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	<title>Ballardian &#187; architecture</title>
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	<link>http://www.ballardian.com</link>
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		<title>Affirmative architectural dystopias</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/affirmative-architectural-dystopias</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/affirmative-architectural-dystopias#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Aug 2010 11:44:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=2890</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Next week, I’ll be speaking on 'affirmative architectural dystopias' at Monash University's conference Changing the Climate: Utopia, Dystopia and Catastrophe. I'm on a panel representing Pia Ednie-Brown’s Plastic Futures project at the Spatial Information Architecture Laboratory, RMIT University. My paper is centred around the theories of François Roche, Greg Lynn and Ballard, but it also considers the work of Nic Clear, Archigram, Bruce Sterling, Geoff Manaugh and Marion Shoard.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/utopias_cover_small.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>Next week, I&#8217;ll be speaking at Monash University&#8217;s conference <a href="http://arts.monash.edu.au/ecps/conferences/utopias">Changing the Climate: Utopia, Dystopia and Catastrophe</a>. I&#8217;m also helping to organise the event with <a href="http://arts.monash.edu.au/ecps/people/andrew-milner">Andrew Milner</a>, and I&#8217;m looking forward to meeting our esteemed guests, among them <a href="http://kimstanleyrobinson.info">Kim Stanley Robinson</a>, whose Red Mars I have been re-reading and enjoying all over again. My paper is on Wednesday, 1 September, part of a panel representing Pia Ednie-Brown&#8217;s <a href="http://liveness.org/plasticfutures">Plastic Futures</a> project at the <a href="http://www.sial.rmit.edu.au">Spatial Information Architecture Laboratory</a>, RMIT University. The panel consists of Pia, myself and another SIAL/Plastic Futures colleague, Andy Miller.</p>
<p>My abstract is below. The title references <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/heres-to-the-borderzone-life-after-the-phd">my PhD subtitle from 2008</a>, &#8216;J.G. Ballard&#8217;s affirmative dystopias&#8217;, and alongside <a href="http://www.new-territories.com">François Roche</a>, <a href="http://www.glform.com">Greg Lynn</a> and Ballard, I will touch upon the work of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear-interview">Nic Clear</a>, <a href="http://archigram.westminster.ac.uk">Archigram</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Sterling">Bruce Sterling</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/politics-of-enthusiasm-geoff-manaugh-interview">Geoff Manaugh</a> and <a href="http://www.marionshoard.co.uk">Marion Shoard</a>. </p>
<p>If you&#8217;re in Melbourne next week, please come along. Registration details are available <a href="http://arts.monash.edu.au/ecps/conferences/utopias/#registration">here</a>, and the full program is <a href="http://arts.monash.edu.au/ecps/conferences/utopias/#program">here</a>. To whet your appetite, read Manaugh&#8217;s <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2007/12/comparative-planetology-interview-with.html">excellent interview with Robinson</a>, which anticipates the key themes of the conference.</p>
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<p><em>Simon Sellars: ‘Affirmative architectural dystopias: experimental relations between humans and the built environment’</em></p>
<p>In a time of environmental concern, architecture is dominated by the mantra of sustainability. This is the ‘new high priest of moralism’ according to François Roche, a ‘green wash’ cordoning off nature as a sterile theme park. But can alternative solutions be found within the archetypal dystopia, within the fraught intertwining of the human and natural worlds that negatively generates the utopian rhetoric of sustainability? In this paper, I explore recent architectural practice that explicitly deploys science fiction, utopia and dystopia to investigate experimental relationships between humans, the built environment and the natural world. Juxtaposing the SF texts of architects including Greg Lynn and Roche with the work of novelist J.G. Ballard, an influence on many practitioners within this new discourse, I consider the suggestion that the movement towards the ‘dystopian’ in these texts can perhaps be simply read as ‘embracing change’, a new relationship that generates a new outcome: ‘affirmative architectural dystopias’.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Ballardian Architecture: Inner and Outer Space</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-architecture-inner-outer-space</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-architecture-inner-outer-space#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Aug 2010 01:44:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ballardian</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Guy Debord]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[W.G. Sebald]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[brutalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[modernism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[spectacle]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=2868</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Via Static TV, film of discussions at the Ballardian Architecture: Inner and Outer Space symposium, Royal Academy of Arts. The event was chaired by Jeremy Melvin and speakers included John Gray, Nic Clear, David Cunningham, Nigel Coates, Matthew Taunton, Chris Hall, Joanne Murray, Dan Holdsworth, Tim Abrahams and Claire Walsh.]]></description>
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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>
<p><em>Modelling and photography by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-office-park">Nicholas Cobb</a>.</em></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>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a>.</p></blockquote>
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<p>Recently, London&#8217;s Royal Academy of Arts hosted the symposium <a href="http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/events/workshops/ballardian-architecture-inner-and-outer-space,1107,EV.html">Ballardian Architecture: Inner and Outer Space</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Acclaimed writer JG Ballard derived inspiration from aspects of the built environment that architectural convention and critics tend to overlook. His novels offer many insights into the flaws and consequences of the shopping centres, car parks, hotels, office towers and housing projects that make up so much of contemporary architectural endeavour. This forum traces several themes in Ballard’s literary analysis of the contemporary built environment, including the concept of spectacle and role of the media in contemporary society, and how “invisible literatures” such as scientific journals, technical manuals, pornography, advertising copy can be seen as a literary counterpart to pop art and the “brutalist” aesthetic of modernity.</p>
<p>Three longer papers are followed by a series of brief but powerful commentaries which each open up particular insights into Ballard’s work, and together explore how Ballard’s perceptions may challenge and inform contemporary architecture. </p></blockquote>
<p>Film has now been posted online of each discussion, and we have reproduced the presentations below. You can also <a href="http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/architecture/ballard-architecture-inner-and-outer-space-audio,1248,AR.html">download mp3s</a> of the talks.</p>
<p>The event was chaired by <a href="http://www.allenandunwin.com/default.aspx?page=94&#038;book=9780713674743">Jeremy Melvin</a>. Speakers included John Gray, Nic Clear, David Cunningham, Nigel Coates, Matthew Taunton, Chris Hall, Joanne Murray, Dan Holdsworth, Tim Abrahams and Claire Walsh. Thank you to <a href="http://statictv.wordpress.com/2010/08/16/ballardian-architecture-inner-and-outer-space/">Static TV</a> for supplying the footage.</p>
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<p>..::: <strong>Previously on ballardian.com:</strong></p>
<p>+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/re-placing-the-novel-sinclair-ballard">Re-Placing the Novel: Sinclair, Ballard and the Spaces of Literature</a>, by David Cunningham<br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/a-near-future-nic-clears-tribute-to-jg-ballard">A Near Future: Nic Clear’s Tribute to JG Ballard</a><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/stereoscopic-urbanism-jg-ballard-and-the-built-environment">Stereoscopic Urbanism: JG Ballard and the Built Environment</a><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear-interview">&#8216;Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;: An Interview with Nic Clear</a><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/because-were-fucked-skinner-vs-gray">&#8216;Because we&#8217;re fucked&#8217;: Skinner vs Gray</a></p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 1: John Gray</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13429682&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13429682&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13429682">Ballardian Architecture 1 &#8211; John Gray</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.abc.net.au/rn/philosopherszone/stories/2008/2284016.htm">John Gray</a>, author and philosopher, identifies correspondences between Ballard&#8217;s work and Guy Debord&#8217;s notion of the spectacle, discussing certain ramifications for contemporary economic and social phenomena.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 2: Nic Clear</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13481278&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13481278&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13481278">Ballardian Architecture 2 &#8211; Nic Clear</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/programmes/units/unit15.htm">Nic Clear</a>, architect and lecturer at the Bartlett School of Architecture, delivers a paper entitled ‘J.G. Ballard is an Enemy of the Architectural Profession’.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 3: David Cunningham</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13486156&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13486156&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13486156">Ballardian Architecture 3 &#8211; David Cunningham</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.westminster.ac.uk/schools/humanities/english,-linguistics-and-cultural-studies/people/english-literature/david-cunningham">David Cunningham</a>, University of Westminster, examines architectural aspects of Ballard’s prose, exploring corresponding tendencies in the writings of Iain Sinclair and W.G. Sebald.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 4: Session 1 Discussion</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=14119448&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=14119448&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/14119448">Ballardian Architecture 4 &#8211; Session 1 Discussion</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p>Session 1 concludes with a discussion featuring speakers John Gray, David Cunningham and Nic Clear. The discussion is chaired by Jeremy Melvin, and features contributions from members of the audience.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 5: Nigel Coates</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13645852&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13645852&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13645852">Ballardian Architecture 5 &#8211; Nigel Coates</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.nigelcoates.com">Nigel Coates</a>, architect and lecturer, discusses the influence of Ballard’s writings upon a number of his architectural projects, as well as reviewing work by some of his students at the Royal College of Art.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 6: Matthew Taunton</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13670654&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13670654&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13670654">Ballardian Architecture 6 &#8211; Matthew Taunton</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://matthewtaunton.blogspot.com">Matthew Taunton</a>, author and academic, investigates Ballard’s 1960 short story ‘Chronopolis’, highlighting Ballard’s engagement with modernist urbanism and his response to Taylorism and Fordism.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 7: Chris Hall</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13673739&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13673739&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13673739">Ballardian Architecture 7 &#8211; Chris Hall</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.spikemagazine.com/0104jgballard.php">Chris Hall</a>, journalist and writer, analyses architectural aspects of Ballard’s short story ‘The Terminal Beach’.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 8: Joanne Murray</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13677481&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13677481&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13677481">Ballardian Architecture 8 &#8211; Joanne Murray</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p> <a href="http://www.jgballard.ca/shanghai_to_shepperton_conference/joanne_murray.html">Joanne Murray</a>, lecturer and Birkbeck PhD candidate, discusses formal characteristics of Ballard’s art and writing in relation to New Brutalist architecture.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 9: Dan Holdsworth</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13728465&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13728465&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13728465">Ballardian Architecture 9 &#8211; Dan Holdsworth</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.danholdsworth.com">Dan Holdsworth</a>, artist, discusses his photographs, highlighting architectural motifs and visual tendencies that reflect aspects in Ballard’s prose.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 10: Tim Abrahams</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13729985&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=13729985&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13729985">Ballardian Architecture 10 &#8211; Tim Abrahams</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.timabrahams.net">Tim Abrahams</a>, journalist and Associate Editor of ‘Blueprint’ magazine, discusses Ballard’s Shanghai-set, semi-autobiographical novel ‘Empire of the Sun’ in relation to the Shanghai Expo 2010.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 11: Session 2 Discussion</strong></p>
<p><object width="400" height="225"><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="movie" value="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=14139503&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" /><embed src="http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=14139503&amp;server=vimeo.com&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;autoplay=0&amp;loop=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="400" height="225"></embed></object>
<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/14139503">Ballardian Architecture 11 &#8211; Session 2 Discussion</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p>Session 2 concludes with a discussion featuring speakers Dan Holdsworth, Nigel Coates, Tim Abrahams, Chris Hall, Joanne Murray and Matthew Taunton. The discussion is chaired by Gavin Parkinson, and features contributions from members of the audience.</p>
