</p>
<p><strong>She is fantastic. How did you find her? </strong></p>
<p>She is a very well-known and popular Portuguese actress now, but in 2002 she was in the beginning of her career.</p>
<p><strong>The cinematography is truly breathtaking. Aside from the power of the sets, Acácio De Almeida’s lens seems to caress the light in a very Ballardian way. You must have been very happy with the results.</strong></p>
<p>Yes I was. I also was very lucky to have a very good post-production laboratory with very good technicians.</p>
<p><strong>I was also quite taken with the film’s art direction. Mona Teresia Forsén did an amazing job with the film’s overall look. Did you work this out together? Gould’s stylized fluorescent green &#8216;V&#8217; sign is also compelling</strong>.</p>
<p>Mona Teresia Forsén is a very well-known Swedish art director, but there were many hands that collaborated in the creation of the visual aspect. The Zote alphabet, for example, was created by the Portuguese artist Rui Serra.</p>
<p><strong>I thought the sound was foregrounded in an interesting way, and that Johan Zachrisson’s musical score is very evocative. Did you work closely on this with Johan? </strong></p>
<p>Yes. Johan Zachrisson is a collaborator of mine since a long time. He is Swedish but lives and works in Portugal. I think we tried to get a correspondence to the green colour that the doctor paints the world with.</p>
<p><strong>You show Carmen in the film as a sort of futuristic movie starlet, with sexy dark glasses.</strong></p>
<p>Carmen hides her deformed eyes behind dark glasses. She is blind in a conventional way, she sees with other senses, that’s why she moves in such an adulatory way. Don’t forget that her father, the doctor, has made her look like an ordinary Venus client in order to protect her.</p>
<p><strong>Are you influenced by any particular filmmakers?</strong></p>
<p>I admire Alain Resnais&#8217; Muriel and Providence.</p>
<p><strong>Do you think your film has a happy ending? </strong></p>
<p>Yes. Life goes on even if it is not our life.</p>
<p><strong>Will the film ever be available on DVD? Many people are curious to see  it.</strong></p>
<p>It is on DVD in Portugal. If somebody is interested in publishing it with English subtitles I would be happy.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/aparelho2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude" /></p>
<p><em>Miguel Guilherme and Rui Morrison in Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude (dir. Solveig Nordlund, 2002).</em></p>
<p><strong>Do you have plans to do anything more from the Ballard oeuvre?</strong></p>
<p>I like very much &#8216;Deep End&#8217;, the story about the last fish on Earth. I had plans to do <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio/concrete-island">Concrete Island</a>. I think it is an amazing story and so frightening. You can die in the middle of the crowd without anybody seeing you. But the rights JG’s agent demanded were so high that it’s not possible. But who knows, he has many good short stories.</p>
<p><strong>You told me in Barcelona you didn’t think any more JGB stories would be made into films because of the cost of film rights. Can you elaborate?</strong></p>
<p>I think J.G.’s agent has set a Spielberg level for his novels.</p>
<p><strong>I heard £3.5 million &#8212; that’s a lot of money. I wonder if JG knows what’s going on? You’d think he’d like to have his stories made into movies, where reality and illusion combine.</strong></p>
<p>I think he knows and agrees.</p>
<p><strong>What appeals to you most about JGB?</strong></p>
<p>J.G.’s stories are often told as thoughts and memories, but those thoughts and memories are very visual. I like to imagine those worlds the main characters see. I think that had the film rights been more accessible, most of his novels would have been made into film. Now, a lot of films inspired by his work have been made instead.</p>
<p><strong>Many people who have visited the Ballard home comment on its quirkiness. Did you find it unusual?</strong></p>
<p>I found it touching, a big man in a small house. Like Alice in Wonderland.</p>
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<p><em>Interview by Rick McGrath, 2008.</em></p>
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<p><em>Born in Stockholm on June 9, 1943, Solveig Nordlund began working in film while completing her degree in art history from her native Stockholm&#8217;s Universitet. Leaving Sweden for Portugal, Nordlund first worked as an assistant and then a film editor on such productions as Sweet Habits (1973) and Doomed Love (1978). In 1976 she co-founded the left-wing film cooperative Grupo Zero, and that year directed her first film, although she received no on-screen credit. In 1978, she directed a pair of medium-length features, but did not direct her first full-length feature until 1980 with Dina e Django. Nordlund then returned to Sweden in 1982 where she founded the Torrom Film Company. In 1986 she directed &#8216;Journey to Orion&#8217;, her take on J.G. Ballard’s &#8216;Thirteen to Centaurus&#8217;, which won a prize at the Bilbao Festival, and also directed a filmed interview with Ballard called Future Now. In 1998, Nordlund&#8217;s Swedish-Portuguese-Mozambican co-production Comedia Infantil was nominated for a Tiger Award at that year&#8217;s Rotterdam Film Festival. In 1999 she made The Ticket Inspector, which won the RTP/Onda Curta Prize at the Avanca Film Festival, and followed that with Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude in 2002, which won an award at the Coimbra Caminhos do Cinema Portugués, and My Baby in 2003.</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: MORE INFORMATION:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://ambarfilmes.blogspot.com">Ambar Filmes</a>: blog for Solveig&#8217;s film company.<br />
<strong>+</strong> Ambar Filmes&#8217; <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/ambarfilmes">YouTube channel</a>.</p>
<p><strong>..:: NORDLUND &#038; BALLARD ON YOUTUBE:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmosfzmfOAk">Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude trailer</a>.<br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjRXE2z0CMA&#038;eurl=http://www.ballardian.com/?p=840&#038;preview=true">Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude (extract; part 1)</a>.<br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2w2QR6T5lw">Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude (extract; part 2)</a>.<br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5pJUrY5tfU">Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude (extract; part 3)</a>.<br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lA8lXDcA8KA">Future Now interview (extract)</a>.<br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wyJY1F_ZS4U">&#8216;Journey to Orion&#8217;, part 1</a>.<br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgmXoZQz8cU">&#8216;Journey to Orion&#8217;, part 2</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>11</slash:comments>
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		<title>An Exhibition of Atrocities: J.G. Ballard on Mondo films</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-on-mondo-films</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-on-mondo-films#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Aug 2008 15:01:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ballardian</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pacific]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[archival]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[boredom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conspiracy theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[postmodernism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychopathology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[war]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[With thanks to Headpress books, here's an interview with JGB conducted by Mark Goodall in 2006 for his book Sweet &#038; Savage: The World Through the Shockumentary Film Lens. The interview covers JGB's admiration for the Mondo Cane films of Gualtiero Jacopetti, so-called 'shockumentaries' that in their artfully faked scenarios present what Ballard terms 'an elective psychopathy that would change the world (so we hoped, naively)'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>AN EXHIBITION OF ATROCITIES: J.G. BALLARD ON MONDO FILMS</strong></p>
<p>interview by <strong>Mark Goodall</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mondocane_poster.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Mondo Cane" /></p>
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<p><em>The following is a short interview with JGB conducted by Mark Goodall in 2006 for his book <a href="http://www.headpress.com/ShowProduct.aspx?ID=54">Sweet &#038; Savage: The World Through the Shockumentary Film Lens</a>. The book is published by <a href='http://www.headpress.com'>Headpress</a>, and the interview is posted here with the kind permission of Mark Goodall and the publisher.</em></p>
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<p><strong>News reporter turned film director, Gualtiero Jacopetti, kickstarted the trend for outrageous documentaries &#8212; &#8217;shockumentaries&#8217; if you will &#8212; back in 1962 when he made Mondo Cane. MARK GOODALL talks to J.G. BALLARD, a fan, about Mondo Cane, its successors and its influence on his own work as a writer.</strong></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mondocane_jacopetti.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Mondo Cane" class="picleft" /> <em>LEFT: Gualtiero Jacopetti.</em></p>
<p><strong>MARK GOODALL: What were your initial impressions of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?ie=UTF8&#038;keywords=Gualtiero%20Jacopetti&#038;tag=sleepybrain-20&#038;index=dvd&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325">the films of Gualtiero Jacopetti</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=sleepybrain-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> (Mondo Cane, Mondo Cane 2, Women of the World, Africa Addio etc.); where did you see them; what was the audience like?</p>
<p></strong>J.G. BALLARD: I was very impressed by Jacopetti’s films &#8212; I saw all of them from 1964 or so onwards &#8212; they were shown in small cinemas in the West End, and to full or more or less full houses, and my impression is that the audiences completely got the &#8216;point&#8217;. As far as I remember, the response of the people sitting around me was strong and positive. I think there was comparatively little sex in the first Mondo Cane, and I can’t recall even one dirty raincoat. The audience was the usual crew of rootless inner Londoners (the best audience in the world) drawn to an intriguing new phenomenon. At the time, some twenty years had gone by since the war’s end, and everyone had seen the World War 2 newsreels &#8212; Belsen, corpses being bulldozed, dead Japanese on Pacific Islands and so on. All grimly real, but safely distanced from the audiences by a sign that said &#8216;horrors of war&#8217;. What the Mondo Cane audiences wanted was the horrors of peace, yes, but they also wanted to be reminded of their own complicity in the slightly dubious process of documenting these wayward examples of human misbehaviour. I may be wrong, but I think that the early Mondo Cane films concentrated on bizarre customs rather than horrors, though the gruesome content grew fairly rapidly, certainly in the imitator’s films.</p>
<blockquote><p>I was a great admirer of Mondo Cane and the two sequels, though if I remember they became more and more faked, though that was part of their charm. We, the 1960s audiences, needed the real and authentic (executions, flagellant processions, autopsies etc) and it didn’t matter if they were faked &#8212; a more or less convincing simulation of the real was enough and even preferred. Also, the more tacky and obviously exploitative style appealed to an audience just waiting to be corrupted &#8212; the Vietnam newsreels on TV were authentically real, but that wasn’t ‘real’ enough. Jacopetti filled an important gap in all sorts of ways &#8212; game playing was coming in. Also they were quite stylistically made and featured good photography, unlike some of the ghastly compilation atrocity footage I’ve been sent. It is lovely to think that he had his retrospective in a British university (as in The Atrocity Exhibition, which is <em>not</em> set in the US, as some think).</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>But the audiences were fully aware that they were collaborating with the films, and this explains why they weren’t upset when what seemed to be faked sequences (they might have been real in fact) started to appear in the later films &#8212; there was almost the sense that they <em>needed</em> to appear &#8216;faked&#8217; to underline the audience’s awareness of what was going on &#8212; both on screen and inside their own heads. We needed violence and violent imagery to drive the social (and political) revolution that was taking place in the mid 1960s &#8212; violence and sensation, more or less openly embraced, were pulling down the old temples. We needed our &#8216;tastes&#8217; to be corrupted &#8212; Jacopetti’s films were part of an elective psychopathy that would change the world (so we hoped, naively). Incidentally, all this was missing from the way audiences (in the Curzon cinema I think) saw another 1960s shockumentary &#8212; The Savage Eye (directed by Joseph Strick) &#8212; when I saw it I, like the audience, shuddered but felt no complicity at all. A fine film.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mondocane_religion.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Mondo Cane" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Still from Mondo Cane.</em></p>
<p><strong>MG: Can you recall any critical or other ‘professional’ reactions to Jacopetti’s films when they were released?</strong></p>