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<p><strong>Ballardian Architecture 12: Claire Walsh</strong></p>
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<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/13912553">Ballardian Architecture 12 &#8211; Claire Walsh</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/londonconsortium">static tv</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/apr/26/jg-ballard-appreciation-claire-walsh">Claire Walsh</a>, editor, researcher and J.G. Ballard’s partner, discusses Ballard’s life and interests in a presentation that closes the proceedings of the forum.</p>
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		<title>A Fascist State? Another Look at Kingdom Come and Consumerism</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/fascist-state-another-look-at-kingdom-come</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/fascist-state-another-look-at-kingdom-come#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2010 11:21:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike Holliday</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bentall Centre]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salvador Dali]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[advertising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[celebrity culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media landscape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speed & violence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surrealism]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Ballard’s final novel, Kingdom Come, a dystopian account of consumerism as a type of ’soft fascism’, received lukewarm reviews and suggestions that the author was, perhaps, finally losing his touch. Others were eager to point to parallels between it and events around us: aggressive car commercials, racist behaviour by sports fanatics. In this article, Mike Holliday re-examines Kingdom Come and asks: can we really equate consumerism with fascism?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bentall_centre.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Bentall Centre. Photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/fr3d/4730716706/in/photostream/">Fr3d.org</a>. Reproduced under Creative Commons.</em></p>
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<p>by <strong><a href="http://www.holli.co.uk">Mike Holliday</a</strong></p>
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<blockquote><p>Why do I dislike the Bentall Centre so much? Because it&#8217;s so&#8230; cretinous. [The consumers] seem to be moving though a kind of commercial dream space and vague signals float through their brains.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard in interview, 2006.<a href="##1">[1]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Ballard&#8217;s final novel, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>, a dystopian account of consumerism as a type of &#8217;soft fascism&#8217;, <a href="##2">[2]</a> received lukewarm reviews and suggestions that the author was, perhaps, finally losing his touch &#8211; that the metaphors seemed strained, the text confusing and ambiguous.<a href="##3">[3]</a> M John Harrison, one of Ballard&#8217;s fellow authors in New Worlds back in the 1960s, commented that &#8216;Perhaps, after all, it is not the consumers who have fallen for the dream of the Metro-Centre; it is the alienated intellectual of the London suburbs &#8230; For the old metaphorista, perhaps, the hidden terror of the shopping centre is that it is just somewhere people go to shop&#8217;.<a href="##4">[4]</a> Other commentators were eager to point to parallels between Kingdom Come and events in the world around us &#8211; aggressive car commercials, racist behaviour by sports fanatics &#8211; but appeared reluctant to delve into the novel&#8217;s theses in any depth. In this article, I re-examine Kingdom Come and ask: can we really equate consumerism with fascism?</p>
<blockquote><p>How you convert a metaphor into the arming device of a political conspiracy, or how the consumerist dream might be co-opted to produce the kinds of hard results associated with the nationalist dream of the 1920s and 30s, Ballard seems less sure. In reality, there are only a lot of people buying American sports utility vehicles, Tanzanian fish, Chinese teddy bears, French five-hob stoves &#8230; Do unconscious dreams of mass violence need to figure? </p>
<p>M John Harrison, &#8216;Narratives of the mall&#8217;.<a href="##5">[5]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The elements of Kingdom Come are taken straight from the world that the author would have seen around him &#8230; a giant shopping mall (loosely based on the <a href="http://www.thebentallcentre-shopping.com"> Bentall Centre</a> in Kingston) which is not just a place to buy things but somewhere to take the family for a day out; low-level racist behaviour against ethnic minorities in the suburbs of West London; an upsurge in interest in sporting events such as the World Cup that enable displays of national or tribal identity. These realistic components can prompt a straightforward reading of the novel: Kingdom Come is rendered as the idea that consumerism in 21st century England can be seen &#8211; with the help of a modest dosage of imagination and metaphor &#8211; to be a type of fascism. Such realist readings appear to lie behind M John Harrison&#8217;s complaints, as well as <a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/rod_liddle/article1267260.ece">Rod Liddle&#8217;s attack on the book</a> as &#8216;deeply silly and patronising&#8217;.<a href="##6">[6]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bentall_bears.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Bentall Centre. Photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/joannebelinda/235285635/in/set-72157594271736891">Joanne Murray</a>. Reproduced with permission.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;I remember four or five years ago going into the Bentall Centre, a huge shopping mall in Kingston, a town I hate. It was before Christmas, and there were these three gigantic bears on a plinth in the centre of this huge atrium &#8230; automatons, moving to Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. The place was packed; crowds looking up at them. And I thought, God, these people have left their brains somewhere. What’s going on here? And then I noticed that my head was moving, too. I thought, Jesus, get out fast.&#8217; </p>
<p>Ballard in interview, 2006.<a href="##7">[7]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>If Kingdom Come is a realistic reading of the English suburbs, then various of its details fail to convince. It seems odd to emphasize the violence of spectator sports when the most popular, soccer, has become far less brutal, among both participants and spectators, than was the case 25 or more years ago. And the portrayal of ethnic minorities as antipathetic to consumerism seems equally unrealistic, and risks an accusation of the very racism that the author wants to attack &#8211; for implying that they aren&#8217;t interested in consumer goods or sport because their culture is different from ours.<a href="##8">[8]</a></p>
<p>Beyond the details, there seems to be a conspicuous problem with the novel&#8217;s underlying theme, since fascism was always anti-consumerist in its temperament. As Peter N Stearns puts it in his review of <a href="http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415395878/">Consumerism in World History</a>: &#8216;For fascist leaders, modern society had become too disunited and individualistic. Consumerism was a fundamental part of modern degeneracy&#8217;.<a href="##9">[9]</a></p>
<p>But any such straightforward reading of Kingdom Come surely founders on the fact that Ballard is simply not, and never has been, a realist writer. Deeply influenced by the surrealist artists, and by Freud&#8217;s distinction between manifest and latent content, Ballard&#8217;s descriptions are no more &#8216;realist&#8217; than Dali&#8217;s clock-faces or Delvaux&#8217;s mysterious women. He described his semi-autobiographical novel, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a>, as an effort to reach some sort of psychological truth, as opposed to a depiction of actual events in the camp at Lunghua in which he was interned, and Kingdom Come is perhaps best viewed in like manner, as a surrealistic attempt to discover the latent psychological meaning behind consumerist society, rather than as a portrayal, however exaggerated, of the behaviour of sports fans and visitors to shopping malls.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dali_persistence.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Dali&#8217;s &#8216;The Persistence of Memory&#8217;.</em>	</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jgb_delvaux.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Ballard in front of his commissioned reproduction of a lost painting by Delvaux. Photo: David Levenson.</em></p>
<p>This still leaves us with the underlying concept, reiterated by Ballard in contemporaneous interviews, of consumerism as a soft fascism. An obvious temptation is to interpret Ballard as agreeing with the frequently articulated view that modern consumerist societies are totalizing &#8211; enclosing individuals in a perpetual obligation to choose, but allowing no alternative ways of living outside of the marketplace and the media &#8211; and concluding that therefore such societies can be regarded as fascist.</p>
<blockquote><p>If there is no principle restricting who can consume what, there is also no principled constraint on what can be consumed: all social relations, activities and objects can in principle be exchanged as commodities. This is one of the most profound secularizations enacted by the modern world &#8230; [and] places the intimate world of the everyday into the impersonal world of the market and its values. Moreover, while consumer culture appears universal because it is depicted as a land of freedom in which everyone can be a consumer, it is also felt to be universal because everyone must be a consumer: this particular freedom is compulsory. </p>
<p>Don Slater, &#8216;Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity&#8217;.<a href="##10">[10]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>But seen as an interpretation of Kingdom Come, this makes little sense. Ignoring Ballard the surrealist, it instead concentrates on an all-too-easy transition from &#8216;totalizing&#8217; to &#8216;fascist&#8217;, a transition which effectively empties the term &#8216;fascist&#8217; of meaningful content and historical context. Yet Ballard&#8217;s novel is full of such context &#8211; from the explicit references to the Third Reich in the set-speeches, to the marching groups of supporters and over-lit sports stadia, and even to small details such as the cable-TV presenter naming his new Mercedes limousine &#8216;Heinrich&#8217;. On the proposed interpretation all this detail becomes mere window-dressing, and the novel adds little or nothing to the political critique on which its main thesis supposedly rests. I therefore suggest that Ballard really does intend arguing for the more substantive, if less obvious, notion that modern consumer societies can mutate into something best understood in terms of 1930s Nazi Germany.</p>
<p>To see how this might be the case, I think we should start by recognizing that Ballard&#8217;s understanding of society is principally in terms of psychology, and that Kingdom Come re-emphasizes, and links together, two of his long-standing motifs &#8211; that the future will be boring, and that humans are dangerous and violent animals.</p>
<blockquote><p>Consumerism rules, but people are bored. They&#8217;re out on the edge, waiting for something big and strange to come along. &#8230; They want to be frightened. They want to know fear. And maybe they want to go a little mad. </p>
<p>Ballard, Kingdom Come.<a href="##11">[11]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Lying behind Ballard&#8217;s expectations of a boring and empty suburban world is the notion of human reality as a constructed reality, the roots of which seem to lie with his early grasp, as a child in Shanghai, of the everyday world as a stage-set.<a href="##12">[12]</a> For Ballard, the human brain has presented us with &#8216;a kind of ramshackle construct&#8217; suitable to the lives of all those countless ancestors who were engaged in the struggle for food, shelter, and safety. But we no longer live in an age of day-to-day scarcity and insecurity, and as a result the external world no longer forces its interpretation upon us. Therefore the conventional ways in which we viewed the world, which had been buttressed by traditional social structures and conforming behaviours, have weakened their hold over us. The external environment has become fictionalized, and &#8216;reality&#8217; &#8211; that which is of most significance in our lives &#8211; has retreated inside our minds, to be represented by our hopes, desires and obsessions.<a href="##13">[13]</a> One way in which we establish meaningful relationships between events and objects is via our <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time"> our notion of time</a>, by working out causal relationships and by connecting the present to the past through memories, either individual or social, or to the future through our intentions and expectations. However, as Ballard has emphasized, the past as a guide and the future as a destination no longer have much meaning for us.<a href="##14">[14]</a> Nowadays, an understanding of events and objects cannot simply be read off from the external world, nor can we link them in a straightforward temporal manner. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bentall_roof.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Bentall Centre. Photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/elyob">elyob</a>. Reproduced under Creative Commons.</em></p>
<p>The retreat of past and future and the internalization of reality &#8211; both of which are ultimately grounded in increased prosperity &#8211; are viewed by Ballard in two very different ways. On the positive side, our freedom and possibilities for fulfillment are enhanced. But, because we lack the sense of meaning provided by a stable external reality and by an awareness of time, we can experience emptiness and boredom. In the 1960s and 1970s, Ballard chose to emphasize the use of our imaginative powers as a way of providing us with different perspectives and of transcending our conventional outlook on the world. But the way Ballard told it to Carol Orr in 1974, this seemed a demanding and daunting task: &#8216;people will behave in a very lunar way, very isolated from each other. Does that appeal to me? Yes, it does, because I think people will have more freedom there. I mean, the freedom of isolation, the freedom of complete choice in one&#8217;s behaviour.&#8217;<a href="##15">[15]</a> Fifteen years later, there was more urgency in his comments to Rolling Stone: &#8216;the suburbanization of the soul [forces] the individual to recognize that he or she is all he or she has got. And this sharpens the eye and the imagination. The challenge is for each of us to respond, to remake as much as we can of the world around us, because no one else will do it for us. We have to find a core within us and get to work. Don&#8217;t worry about worldly rewards. Just get on with it!&#8217;<a href="##16">[16]</a> Using the imagination and following one&#8217;s obsessions may, perhaps, be rewarding, but it certainly doesn&#8217;t sound easy psychologically, more like hard work. By the early 1990s the warning was starker: &#8216;If people are going to survive they will need to do this on the plane of the imagination much more than they have done. Otherwise, they&#8217;ll simply become a mark on some consumer chart.&#8217;<a href="##17">[17]</a></p>