<p><strong>JGB:</strong> I remember the critical/respectable reaction to the Jacopetti films was uniformly hostile and dismissive. As always, this confirmed their originality and importance.</p>
<p><strong>MG: Jacopetti has distanced himself from the films that later copied Mondo Cane labelling them &#8216;counterfeit&#8217;. What were/are your impressions of the copies of his films?</strong></p>
<p><strong>JGB:</strong> I can’t remember any specific imitations, though I must have seen one or two. They were too obvious, ignoring the delicate balance between &#8216;documentary&#8217; footage on the one hand, and on the other the need to remind the audience of its role in watching the films, and that without its intrigued response the films wouldn’t function at all. The balance between the &#8216;real&#8217; and the ironic simulation of the real had to be walked like a tightrope.</p>
<p><strong>MG: How did mondo films influence your own work/ideas/thought processes (in particular <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a>)?</strong></p>
<p><strong>JGB:</strong> For me, the Mondo Cane films were an important key to what was going on in the media landscape of the 1960s, especially post the JFK assassination. Nothing was true, and nothing was untrue (The Atrocity Exhibition tried to find a new sense in what had become a kind of morally virtual world) &#8212; &#8216;which lies are true?&#8217;</p>
<blockquote><p>I think that Jacopetti was genuinely important, and opened a door into what some call postmodernism and I call boredom. Screen the JFK assassination enough times and the audience will laugh.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>MG: What in your view was important about Jacopetti’s films? Do you think the films have any relevance to the present day, or to the future?</strong></p>
<p><strong>JGB:</strong> I suspect they’re very much of their time, but that isn’t a fault, necessarily. But there are many resonance’s today as in the Bush/Blair war in Iraq &#8212; complete confusion of the simulated, the real and the unreal, and the acceptance of this by the electorate. Reality is constantly redefining itself, and the electorate/audience seems to like this &#8212; a Prime Minister, religiously sincere, lies to himself and we accept his self–delusions. There’s a strong sense today that we prefer a partly fictionalised reality onto which we can map our own dreams and obsessions. The Mondo Cane films were among the first attempts to provide the collusive fictions that constitute reality today. Wartime propaganda, and the Believe it or Not (Ripley) comic strip of bizarre facts in the 1930s, were assumed to be largely true, but no one today thinks the same of the official information flowing out of Iraq &#8212; or out of 10 Downing Street and the Pentagon and significantly this <em>doesn’t</em> unsettle us.</p>
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<p><em>A <a href="http://www.nationalmediamuseum.org.uk/bff/2003/strand_jacopetti.asp">Gualtiero Jacopetti retrospective</a> occurred as part of the 2003 National Museum of Photography Film and Television’s Bradford International Film Festival. The retrospective was a collaboration between the festival and the department of postgraduate studies at the School of Art and Design, Bradford College.</em></p>
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<p><em>&#8216;An Exhibition of Atrocities: J G Ballard on Mondo Films&#8217; is taken from the book <a href="http://www.headpress.com/ShowProduct.aspx?ID=54">Sweet &#038; Savage: The World Through the Shockumentary Film Lens</a> by Mark Goodall. Published by <a href="www.headpress.com">Headpress</a>.</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mondocane_sweetsavage.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Mondo Cane" /></p>
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<hr /></div>
<p>UK £9.99 / US $19.95<br />
ISBN 1900486490</p>
<p><strong>..:: MORE INFO</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="www.headpress.com">Headpress</a></p>
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<p><strong>..:: POSSIBLY RELATED</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/review-john-foxx-and-tiny-colour-movies">Escaping the gaze: A review of John Foxx&#8217;s Tiny Colour Movies</a></p>
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		<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
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		<title>Escaping the gaze: A review of John Foxx&#039;s Tiny Colour Movies</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/review-john-foxx-and-tiny-colour-movies</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/review-john-foxx-and-tiny-colour-movies#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Aug 2008 11:37:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CCTV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Marker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Petit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Foxx]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[YouTube]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[invisible literature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media landscape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=785</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is a review of John Foxx's Melbourne performance of Tiny Colour Movies, his found-film collection and live soundtrack. For the reviewer, witnessing this may have solved a two-year-old puzzle; certainly, it brought everything full circle back to Ballard.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/tcm_marker.jpg" alt="Ballardian: John Foxx" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Stills from &#8216;The Projectionst&#8217; by &#8216;Alan Marker&#8217; (John Foxx; Tiny Colour Movies).</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/john_foxx_ha.jpg" alt="Ballardian: John Foxx" class="picleft" /> In Melbourne a few months back, I had occasion to see <a href="http://www.acmi.net.au/foxx_tiny_colour_movies.aspx">John Foxx&#8217;s live soundtrack performance and presentation</a> of <a href="http://www.tinycolourmovies.com">Tiny Colour Movies</a>, a selection of found-film fragments. Regular readers will recall that <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/john-foxx-interview">I interviewed Foxx</a> <a href="http://www.simonsellars.com/sleepybrain/john-foxx-seductive-whirlpools-part-2">in 2006</a>, when the <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FTiny-Colour-Movies-John-Foxx%2Fdp%2FB000FBG02G%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dmusic%26qid%3D1218085651%26sr%3D8-2&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">TCM album</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> had just been released. At the time John was maintaining the line that the album was the soundtrack to a found-film collection owned by one Arnold Weizcs-Bryant, who, we were told, collects home movies and &#8216;repurposed movie fragments&#8217;, indeed any type of film produced outside of commercial considerations and not meant for public consumption. John, so the story goes, attended a private screening of Arnold&#8217;s collection and was compelled to create a soundtrack to accompany these resonant images, what he calls &#8216;tiny colour movies&#8217;.</p>
<p>According to the TCM liner notes:</p>
<blockquote><p>Arnold stipulates that the movies he collects must be short &#8212; none is more than seven or eight minutes long, and some have a duration of only a few seconds. He insists that these represent a new kind of art. One which is only now becoming possible to recognise. Photography has recently become acknowledged as a new technological art form and commercial cinema is currently undergoing this kind of reassessment &#8230; these ideas cross over with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Brakhage">Stanley Brakhage</a>. Indeed Arnold was very excited when he discovered Brakhage’s work a few years ago, since he feels it confirms many of his long held views about the aesthetic beauty and cultural significance of film fragments.</p>
<p><em>John Foxx, TCM liner notes (2006).</em></p></blockquote>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Stray Sinatra Neurone&#8217; by &#8216;Max Forbert&#8217;, performed by John Foxx at the <a href="http://www.leedsfilm.com/2007/liff/film/71107">Leeds International Film Festival, 2007</a>.</em></p>
<p>One of the filmmakers in Arnold&#8217;s collection is a certain Max Forbert, who makes what John terms &#8216;assemblage movies&#8217;. Forbert, supposedly a janitor in Hollywood, collected film scraps saved from the cutting-room floors he was sweeping for a living and later compiled them into his own sampled productions, a fragment of which was found by Arnold after Forbert&#8217;s death:</p>
<blockquote><p>This is a section of a Forbert film that he identifies as using cutting room outtakes from a Sinatra movie, among others which remain unidentified. Shots are: Back view of a man in a suit looking through the window of a set interior (too tall for Sinatra &#8212; possibly an extra brought in to test-light a scene). Some brief outdoor shots of cars driving through a glittering downtown New York. Close-up of a woman applying deep red lipstick &#8212; again this appears to be a test shot of make-up and lighting. Location shots of Paris and Rome. Intricately cut together, these damaged fragments become an almost tactile essay on the sensual textures and enigmatic images that film can make available.</p>
<p><em>Foxx, TCM liner notes.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>In the liner notes, John talks of the beauty of the imperfections in the films, the scratches and grain, the bleaching from wear and age, &#8216;elements which only add to the mystery, the emotional and intellectual resonance, and the sensual appreciation, of film&#8217;. Tiny Colour Movies, then, is not only an interesting document but also one that has overtly Ballardian overtones. For starters, there&#8217;s Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/1st-ballardian-festival-of-home-movies">own interest</a> in the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-festival-the-final-cut">subversive potential</a> of home movies. But also, as I tried to tease out in the interview, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a> features many examples similar to what John identifies as a &#8217;sample film aesthetic&#8217; in the Weizcs-Bryant collection, including therapeutic DIY film groups designed to aid the recovery of schizhophrenic patients:</p>
<blockquote><p>Cine-films as group therapy. Patients were encouraged to form a film production unit, and were given full freedom as to choice of subject matter, cast and technique. In all cases explicitly pornographic films were made. Two films in particular were examined: (1) A montage sequence using portions of the faces of (a) Madame Ky, (b) Jeanne Moreau, (c) Jacqueline Kennedy (Johnson oath-taking). The use of a concealed stroboscopic device produced a major optical flutter in the audience, culminating in psychomotor disturbances and aggressive attacks directed against the still photographs of the subjects hung from the walls of the theatre. (2) A film of automobile accidents devised as a cinematic version of Nader’s Unsafe at Any Speed. By chance it was found that slow-motion sequences of this film had a marked sedative effect, reducing blood pressure, respiration and pulse rates. Hypnagogic images were produced freely by patients. The film was also found to have a marked erotic content.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, The Atrocity Exhibition (1970).</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Throughout Atrocity, T-, the book&#8217;s troubled protagonist, stitches and sutures together fragments from the media landscape &#8212; TV broadcasts, snatches of film, billboard representations of movie stars, the Zapruder film of JFK&#8217;s assassination (even the &#8216;time music of the quasars&#8217;, derived from a strange contraption on his roof, a sculpture consisting of &#8216;antennae of metal aerials&#8217;) &#8212; into a form that will make sense to his disordered psyche. This is most clearly expressed in Ballard&#8217;s dictum that politics today has become a branch of advertising that sells personalities rather than policies, and that as a result politicians involve us in their fantasies without our consent &#8212; fantasies of power, ego, domination, celebrity, lust, all disguised as governance but which are really designed to place us in peripheral roles as impotent bystanders in the major decisions affecting our lives. In Atrocity, then, Ballard&#8217;s schizophrenic patients involve politicians in <em>their</em> fantasies, notably the hapless figure of Ronald Reagan:</p>
<blockquote><p>The conceptual role of Reagan. Fragments of Reagan’s cinetized postures were used in the construction of model psychodramas in which the Reagan-figure played the role of husband, doctor, insurance salesman, marriage counsellor, etc. The failure of these roles to express any meaning reveals the non-functional character of Reagan. Reagan’s success therefore indicates society’s periodic need to re-conceptualize its political leaders. Reagan thus appears as a series of posture concepts, basic equations which re-formulate the roles of aggression and anality&#8230; In assembly kit tests Reagan’s face was uniformly perceived as a penile erection. Patients were encouraged to devise the optimum sex-death of Ronald Reagan.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/small_reagan.jpg" alt="Ballardian: John Foxx" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: T- devising the &#8216;optimum sex death of Ronald Reagan&#8217; in Jonathan Weiss&#8217;s film of The Atrocity Exhibition.</em></p>
<p>Essentially, T- reclaims the inner space he feels has been invaded by media and advertising &#8212; the colonisation of the subconscious and the stealing of his memories &#8212; repopulating it with a collaged, open-ended landscape of images drawn from the free circulation of signs and signals of what we can now view, with hindsight, as Ballard&#8217;s own proto version of hyperreality.</p>
<p>As Ballard says,</p>
<blockquote><p>The media landscape of the present day is a map in search of a territory. A huge volume of sensational and often toxic imagery inundates our minds, much of it fictional in content. How do we make sense of this ceaseless flow of advertising and publicity, news and entertainment, where presidential campaigns and moon voyages are presented in terms indistinguishable from the launch of a new candy bar or deodorant? What actually happens on the level of our unconscious minds when, within minutes on the same TV screen, a prime minister is assassinated, an actress makes love, an injured child is carried from a car crash? Faced with these charged events, prepackaged emotions already in place, we can only stitch together a set of emergency scenarios, just as our sleeping minds extemporize a narrative from the unrelated memories that veer through the cortical night. In the waking dream that now constitutes everyday reality, images of a blood-spattered widow, the chromium trim of a limousine windshield, the stylized glamour of a motorcade, fuse together to provide a secondary narrative with very different meanings.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, annotations (1994) to The Atrocity Exhibition.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>This strategy of treating all media and perceptual inputs as equal, with no distinction between the inner world of fantasy and the outer world of reality, seems a clear precursor to the kind of culture-jamming hacktivism that would reach a peak in the 90s with the sound artists <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negativland">Negativland</a> and their followers:</p>
<blockquote><p>Negativland occupies itself with recontextualizing captured fragments to create something entirely new &#8212; a psychological impact based on a new juxtaposition of diverse elements, ripped from their usual context, chewed up, and spit out as a new form of hearing the world around us.</p>
<p>As audio artists, we pursue a uniquely contemporary and wholly appropriate creative process which inevitably emerges out of our electronic age of media saturation and the reproducing technologies available to all consumers.</p>
<p><em>Negativland, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FFair-Use-Story-Letter-Numeral%2Fdp%2F0964349604%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1218086674%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Fair Use: The Story of the Letter U and the Numeral 2 </a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> (1995).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jgb_orbital.jpg" alt="Ballardian: London Orbital" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: JGB in London Orbital.</em></p>
<p>More explicitly, Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair, in <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FLondon-Orbital-J-G-Ballard%2Fdp%2FB00023JHC2%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Ddvd%26qid%3D1218086855%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">the film version</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> of <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FLondon-Orbital-Iain-Sinclair%2Fdp%2F0141014741%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1218086769%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">London Orbital</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />, acknowledge a clear debt to Ballard, whose influence over the film looms large, both in the interview with him in the middle section and in the reading by Sinclair of JGB&#8217;s &#8216;What I Believe&#8217; that frames it. Sinclair and Petit see the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/bluewater-round-2">Bluewater shopping centre</a>, &#8216;Ground Zero&#8217; for the film&#8217;s aesthetic, as an architecture mediated by technology, specifically the omniscient CCTV cameras which in their endless, plastic and formless state create what the filmmakers call &#8216;a new nostalgia, a new boredom, a new kind of time&#8217;. If everything is filmable then, Petit and Sinclair&#8217;s method of resistance is to become like the surveillance camera, to always be open and to always be filming but to locate the degradations in the tape, the fraying at the edges, recovering and recycling elements of old technologies, what Esther Leslie calls an &#8216;aesthetic of refuse&#8217;, drawing on the double meaning of &#8216;refuse&#8217;: as both rubbish, in that if everything is filmable then everything is junk, valueless; and as resistance, ie refusing to be dissolved into the &#8216;electronic slums&#8217;, to use Petit&#8217;s term. Thus Sinclair inserts his home movies into the end of the film, recovering a memory that is in danger of being overwritten yet still framed in the logic of the image, both inside and outside at once &#8212; an aesthetic that instantly recalls Atrocity and many other Ballard stories.</p>
<p>Foxx&#8217;s Tiny Colour Movies project seems a direct descendant of this lineage, especially given this statement of John&#8217;s from our interview:</p>
<blockquote><p>Movies will be played with, just as sound was sampled, for fun and surrealism. Simply because it can be done. I remember positing this five years ago in a talk at the London College of Music and Media. Around that time, I made a movie called A Man Made of Shadows from several other movies. This made a new movie from existing films by collaging, repurposing, hommaging, stealing, sampling, appropriating. Whatever you like to call it. ‘Repurposing’ is my current fave term, along with ‘theft’. Watch out Hollywood. Movies had better get used to this because it will happen. Inevitable.<br />
&#8230;<br />
We’ll also need to develop new aesthetics of film, to regard elements formerly regarded as faults as intrinsic qualities inherent in film itself. The beauty of scratches, bleached out film ends, emulsion faults, grain, frameslip, etc. Just as we now value surface scratches in audio sampling.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/tcm_wilkes.jpg" alt="Ballardian: John Foxx" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Stills from &#8216;Lost New York&#8217; by &#8216;George Wilkes&#8217; (John Foxx; Tiny Colour Movies).</em></p>
<p>So, freighted with all of this intertextual baggage, I was therefore very excited to learn that John was bringing the Arnold collection to Melbourne; I knew he&#8217;d premiered it overseas with a live soundtrack, but that&#8217;s about all I knew. I hadn&#8217;t really done much research on John since we last communicated, but I still harboured the suspicion that, as I detailed in the afterword to the interview, Arnold and the filmmakers were fictitious personas and that the films were in fact John&#8217;s own inventions. I sensed various clues that gave the game away including the name of one of the filmmakers, &#8216;Alan Marker&#8217;. This seemed far too close to the aura of Chris Marker (but with an amusingly British first name), especially given John&#8217;s stated admiration for <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/la-jetee">La Jetée</a>, which of course is also about memory being overwritten and recovered.</p>
<p>I felt there were more clues, not least the fact that the synopses of the various filmmakers and their motivations in the liner notes to the album resembled John&#8217;s own very individualistic short stories, especially one he wrote a while back called &#8216;The Quiet Man&#8217; (for even with the best of intentions the best of artists can find it hard to disguise their &#8216;voice&#8217; when inhabiting alter egos):</p>
<blockquote><p>The old newscasts affected him greatly, the Kennedy Assassination, the images of Christine Keeler, early Beatles footage, all in a slightly worn Black and White. He edited together a film containing all these images and more, and played it constantly. He found it profoundly moving, the images gaining even more emotive power with each viewing. All these characters of his past moving in old daylight, waving and smiling and moving on.</p>
<p>One of his favourite films was The Swimmer starring Burt Lancaster, and he often played this without the soundtrack, drowning in the crude beauty of its early technicolour.</p>
<p>At home, too, he kept a small 8mm projector for playing home movies that he came across in his exploration of the city&#8217;s deserted apartments. He was fascinated by all the tiny intimate details of these films, the jerky figures waving from seaside and garden at weddings and birthdays and baptisms, records of whole families and their pets growing and changing through the years.</p>
<p><em>John Foxx, <a href="http://www.metamatic.com/zQuietmandocs/thequietman.html">&#8216;The Quiet Man&#8217;</a>, 1978.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>In fact, my musings sparked off quite a bit of debate in various forums about the nature of Arnold, with many people, including myself, initially believing the entire story of Mr Weizcs-Bryant and his amazing collection of found film.</p>
<p>But John remained tight-lipped&#8230; or so I thought. More on that later.</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Skyscraper&#8217; by &#8216;Jerry Golden&#8217;, performed by John Foxx at the <a href="http://www.leedsfilm.com/2007/liff/film/71107">Leeds International Film Festival, 2007</a>.</em></p>
<p>From the first film of the performance, I was drawn into the degraded beauty of the Super 8 footage and the blown-out and colour-saturated celluloid on display. And yes, this was clearly found footage, the genuine article. It appeared I was wrong &#8212; you can&#8217;t fake period details, hairstyles and cars, on John&#8217;s limited budget. But it had been assembled artfully, like the looped film of traffic on LA freeways drawing out the beauty of this perpetual motion sculpture. Or time-lapsed shadows and sunlight passing across buildings, slowed down or reversed, the motion of the elements becoming imperceptible, the buildings and backgrounds the same but not quite as shadows gently ripple across them as if the fabric of time and molecular space was slowly re-weaving itself. When a building became covered completely in shadow, the film was edited so that another building emerged from the black and into daylight, a slow modernist dance of compacted grace and proportion. It seemed a trick of the mind designed to evoke the passing of civilisation, like the classic Ballardian ideal that treats reality as just a stage set that can be pulled away at any moment.</p>
<p>At this point, I thought I might need to re-assess: if these films were genuine, maybe Arnold was, too.</p>
<p>There was much to enjoy throughout the program. Extraterrestrial, sun-soaked clouds magnified to massive proportions so that they seemed composed of nothing but pure colour and grain. Flickering film projected onto women&#8217;s faces, turning them into shapeshifting cats and dogs with whiskers and elongated ears. A naked woman underwater, swimming among the wrecks of submerged automobiles as the sunlight from above the surface turns her and everything it touches into a blue dream.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/tcm_rouncefield.jpg" alt="Ballardian: John Foxx" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Stills from &#8216;Underwater Automobiles&#8217; by &#8216;Robert Rouncefield&#8217; (John Foxx; Tiny Colour Movies).</em></p>
<p>But then I began to imagine that John had made a very clever play: he&#8217;d inserted what I was sure were his own films into the found footage. The giveaway for me was twofold. First, the film &#8216;Smokescreen&#8217; by &#8216;Unknown&#8217; featuring a man walking into a series of smoke-filled rooms &#8212; we never see his face as it is either obscured by smoke, or he is filmed from the side or behind. In the liner notes, Arnold says this:</p>
<blockquote><p>I saw these marvellously lit sequences which seemed to have a very definite story, yet there is no explanation or development or resolution. We can have no idea what the filmmaker had in mind. Because of this lack of resolution, they seem strangely suspended. You begin to make connections, you feel compelled to write a story. But there is none. There can be none. The effect is tantalising, like a damaged and incomplete fragment of memory.</p></blockquote>
<p>But, I&#8217;m sure, both the film and this explanation is very obviously the voice of Foxx; this film, to me, is another iteration of Foxx&#8217;s &#8216;quiet man&#8217; persona, the ghost moving through the streets of the city, his identity never quite coalescing, always escaping the gaze. As John <a href="http://www.barcodezine.com/John%20Foxx%20Interview.htm">has said</a>, &#8216;The point of view I’ve always worked from is that of a ghost in the city &#8212; someone who is a sort of drifting, detached onlooker &#8212; but still vulnerable and trying against the odds to maintain a sort of dignity in the face of all the static.&#8217;</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Smokescreen&#8217; by &#8216;Unknown&#8217;, performed by John Foxx at the <a href="http://www.leedsfilm.com/2007/liff/film/71107">Leeds International Film Festival, 2007</a>.</em></p>
<p>There appeared to be more confirmation in the film &#8216;A Peripheral Character&#8217; by &#8216;Evan Parker&#8217;, a montage of shots supposedly featuring a mysterious extra from Hollywood films:</p>