<p>The reasons for concern are clear: if we do not use our imaginations and obsessions, we are at risk of being governed by forces outside ourselves which still operate, such as capitalism or purposeless social conformity. Ballard has drawn attention to the way in which moral structures and decision-making powers have been externalized out into the environment by technology &#8211; from traffic lights to CCTV cameras &#8211; providing us with a safe passage through our lives,<a href="##18">[18]</a> and in like manner we may find it psychologically easier to decline the freedom to utilize the imagination that comes with a safe and prosperous, but individualistic, society. People might instead be content to be governed by forces of social conformity, and to let themselves be directed by their emotions &#8211; which Ballard thinks of as tending to reinforce existing social conventions and as restricting, rather than expanding, the possibilities for action.</p>
<blockquote><p>It may be that we thrive when certain of our relationships are drained of emotion, that we may then be able to explore our lives more fully, because emotions tend to act as a brake. They reinforce the status quo. They set up a kind of tyranny rather like the psychology of a very small child, which may be entirely governed by passionate emotions that are in fact very limiting. It&#8217;s only when the child learns to control its emotions that he can begin to explore all sorts of interesting possibilities at the other end of the nursery. </p>
<p>Ballard in interview, 1997.<a href="##19">[19]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>If this is the bare bones of the psychology that underpins Kingdom Come, we can perhaps add some flesh by considering the social aspects of consumerism. Peter Stearns points out that the growth of consumer behaviour was closely connected with the decline of long-established social structures under the pressures of industrialization and urbanization. In earlier times, social hierarchies were much more rigidly observed, and any crossing of social boundaries or individualistic behaviour tended to be viewed negatively, especially by the upper-classes. The latter had luxury, i.e. their wealth was displayed, rather than consumed, and in standard formats with an absence of individuality or any concern about fashion.<a href="##20">[20]</a> However, once this social edifice began to lose its grip, consumer behaviour helped people cope with the resulting uncertainty and insecurity about social status, and with the disruption to established patterns of behaviour, by providing alternative ways of fulfillment and by enabling an individual to demonstrate personal achievement, no matter how limited. This was particularly the case in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when the growth of large firms meant that many in the middle-classes found themselves working for others rather than themselves and in jobs with a high degree of routine: satisfaction and success were no longer an integral element of their occupation, and had to be sought elsewhere.<a href="##21">[21]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/utama_centre.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em> <a href="http://www.1utama.com.my/aboutus.aspx">Utama shopping centre, Malaysia</a></em></p>
<p>But there is a malign dialectic at work here. I buy things in order to try and reassert my identity, but as the marketplace grows I am offered an increasing variety of goods and services, and associated ways of living, from which to choose. Now my identity is even more in question, because it is something that I myself have to select and realize. The impact is heightened as the material prosperity of society increases &#8211; even something as basic as food becomes no longer a matter of survival and physical well-being, but a decision about life-style.<a href="##22">[22]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>Yet coherent identity seems to be precisely the main problem of modern existence and is itself something to be chosen and achieved. &#8230; Consumerism simultaneously exploits mass identity crisis by proffering its goods as solutions to the problems of identity, and in the process intensifies it by offering ever more plural values and ways of being. &#8230; That the self must be a project is dictated to us by a pluralized world and must be pursued within that pluralized world. This entails a high level of anxiety and risk. In terms of consumer culture, there is high anxiety because every choice seems to implicate the self: all acts of purchase or consumption, clothing, eating, tourism, entertainment, &#8216;are decisions not only about how to act but who to be&#8217;. </p>
<p>Slater, &#8216;Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity&#8217;.<a href="##23">[23]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>To make matters worse, the psychological support that might have been available from kinship ties, the local community, religion, voluntary organizations, and such like, is now much weaker &#8211; in fact, involvement in these is as much a life-style choice as everything else. Yet the evidence is that people with a rich variety of social connections are less likely to suffer depression and anxiety than those without.<a href="##24">[24]</a> As well as support that I might obtain directly from others, I am better able to cope if I am &#8216;not just the local lawyer, but also the coach of the cricket team, the friendly neighbour, and the person who always sings at the christmas party&#8217;, as a setback in one role is of less significance to my sense of identity and self-esteem.<a href="##25">[25]</a></p>
<p>Without a traditional social fabric around me, I live in a world of endless possibilities but any failure to find fulfillment in my life must somehow reflect my own inadequacies. Hence, as Zygmunt Bauman suggests, we are nowadays more likely to suffer from depression &#8211; caused by the fear of inadequacy in the face of endless possibilities &#8211; than from neurosis arising from guilt caused by the transgression of prohibitions.<a href="##26">[26]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>The more we are allowed to be the masters of our fates, the more we expect ourselves to be. We should be able to find education that is stimulating and useful, work that is exciting, socially valuable, and remunerative, spouses who are sexually, emotionally, and intellectually stimulating and also loyal and comforting. Our children are supposed to be beautiful, smart, affectionate, obedient, and independent. And everything we buy is supposed to be the best of its kind. &#8230; [Hence,] almost every experience people have nowadays will be perceived as a disappointment, and thus regarded as a failure &#8211; a failure that could have been prevented with the right choice. </p>
<p>Barry Schwartz, &#8216;The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less&#8217;.<a href="##27">[27]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>In such circumstances, the temptation is to seek comfort and easy pleasures. But experimental psychology suggests that the systems of the brain which control desire are not the same as the systems that control pleasure.<a href="##28">[28]</a> Hence, some things &#8211; sex, good food &#8211; will both activate desire and bring pleasure, but others &#8211; such as a bigger, higher-definition TV &#8211; may provoke desire but not add much to our happiness. Biologically speaking, happiness is a spur to action, not some end-state that we are programmed to seek out, and this is reflected in the wealth of data indicating a lack of correlation between absolute levels of income and happiness (other than at extremely low levels of income), whether it be between different societies, different individuals in the same society, or individuals over time.<a href="##29">[29]</a></p>
<p>Ballard&#8217;s recognition that we &#8216;construct our own reality&#8217; implies an understanding that happiness is not some &#8216;default&#8217; or natural state, and that nowadays we have to create the conditions for our own satisfaction and fulfillment; failure to do this in a world that does not impose its meanings on us will lead to emptiness, boredom, and anxiety. What we seem to have, therefore, are the possible conditions for a social crisis rooted in personal reactions to the complexity and uncertainty inherent in a prosperous, individualistic, consumer society, exacerbated by the lack of established social structures that might provide support. And here we can make start to make the connection with fascism &#8230;</p>
<p>Given the near unintelligibility of the Nazi regime,<a href="##30">[30]</a> any interpretation of its causes needs to explain why it developed in Germany (and not, say, the U.S.A. or France) and in the 1930s (rather than some earlier or later date). Generic explanations based on the &#8216;German psyche&#8217;, or some form of &#8216;moral crisis&#8217; in modern capitalism, fail to convince precisely because they have no answer to these questions.</p>
<blockquote><p>Under a leader who talked in apocalyptic tones of world power or destruction and a regime founded on an utterly repulsive ideology of race-hatred, one of the most culturally and economically advanced countries in Europe planned for war, launched a world conflagration which killed around 50 million people, and perpetrated atrocities &#8211; culminating in the mechanized mass murder of millions of Jews &#8211; of a nature and scale as to defy imagination. </p>
<p>Ian Kershaw, &#8216;The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems &#038; Perspectives Of Interpretation&#8217;.<a href="##31">[31]</a></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>No explanations I&#8217;ve seen are ever convincing of why cultivated and intelligent people like the Germans and Italians should plunge into this insane world-view. </p>
<p>Ballard <a href="http://www.tobylitt.com/ballardinterview.html">in interview</a>, 2006.</p></blockquote>
<p>A promising approach is to start from the idea that inter-war Germany was suffering from a crisis that was simultaneously political, economic, social, and existential. Fascism is then seen to result from a generalized sense of trauma, where stresses in one arena &#8211; say the economic or the existential &#8211; cannot find an outlet in another, such as the political or social. Such an explanation of fascism owes a debt to Erich Fromm&#8217;s prognosis in his 1941 book <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fear_of_Freedom">Escape from Freedom</a>, where he described the fascist regimes, and Nazi Germany in particular, as resulting from the isolation, powerlessness, and anxiety that people felt following modernization and industrialization in countries where traditional structures had lost much of their strength, and which had suffered hyper-inflation and extremely high unemployment.<a href="##32">[32]</a></p>
<p>By the early decades of the 20th century, the German economy was the most developed in Europe and becoming dominated by large organizations: the local boss whom the worker knew on a personal basis was being replaced by distant and amorphous management, and the individual&#8217;s sense of their place in the whole was increasingly opaque. In politics, the parties of the new Weimar democracy were concerned with large-scale, intractable issues at the federal level, weakening the significance of local or work-place participation in political or trade union affairs; and the advent of radio was about to kick-start the transformation of politics into a form of advertising and manipulation of the emotions &#8211; as the Nazis were quick to realize.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hitler_25.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Hitler practices his acting skills. &#8216;Apocalyptic, visionary, convincing&#8217;: three photos by Heinrich Hoffman from 1925.</em></p>
<p>The individual was no longer compensated for a lack of security and purpose by the strength of those long-standing and powerful elements of German society to which he had been accustomed. The monarchy had been abolished; the military (who had virtually run the country during 1914-1918) had been defeated in a war largely of their own devising; the once all-powerful German state could no longer even honour the commitments on its own bank notes as a result of massive inflation which had destroyed middle-class savings &#8211; together with the resulting bourgeois sense of certainty and security; rapid political change, military defeat, and economic problems had left the older generation lost in the world and the young looking elsewhere than to tradition and family. The lack of &#8211; or decline in &#8211; local social participation and intermediate-level structures, such as voluntary organizations, led to what Gino Germani referred to as &#8217;street corner society&#8217;.<a href="##33">[33]</a> And there were all too many whose recourse was to the street &#8211; unemployment rose following the 1929 Wall Street Crash until by 1932 an estimated one-third of the workforce were without a job.<a href="##34">[34]</a> To many, the world no longer made sense, and in the words of the Marxist historian TW Mason: civil society was no longer able to reproduce itself.<a href="##35">[35]</a></p>
<p>In such circumstances, one psychological recourse for the individual is to seek to give up their independence and to fuse with somebody &#8211; or something &#8211; else, in an attempt to somehow recreate the lost bonds that had existed at societal level. Hence the attraction to many of an authoritarian party, such as the Nazis, with a clear leader on whom the party member or citizen could project qualities which &#8211; especially in the case of Hitler &#8211; they clearly lacked, but which were the counterpart of the psychological needs of the adherent. As Ballard once put it: &#8216;It&#8217;s almost as if what [a politician] needs is sort of a reverse charisma now. Not a light that shines outwards, but the ability, like a black hole, to draw light inwards! You&#8217;ve got to be able to draw other people&#8217;s fantasies to you&#8217;.<a href="##36">[36]</a> For the disciple, doubt is assuaged by accepting the opinions and directions of others, and uncertainty is conquered by relying on the conviction of the emotions instead of trusting in rational thought and debate &#8211; in a world that no longer makes sense, emotions appear a surer guide than reason. As Michael Burleigh puts it in The Third Reich: A New History: &#8216;Nazism was truly ahead of its time &#8230; This was politics as feeling&#8217;.<a href="##37">[37]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/fans_96.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Not a light that shines outwards, but the ability, like a black hole, to draw light inwards! You&#8217;ve got to be able to draw other people&#8217;s fantasies to you.</p>
<p>Ballard on the requirements for modern politician, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FJ-G-Ballard-Conversations-J-G%2Fdp%2F1889307130%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1278500731%26sr%3D8-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">interview, 1997</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></blockquote>
<p>Hitler himself understood all this perfectly well, as he displayed in Mein Kampf: &#8216;The mass meeting is necessary if only for the reason that in it the individual, who in becoming an adherent of a new movement feels lonely and is easily seized with the fear of being alone, receives for the first time the pictures of a greater community, something that has a strengthening and encouraging effect on most people. &#8230; If he steps for the first time out of his small workshop or out of the big enterprise, in which he feels very small, into the mass meeting and is now surrounded by thousands and thousands of people with the same conviction &#8230; he himself succumbs to the magic influence of what we call mass suggestion.&#8217;<a href="##38">[38]</a></p>