<blockquote><p>He has appeared in dozens of major Hollywood movies and American television series, yet he is completely unknown to the public. He appears as a background character, a passer-by, often wearing a grey suit, or a raincoat. His calm unhurried walk, his spectacles, his lapel flower and his habit of turning his head briefly (seemingly so that his face will be momentarily on the film), are what eventually make him distinctive. The film was researched and assembled by the man who first discovered his existence, Evan Parker. Parker is an academic whose field is the evolution of Hollywood. In the course of his studies, Parker watched hundreds of films and had begun to speculate about making a study of the extras, those figures passing by in the background. That is when he began to notice one who appeared to be present in several movies. Intrigued, Parker began a search and was surprised to discover the presence of this figure in dozens of major and minor Hollywood movies. This is a slow-motion montage of all the clips of his appearances so far discovered. His identity remains unknown.</p>
<p><em>TCM liner notes.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Note the reference to the <strong>GREY</strong> suit!</p>
<p>&#8216;A Peripheral Character&#8217; is an intriguing concept and very well put together, but at times you could tell John had judiciously selected clips of not the same mysterious person, but of similar looking actors from dozens of films, always with their face half turned away, or shot from behind, or bending over &#8212; you might just be convinced if you weren&#8217;t paying close enough attention that you were viewing just the one ghost in the city.</p>
<p>By the program&#8217;s end, I felt as if I&#8217;d finally worked it out for sure: that &#8216;Arnold Weizcs-Bryant&#8217; was merely another psuedonym for Dennis Leigh (Foxx&#8217;s real name), and that it was indeed John Foxx himself who is the passionate collector of found footage, the underground filmmaker inspired by what he has stumbled across to create his own &#8217;sample films&#8217;, his own &#8216;tiny colour movies&#8217;&#8230;</p>
<p>And the live music? Well, it was classic Foxx, yes, lovely electronic washes drifting as timelessly as the shadows and sunlight of the films. I do like John&#8217;s work, but even so I have to say I was disappointed that there didn&#8217;t seem to be much improvisation, given that this was ostensibly a live performance of the soundtrack. Tracks stopped and started exactly when the films did, and it all seemed a bit too perfectly sequenced, too faithful to the CD. I would have liked more of a continuous flow, more segues to sustain the atmosphere, more improv, more of the scratches, collages and squelches that John so admires in the films, for as good as the music is, it just seems far too clean, too digital in  the live context to suit the conceptual conceit of the films themselves. As a standalone CD it&#8217;s great; as an audiovisual package, I&#8217;m not so sure.</p>
<p>And then it was question time, and John appeared from behind his bank of keyboards, dressed head to toe in black like a handsomer version of Lux Interior. Before the show I&#8217;d thought of sticking my hand up and asking him if Arnold really did exist, but as I was watching the films I decided it just didn&#8217;t matter at all to me anymore. Whatever the answer, either way, John&#8217;s assemblage of the results had become compelling &#8212; if John wanted to keep up the pretense, if indeed that&#8217;s what it was, I was happy to play along. Besides I&#8217;d already voiced my suspicions two years ago and I didn&#8217;t want to seem like a curmudgeon or a stalker by hounding him forever more about it. Also, I was curious to see if anyone else in the audience would broach the subject. Perhaps no-one even cares&#8230;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/tcm_parker.jpg" alt="Ballardian: John Foxx" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Stills from &#8216;A Peripheral Character&#8217; by &#8216;Evan Parker&#8217; (John Foxx; Tiny Colour Movies).</em></p>
<p>Questions were asked about Ultravox, about the soundtrack and always John&#8217;s answers were mystical, evasive, talking of dreams and flight. Then someone asked him about the Hollywood extra. &#8216;Did you ever ask Arnold if he had any info on the extra, or whether he&#8217;d tried to trace his identity?&#8217; John fidgeted, looked a little uncomfortable. &#8216;Er&#8230; no&#8217; he replied. The mere mention of Arnold appeared to be making him nervous.</p>
<p>Then someone else stuck up a hand. &#8216;John, I read the piece on Ballardian where you talk about the influence of J.G. Ballard on your work.&#8217; Ah, he&#8217;d read my interview, meaning he&#8217;d know of the afterword where I first expressed my doubts! We were getting warm, no doubt about it, but would this guy pop the burning question? But &#8216;Which of his novels is your favourite?&#8217; was the interrogation and the moment had passed again.</p>
<p>A few more questions and then someone asked John if he wanted a beer. He quickly said he&#8217;d love one, but then just as quickly said his goodbyes and hustled off the stage, always the enigma, always elusive, never to be seen again. The end.</p>
<p>And I couldn&#8217;t help but think of <a href="http://www.simonsellars.com/sleepybrain/john-foxx-seductive-whirlpools-part-2">part 2 of our interview</a>, for I was greatly surprised to see him in Melbourne in the first place.</p>
<p>Because when I asked him if he would ever tour Australia, this is what he said: &#8216;I’d like to. But it will most likely be as drifting molecules about twenty years from now&#8230;&#8217;</p>
<div class="hr">
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>POSTSCRIPT:</strong> After the screening, my dormant interest in John Foxx was reignited and I went Googling for more information. As I mentioned, all I really knew of the background to this project was what had emerged in our interview. As far as I knew, for others, as it was for me, the mystery was still sustainable. Little did I know that John had recently come clean! In <a href="http://www.metamatic.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=11;t=000312#000000">this post</a> on John&#8217;s forum, for example, it&#8217;s claimed that &#8216;The footage that JF and Mike Barker use in TCM is bought at car boot sales, jumble sales and at market stalls. Sometimes people put their home movie collections up for grabs on ebay&#8230; this is then digitised and re-edited to produce TCM.&#8217;</p>
<p>And this is confirmed <a href="http://goingdeafforaliving.blogspot.com/2008/05/interview-john-foxx.html">in an interview</a> John did just before the Melbourne screening:</p>
<blockquote><p>I used to buy reels of film (from Brick Lane and Portobello Road markets) and didn’t know what they were and view them to see if there was anything interesting on them. Eventually I amassed all this stuff and didn’t quite know what to do with it. Then I saw this collector’s reel of films one night and thought ‘Yeah &#8212; that’s exactly right! It is finite. It does have a place in history’. And some of it is unique and some of the stories behind the pieces are very interesting too. It’s like reading an obituary; which is something I like &#8212; it’s not morbid at all. It’s very interesting because you get a summation of someone’s life and their achievements…</p></blockquote>
<p>So, is it actually John&#8217;s collection on display? It would appear that way, yes, judging by this interview. It would appear that Arnold is John, just as John is Dennis. And what of the filmmakers and their backstories? As I wrote in the afterword to the 2006 interview, after mulling over the &#8216;Frank Watts&#8217; film:</p>
<blockquote><p>Urban drift; walking through the city; submitting to psychic entry points … surely this is yet another brilliantly evocative John Foxx short story? Yes &#8212; the more I think about it, the more I think that’s the case … re-reading the liner notes, the parallels with these ‘filmmakers’, with their obsessions and aesthetics, to Foxx himself now seem all too obvious (let’s not forget that ‘John Foxx’ is a character that Dennis Leigh himself has said he inhabits because ‘John Foxx is smarter than me’).</p>
<p>Arnold’s ‘filmmakers’ are called Robert Rouncefield; Jerry Golden; Earnst Lubin — like ‘John Foxx’, these are humdrum yet fanciful names, mythical yet ordinary, dull names to the point of incandescence. Their bios and summaries exhibit all the traits of the condensed novels in The Atrocity Exhibition.</p></blockquote>
<p>But there would be one final nail in the coffin&#8230;</p>
<p><embed id="VideoPlayback" style="width:400px;height:326px" allowFullScreen="true" src="http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=6024910063292068898&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=true" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: John Foxx answering audience questions after the Sydney screening of TCM.</em></p>
<p>Something else I found in my latest research was this video of John&#8217;s Q&#038;A after the Sydney performance of TCM. Note that this was filmed the day after the Melbourne gig. Now recall the Melbourne audience member who asked John if he wanted a beer. Finally, watch the Sydney video: as <a href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6024910063292068898&#038;hl=en">the uploader writes</a>, &#8216;Note the beer in his hand. Someone from the audience was kind enough to rush off and get him one.&#8217;</p>
<p>Someone had obviously been taking notes in Melbourne, had flown up to Sydney, and wasn&#8217;t letting John rush off the stage without a drink this time!</p>
<p>Perhaps they thought the beer might loosen his tongue just a little. Indeed, it appears that way for in this Q&#038;A John is far more expansive and revealing than in the session I attended, and even goes so far as to say that some of the TCM movies are <em>outright fiction</em>, &#8216;complete lies&#8217; as he calls them, created by him under the guise of a fictitious filmmaker and inserted into the program to mess with the audience&#8217;s perception:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>AUDIENCE QUESTION:</strong> Did you cut some of those movies up?</p>
<p><strong>JOHN FOXX:</strong> Oh, some of them were invented. And some aren&#8217;t. And I want to use these films as a way of telling stories. And being dishonest. Because I think dishonesty&#8217;s really interesting. What do you call someone who tries to convince you that something is true when it&#8217;s not? You call them a liar, don&#8217;t you? So what do you call an author? And that&#8217;s the thing that really interests me, is that line between truth and fiction. So some things are true in the movies, and some are complete lies. And I think it&#8217;s very interesting to try and work out which is which. Some of them are totally fabricated and some aren&#8217;t. But they&#8217;re all made up of the real thing.</p>
<p>So what one of the filmmakers practices, in other words cutting Hollywood up into pieces and reassembling it, I&#8217;ve been doing as well. And I want to continue doing that, because I think film is raw material now, to be used in any way we want. We&#8217;ve all grown up with that stuff. And I even dream it. Because I went to the cinema when I was 7, 6, 5 years old in Lancashire. And Lancashire was so grey, in England, and the cinema was so grey, everything merged together. You know, I was usually covered in soot when I was a kid, and everything was in black and white, the factory chimneys and smoke and all that, and when I looked on the screen it was the same thing. So all my memories of it are mixed up in the movies, old science fiction movies and utter rubbish. None of which I could understand as a kid, so I had to make things up with a kit from my own mind. It became a part of my dream language. And I still dream it. So I think we all mix stuff in strange ways because it&#8217;s in our heads, isn&#8217;t it? We&#8217;ve grown up with it. So why not reassemble it in the way we want to? Because we own it, you know &#8212; we don&#8217;t have to be dominated by it. It&#8217;s <em>ours</em> for God&#8217;s sake, not theirs &#8212; we own it.</p></blockquote>
<p>However, I&#8217;m glad I went into the screening not knowing about John&#8217;s admission. It meant there was still a bit of mystery and wonder about the project, it meant I could &#8217;script&#8217; the story a little bit as I tried to link and crosslink various ideas and theories &#8212; using a &#8216;kit&#8217; from my <em>own</em> mind.</p>
<p>Does John&#8217;s admission matter in the end? No &#8212; the project stands on its own merits. I was reminded of how many people still take <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> to be Ballard&#8217;s autobiography, and how they are often greatly surprised and sometimes angry to discover the book is as &#8216;fictional&#8217; as the rest of his novels. In this day and age, surely it is not too farfetched to suggest that authenticity is just another mask? I personally love the idea of creating a character and inhabiting it so that the boundaries become blurred, inhabiting the interzones and interstitial zones, &#8216;the yes or no of the borderzone&#8217; to borrow a phrase from Atrocity, escaping definition and classification.</p>
<p>As does Ballard, for that matter, who has his own passion for the idea of faked newsreels, and the notion of fiction passed off as truth:</p>
<blockquote><p>The fake war newsreel (and most war newsreels are faked to some extent, usually filmed on manoeuvres) has always intrigued me &#8212; my version of Platoon, Full Metal Jacket or All Quiet on the Western Front would be a newsreel compilation so artfully faked as to convince the audience that it was real, while at the same time reminding them that it might be wholly contrived. The great Italian neo-realist, Roberto Rossellini, drew close to this in Open City and Paisa.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, annotations to The Atrocity Exhibition, 1994.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>For anyone interested in Ballard &#8212; especially Atrocity &#8212; and experimental film, John Foxx&#8217;s Tiny Colour Movies performance is highly recommended. I&#8217;m not sure any of it is especially &#8216;cutting edge&#8217; &#8212; Foxx&#8217;s liner notes, for example, state that the Alan Marker stuff (as commanding as it is, one of my favourites from the set) is &#8217;surely unique in the history of filmmaking&#8217;, yet I saw the exact same technique performed with skulls and ghost imagery last week in Melbourne by Australian artists who&#8217;d been practising it for some time. And overall, in terms of experimental and repurposed film, the phenomenal, unparalleled work of the likes of <a href="http://www.luxonline.org.uk/artists/guy_sherwin/index.html">Guy Sherwin</a>, the old master, and <a href="http://www.dimeshow.com">Ben Russell</a> and <a href="http://www.lumiere.net.nz/reader/item/1812">Ben Rivers</a>, the heirs, is certainly more of an assault in both audio and visual terms.</p>
<p>What Tiny Colour Movies undoubtedly is, however, is <em>Foxxian</em>: too cold by half for some, beautiful and sad for others, an industrial spiritualism and an unalloyed sensuality of machines.</p>
<p><em>Arnold Weizcs-Bryant: R.I.P.</em></p>
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<p><strong>..:: <em>Previously</em>:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/john-foxx-interview">John Foxx: A Whirlpool with Seductive Furniture, part 1</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.simonsellars.com/sleepybrain/john-foxx-seductive-whirlpools-part-2">John Foxx: A Whirlpool with Seductive Furniture, part 2</a></embed><div class="hr">
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<p><strong>..:: <em>More information:</em>:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.metamatic.com">Metamatic: John Foxx&#8217;s official site</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.tinycolourmovies.com">Tiny Colour Movies official site</a></p>
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		<title>Kingdom of the Dead</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/kingdom-of-the-dead</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/kingdom-of-the-dead#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Aug 2008 06:46:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=836</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Parallels between Ballard's Kingdom Come and Romero's Dawn of the Dead.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kingdom_dead.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Dawn of the Dead" /></p>
<p>I saw George Romero&#8217;s zombie flick <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077402">Dawn of the Dead</a> for the first time at the <a href="http://www.melbournefilmfestival.com.au/films?film_id=9750">Melbourne International Film Festival</a> last night. What a super film. What a <em>statement</em>. And very, very funny too. And in fact very reminiscent of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>, for Dead, like KC, also features a sealed-off shopping mall in which a band of resistance fighters attempt to restart a micro society, sustained yet ultimately imprisoned by the trappings of consumer capitalism.</p>
<p>The mall in both Ballard and Romero becomes a city, a country, a galaxy, a self-sustaining micronational state seceding from reality, a State of mind absorbing and zombifying all it touches, and the faceless, cartoonish football hordes in KC are consumer zombies as much as the walking dead in Romero are metaphorically intended to be.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kc_paperback_small.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Dawn of the Dead" class="picleft" /> Yet, if you tweak your perspective just a little, the survivors in both could conversely be read as the oppressors, the old world clinging to its accumulated wealth, hording it for themselves in the face of the zombie attack &#8212; an all-devouring, ever-growing underclass.</p>
<p>For Romero, like Ballard, is nothing if not a master of ambivalence.</p>
<p>The most Ballardian part of the film is when the survivors seal off a department store &#8212; privileged retail space &#8212; from the zombies in the mall&#8217;s concourse, ie the tacky public domain. The survivors turn on the store&#8217;s muzak and roam the aisles to take whatever they want from the limitless, yet depthless wonders of consumerism, free to act out their decadent bourgeois fantasies, setting up their attic space with expensive furniture and luxury TV sets, even though the apocalypse that has blighted the outside world means there is nothing to watch anymore.</p>
<p>Watching this sequence, I could almost imagine yet another parallel world in which KC was written in the late 70s, and George Romero, the master of guerilla filmmaking &#8212; an aesthetic and a philosophy that informs the guerilla responses in his storylines &#8212; had become the first director to adapt Ballard for the big screen, setting the tone for future Ballard adaptations to come: raw, uncompromising, revolutionary, and shot through with the blackest humour, the perfect defence against insanity.</p>
<p>In short: how Ballard&#8217;s books, and Romero&#8217;s films, appear to me.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kingdom_dead3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Dawn of the Dead" /></p>
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		<title>Rick McGrath&#039;s Letter from Barcelona: The Exquisite Corpse, An Autopsy of the New Millennium</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/letter-from-barcelona-exquisite-corpse</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/letter-from-barcelona-exquisite-corpse#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Jul 2008 16:00:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rick McGrath</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barcelona]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Cronenberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salvador Dali]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[autobiography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deep time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Transmission from Barcelona stop Having a wonderful time stop I believe in nothing stop Lost in surreal image machine and deep-blue-drenched corridors stretching to infinity stop Startling comma perverse visuals stop Rare books and writing stop Exhibition a raging success stop JGB would be proud stop Full letter to follow comma Love Rick end transmission]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Rick McGrath&#8217;s Letter from Barcelona:<br />
THE EXQUISITE CORPSE: AN AUTOPSY OF THE NEW MILLENNIUM</strong></p>
<p>by <strong><a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com">Rick McGrath</a></strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/rick_josep.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Rick talking to CCCB Director-General Josep Ramoneda on opening night. Photo by Christian Mauri from Spain&#8217;s El Mundo newspaper.</em></p>
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<p><em>Hola</em>, Simon, and <em>buenos dias</em> from Barcelona.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m currently standing in the Carrer de Montalegre, a narrow street deep in the university section of Barcelona. Behind me is the university&#8217;s Dept of Philosophy, and I&#8217;m standing in the overbright sunlight, looking at an imposing 18th century building which is currently the home of the <a href="http://www.cccb.org">Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB)</a>… and even more currently the home of the <a href="http://www.cccb.org/en/exposicio?idg=16452">very first museum exhibition</a> ever dedicated to the life and work of JG Ballard.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a great place to be…</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been here two days now, and have toured the show three times in different guises – as it was being finished, once with the Press, and finally at the Grand Opening with Barcelona VIPs – and to tell you the truth, I&#8217;m feeling a little late with this report, as I&#8217;ve already read all the various and sundry exhibition press releases you and the rest of the world&#8217;s media have published. And besides, I was out each Barcelonian night with a short story of fellow Ballardians, and one must follow one&#8217;s obsessions. So I thought I wouldn&#8217;t cover that ground again. Instead, I&#8217;d like to treat you to an overall taste of the experience – a sort of old-fashioned slide show with commentary – a visual tour of what visitors to this extraordinary exhibition will see and experience.</p>
<p>OK, you ready? Visitor&#8217;s pass showing?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_exterior.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: CCCB exterior.</em></p>
<p>The first bit of irony comes quickly when you discover this building was first constructed as a hospital. What better place to perform an <a href="http://www.cccb.org/en/exposicio?idg=16452">Autopsy of the New Millennium</a>? Crossing the street we enter the building thru an archway – to the left is the Museum&#8217;s administration offices, to the right the ubiquitous gift shop. Ahead is a huge courtyard, empty save for a few trees and student-filled lounge chairs. The building retains its ancient decorations on three sides, and these walls face an angled wall of glass, which rises and tips protectively over the courtyard.</p>
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<p><strong>ENTERING THE EXHIBITION</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_entrance.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Spain’s longest escalator&#8230; a sort of Kingdom Come message to rise into the imaginary&#8230;</em></p>
<p>The trip into the exhibition itself is a Ballardian experience of corridors and obsessively angled floors. It&#8217;s a maze. You first walk along the left wall of the courtyard, noticing what must be medical slogans from the 1700s painted on the ornate tiles, then you&#8217;re suddenly at a hidden entrance. Turning right, you walk down a long, slow incline, mirrored on the right wall, to a set of hidden doors. Entering, you reverse direction and descend again down another long incline which empties into to a large auditorium with information booths, ticket sales, and a large screen showing the CCCB&#8217;s specially-made promotional video for the show.</p>
<p>You&#8217;ve <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-in-the-raw">already commented</a> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballardoscope-writer-as-visionary">on this vid</a>, Simon, so we&#8217;ll pass thru here and then climb a series of long, open stairs, which leads us into the new glass tower and onto Spain&#8217;s longest escalator – a three-story monster right out of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a> – which delivers us to the Exhibition&#8217;s entrance and a charming young lady who would like to see our passes, <em>por favor</em>.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_amis.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Martin Amis pontificates; the media records.</em></p>
<p>We&#8217;re here. I&#8217;d suggest we put on our surgical masks and rubber gloves now. The first room we enter is actually not part of the Autopsy itself, but a sort of literary introduction to what follows. What we see is a video projection onto a wall that features a number of writers, English and Spanish, French and Catalan, extolling the influence and seductive qualities of Ballard&#8217;s work. John Clute, Martin Amis and Catherine Millet I recognized, and once your mind has been properly attuned and your Ballard glasses are in focus, it&#8217;s time to enter the Autopsy Rooms proper.</p>
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<hr /></div>
<p><strong>AUTOPSY #1: What I Believe</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_believe1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in the power of the imagination to remake the world, to release the truth within us, to hold back the night, to transcend death, to charm motorways, to ingratiate ourselves with birds, to enlist the confidences of madmen.</p></blockquote>
<p>This section is called &#8220;Credo&#8221;, and it&#8217;s a multimedia effort with a wall of words and hidden, tiny mirrors, JGB&#8217;s dulcet tones, and three video screens repeating what JG says he believes in Spanish, Catalan and English. It&#8217;s a repetition of JG&#8217;s piece in the January 1984 issue of Science Fiction magazine, in which he summarises his obsessions and their often-disturbing logic.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_believe2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p>If you stand in precisely the right spot, the words on the wall before you also reveal tiny mirrors reflecting the light from an electric candle. The words that appear on the TV screens also melt and fade, ebbing and flowing with the tidal resonance of Ballard&#8217;s musical speech. It&#8217;s a fascinating experience, and I noted both the press and VIPs were mesmerised by the incantory nature of this first cut into the body of our culture.</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #2: From Shanghai to Shepperton</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_shanghai.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: After the 1937 bombing.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in the forgotten runways of Wake Island, pointing towards the Pacifics of our imaginations.</p></blockquote>
<p>From Credo we dip back in time to JG&#8217;s youth in Shanghai and Lunghua camp where the Japanese interned JG and his family for three years. This display begins with a loop from Spielberg&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/dreams-ransom-steven-spielbergs-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a>, where young Jimmy attempts to bring the young Japanese kamikaze pilot back to life, and then settles into the real thing in a cleverly-constructed room which shows scenes from the camp on one wall, and opposite, separated by prison-like planking, scenes from the destruction of Shanghai.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_shanghaijim.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Watching Shanghai Jim.</em></p>