<p>Fascist ideology was therefore concentrated on a mythic core constituted by the image of the nation reborn, purified, and following its &#8216;destiny&#8217;,<a href="##39">[39]</a> and practical politics accordingly relied heavily on symbols, mass spectacles, and a continuously reiterated vocabulary of basic ideas.</p>
<blockquote><p>A dreadful mass sentimentality, compounded of anger, fear, resentment and self-pity, replaced the customary politics of decency, pragmatism, property and reason &#8230; Belief, faith, feeling and obedience to instinct routed debate, scepticism and compromise. People voluntarily surrendered to group or herd emotions &#8230; Among committed believers, a mythic world of eternal spring, heroes, demons, fire and sword &#8211; in a word, the fantasy world of the nursery &#8211; displaced reality. Or rather invaded it, with crude images of Jews, Slavs, capitalists and kulaks populating the imagination. This was children&#8217;s politics for grown-ups, bored and frustrated with the prosaic tenor of post war liberal democracy, and hence receptive to heroic gestures and politics as a form of theatrical stunt. </p>
<p>Michael Burleigh, &#8216;The Third Reich: A New History&#8217;.<a href="##40">[40]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Fascism therefore offers an irrational escape from apparently intractable difficulties. As Ballard pointed out long ago, in his review of Mein Kampf for New Worlds,<a href="##41">[41]</a> Hitler was successful precisely because he dispensed with any rationalization of his prejudices, and was therefore able to tap directly into the unconscious of his followers.</p>
<p>More prosaically, a sense of place and safety could be supplied by hierarchy and control: a 1938 decree introduced general labour conscription by forcing people to work wherever the State decreed, but this effectively gave the well-behaved worker job security, in stark contrast to the early 1930s and to other countries;<a href="##42">[42]</a> and the small-holding farmer was tied to the soil just as much as a feudal serf, but was protected against creditors forcing him to sell his property.<a href="##43">[43]</a> Independent groups and sources of power which were not destroyed were assimilated into the system: Nazi ideology did not consider a person to have an identity separate from their obligations as a citizen, and it followed that if one was, say, an engineer, a mother, or a writer, one&#8217;s own particular concerns could be most effectively met within the context of the Nazi regime. Organizations such as employee associations or trade unions, or women&#8217;s and children&#8217;s groups, were therefore effectively incorporated into the party or the administration. For example, sports and recreational societies all functioned under the <a href="http://www.feldgrau.com/KdF.html"> Kraft durch Freude</a> (&#8216;Strength through Joy&#8217;) organization, and one of the tasks legally accorded to the Reich Chamber of Commerce was to &#8216;gather together the creative artists in all spheres into a unified organization under the leadership of the Reich [which] must not only determine the lines of progress, mental and spiritual, but also lead and organize the professions&#8217;.<a href="##44">[44]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/nazi_metro.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Nazi&#8217;s &#8216;Metro-Centre&#8217;? A detail from an illustration for an article in the propaganda magazine <a href="http://www.signalmagazine.com/signal.htm">Signal</a> c. 1941, describing the organization of the Nazi Party: &#8216;Any creative initiative to be introduced in health and hygiene, the training of youth, welfare work on behalf of the working man &#8230; whatever revolutionary idea is to be introduced into the crafts, industry, trade or among the peasantry, all flows through the channels of the Party organization&#8217;</em>.</p>
<p>The Nazi state was not a completely controlled society, but rather one where existing societal organizations were subject to a form of &#8216;capture&#8217;. Hence, Germany was no longer a pluralist society in the sense of accepting variation in aims, opinions, and interests; variety could exist but it was merely a functional variety &#8211; a diversity in unity. As Kevin Passmore puts it: &#8216;civil society was absorbed into fascism&#8217;.<a href="##45">[45]</a> The sense of community was now workers and managers marching in the same procession or rally, all shouting Heil Hitler together whilst feeling the same emotions.<a href="##46">[46]</a> One advantage of such a non-pluralist society was that it was able to limit the extent to which the functional and social complexity of modern societies impacted on human subjectivity: common activities and emotions, communal gatherings, signs and slogans, all represented psychological simplifications that helped nullify the difficulties of a complex, modern world. The result of this reliance on myth, symbols and emotions was that fascism transformed consciousness rather than society: &#8216;The idea of the &#8220;national community&#8221; was not a basis for changing social structures, but a symbol of transformed consciousness. &#8230; [Nazism's] intentions were directed towards a transformation of value- and belief systems &#8211; a psychological &#8220;revolution&#8221; rather than one of substance.&#8217;<a href="##47">[47]</a></p>
<p>So there are indeed similarities between inter-war Germany and 21st century consumerist societies: in particular, people can feel they live in a world without meaning and have somehow lost control of their lives. Obviously there are also major differences &#8211; one could hardly suggest that boredom and ennui were a major factor in 1920s Germany, for example, and the economic backgrounds are dissimilar &#8211; but these can obscure the psychological resemblances.<a href="##48">[48]</a> In both cases, customary social and political structures are debilitated, providing little tangible or intangible support, and the sense of community is weakened. Traditional politics are viewed as irrelevant or with contempt: there is an absence of debate and we are left with politics as emotion and advertising. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reichsparteitag_38.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reichsparteitag_glaube.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>A Nazi mass gathering: the 1937 Reichsparteitag at Nuremberg, including a spectacular performance from the young girls of the &#8216;Glaube und Schönheit&#8217; (&#8216;Belief and Beauty&#8217;) organisation.</em></p>
<p>The &#8217;solutions&#8217; in the two cases are analogous. A sense of pseudo-community is created through common activities and attendance at mass spectacles, by the channeling of emotions into a narrow range, and through a strengthening of the sense of commonality by means of an emphasis &#8211; vague but insistent &#8211; on &#8216;outsiders&#8217;. Community and a shared-culture may still be with us, but no longer based on locality or history: &#8216;What&#8217;s the point of privacy if it&#8217;s just a personalized prison? Consumerism is a collective enterprise. People here want to share and celebrate, they want to come together. When we go shopping we take part in a collective ritual of affirmation. &#8230; Shared dreams and values, shared hopes and pleasures&#8217;, claims Sangster in Kingdom Come.<a href="##49">[49]</a></p>
<p>The concept of &#8216;us&#8217; implies a &#8216;not-us&#8217; &#8230; an age-old and reliable way of putting strength back into weakening societal bonds: &#8216;David Cruise casually referred to the &#8216;enemy&#8217;, a term kept deliberately vague that embraced Asians and east Europeans, blacks, Turks, non-consumers and anyone not interested in sport. New enemies were always needed&#8217;.<a href="##50">[50]</a> To the extent that I am not an individual but part of a commonality, you are not an individual either, but a category; in Nazi Germany, one was &#8216;no longer a person, but an anti-social, criminal, Gypsy, homosexual, Jehovah&#8217;s Witness, Jew or political, in involuntary anticipation of modern identity politics, with their replacement of persons by categories&#8217;.<a href="##51">[51]</a></p>
<p>The effect of this growth in pseudo-community is the same in Kingdom Come as in Nazi Germany, as Ballard himself described in a discussion with Jeannette Baxter, when he referred to &#8216;the positive features of the new regime [of the Metro-Centre] &#8211; the self-disciplined and healthily glowing families, the sense of a revived community with a new confidence and purpose in life (in short, that &#8220;accommodation&#8221; made by so many in the 1930s in England and Germany who should know better)&#8217;.<a href="##52">[52]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;I like the music,&#8217; I commented. &#8216;Though maybe it&#8217;s a little too martial. Somewhere in there I can hear the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst-Wessel-Lied"> Horst Wessel<br />
song</a>. </p>
<p>&#8216;It&#8217;s good for morale,&#8217; Carradine explained. &#8216;We like to keep people cheerful &#8230;&#8217; </p>
<p>Ballard, Kingdom Come.<a href="##53">[53]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Symbols and myths &#8211; reaching almost religious significance &#8211; start to predominate. &#8216;Politics&#8217; mutates into something else, a mixture of emotion, myth, and violence that comes close to madness. In Kingdom Come, Sangster is convinced that &#8217;some kind of insanity is the last way forward&#8217;, and the psychiatrist, Maxted, draws the parallel with Nazi Germany: &#8216;The Germans were desperate to break out of their prison. Defeat, inflation, grotesque war reparations, the threat of barbarians advancing from the east. Going mad would set them free, and they chose Hitler to lead the hunting party.&#8217;<a href="##54">[54]</a></p>
<p>But what of psychopathology and violence, which I referred to earlier as another of Ballard&#8217;s long-standing themes that runs through Kingdom Come? He has always held &#8211; based in part on his childhood experiences in Shanghai and Lunghua &#8211; that the human psyche has dark and dangerous depths, including an attraction to violence. On Ballard&#8217;s conception, mankind has natural psychopathic tendencies which, although they may not come to the fore in all societies, cannot be eradicated &#8230; a view which has some support from the anthropological and historical evidence, which indicates that hunter-gatherer and primitive agriculturalist societies often had far higher male mortality rates from violence than did Europe and North America in the 20th century, despite our technologies of destruction and two world wars.<a href="##55">[55]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>When I refer to my own childhood, and how people behaved in the Far East during the Second World War, it seemed that some people simply enjoy killing and tormenting others. &#8230; To use a term like &#8217;sadism&#8217; and to construct an elaborate psychological machinery to explain this behaviour, however, is to miss the point. The fact is, we are violent and dangerous creatures. We needed to be to survive all those hundreds of thousands of years when we were living in small tribal groups, faced with an incredibly hostile world. And we still carry those genes. </p>
<p>Ballard in interview, 1997.<a href="##56">[56]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>For the majority of the time that people have lived in crowded urban environments, any proclivity for violence was &#8211; probably of necessity &#8211; contained by social arrangements and by a widely accepted system of morality. However, both of these types of constraints are weakening, something which concerned Ballard as early as this 1974 interview: &#8216;I myself think that Man, if you like, is a naturally perverse animal, that the elements of psychopathology or perversity or moral deviancy are a very large part of his character. I don&#8217;t think that can be changed. I think attempts in the past to provide a very rigid moral framework succeeded to some extent. I think they&#8217;re going to break down now, simply because the opportunities for limitless freedom are so great.&#8217;<a href="##57">[57]</a></p>
<p>The risk is that the erasure of meaning in modern societies produces boredom and emptiness, a gap which a dormant psychopathology can readily fill, fuelled by a preference for emotion over cognition. Hence Ballard frequently links boredom and psychopathic behaviour in his later books and interviews: &#8216;My real fear is that boredom and inertia may lead people to follow a deranged leader &#8230; that we will put on jackboots and black uniforms and the aspect of the killer simply to relieve the boredom.&#8217;<a href="##58">[58]</a> The descriptions of brutality in Kingdom Come &#8211; racist attacks and violent sports events &#8211; are simply taken from Ballard&#8217;s perception of the world around him. Their significance lies not, I suggest, in the precise content, but in their latent meaning: within the absences which permeate both society and our own minds, &#8216;violence and hate, as always, were organizing themselves&#8217;.<a href="##59">[59]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mercedes.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Aggressive advertising: For Mercedes-Benz, from the Nazi propaganda magazine &#8216;Signal&#8217;, c1943; and, below, for Hummer SUVs in Australia, 2008.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hummer_kc.jpg" alt="" class="picleft" /> How might we view consumerism &#8211; and in particular the totalizing aspects of a consumerist society &#8211; as a result of this analysis of Ballard&#8217;s vision of a &#8217;soft fascism&#8217;? Consumer behaviour is an exercise in choice, and can therefore infiltrate other aspects of our lives, replacing the traditional but declining forms of morality and politics, both of which are essentially ways of choosing between alternatives. This presents us with an obligation to choose from what is on offer, and thereby effectively closes off the possibility of exiting the system &#8211; something that Pearson discovers in Kingdom Come on his first visit to the West London suburbs: &#8216;I moved through the darkened streets, searching for a signpost to guide me back to London. But here by the M25, in the heartland of the motorway people, all signs pointed inwards, referring the traveller back to his starting point&#8217;<a href="##60">[60]</a> (my emphasis). The fictionalization of the external world means that Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;exit door&#8217; through the use of our imaginative faculties is gradually closing, as these powers of the imagination become colonized by the fantasies around us and by our own emotions. This enables consumerism to satisfy our needs, not directly via the goods and services that we purchase, but indirectly by meeting our psychological requirements through our involvement in the activities of consumer society &#8211; shopping, media, leisure. The disassociation between our desires and pleasures &#8211; which might be seen as threatening the consumerist system once we discover that satisfying our desires is unfulfilling &#8211; can now be bridged: we desire the goods and buy them, but our rewards come from elsewhere, from our very participation in the system itself &#8230; from our attendance at Ballard&#8217;s Metro-Centre.</p>