<p>Against the far wall runs a continuous vid of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/shanghai-jim-form-dictated-by-time">Shanghai Jim</a>, JG&#8217;s BBC-produced return to Lunghua in 1991. The CCCB organizers (I&#8217;ll laud them later) have done a terrific job of assembling period photographs of Shanghai under siege, and many of these photos I&#8217;ve not seen before… but have unconsciously experienced in JG&#8217;s work. The camp is represented by a series of soft watercolours, in stark opposition to the black and white photographs of war, and I was pleased and surprised to see the image of Lunghua camp survivor Irene Duguid in two of the photos – I had the pleasure of sitting and talking with her at her home in Surrey just four days earlier.</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #3: Landscapes of Dream</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_surreal1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: From the surreal image &#8220;machine&#8221;.</em></p>
<blockquote><p> I believe in Max Ernst, Delvaux, Dali, Titian, Goya, Leonardo, Vermeer, Chirico, Magritte, Redon, Duerer, Tanguy, the Facteur Cheval, the Watts Towers, Boecklin, Francis Bacon, and all the invisible artists within the psychiatric institutions of the planet.</p></blockquote>
<p>This is one of my favourite autopsy rooms. It begins with a short quote from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-miracles-of-life">Miracles of Life</a> printed just inches from the floor on a black wall: &#8220;At the age of 16, I discovered Freud and the surrealists, a stick of bombs that fell in front of me and destroyed all the bridges I was hesitating to cross.&#8221;</p>
<p>This room contains just three exhibits, but powerful ones they are: a photo of JG in his home at Shepperton in front of his Delvaux painting, a new version of the painting specially done for this show by Brigid Marlin (it&#8217;s dated 2008), and the <em>piece de resistance</em>, an incredible surreal image generator! As the CCCB press release says: &#8220;His writings not only recreates many of the visions of Surrealism, it also reproduces some of its aesthetic strategies – superimpositions, mirroring, false perspectives, mutations – in order to explain the profound structure of the real.&#8221;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_surreal2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: From the surreal image &#8220;machine&#8221;.</em></p>
<p>These strategies are all visualised in this very clever display: ten or so sheets of thin, white muslin cloth have been suspended from the ceiling, approximate three feet apart. At each end a projector illuminates a slowly changing series of images from famous surrealist paintings onto the cloth. Walking back and forth and up and down between the sheets reveals an endlessly-changing collage of images from the likes of Dali, Ernst and Delvaux, spinning endlessly thru impositions and mutations. I spent a lot of time in this room. You will, too.</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #4: Inner Space</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_jgbgreen.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Pixelated Ballard.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in madness, in the truth of the inexplicable, in the common sense of stones, in the lunacy of flowers, in the disease stored up for the human race by the Apollo astronauts.</p></blockquote>
<p>Now we&#8217;re moving into more familiar territory – this section deals with the ramifications of JG&#8217;s 1962 New Worlds editorial, &#8220;Which Way To Inner Space?&#8221; Visitors are treated to wall-projected vids of JG&#8217;s <a href=" http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=9D3FED5975ED8EF2">favourite SF movies</a> (Alien, Alphaville, Barbarella, Close Encounters, Dark Star, Dr Strangelove, Forbidden Planet, Silent Running, The Man Who Fell To Earth, and The Road Warrior) and opposite these imaginary images we move to the real with vids from Cape Canaveral space program projected upon the opposite wall – but in reverse… then you note the large central display case is mirrored and the visuals magically right themselves.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_bananas.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: From Rick&#8217;s JGB collection.</em></p>
<p>In this display case are souvenirs of JG&#8217;s 1969 trip to Rio for the International Festival of Cinema, and, oh look – some items from <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html">my collection</a> have made an appearance: early SF pulps from the 1950s, various magazines, such as Interzone, and literary newspapers such as Bananas. The only thing here I had not seen is <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-the-corridor-interview">a rather Hollywood-inspired photo of JG</a>, looking young, round-cheeked and rather smug in his pressed white shirt and cool shades.</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #5: Disaster Area</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_sandcar.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Drought car in sand.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in my own obsessions, in the beauty of the car crash, in the peace of the submerged forest, in the excitements of the deserted holiday beach, in the elegance of automobile graveyards, in the mystery of multi-storey car parks, in the poetry of abandoned hotels.</p></blockquote>
<p>This exhibit begins with a series of small exhibits of clever homages to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind from Nowhere</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">The Crystal World</a>, and leads ultimately to one of the exhibition&#8217;s strongest images: a huge room filled with sand, out of which protrudes the top of a sun- and rust-ravaged car. The effect is enhanced with off-centre lighting, and this startling image of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-burning-world">The Drought</a>  is one you&#8217;ll remember, and think about, long after you leave.</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #6: Technology and Pornography</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_crone.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Cronenberg&#8217;s Crash.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in the gentleness of the surgeon&#8217;s knife, in the limitless geometry of the cinema screen, in the hidden universe within supermarkets, in the loneliness of the sun, in the garrulousness of planets, in the repetitiveness or ourselves, in the inexistence of the universe and the boredom of the atom.</p></blockquote>
<p>Now we move into another of my fave pieces of the dismembered millennium… very cleverly organized with each mini-exhibit separated by the white sheets of medical privacy screens. The original use of the building as a hospital is reflected in the ancient arches overhead, and the visuals are pumped up with the addition of a heartbeat-like bass drum slowly thumping in the background. Half of this exhibit is literary, with displays of JG&#8217;s &#8220;Advertiser&#8217;s Announcements&#8221;, a copy of the <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/jgbatrocity.html">Doubleday Atrocity Exhibition</a>, a facsimile of the &#8220;Why I Want To Fuck Ronald Reagan&#8221; handout distributed at the Republican Convention, copies of the Warren Commission Report and the book of car crash injuries (which I must get).</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_ricknovel.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Rick in front of the &#8216;Project for a New Novel&#8217; (photo: Joanne Murray).</em></p>
<p>The most fascinating object in this section is the original two-page spreads JG made in 1958 or 1959 which he called <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballards-experiment-in-chemical-living ">&#8220;Project for a New Novel&#8221;</a>. JG gave it to <a href="http://www.ambitmagazine.co.uk">Ambit</a> editor Dr Martin Bax, who had it framed in two sections, and as far as I know this is the very first time the complete piece has been shown outside the Bax home. As you know, parts of it have been reprinted by <a href="http://www.researchpubs.com">RE/Search and </a><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Worlds_(magazine)">New Worlds</a>, but this is the only time all of it has been made available for public viewing. Interestingly enough, they have the pieces in the wrong order.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_visualwall2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The big visual wall display.</em></p>
<p>The rest is video, with each examination room showing excerpts from <a href="http://www.cronenbergcrash.com">Cronenberg&#8217;s Crash</a><a>, a fragment of Jonathan Weiss&#8217;s </a><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/weiss-interview">movie of The Atrocity Exhibition</a>, with real footage of victims of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, and finally, a huge room showing multi-vids on two walls, with all reflected on a third wall. The effect is startling and cumulative, and on both times I visited both the press &#038; VIPs just stood there, captured by the strength and variety and perversity of the visuals…</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #7: Asepsis and Neobarbarism</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_bluewall2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Infinity drenched in blue.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in flight, in the beauty of the wing, and in the beauty of everything that has ever flown, in the stone thrown by a small child that carries with it the wisdom of statesmen and midwives.</p></blockquote>
<p>Here the exhibition features the realist phase of JG&#8217;s  writings, starting with <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-running-wild">Running Wild</a> and ending with Kingdom Come. The visuals are split into two – the main effect created by a long corridor, mirrored on one side and at both ends, with the symmetry punctuated by overhead text generators which feature copy from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-millennium-people">Millennium People</a>. On the unmirrored wall are four TV screens, set at child-height level, and they display a series of looping visuals, such as adverts for gated communities in Dubai, and Disney&#8217;s fake town of Celebration, Florida. The whole thing is drenched in a dark blue light, and the mirrors reflect all to infinity in both directions. Very cool.</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #8: The Ballard Library</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_books.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: From my JGB collection.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in the death of the emotions and the triumph of the imagination.</p></blockquote>
<p>OK, here&#8217;s where the <a href=" http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html">bulk of the books</a> the CCCB borrowed from me reside, so I won&#8217;t go on at length. Suffice perhaps to say this is the first time they&#8217;ve been out in public, and I hope they behave themselves. As well as these excerpts from my collection, this area features a series of computer monitors that allows visitors to replay all the videos shown in the prior exhibits, and three tables contain softcover editions of JG&#8217;s work which have been translated into Spanish and Catalan. The public is encouraged to pick up and read a little JG for themselves. Good idea. This section also contains filmmaker Solveig Nordlund&#8217;s very important interview with JG – &#8220;Encontro con o escritor JG Ballard&#8221; – and whoa, let&#8217;s not leave you out, Simon, as this is where your outstanding, exhaustive and brilliantly commented selection of Ballardian music can be heard. Great job!</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_wylie.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Donovan Wylie&#8217;s photography.</em></p>
<p>The end wall contains a fascinating series of photographs taken in 2006 by Donovan Wylie, which were never published, and they reveal JG at home at approximately the same time he received his unfortunate diagnosis. The final part of this particular autopsy report is the staggeringly honest &#8220;Answers Given by Patient JGB to the Eyckman Personality Quotient Test&#8221;, from Sam Scoggin&#8217;s film <a href=" http://www.ballardian.com/sam-scoggins-unlimited-dream-company">The Unlimited Dream Company</a>. In it JG quickly and steadfastly answers &#8220;yes&#8221; or &#8220;no&#8221; to a series of rapidfire questions while the camera slowly zooms in on his face, finally settling on an extreme closeup of his left eye. Sixty minute zoom, indeed. This video was very popular, and continually elicited grunts, titters and the odd chittering from its always-large audience.</p>
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<p><strong>AUTOPSY #9: Ballardian Art</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_lord.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Michelle Lord with her Ballard-inspired art.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>I believe in nothing.</p></blockquote>
<p>The Exhibition ends, fittingly, with four rooms of art influenced by Ballard and the concept of &#8220;Ballardian&#8221;. We&#8217;re first treated to a wall of unsettling and disturbing photos by <a href=" http://www.researchpubs.com/features/anafeat.php">Ana Barrado</a>, she of RE/Search publications fame, then a captivating video of sunlight changing the perspectives of two rooms by <a href=" http://www.lislegaard.com">Ann Lislegaard</a>, photos of Michelle Lord&#8217;s <a href=" http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins ">miniature models of stacked cars, TV sets, and washing machines</a>…</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cccb_bonsall.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Autopsy of the New Millennium" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Mike Bonsall&#8217;s Ballardian home movie.</em></p>