<p>This totalizing effect of consumerism, whereby everything is absorbed into it in much the same way as existing organizations and groupings were subject to &#8216;capture&#8217; by the Nazis, is perhaps reflected in some of those elements of Kingdom Come which perplexed reviewers: Are the group led by the local solicitor Fairfax really opponents of the Metro-Centre, or are they just trying to use it for their own purposes? How much can we trust what the main protagonist, Pearson, says &#8211; or should we regard him as an &#8216;unreliable narrator&#8217;? Why is it not clear, even at the end of the book, whether Pearson really regrets getting involved with the Metro-Centre?<a href="##61">[61]</a> The ambiguity of Ballard&#8217;s narrative is in keeping with the self-reflexive nature of the society that he is describing, where the transgressive gesture rapidly becomes another media item that can be purchased for cash, and an attempt at escape puts you right back at the centre. Any effort at political action or opposition becomes pointless, because this is not &#8211; on Ballard&#8217;s view &#8211; a conspiracy of false needs and false consciousness: by accepting the emotional lie and the feel-good fairy story, we are ourselves complicit in the consumerist society. But if this is right, then we can see the point of Ballard&#8217;s long-held insistence that we must, as he puts it, immerse ourselves in the most dangerous elements and hope that we can swim to the other side<a href="##62">[62]</a> &#8211; a view that infects both the &#8216;extreme hypothesis&#8217; of Crash and the studied ambiguity of Kingdom Come.</p>
<p>Finally, what does Ballard&#8217;s novel tell us about fascistic activity and what it represents? As I have described it here, fascism arises as a result of a generalized sense of crisis in prosperous, complex societies, whereby tensions in each sphere &#8211; the economic, the social, the political, and the personal &#8211; cannot find relief, but actually amplify each other. The result is an escape to pseudo-community, and a surrender to the emotions and to psychopathic urges. This suggests a close similarity to Daniel Woodley&#8217;s recent discussion of the links between fascism, modernity, and capitalism:</p>
<blockquote><p>Modern [critical] theorists have abandoned class reductionism for a more sophisticated account of fascism as a political commodity, a form of ideological production in postliberal capitalism based on the aestheticization of politics and the mobilization of emotion. &#8230; postliberal capitalism entails new forms of ideological justification based on the bureaucratization and societalization of economic life. These structural tendencies increase the pressure for collective solutions to political integration, resulting in a panoply of new ideologies aimed at addressing atomization. &#8230; [Fascism's] timely appearance and reappearance is rooted &#8230; in the aestheticization of depoliticized politics and the fetishization of communal identities which conceal the true nature of the commodity as a structured social practice. </p>
<p>Daniel Woodley, &#8216;Fascism and Political Theory: Critical Perspectives on Fascist Ideology&#8217;.<a href="##63">[63]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>What I have tried to show in this article is that in Kingdom Come Ballard has attempted to unearth this &#8216;latent content&#8217; of fascism by means of his well-honed forensic tools of imagination and surrealistic description.<a href="##64">[64]</a></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p>[1]<a name="#1"></a> &#8216;JG Ballard: The Comforts of Madness&#8217;, interview in The Independent, 15 September 2006.<br />
[2]<a name="#2"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, Fourth Estate (London), 2006, pp 167-169.<br />
[3]<a name="#3"></a> See, for example, Ursula K Le Guin, &#8216;Revolution in the aisles&#8217;, The Guardian, 9 September 2006.<br />
[4]<a name="#4"></a> M John Harrison, &#8216;Narratives of the mall&#8217;, The Times Literary Supplement, 6 September 2006.<br />
[5]<a name="#5"></a> M John Harrison, &#8216;Narratives of the mall&#8217;, op cit.<br />
[6]<a name="#6"></a> Rod Liddle, &#8216;Our simple pleasures go up in smoke&#8217;, Times Online, <a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/rod_liddle/article1267260.ece"></a> http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/rod_liddle/article1267260.ece</a>, accessed 5 May 2010.<br />
[7]<a name="#7"></a> &#8216;From Here to Dystopia&#8217;, interview in the Telegraph Magazine, 2 September 2006.<br />
[8]<a name="#8"></a> A similar sentiment is displayed here: &#8216;A mastery of the discontinuities of metropolitan life has always been essential to the successful urban dweller &#8230; A failure to master these discontinuities, whether social or genetic in origin, leaves some ethnic groups at a disadvantage, forced into enclaves that seem to reconstitute mental maps of ancestral villages.&#8217; JG Ballard, &#8216;Airports: Going somewhere?&#8217;, The Observer, 14 September 1997.<br />
[9]<a name="#9"></a> Peter N Stearns, Consumerism in World History: The Global Transformation of Desire (2nd edition), Routledge (New York &#038; London), 2006, p 72.<br />
[10]<a name="#10"></a> Don Slater, Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity, Polity Press (Cambridge), 1997, p 27.<br />
[11]<a name="#11"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 101.<br />
[12]<a name="#12"></a> JG Ballard, Miracles of Life, Fourth Estate (London), 2008, pp 58-59.<br />
[13]<a name="#13"></a> Some of Ballard&#8217;s clearest comments on the fictionalization of the external world and the interiorization of reality as a consequence of increased prosperity are to be found in an unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, c1974, available at <a href="http://www.jgballard.ca/interviews/jgb_cbc_ideas_interview.html"></a> http://www.jgballard.ca/interviews/jgb_cbc_ideas_interview.html</a>, accessed 6 May 2010.<br />
[14]<a name="#14"></a> Unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, op cit.<br />
[15]<a name="#15"></a> Unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, op cit.<br />
[16]<a name="#16"></a> &#8216;The Strange Visions of J. G. Ballard&#8217;, interview in Rolling Stone, 19 November 1987.<br />
[17]<a name="#17"></a> &#8216;An Interview with J. G. Ballard&#8217;, Mississippi Review Vol. 20 #1-2, 1991, p 32.<br />
[18]<a name="#18"></a> &#8216;Interview by Graeme Revell&#8217;, Re/Search 8/9: J. G. Ballard, Re/Search Publishing (San Francisco), 1984, p. 46.<br />
[19]<a name="#19"></a> &#8216;Dangerous Driving&#8217;, interview in &#8216;Frieze&#8217; magazine #34, May 1997.<br />
[20]<a name="#20"></a> Peter N Stearns, Consumerism in World History: The Global Transformation of Desire (2nd edition), op cit, pp 1-14.<br />
[21]<a name="#21"></a> Peter N Stearns, Consumerism in World History: The Global Transformation of Desire (2nd edition), op cit, pp 32-34, 60-62.<br />
[22]<a name="#22"></a> Anthony Giddens, Beyond Left and Right: The Future of Radical Politics, Polity Press (Cambridge), 1994, p 224.<br />
[23]<a name="#23"></a> Don Slater, Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity, op cit, p 84-85.<br />
[24]<a name="#24"></a> Michael Marmot, Status Syndrome: How Your Social Standing Directly Affects Your Health, Bloomsbury (London), Chapter 6; Robert H Frank, Luxury Fever: Money and Happiness in an Era of Excess, Princeton University Press, 1999, pp 86-88.<br />
[25]<a name="#25"></a> Daniel Nettle, Happiness: The Science Behind Your Smile, Oxford University Press, 2005, p 180.<br />
[26]<a name="#26"></a> Zygmunt Bauman, Consuming Life, Polity Press (Cambridge), 2007, p 94.<br />
[27]<a name="#27"></a> Barry Schwartz, The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less,  Harper Perennial (New York), 2004, pp 210-211.<br />
[28]<a name="#28"></a> For example, when rats have their brains stimulated to eat food, they don&#8217;t show the typical &#8216;liking behavior&#8217; that normally accompanies pleasurable activities &#8211; indeed, if anything, they show &#8216;disliking behavior&#8217;. Conversely, the rats can be drugged so that they have no desire to eat, but show liking behavior when a sweet solution is put onto their tongue. See also Daniel Nettle, Happiness: The Science Behind Your Smile, op cit, Chapter 5.<br />
[29]<a name="#29"></a> Daniel Nettle, Happiness: The Science Behind Your Smile, op cit, pp 48-52, 70-75; Robert H Frank, Luxury Fever: Money and Happiness in an Era of Excess, op cit, pp 71-74.<br />
[30]<a name="#30"></a> Although the reference is to the generic term &#8216;fascism&#8217;, I shall limit my historical discussion to the Nazi Party and the German Third Reich &#8211; as does, by and large, Ballard..<br />
[31]<a name="#31"></a> Ian Kershaw, The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems &#038; Perspectives Of Interpretation (4th edition), Hodder Arnold (London), 2000, p 4.<br />
[32]<a name="#32"></a> Erich Fromm, The Fear of Freedom, Routledge (London), 1960, pp 106-116, 180-188 (originally published as Escape from Freedom, 1941).<br />
[33]<a name="#33"></a> See S J Woolf (ed), The Nature of Fascism, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1968, pp 107-108.<br />
[34]<a name="#34"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, Pan Books (London), 2001, p 122.<br />
[35]<a name="#35"></a> T W Mason, &#8216;The Primacy of Politics &#8211; Politics and Economics in National Socialist Germany&#8217;, in S J Woolf (ed), The Nature of Fascism, op cit, p. 171.<br />
[36]<a name="#36"></a> In a conversation with Mark Pauline c1987, published in J. G. Ballard: Conversations, RE/Search Publications, San Francisco, 2005, p 136.<br />
[37]<a name="#37"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, op cit, pp 210-211.<br />
[38]<a name="#38"></a> Quoted in Erich Fromm, The Fear of Freedom, op cit, p 193.<br />
[39]<a name="#39"></a> Roger Griffin (ed), Fascism, Oxford University Press, 1995, pp 3-4.<br />
[40]<a name="#40"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, op cit, pp 8-9.<br />
[41]<a name="#41"></a> JG Ballard, &#8216;Alphabets of Unreason&#8217; in New Worlds # 196, December 1969, p 26.<br />
[42]<a name="#42"></a> William L Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Arrow Books, [1960]/1998, p 265.<br />
[43]<a name="#43"></a> William L Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, op cit, p 258.<br />
[44]<a name="#44"></a> For the Nazi assimilation of intermediate-level organizations, see William L Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, op cit, pp 241-267.<br />
[45]<a name="#45"></a> Kevin Passmore, Fascism: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2002, p 128.<br />
[46]<a name="#46"></a> SL Andreski, &#8216;Some sociological considerations on fascism and class&#8217;, in S J Woolf (ed), The Nature of Fascism, op cit, pp 100-101.<br />
[47]<a name="#47"></a> Ian Kershaw, The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems &#038; Perspectives Of Interpretation (4th edition), op cit, pp 174, 179.<br />
[48]<a name="#48"></a> It is the psychological similarities that Ballard stressed in an interview with James Campbell: &#8216;&#8230; could consumerism turn into fascism? The underlying psychologies aren&#8217;t all that far removed from one another. If you go into a huge shopping mall and you&#8217;re looking down the parade, it&#8217;s the same theatrical aspect: these disciplined ranks of merchandise, all glittering like fascist uniforms. When you enter a mall, you are taking part in a ceremony of affirmation, which you endorse just by your presence.&#8217; The Guardian, 14 June 2008.<br />
[49]<a name="#49"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 85. It is interesting to note that Fromm uses the term &#8216;automaton conformity&#8217; to describe the form that the attempt to escape from freedom takes in modern democracies (as opposed to fascist dictatorships); see Erich Fromm, The Fear of Freedom, op cit, pp 159-178.<br />
[50]<a name="#50"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 189.<br />
[51]<a name="#51"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, op cit, p 204.<br />
[52]<a name="#52"></a> &#8216;Kingdom Come: An Interview with J. G. Ballard&#8217;, in Jeannette Baxter, J. G. Ballard: Contemporary Critical Perspectives, Continuum (London &#038; New York), 2008, p 127.<br />
[53]<a name="#53"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 39.<br />
[54]<a name="#54"></a>  JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, pp 102, 168.<br />
[55]<a name="#55"></a> See, for example, Azar Gat, War in Civilization, Oxford University Press, 2006, Chapters 2, 6 and 9; also Steven LeBlanc, with Katherine Register, Constant Battles: The myth of the peaceful noble savage, St Martin&#8217;s Press (New York), 2003.<br />
[56]<a name="#56"></a> &#8216;Dangerous Driving&#8217;, interview in &#8216;Frieze&#8217; magazine #34, May 1997.<br />
[57]<a name="#57"></a> Unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, op cit.<br />
[58]<a name="#58"></a> &#8216;Age of Unreason&#8217;, interview published online by the The Guardian, 22 June 2004; available at <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2004/jun/22/sciencefictionfantasyandhorror.jgballard"></a>http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2004/jun/22/sciencefictionfantasyandhorror.jgballard</a> (accessed 13 May 2010).<br />
[59]<a name="#59"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 191.<br />
[60]<a name="#60"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 35.<br />
[61]<a name="#61"></a> After all that&#8217;s happened, Pearson still has positive feelings for the people of the Metro-Centre: &#8216;Leaving Sangster and his self-hating motives to one side, I admired Carradine and his mutineers, and the robustly physical world they had based on their consumerist dream. The motorway towns were built on the frontier between a tired past and a future without illusions and snobberies&#8217; (Kingdom Come, op cit, p. 266). And on the penultimate page, there&#8217;s the following, rather astonishing, meditation from Pearson: &#8216;The cable channels had reverted to an anaesthetic diet of household hints and book-group discussions. Once people began to talk earnestly about the novel any hope of freedom had died. The once real possibility of a fascist republic had vanished into the air &#8230;&#8217; (Kingdom Come, op cit, p. 279, my italics). This appears to mourn the failure of fascism, but I prefer to think of as reflecting Ballard&#8217;s oft-mentioned idea of &#8216;immersing oneself in the most dangerous elements and swimming&#8217;. Just to confuse matters further, on the following (and last) page of the book, Pearson turns pessimistic again and ruminates that &#8216;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&#8217; (Kingdom Come, op cit, p. 280).<br />
[62]<a name="#62"></a> See, for example, &#8216;An Interview with J. G. Ballard&#8217;, Mississippi Review op cit, p 33. And the following brief quote well-illustrates Ballard&#8217;s reasoning: &#8216;I certainly do believe that we should immerse ourselves in the destructive element. Far better to do so consciously than find ourselves tossed into the pool when we&#8217;re not looking&#8217;, interview in The Paris Review #94, 1984, p 143.<br />
[63]<a name="#63"></a> Daniel Woodley, Fascism and Political Theory: Critical Perspectives on Fascist Ideology, Routledge (London &#038; New York), 2010, pp 14-18.<br />
[64]<a name="#64"></a> c.f. Ballard on the distinction between manifest and latent content: &#8216;Freud pointed out that one has to distinguish between the manifest content of the inner world of the psyche and its latent content, and I think in exactly the same way today, when the fictional elements have overwhelmed reality, one has to distinguish between the manifest content of reality and its latent content&#8217;, from &#8216;The New Science Fiction: A conversation between J G Ballard and George MacBeth&#8217; in Langdon Jones (ed), The New SF, Hutchinson (London), 1969, p 50.</p>
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		<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>
		<category><![CDATA[death of affect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gated communities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[non-place]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychopathology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surveillance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[theme parks]]></category>

		<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>Ballardian.com&#8217;s &#8216;Top 10&#8242; lists for 2009</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-top-10-lists-for-2009</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-top-10-lists-for-2009#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jan 2010 10:08:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[advertising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[invisible literature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sexual politics]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Probably of no interest to anyone but me, but here goes: top 10 most-read posts on ballardian.com in 2009; top 10 search-engine phrases leading visitors to the site in 2009; and top 10 links from other sites in 2009.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Happy New Year! </p>
<p>After Robert Anton Wilson, my 2010 goal is to &#8220;create the happiest, funniest, most romantic reality-tunnel consistent with my brain signals&#8221;. And so the following is probably of no interest to anyone but me&#8230; </p>
<p>But here goes, anyway: for 2009, ballardian.com&#8217;s top 10 most-read posts, search terms leading to the site and links from other sites:</p>
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<p><strong>TOP 10 MOST-READ POSTS ON BALLARDIAN.COM FOR 2009</strong><br />
<em>(Note that most of these are old posts, and, surprise, surprise: the X-ray porn comes in at no. 1; there&#8217;s depravity also at no. 5, 6 &#038; 10. Good to see urbanism and film posts making a strong showing, too.):<br />
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/xray_top10.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Top 10 2009" /></p>
<p><strong>1. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-fusion-of-science-and-pornography">&#8216;The fusion of science and pornography&#8217; (WARNING! Exceptionally unsafe for work)</a> &#8211; 1 July 2008</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Wim Delvoye&#8217;s &#8216;Kiss&#8217; series of x-ray art echoes The Atrocity Exhibition and the illustrations of Phoebe Gloeckner. WARNING: this post is indisputably unsafe for work. No, seriously: you have been warned.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>2. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/coming-never-richard-gere-as-blake">Coming Never: Richard Gere as Blake</a> &#8211; 7 May 2008</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Aside from the films of Empire and Crash, Ballard has had almost all his novels optioned for the screen at some stage. Suitors include Richard Gere, Samuel L. Jackson, Jack Nicholson, David Frost and a trio of scantily-clad cavegirls.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>3. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/crash-full-tilt-autogeddon">Crash! Full-Tilt Autogeddon</a> &#8211; 10 August 2007</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Although little known, Harley Cokliss&#8217;s 1971 short film Crash!, based on passages from The Atrocity Exhibition, has something even more prized, something else the Cronenberg and Spielberg adaptations could never have: it stars J.G. Ballard. With his brooding, hypermasculine presence, Ballard plays a version of Atrocity&#8217;s &#8216;T&#8217; character alongside Gabrielle Drake, her own role a composite of the book&#8217;s archetypal &#8217;sex-kit&#8217; women.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>4. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/michael-jacksons-facelift">Michael Jackson&#8217;s Facelift</a> &#8211; 2 July 2009</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;&#8216;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.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>5. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/dead-models">Dead Models</a> &#8211; 31 October 2007</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;A photo shoot for America’s Next Top Model, on the subject of dead girls. The judges’ comments have to be seen to be believed.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>6. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/triple-transgression">Triple Transgression</a> &#8211; 26 December 2007</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;This disturbing photo feature focuses on peeping toms in Japan and Kohei Yoshiyuki, the photographer who documented them in the 1970s.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>7. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear-interview">&#8216;Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;: An Interview with Nic Clear</a> &#8211; 24 December 2008</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Nic Clear leads the remarkable Unit 15 course on the built environment at the Bartlett School of Architecture in London. In this interview, Nic explains the course&#8217;s focus on the work of Ballard as a way to counter the lamentable state of current discourse on architecture. The article includes clips of six stunning films produced by students as part of this Ballard-inspired methodology.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>8. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/crown-casino-a-snarling-digitised-mutilation">Crown Casino: ‘A snarling, digitised mutilation’</a> &#8211; 27 May 2009</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Simon Sellars, Mel Chilianis and Melb Psy take an audiovisual tour of Melbourne&#8217;s Crown Casino, seeking to map the coordinates of this micronational zone &#8212; consumer-driven control space with a raging need.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>9. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/rip-jg-ballard-1930-2009">R.I.P. JG Ballard, 1930-2009</a> &#8211; 20 April 2009</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Goodbye, Jim&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>10. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/love-among-the-mannequins">Love Among the Mannequins</a> &#8211; 15 January 2008</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;Here&#8217;s a new campaign from fashion label Dsquared2, featuring sex with crash-test mannequins. But it doesn’t appear to be selling anything. What exactly *is* it selling? Note the photographer: none other than our old mucker, Steven Meisel.&#8221;</p>
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<p><strong>TOP 10 MOST-FOLLOWED LINKS TO BALLARDIAN.COM FROM OTHER SITES:</strong><br />
<em>(surprise: no porn)</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/radiohead_top10.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Top 10 2009" /></p>
<p>1. <a href="http://www.radiohead.com/deadairspace/index.php?a=469">http://www.radiohead.com/deadairspace/index.php?a=469</a><br />
2. <a href="http://www.jgballard.com">http://www.jgballard.com</a><br />
3. <a href="http://www.planetaki.com">http://www.planetaki.com</a><br />
4. <a href="http://www.metafilter.com">http://www.metafilter.com</a><br />
5. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_Come_(Ballard_novel)">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_Come_(Ballard_novel)</a><br />
6. <a href="http://www.facebook.com">http://www.facebook.com</a><br />
7. <a href="http://www.warrenellis.com/?p=7221">http://www.warrenellis.com/?p=7221</a><br />
8. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._G._Ballard">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._G._Ballard</a><br />
9. <a href="http://twitter.com/ballardian">http://twitter.com/ballardian</a><br />
10. <a href="http://k-punk.abstractdynamics.org">http://k-punk.abstractdynamics.org</a></p>
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<p><strong>TOP 10 SEARCH-ENGINE TERMS LEADING VISITORS TO BALLARDIAN.COM:</strong><br />
<em>(very surprised at the paucity of porn, also that &#8216;ballardian&#8217; beats &#8216;jg ballard&#8217;)</em></p>
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<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/drake_top10.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Top 10 2009" /></p>
<p>1. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=ballardian&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">ballardian</a><br />
2. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=jg+ballard&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">jg ballard</a><br />
3. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=gabrielle+drake&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">gabrielle drake</a><br />
4. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=ballard&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">ballard</a><br />
5. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=medical+fetish&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">medical fetish</a><br />
6. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=make+love&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">make love</a><br />
7. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=computers+internet+blog&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">computers internet blog</a><br />
8. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=concrete+island&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">concrete island</a><br />
9. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=ballardian.com&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">ballardian.com</a><br />
10. <a href="http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&#038;rls=en&#038;q=atrocity+exhibition&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;oe=UTF-8">atrocity exhibition</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>
				<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[R.I.P. JGB]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[airports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[audio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dystopia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban ruins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[utopia]]></category>

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		<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>Stereoscopic Urbanism: JG Ballard and the Built Environment</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/stereoscopic-urbanism-jg-ballard-and-the-built-environment</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 14 Nov 2009 02:04:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inner space]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[perception]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychogeography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The fiction of JG Ballard was centred almost wholly on the built environment. Ballard took architectural design to its logical extreme and then contorted it further. Simon Sellars looks at how architects can learn from Ballard and, specifically, his use of urban sound as a metaphor.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_ad1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" /></p>
<p><em>Images by <a href="http://www.michellelord.co.uk">Michelle Lord</a>, from Future Ruins (inspired by JG Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;), 2008. </em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Pulled apart by the elders, many of the sets revealed their internal wiring. The green and yellow circuitry, the blue capacitors and modulators, mingled with the bright berries of the firethorn, rival orders of a wayward nature merging again after millions of years of separate evolution.&#8217;</p>
<p> <em><strong>JG Ballard, &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, 1976.</strong></em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ad_clear2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" class="picleft" />
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<p>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. 82-7.</p>
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<p><strong>The fiction of JG Ballard was centred almost wholly on the built environment. Ballard took architectural design to its logical extreme and then contorted it further. Simon Sellars looks at how architects can learn from Ballard and, specifically, his use of urban sound as a metaphor.</strong></p>
<p>In JG Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;The Sound-Sweep&#8217;,<a href="#1">[1]</a> the sonic strata of everyday urban life – a &#8216;frenzied hypermanic babel of jostling horns, shrilling tyres, plunging brakes and engines&#8217;<a href="#2">[2]</a> – is so without respite that it is literally embedded within walls and surfaces and must be vacuumed away with a device called the &#8217;sonovac&#8217;. The central character, Mangon, is a mute who has developed hyperacute hearing, making him a valued sound- sweep. His main client is Madame Gioconda, an ex-opera singer whose career ended with the advent of &#8216;ultrasonic music&#8217;. Ultrasonic producers electronically rescore classical symphonies into musical notation that operates on a subliminal level, making use of the sensorium beyond the normal range of the human ear. Supposedly the new music, ostensibly silent, has richer texture, theme and emotion, but whether this is merely a placebo effect to placate the frazzled masses remains ambiguous.</p>
<p>Mangon strives to resurrect Gioconda&#8217;s career, but when he does eventually stage her comeback, she botches it, her voice so cracked, out of practice and out of tune that it causes great distress to all who hear it. The story ends with Mangon driving off in his sound truck as he turns on the vehicle&#8217;s inbuilt sonovac – filled with the city&#8217;s sonic detritus – to drown out Gioconda singing like an &#8216;insane banshee&#8217;. Effectively, Mangon manipulates the sounds of the city to assuage his psychological turmoil.</p>
<p>Ballard&#8217;s story anticipates R Murray Schafer&#8217;s World Soundscape project, which aimed to reduce the noise pollution of industrial environments in favour of an &#8216;acoustic ecology&#8217;, eliminating so-called &#8216;bad&#8217; sounds in favour of prescribed &#8216;good&#8217; sounds, returning to &#8216;the Ursound&#8217; supposedly found in nature, where, Schafer rhapsodises, &#8216;listening blindly to our ancestors and the wild creatures, we will feel it surge within us again, in our speaking and in our music&#8217;.<a href="#3">[3]</a> But as Geoff Manaugh notes: &#8216;Where the Project went wrong &#8230; was when it thought it had a kind of sonic monopoly over what sounded good. Industrial noises would be scrubbed from the city &#8230; and a nostalgic calm &#8230; infused in its place. Think church bells, not automobiles. But where would such sensory cleansing leave those &#8230; who enjoy the sounds of factories?&#8217;<a href="#4">[4]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_ad2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" /></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Halloway had the distinct impression that this solitary young mute was a prisoner here, high above this museum of cars in the centre of the abandoned airport.&#8217;</p>
<p><em><strong>JG Ballard, &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, 1976.</strong></em></p></blockquote>