<p>&#8230;and finally, Simon, the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-festival-the-final-cut">Ballardian cellphone home videos</a> you commissioned last year, cleverly set up so you watch them on a cellphone.</p>
<p>And that, <em>amigo</em>, is the Exhibition. All in all, around 90,000 square feet of Ballardian bounty. We leave the same way as we arrived, by taking a long escalator ride back to the main floor, reminding me in a curious way that we have traveled &#8220;up&#8221; into the realm of the unbridled imagination, and are now returning &#8220;down&#8221; to the reality of convention and habit.</p>
<p>You can keep the surgical mask as a souvenir.</p>
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<p><strong>THE MEDICAL TEAM</strong></p>
<p>This is an excellent, thought-provoking, informative exhibition, Simon, and one I&#8217;m sure which would have pleased JG had he been well enough to attend. Can you give it greater praise? Yes, those responsible should be dragged out and severely congratulated:</p>
<p><strong>Jordi Costa: The Curator.</strong><br />
Hip, intense, knowledable, and an accomplished writer himself, Jordi&#8217;s vision and leadership has created the first, and most impressive overview of JGB, his work and influence. Super job, Jordi!</p>
<p><strong>Marcial Souto: The Advisor.</strong><br />
Marcial has translated 10 of JG’s novels and short story collections, plus many other classic SF, outsider and popular writers. He’s an extremely pleasant and knowledgeable man, and is so interesting I’m going to interview him for you later.</p>
<p><strong>Miquel Nogués: The Coordinator.</strong><br />
He&#8217;s the man who tracked down and organized all the various elements of the Exhibition, including the original flats for &#8220;Project For A New Novel&#8221; from Dr Martin Bax, the news Delvaux painting by Brigid Marlin, all the photographs and videos, and more. Basically, he&#8217;s responsible for the body that has been autopsied.</p>
<p><strong>Dani Freixes &#038; Pep Angli: The Designers &#038; Assemblers.</strong><br />
These two gentlemen are responsible for the show&#8217;s brilliant visual appeal, the use of colour and music and light. It&#8217;s a retinal circus, and they deserve lots of credit.</p>
<p><strong>Mariona Garcia: The Designer.</strong><br />
With the assistance of Anaïs Esmerado, she developed the textual look of the show, relying on understated, clean fonts and all the show&#8217;s peripheral print, such as the catalogue, posters and handouts.</p>
<p><strong>Cristina Giribets: The A/V.</strong><br />
She is responsible for all the exhibition&#8217;s marvelous audio-visual work, and, it should also be noted that the Large Wall of compelling images found in the Technology and Pornography exhibit was created by Andres Hispano and La Chula Productions. Good eye, everyone!</p>
<p>All in all, a most excellent adventure into the mind of JGB… thank you, doctors, for all your hard work.</p>
<p>And that, Simon, is just about it.</p>
<p>From Barcelona, <em>adios!</em></p>
<p>&#8211; Rick.</p>
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<p><em>Rick McGrath 2008.</em></p>
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<p><em>All quotes excerpted from &#8216;What I Believe&#8217; by JG Ballard. All photography by Rick McGrath, except where noted.</em></p>
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<p><strong>&#8230;:: FURTHER INFO:</strong></p>
<p><strong>+</strong> <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/rick_mcgrath/collections/72157606428935539">More exhibition photography from Rick McGrath</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.cccb.org/en/exposicio?idg=16452">J.G. Ballard, Autopsy of the New Millennium</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.cccb.org/kosmopolis/en/edicio_tema?idg=22337&#038;t=24422">Ballard at Kosmopolis</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.cccb.org/blogballard">Official exhibition blog</a></p>
<p><strong>&#8230;:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong></p>
<p><strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballardoscope-writer-as-visionary">Ballardoscope: some attempts at approaching the writer as a visionary</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-in-the-raw">J.G. Ballard: In the Raw</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/autopsy-of-the-new-millennium-jgb-exhibition-opens-tomorrow-in-barcelona">JGB exhibition opens tomorrow in Barcelona</a></p>
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		<title>Ballardcraft: Ballard/Lovecraft</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardcraft-ballardlovecraft</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardcraft-ballardlovecraft#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jul 2008 13:39:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[H.P. Lovecraft]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pacific]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Savoy Books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[horror]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=755</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What is the connection between J.G. Ballard and H.P. Lovecraft? Artist John Coulthart is well placed to offer some insight into what he terms 'superficial style at the service of a unique imagination'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/back_cthulhu.jpg" alt="Ballardian: H.P. Lovecraft" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Back cover from <a href="http://www.johncoulthart.com/haunter/haunter.html">The Haunter of the Dark and Other Grotesque Visions</a>, John Coulthart&#8217;s book of Lovecraft adaptations.</em></p>
<p>I have been curious about Lovecraft for some time. When I was younger I saw the film of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089885">Reanimator</a>. When I was a little older, I got beaten up by headbangers who loved Metallica&#8217;s &#8216;The Call of Ktulu&#8217; and were offended that I, as a card-carrying punk, only knew of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_of_Puppets">Master of Puppets</a>, a crossover fave with chaospunks but the liking of which was seen as a symbol of a tryhard bandwagon jumper according to them. Later, when I was a travel writer, I visited on assignment the Pohnpei island group in Micronesia, which includes <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nan_Madol">the ruins of Nan Madol</a>, inspiration for some of the setting of the Cthulhu Mythos. And now, during my tenure as curator of ballardian.com, I have been most intrigued by the re-modulation of the Lovecraft frequency on my radar, calibrated via the online acquaintances I&#8217;ve made through the site.</p>
<p>But how exactly does Lovecraft speak to Ballard aficionados? Don&#8217;t the two writers in fact speak to separate audiences? Could you really imagine an Alcoholica fan banging their head to Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> while listening to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ride_the_Lightning">Ride the Lightning</a>? In fact there appears to have been a certain critical tradition of sorts that equates some aspects of Lovecraft&#8217;s work with some aspects of Ballard&#8217;s. As far back as 1959, Ballard&#8217;s story &#8216;The Waiting Grounds&#8217; was introduced by Ted Carnell in New Worlds like so:</p>
<blockquote><p>Not for a long time have readers seen a story quite like this one. Those with extensive collections or good memories will remember the impact H.P. Lovecraft made in the middle 30s with his all-too-few science fiction stories, particularly &#8216;At the Mountains of Madness.&#8217; Undoubtedly author Ballard has a touch of that same genius which eventually made Lovecraft great.</p></blockquote>
<p>And in 1994, Ballard&#8217;s 1965 short &#8216;Prisoner of the Coral Deep&#8217; even appeared in a Lovecraft tribute volume, The Starry Wisdom: A Tribute to H. P. Lovecraft, edited by D.M. Mitchell, although, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cthulhu_Mythos_anthology">as wiki notes</a>, &#8216;Some of the stories in the collection &#8212; notably those by Burroughs and Ballard &#8212; were not inspired by Lovecraft, but were seen by Mitchell as sharing his &#8220;visions of cosmic alienation&#8221;.&#8217;</p>
<p>More recently, I have noted that k-punk (Mark Fisher) and Ben Noys, both Ballard scholars and also  <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/crimes-of-the-near-future-baudrillard-ballard">past contributors</a> to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/fantasy-kits-steven-meisels-state-of-emergency">this site</a>, were involved in the conference <a href="http://k-punk.abstractdynamics.org/archives/009048.html">&#8216;Weird Realism: Lovecraft and Theory&#8217;</a> in April 2007. Cousin Silas, whom <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard">I interviewed in 2007</a>, told me that his music is inspired by both Ballard and Lovecraft. And at <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/if-i-had-a-pound-jg-ballard-conference">the Ballard conference in Norwich</a> in May 2007, Mark Williams gave a paper on Ballard and <em>New Worlds</em> that contained, as I noted at the time, &#8216;a surprising diversion into Lovecraft territory&#8217;.</p>
<p>In fact, Noys, over at his excellent new blog, No Useless Leniency, <a href="http://leniency.blogspot.com/2008/06/lovecraft-part-2.html">goes some way</a> to explaining why Ballard, a writer not primarily known for horror or Gothic fiction, is so frequently aligned with Lovecraft:</p>
<blockquote><p>In the formation of “reactionary novelties” (Badiou) Lovecraft can be aligned with those forms of “High Modernism,” such as T. S. Eliot’s, that constituted themselves, in Peter Nicholls words, as “an attack on modernity” (251). The difficulty, in terms of Badiou’s evental tracings, is how Lovecraft’s “novelty” is something artistically “new” while at the same time “politically” reactionary (and reactionary against other artistic innovations); it suggests the intersection or imbrication of events: in this case art, science, politics.</p>
<p>His reaction against these currents of the new produces a “reactionary novelty,” but actually also a true novelty of disruption that exceeds its primary evental site – Gothic fiction; this may be why that it only outside of the Gothic that we find Lovecraft’s true disciples: William Burroughs, J. G. Ballard, and Michel Houellebecq, artists like H. R. Giger and John Coulthart, and muscians like The Fall and Patti Smith. The Lovecraft event therefore problematises Badiou’s formulation of the artistic event by being a reactionary event that produces something new.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cover_cthulhu.jpg" alt="Ballardian: H.P. Lovecraft" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Front cover illustration for <a href="http://www.johncoulthart.com/haunter/haunter.html">The Haunter of the Dark and Other Grotesque Visions</a>, John Coulthart&#8217;s book of Lovecraft adaptations.</em></p>
<p>Wanting to know more, I was inspired to approach <a href="http://www.johncoulthart.com">John Coulthart</a> himself, a contributor to the aforementioned Lovecraft tribute volume and the foremost visual interpreter of Lovecraft&#8217;s work today. Coulthart is an operative of <a href="http://www.savoy.abel.co.uk">Savoy Books</a>, and as such, given the Savoy trajectory, is well placed to comment on Ballard&#8217;s work, too.</p>
<p>Given that John&#8217;s art is included in <a href="http://www.johncoulthart.com/feuilleton/2008/06/28/the-monstrous-tome/">A Lovecraft Retrospective: Artists Inspired by HP Lovecraft</a>, the mighty volume that has just been released, the timing could not in fact be better to ask him for his own take on the Ballardcraft crossover:</p>
<blockquote><p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/coulthart_atrocity.jpg" alt="Ballardian: H.P. Lovecraft" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;The Atrocity Exhibition&#8217; (1984), by John Coulthart.</em></p>
<p><strong>JOHN COULTHART:</strong> One of the earliest works of mine I can stand to see displayed in public is my drawing from 1984 intended to accompany the story (as opposed to the book) of The Atrocity Exhibition. It was going to be part of a series of drawings illustrating each chapter of The Atrocity Exhibition collection with each picture joining to the next to form a single long work. I completed the second one, The University of Death, then ran out of steam, and the whole idea was completely negated by the superior RE/Search edition of TAE, and then dropped in favour of my starting work on the Lovecraft stuff.</p>
<p>There are some vague parallels between the two writers: both are very imitable writers in terms of superficial style yet that style is at the service of a unique imagination. Both have a very identifiable inner landscape (to borrow a Ballard phrase), sufficiently notable to give us the terms Ballardian and Lovecraftian. Both transcend the genres they started out in; HPL moved from horror to a kind of visionary sf more concerned with conveying the sublime feeling of the vastness of space and time than generating a horror thrill. And both have their own readily identifiable mythology, of course. It irks me the way Lovecraft&#8217;s mythology, at least where Cthulhu is concerned, has been rendered cuddly by Americans. Have you noticed how they do this with everything, putting monsters on cereal packets and kids&#8217; TV? I keep telling people that Hannibal Lecter (and the inferior Jigsaw from the Saw films) will be next to be absorbed by this process. Hannibal is already on his way after the last book and film.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/haunter_of_the_dark.jpg" alt="Ballardian: H.P. Lovecraft" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Haunter of the Dark&#8217; from <a href="http://www.johncoulthart.com/haunter/haunter.html">The Haunter of the Dark and other Grotesque Visions</a>, John Coulthart&#8217;s book of Lovecraft adaptations.</em></p>