<p>For Ballard, too, neither full reliance on technology (represented by the sterile, calming aesthetic of ultrasonic music) nor the reactionary turn to nostalgia and a safe retreat into the past (ie Mangon&#8217;s initial deification of the opera singer) is posited as an adequate solution. Instead, a middle ground is sought, a strategy found throughout his career, grounded in the sense that the built environment must be met on its own terms.</p>
<p>In the novella &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;,<a href="#5">[5]</a> Ballard moves beyond Mangon&#8217;s half-aware thumbnail sketch and into a three-dimensionality: a full-scale cognitive remapping. A future ecotopia, Garden City, has developed wind power and alternative technologies after New York has fallen into ruins from the exhaustion of fossil fuels. The central character, Halloway, dissatisfied with what he sees as the dulling of the imagination in Garden City, with its organic conformity, makes his way back to the abandoned New York, where he attempts to restart the metropolis and its power supplies. Significantly, it is the noise of the city that he misses and that he is inescapably drawn to. With the help of Olds (another mute), Halloway manages to restart the generators and power supplies of a small sector of the city, bringing to life neon and traffic lights, while broadcasting sound- effects records of automobile and aircraft noise:</p>
<blockquote><p>Halloway moved from one apartment to the next, flicking lights on and off, working the appliances in the kitchens. Mixers chattered, toasters and refrigerators hummed, warning lights glowed in control panels &#8230; Television sets came on, radios emitted a ghostly tonelessness interrupted now and then by static from the remote-controlled switching units of the tidal pumps twenty miles away.</p>
<p>It was only now, in this raucous light and noise, that the city was being its true self, only in this flood of cheap neon that it was really alive &#8230;<a href="#6">[6]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Like Mangon, but on a grander scale, Halloway tunes the city rather than shutting it out, rejecting the sterile, affectless Garden City for a complete reimagining and re-envisaging of the city&#8217;s technological grid, including the acoustic footprint that so disturbed the inventors of ultrasonic music. This time, the story anticipates the Positive Soundscapes research project, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and comprising five British universities, which aims to convince architects and town planners to think beyond the traditional focus on reducing noise levels and to pay attention instead to &#8216;the many possibilities for creating positive environments in the soundscapes in which we live. People can completely change their perception of a sound once they have identified it. In the laboratory, many listeners prefer distant motorway noise to rushing water, until they are told what the sounds are.&#8217;<a href="#7">[7]</a></p>
<p>I have cited these examples of urban sound in Ballard because they represent the key components of a framework he uses to critique the psychological and perceptual dimensions that are saturated in the built environment, but that seem lacking in the discourse that generates architectural practice. In a sense, Ballard&#8217;s work is about nothing but the built environment. It is often said that technology and the liminal zones of suburbia and non- place urban fields are his main characters, and indeed the buildings and zones he erects – the motorway system in Crash,<a href="#8">[8]</a> the apartment block in High-Rise (&#8216;an environment built, not for man, but for man&#8217;s absence&#8217;),<a href="#9">[9]</a> the secessionist shopping centre in Kingdom Come<a href="#10">[10]</a> – all seem imbued with an artificial intelligence determined to eradicate human life as if it were a disease.</p>
<p>This is a gambit that brings sociologist Ron Smith&#8217;s observation into stark relief: &#8216;If you want to see what&#8217;s wrong with architecture today, pick up the latest issue of almost any architectural design magazine. They&#8217;re filled with pictures of interesting architecture, but you rarely see any people actually using those buildings.&#8217;<a href="#11">[11]</a> In Ballard, trends (and flaws) in architectural design are pursued to their logical extremes, and then bent backwards or forwards through time to go completely beyond logic. In the real world, people might complain about an escalator too far away from a baggage chute in an airport or a concourse in a mall that heats up too quickly, or overly processed floors that make far too much noise when walked upon. In Ballard, the unspoken tension and psychopathology engendered by such scenarios is recycled, reheated and allowed free rein to play itself out to the bitterest of ends.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_ad3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" /></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Buckmaster tried to point out to Halloway how the Twentieth Century had met its self-made death. They stood on the shores of artificial lagoons filled with chemical wastes, drove along canals silvered by metallic scum, across landscapes covered by thousands of tons of untreated garbage, fields piled high with cans, broken glass and derelict machinery.&#8217; </p>
<p><em><strong>JG Ballard, &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, 1976.</strong></em></p></blockquote>
<p>In High-Rise, which charts the breakdown of the social order in a neo-Corbusian residential building, at first it is the little things that niggle. These then overlay and overlap, each new escalation of hostilities a clear and logical progression from the previous strata, however bizarre each incident might seem in isolation. Parents find that the building hasn&#8217;t been designed for children: there is no free, open space, only &#8217;someone else&#8217;s car park&#8217;. Shared garbage disposal causes anxiety and division between residents. Raucous parties occur on the upper floors, and residents in &#8216;better-sited apartments&#8217; are unsympathetic to those living below them. Dog owners are attacked for allowing their pets to urinate and defecate in the elevators, culminating in the fateful moment when one resident&#8217;s Afghan hound is drowned in the swimming pool.</p>
<p>Thereafter, things really take off: incidents of violent aggression morph into tribal skirmishes and warring groups cut off escalator access, barricading their apartments and &#8216;Balkanising&#8217; the middle section of flats to form a buffer zone. Yet, after the system has collapsed and failed, what we are left with is more than a mere glimmer of hope, and clearly akin to a programme of resistance based on emergent psychologies and a radical new approach to the built environment: &#8216;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.&#8217;<a href="#12">[12]</a></p>
<p>Yet just as Positive Soundscapes has encountered resistance in persuading architects and engineers to re- evaluate environmental sound, &#8216;perhaps because of barriers to communication across different disciplines&#8217;<a href="#13">[13]</a>, chances are you will not find Ballard on the syllabus. According to Nic Clear, who has used Ballard&#8217;s work as an aid in architectural learning: &#8216;Within academia and architectural criticism, if such a thing still exists, there is a general disdain for “popular” fiction – writing on, and about, architecture is still very elitist – and I have met quite a bit of resistance when discussing Ballard as a serious subject.&#8217;<a href="#14">[14]</a></p>
<p>Yet architects have no compunction about appropriating critical theory to their own ends. Peter Eisenman drew heavily on Deleuze and Baudrillard for his conception of &#8216;interstitial&#8217; architecture and &#8216;blurred zones&#8217;, where the aim was to examine the way the virtual has invaded the actual, displacing architecture&#8217;s traditional role as an anchor for the real. Eisenman&#8217;s &#8216;philosophy lite&#8217; sought to invite architecture to explore conceptual spaces located within the &#8216;folds&#8217; of the built environment, with the aim of &#8216;refram[ing] existing urbanism, to set it off in a new direction&#8217;.<a href="#15">[15]</a> But surely the theory of Deleuze (which has more than a few correspondences with the work of Ballard) is designed to inspire affirmation in the reader, the user, the inhabitant; surely it must be tangible and must work in practice, in real-world terms, in that it must inspire thought and positive action to affirm its validity.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_ad4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" /></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Halloway was fascinated by the glimmering sheen of the metal- scummed canals, by the strange submarine melancholy of drowned cars looming up at him from abandoned lakes, by the brilliant colours of the garbage hills, by the glitter of a million cans embedded in a matrix of detergent packs and tinfoil, a kaleidoscope of everything they could wear, eat and drink.&#8217;</p>
<p><em><strong>JG Ballard, &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, 1976.</strong></em></p></blockquote>
<p>That to me seems the Deleuzian ideal – indeed, the Ballardian ideal. It would seem apposite to say the majority of criticism of Eisenman&#8217;s buildings implies that not only are most users unaware of the inner workings of the &#8216;process of the interstitial&#8217; that built the thing, but that in the final product antagonism and negation is placed before affirmation and interaction. As Roger Kimball writes: &#8216;When we encounter a stairway that leads nowhere &#8230; we need [Eisenman's] help to understand that we are being given a lesson in linguistic futility. Otherwise we might foolishly conclude that it was just a stairway that led nowhere and wonder about the sanity of the chap who paid the architect&#8217;s bill.&#8217;<a href="#16">[16]</a></p>
<p>Ballard is interested in urbanism and spatial dynamics as a way to understand the city as narrative. The psychological dimension of urban life plays an important part, &#8216;reading&#8217; and &#8216;writing&#8217; the city on a sensory level. Indeed, he should be required reading for anyone seriously interested in making architecture more &#8216;user friendly&#8217;, or to anyone who thinks that architecture should be more than a series of shiny icons designed by remote starchitects. In this, he is ideally matched with the aims of Smith, who believes that &#8216;to become truly great architects [architecture students] also have to be great social psychologists, community sociologists, and organizational theorists&#8217;,<a href="#17">[17]</a> and also those of Michael Kroelinger, who teaches a course in &#8216;Architectural Sociology&#8217; at the University of Nevada that &#8216;underscores the importance of understanding people&#8217;s values, needs, and attitudes, from an individual level to an organizational one&#8217;.<a href="#18">[18]</a></p>
<p>Architects: read, study and learn from Ballard&#8217;s writing. Because it should not be the job of the architect to build worlds and indulge the luxury of allowing them to fail at our expense, but that of the writer, the constructor of virtual worlds that live, breathe and, indeed, die in virtuality so that we, in the actual, do not have to expire to prove a point. Only then should we overlay the virtual with the actual to create a stereoscopic representation, a truly interstitial process that places the user at the centre with the power to inform, direct, stage and manage the terms of his or her movement through time and space, perhaps nudging us one step closer to a read/write city in which we are free to &#8216;tune&#8217; the built environment, <a href="#19">[19]</a> free to contribute to the conditions of our cohabitation.</p>
<p>In fact, an interdisciplinary, specifically Ballardian approach may be exactly what is required to shake architecture out of its &#8216;business as usual&#8217; mentality, forcing it to confront the global economic and environmental crises just over the horizon. Ask the question: is another &#8217;shiny, happy&#8217; building really what we want or need to see or inhabit?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/michelle_ad5.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Architectural Design" /></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;He knew now that he would never return to Garden City, with its pastoral calm &#8230; he would set off on foot, &#8230; following the memorials westwards across the continent, until he found the old man again and could help him raise his pyramids of washing machines, radiator-grilles and typewriters.&#8217; </p>
<p><em><strong>JG Ballard, &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, 1976.</strong></em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>Notes</strong><br />
[1]<a name="1"></a> JG Ballard, &#8216;The Sound-Sweep&#8217; [1960], in The Complete Short Stories, Flamingo (London), 2001.<br />
[2]<a name="2"></a> Ibid, p 106.<br />
[3]<a name="3"></a> Quoted in Brandon LaBelle, Perspectives on Sound Art, Continuum (New York and London), 2006, p 204.<br />
[4]<a name="4"></a> Geoff Manaugh, &#8216;Audio Architecture&#8217;, BLDGBLOG, 10 August 2007. See <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2007/08/audio-architecture.html">http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2007/08/audio-architecture.html</a>, accessed 26 January 2008.<br />
[5]<a name="5"></a> JG Ballard, &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217; [1976], in The Complete Short Stories, Flamingo (London), 2001.<br />
[6]<a name="6"></a> Ibid, pp 902, 907.<br />
[7]<a name="7"></a> Positive Soundscapes, &#8216;Project Overview&#8217;, Positive Soundscapes: A Re- evaluation of Environmental Sound. See <a href="www.positivesoundscapes.org/project_overview">www.positivesoundscapes.org/project_overview</a>, accessed 26 January 2009.<br />
[8]<a name="8"></a> JG Ballard, Crash [1973], Vintage (London), 1995.<br />
[9]<a name="9"></a> JG Ballard, High-Rise [1975], Flamingo (London), 1993.<br />
[10]<a name="10"></a>  JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, Fourth Estate (London), 2006.<br />
[11]<a name="11"></a> Quoted in Gian Galassi, &#8216;Community by Design&#8217;, UNLV Magazine, Fall 2004. See <a href="http://magazine.unlv.edu/Issues/Fall04/community.html">http://magazine.unlv.edu/Issues/Fall04/community.html</a>>, accessed 26 January 2009.<br />
[12]<a name="12"></a> JG Ballard, High Rise, op cit, p 147.<br />
[13]<a name="13"></a> Positive Soundscapes, op cit.<br />
[14]<a name="14"></a> Simon Sellars, &#8216;Architectures of the Near Future: An Interview with Nic<br />
Clear&#8217;, Ballardian, 24 December 2008. See <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear- interview">www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear- interview</a>, accessed 26 January 2009.<br />
[15]<a name="15"></a> Peter Eisenman (ed), Blurred Zones: Investigations of the Interstitial: Eisenman Architects 1988–1998, Monacelli Press (New York), 2002, p 132.<br />
[16]<a name="16"></a> Roger Kimball, &#8216;Architecture and ideology&#8217;, New Criterion, December 2002. See http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb3345/is_4_21/ai_n28962509>, accessed 26 January 2009.<br />
[17]<a name="17"></a> Quoted in Gian Galassi, op cit.<br />
[18]<a name="18"></a> Ibid.<br />