<p>There are a couple of other parallels although the trouble with these discussions is that you can stretch the comparison too far and then it breaks. However&#8230;. HPL was the first writer to move the content of horror stories away from the Gothic with its ghosts and vampires into the 20th century. I&#8217;ve noted elsewhere how he was grasping (albeit in a pulp fashion) after an articulation of horror that parallels some of Kafka&#8217;s writing; the concerns are with the point at which our existence in three-dimensional space becomes disturbing and threatening, a fear of unusual angles and paranoia inflated to a cosmic scale. He&#8217;s known generally as an inventor of a pantheon of monsters but its that reinvention of the medium which makes him important. As Ballard did with sf, he found a way to take the tools of a popular genre and use them to say something new about our  perception of the world. And like Ballard, eventually the genre trappings lost their interest. Lovecraft&#8217;s later work has little overt horror content, it&#8217;s more a kind of sublime sf with a vague horror atmosphere; At the Mountains of Madness and The Shadow Out of Time were both published in Astounding magazine after Weird Tales rejected them for not being scary enough.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/coulthart_university.jpg" alt="Ballardian: H.P. Lovecraft" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;The University of Death&#8217; (1984) by John Coulthart.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>So there you have it &#8212; thanks John. Some of these comments back up what Ben Noys wrote about Lovecraft&#8217;s &#8216;true novelty of disruption that exceeds its primary evental site – Gothic fiction&#8217;, and all of it helps me to understand a little better for I am very far from a Lovecraft expert.</p>
<p>To end, I&#8217;ll leave you with a quote from Ballard himself, probed in 1991 by Paul Di Filippo (on the ball as always):</p>
<blockquote><p>PAUL DI FILIPPO: Could I get your reaction to the rather bizarre assertion that your work bears secret affinities to that of the cult horror writer, H. P. Lovecraft, with its emphasis on &#8220;alien geometries,&#8221; &#8220;the outsider,&#8221; and landscapes as symbols of mental states?  </p>
<p>J.G. BALLARD: I&#8217;ve never read him, but there may well be correspondences.</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/science_fiction_eye_1991.html">&#8216;Ballard&#8217;s Anatomy: An Interview by Paul Di Filippo&#8217;</a>, SF Eye, 1991.</em></p></blockquote>
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		<title>Surreal Urban Worlds</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/surreal-urban-worlds</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/surreal-urban-worlds#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 15:51:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=809</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[London film screening featuring 'futuristic visions of London' and 'surreal urban worlds'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/london_after_rain.jpg" alt="Ballardian: London After the Rain" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: London After the Rain. Image via BLDGBLOG.</em></p>
<p>News <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/cinema-city.html">from BLDGBLOG</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p><a href="http://www.onedotzero.com/home.php">onedotzero</a> is hosting a <a href="http://www.onedotzero.com/event.php?id=31177">film event</a> this Saturday in London, promising &#8220;futuristic visions of London&#8221; and &#8220;surreal urban worlds.&#8221; Screenings will include Ben Marzys&#8217;s short film London After the Rain, produced for Nic Clear&#8217;s <a href="http://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/programmes/units/unit15.htm">Unit 15</a> at The Bartlett. The event costs £8.60, and things kick off around 8:45pm at Southbank.</p></blockquote>
<p>From Unit 15&#8217;s brief:</p>
<blockquote><p>J G Ballard is one of the most original and distinctive authors of the last part of the C20th, and beginning of the C21st. His writing has encompassed topics as diverse as ecological crisis to technological fetishism and augmentation, and from urban ruination to suburban mob culture, and he has pursued these topics with a wit and inventiveness that is without comparison.</p>
<p>His understanding of architecture, and architects, and his prophetic visions make Ballard one of the most important figures in the literary articulation of architectural issues and concerns.From the description of futuristic houses that empathise with their inhabitants, to the bleak characterisation of gated communities consumed by sex, drugs and violence, Ballard’s world is highly prescient and ruthlessly unsentimental. Rather than examining specific texts, Unit 15 will be following themes implicit in Ballard’s writing.</p>
<p>Unit 15 will also be examining filmic interpretations of his writing, particularly David Cronenburg’s ‘Crash’ and Jonathan Weiss’s ‘The Atrocity Exhibition’, and to a lesser extent Steven Spielberg’s ‘Empire Of The Sun’, we shall also be looking at films inspired by Ballard’s work especially Iain Sinclair’s ‘London Orbital’. In short we shall be examining all aspects of culture that can be considered ‘BALLARDIAN’.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>..:: <em>Previously on Ballardian</em>:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/architectures-of-the-near-future">Architectures of the Near Future</a></p>
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		<title>Flooded London</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/flooded-london</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/flooded-london#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Jun 2008 11:33:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deep time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban ruins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visual art]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=801</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Film and media studio floods London 82 years hence, evokes Ballard.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/flooded_london_houses.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Flooded London" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Flooded London, by Squint/Opera.</em></p>
<p>You don&#8217;t need me to tell you what these images evoke&#8230;</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Do you know where we are?&#8217; he asked after a pause. &#8216;The name of this city?&#8217; When Kerans shook his head he said: &#8216;Part of it used to be called London; not that it matters&#8230;&#8217;</p>
<p>The bulk of the city had long since vanished, and only the steel-supported buildings of the central commercial and financial areas had survived the encroaching flood waters. The brick houses and single-storey factories of the suburbs had disappeared completely below the drifting tides of silt. Where these broke surface giant forests reared up into the burning dull-green sky, smothering the former wheatfields of temperate Europe and North America. Impenetrable Mato Grossos sometimes three hundred feet high, they were a nightmare world of competing organic forms returning rapidly to their Paleozoic past, and the only avenues of transit for the United Nations military units were through the lagoon systems that had superimposed themselves on the former cities. But even these were now being clogged with silt and then submerged.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a>, 1962</em>.</p></blockquote>
<p>Via <a href="http://www.dezeen.com/2008/06/18/flooded-london-by-squintopera">De Zeen</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Film and media studio <a href="http://www.squintopera.com">Squint/Opera</a> has created a series of images depicting imaginary scenes in London in 2090, when rising sea levels have inundated the city. The Flooded London series depicts the city as a “tranquil utopia”. Five images will be on show at <a href="http://www.medcalfbar.co.uk">Medcalf Gallery</a> in Clerkenwell, London from 20 June for a month, during the <a href="http://www.lfa2008.org">London Festival of Architecture</a>. Exhibition details are <a href="http://www.lfa2008.org/event.php?id=32&#038;name=Flooded+London">on the festival website</a>.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/flooded_london_st_pauls.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Flooded London" /></p>
<blockquote><p>His name still echoed faintly in his ears as they began their search of the building. He took up his position at the stairwell at the centre of each corridor while Riggs and Macready inspected the apartments, keeping a look-out as they climbed the floors. The building had been gutted. All the floorboards had rotted or been ripped out, and they moved slowly along the tiled inlays, stepping warily from one concrete tie-beam to another.</p>
<p>Most of the plaster had slipped from the walls and lay in grey heaps along the skirting boards. Wherever sunlight filtered through, the bare laths were intertwined with creeper and wire-moss, and the original fabric of the building seemed solely supported by the profusion of vegetation ramifying through every room and corridor.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a>, 1962</em>.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/flooded_london_fish.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Flooded London" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Only a few feet from the surface, they drew closer, emerging from the depths like an immense intact Atlantis. First a dozen, then a score of buildings appeared to view, their cornices and fire-escapes clearly visible through the thinning refracting glass of the water. Most of them were only four or five storeys high, part of a district of small shops and offices enclosed by the taller buildings that had formed the perimeter of the lagoon.</p>
<p>Fifty yards away the first of the roofs broke surface, a blunted rectangle smothered with weeds and algae, across which slithered a few desperate fish. Immediately half a dozen others appeared around it, already roughly delineating a narrow street.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a>, 1962</em>.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Jean Seberg, part 2</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/jean-seberg-part-2</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/jean-seberg-part-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jun 2008 10:52:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=799</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[More on Jean Seberg and The Crystal World, including the appearance of another well-known cultural personage.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I know we&#8217;re supposed to be all blase and post-ironic about the internet these days, but still I retain the capacity to be knocked sideways by the blinding pace and reach of the info dump. What was that Virilio said about the apocalyptic speed of information technology forcing a bleeding of time? Oh, yes: &#8216;As time changes, it is speed that changes gear and history that changes camp, finally attaining <em>a speed limit that cannot be exceeded.&#8217;</em></p>
<p>Ballard, too, is in on this, but from the reverse perspective&#8230; &#8216;Once we get away from our sense of serial time into, say, some more complex notion of time &#8212; time perceived as a simultaneity &#8212; we are beginning to reach the threshold of a larger mental consciousness of the kind that&#8217;s perceived by mystics&#8230;&#8217;</p>
<p>Well, earlier today, no sooner had <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/all-about-stars-and-time">I posted</a> David Pringle&#8217;s snippet about Jean Seberg and The Crystal World, than none other than Jonathan Rosenbaum himself, the catalyst for this obscure slice of Ballardiana, immediately stopped by to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/all-about-stars-and-time#comment-98105">leave a comment</a>. This was in answer to David&#8217;s query about the identity of Jonathan&#8217;s &#8216;friend of mine who was a friend of Seberg&#8217;s&#8217;:</p>
<blockquote><p>The friend of mine who was a friend of Seberg&#8217;s is/was Edith Cottrell. She still lives in Paris, and works, I believe, as an agent. I haven&#8217;t seen her in years, but through another friend we exchanged emails several month ago.</p></blockquote>
<p>Intrigued, I Googled &#8216;Edith Cottrell&#8217; and &#8216;JG Ballard&#8217; and came across the following on Jonathan&#8217;s <a href="http://www.synoptique.ca/core/en/articles/rosenbaum">personal website</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>It was &#8230; at the Cannes festival in the early 70s that I told Susan [Sontag] about the screenplay I&#8217;d been commissioned to write adapting J.G. Ballard&#8217;s The Crystal World for a fledgling producer, Edith Cottrell, who owned the rights and was hoping to find someone interested in directing it. &#8220;I&#8217;m interested,&#8221; Susan declared, and back in Paris I wound up spending an afternoon with her in her garage flat behind Nicole Stéphane&#8217;s house, engaged in what I suppose could be called a script conference. She wasn&#8217;t too enthused about what I&#8217;d written so far, but insofar as I&#8217;d been interested in the script mainly as a way of paying my 