[19]<a name="19"></a> I&#8217;ve borrowed the concept of the &#8216;read/write&#8217; city from Steve Lambert of the Anti- Advertising Agency who, writing about the visual environment and street art, states: &#8216;Why is read/write better? Because you can consume, process, and respond. This is how we think critically. This is how we learn. You can talk back. You can express yourself. You don&#8217;t just consume expression, you create expression. Read/write is how democracy works. There&#8217;s a reason kids want to write their names on walls. There&#8217;s a reason why people take graffiti seriously. Granted, graffiti writers don&#8217;t always know how to direct this energy, but I&#8217;d argue there&#8217;s some overlap with the reasons one writes their name on a wall and the reasons one runs for the school board. Being able to write means being able to affect your environment. To change it. You exist in the world not as a consumer, but an active citizen. Read only culture creates apathy.&#8217; From Steve Lambert, &#8216;Demand a Read/Write City&#8217;, The Anti-Advertising Agency, 3 October, 2008. See http://antiadvertisingagency.com/news/demand-a-readwrite-city, accessed 26 January 2009.</p>
<p><em>Text © 2009 John Wiley &#038; Sons Ltd. Images © Michelle Lord.</em></p>
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<p><strong>&#8230;:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong<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>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>
		<category><![CDATA[hyperreality]]></category>
		<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>
		<category><![CDATA[surveillance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[temporality]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time travel]]></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>&#039;Architectures of the Near Future&#039;: An Interview with Nic Clear</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear-interview</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/near-future-nic-clear-interview#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Dec 2008 06:41:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fredric Jameson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jean Baudrillard]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=1071</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nic Clear leads the remarkable Unit 15 course on the built environment at the Bartlett School of Architecture in London. In this interview, Nic explains the course's focus on the work of Ballard as a way to counter the lamentable state of current discourse on architecture. The article includes clips of six stunning films produced by students as part of this Ballard-inspired methodology.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/6eQHVF9Xuc8&#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/6eQHVF9Xuc8&#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: &#8216;London after the Rain&#8217;, by Ben Olszyna-Marzys. A film produced for Nic Clear&#8217;s Unit 15 course, &#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;.</em></p>
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<p>In recognition of the sophistication of Ballard&#8217;s architectural analysis, a raft of discourse has been produced in recent times from within both academic and pop-cultural realms. This takes the form of tributes, analyses, &#8216;reimaginings&#8217; and course syllabuses. In the influential architecture blog BLDGBLOG, for example, Geoff Manaugh <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2005/01/bldgblog-as-soundbite.html">sounds the note</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>We have more to learn from the fiction of J.G. Ballard &#8230; than we do from Le Corbusier. The good city form of tomorrow is a refugee camp built by Brown & Root; the world&#8217;s largest architectural client is the U.S. Department of Defense. More people now live in overseas military camps than in houses designed by Mies van der Rohe &#8212; yet we study Mies van der Rohe.</p></blockquote>
<p>While Le Corbusier appears to be (mis)remembered by history for supposedly self-important, grandiose plans to realise an architectural utopia that ignored the basic requirements of its inhabitants, Ballard, according to Manaugh, assumes increasing importance for the manner in which his work acutely analyses the ways in which the built environment can impact psychologically on its users and inhabitants. This includes, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/politics-of-enthusiasm-geoff-manaugh-interview">he elaborates</a>, an identification of a &#8216;constant dissatisfaction with &#8230; architectural surroundings [that] becomes a kind of quiet aggression, an unarticulated suburban angst&#8217;. For Manaugh, the &#8216;psycho spatial&#8217; nature of &#8216;Ballardian space&#8217; is best articulated by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a>, which he has utilised to varying degrees as the cornerstones of several BDLGBLOG posts.</p>
<p>Within the creative arts, the Birmingham-based artist Michelle Lord <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/future-ruins">exhibited a series of images</a> that used imagery from Concrete Island and Ballard&#8217;s novella &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217; (1976) to examine the legacy of Brutalist architecture in Britain. Lord&#8217;s work explicitly critiques the utopian &#8217;social idealism&#8217; of Brutalism, itself a descendant of the Le Corbusier school of architecture, and the fashion in which it disregarded &#8216;the communal, historic and surrounding built environment&#8217;. Yet Lord also successfully captures the sense of ambivalence that powers &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, with its depiction of a far-future, &#8216;post technological&#8217; world in which the harshness of the urban environment is rejected in favour of a &#8216;green&#8217;, sterile ecotopia, only to be fatally underscored by a lingering lament for the decline of industrial landscapes.</p>
<p>Academically, Ballardian Studies is an emerging discipline in architectural schools. Here, the website of the London-based firm, Azhar Architecture, is instructive, <a href="http://www.azhararchitecture.com/links_books.html">featuring a list</a> entitled &#8216;What&#8217;s being recommended in Architecture Schools: A Sample&#8217;. High-Rise, tracking the breakdown of social order in a Corbusian apartment block, is included alongside works from Rem Koolhaas, Mike Davis, Deleuze &#038; Guattari and Guy Debord. At Columbia University&#8217;s Department of English &#038; Comparative Literature, Professor Ursula Heise <a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/english/syllabi/3209heise.htm">taught a subject</a> entitled &#8216;Modern and Postmodern Cities&#8217;, in which depictions of &#8216;the metropolis and urban life&#8217; were considered in 20th-century literature. One session was given over to two <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete-short-stories">Ballard short stories</a>, &#8216;The Concentration City&#8217; (1957) and &#8216;Billennium&#8217; (1962), which rank among the author&#8217;s most effective portrayals of the sensory overload of big-city life. Conceptually, the stories are at polar opposites, thematically they are of a piece: the absolute alliance of architecture with late capitalism. &#8216;Billennium&#8217; is concerned with the complete contraction of public and private space by an overbearing architecture, while &#8216;Concentration City&#8217; is based on the premise that the city is ever-expanding, without limits, its boundaries unable to be located by the central protagonist, who, no matter how far he travels, ends up where he started.</p>
<p>But the most ambitious academic program to date is almost certainly <a href="http://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/programmes/units/unit15_08.htm">&#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;</a>, which was taught by Nic Clear and Simon Kennedy at the Bartlett School of Architecture in London in 2007-08. For Clear and Kennedy, the &#8217;speculative&#8217; nature of Ballardian architectural space is all-important. The course, which utilised film and animation, video and motion-graphic techniques to devise representations of &#8217;synthetic space&#8217;, challenged students to examine architectural themes across the broad span of Ballard&#8217;s writing. The aim was to process the manner by which he deploys &#8216;actual&#8217; and &#8216;virtual&#8217; environments to form a coherent analysis of the challenges inherent in a supersaturated technological world. Clear and Kennedy, like Manaugh, also point to the psychological effects of architecture, which leads on to their consideration of Iain Sinclair and Chris Petit&#8217;s film, London Orbital, as a text not only influenced by Ballard but also by the psychogeographical revival that Sinclair is closely associated with.</p>
<p>I recall in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/politics-of-enthusiasm-geoff-manaugh-interview">my interview with Manaugh</a>, where I mentioned how I&#8217;d love to see Ballard taught in architectural schools. Geoff enthusiastically replied, &#8216;I would love to do this — it&#8217;s actually a conscious fantasy of mine&#8230;&#8217; You can understand my excitement upon learning of Unit 15! I decided therefore to contact Nic Clear, and pin him down about Ballard, architecture and the fabulous work created by Unit 15, as well as the new U15 program for 2008-09, &#8216;The Near Future Part II&#8217;, which questions whether the utopianism of the &#8216;corporate architectural complex&#8217; is viable in a world riven by conflict.</p>
<p><em>Simon Sellars</em></p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;The Sound-Sweep&#8217;, by George Thomson, based on the story by J.G. Ballard. A film produced for Nic Clear&#8217;s Unit 15 course, &#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;.</em></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&#8217;s world is highly prescient and ruthlessly unsentimental. Rather than examining specific texts, Unit 15 will be following themes implicit in Ballard&#8217;s writing.</p>
<p>Unit 15 will also be examining filmic interpretations of his writing, particularly David Cronenberg&#8217;s Crash and Jonathan Weiss&#8217;s The Atrocity Exhibition, and to a lesser extent Steven Spielberg&#8217;s Empire Of The Sun. We shall also be looking at films inspired by Ballard&#8217;s work especially Iain Sinclair&#8217;s London Orbital. In short, we shall be examining all aspects of culture that can be considered BALLARDIAN.</p>
<p><em>Nic Clear &#038; Simon Kennedy, &#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;, Unit 15, Bartlett School of Architecture, 2007-08.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SIMON SELLARS: Nic, how did the idea for &#8216;Crash: Architectures Of The Near Future&#8217; come about?</strong></p>
<p>NIC CLEAR: I&#8217;ve been interested in Ballard&#8217;s writing for many years; I was a big Joy Division fan and read <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a> simply because they wrote a song with the same name. More recently, it struck me that the themes in Ballard&#8217;s work seem to address the issues about the built environment that architectural discourse seems to avoid: namely, how people actually operate within a social context where things are either falling, or have fallen apart. Architecture always seems to present this impossibly rosy view of the future and seems unable to deal with the possibility of failure, even though all architecture in some way fails.</p>
<p><strong>SS: How have your students responded to Ballard&#8217;s work?</strong></p>
<p>NC: The projects have been very successful, and the use of a literary point of departure has been quite liberating. The Ballardian theme has allowed students to really speculate on what they are doing, but also, more importantly, why they are doing it.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Besides Unit 15, it seems there are a few architects, architectural critics, architecturally-minded artists and architecture schools that are starting to take notice of Ballard&#8217;s work.</strong></p>
<p>NC: I&#8217;m not sure how many architects are being influenced by Ballard in their work, especially within &#8216;commercial&#8217; architecture &#8212; maybe the forthcoming recession will make architects aware of the Ballardian possibilities of architecture. Within academia and architectural criticism, if such a thing still exists, there is a general disdain for &#8216;popular&#8217; fiction &#8212; writing on, and about, architecture is still very elitist &#8212; and I have met quite a bit of resistance when discussing Ballard as a serious subject. However, I think that there is a desire to face up to a future that deals with a system in crisis, which Ballard articulates so brilliantly. I was recently reading Mike Davis&#8217;s breathtaking collection of essays, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FDead-Cities-Other-Mike-Davis%2Fdp%2F1565848446%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1230078113%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Dead Cities</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;" />, and was constantly thinking &#8216;this is so Ballardian&#8217;. Also, writers like Frederic Jameson and Jean Baudrillard, who have been influenced by Ballard, are still incredibly important and influential. Obviously Ballard&#8217;s early identification of global environmental issues also makes him incredibly pertinent to many people. However Ballard does not give easy, or even <em>any</em> answers and this puts off many people. Given the current economic and environmental conditions, he seems more prescient than ever, not simply because of the situations he describes, but because he offers a mindset for dealing with these issues.</p>
<p>Many people may think that Ballard&#8217;s characters face the scenarios he creates with an unbelievable stoicism, although Ballard has an advantage over us, as most of us have never had to face any kind of catastrophe. I think the experiences of life in Shanghai during WWII made Jim believe that the human race is able to endure &#8212; and inflict &#8212; almost any horror imaginable.</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: A film by Michael Aling, produced for Nic Clear&#8217;s Unit 15 course, &#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;.</em></p>
<p><strong>SS: A wider, and resurgent, trend in film and literature, which Ballard seems to have anticipated, is the idea that on some level we secretly desire the apocalypse, that we welcome the chance to explore the farthest limits of alienation. This is something that Chris Nakashima-Brown <a href="http://nofearofthefuture.blogspot.com/2008/11/politics-of-apocalypse.html">articulates very well</a>: &#8216;The persistence of post-apocalyptic scenarios (as well as many disaster movies) expresses a latent yearning for the destruction of the state apparatus and the abolition of private property. At a deeper psychological level &#8230; the idea of roaming a depopulated earth rummaging for useful artifacts articulates the extent of our individual alienation in a thoroughly commodified society.&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>NC: Many people may fantasise about these scenarios, but when it comes to losing their own luxuries, people will vote for whoever offers the easiest way out &#8212; which most often involves blaming someone else. The most depressing part of how current economic and social structures start falling apart is that, instead of embracing the liberating potential of re-structuring and re-organising, politically things could start getting much more conservative. This is obviously another common theme in Ballard. I grew up in the 70s with the three-day week and the winter of discontent, with the parks of London used as rubbish dumps, but for me it was great power cuts and no school, and out of it came punk &#8230; yet the down side was Thatcherism. Obviously the next few years will be catastrophic for &#8216;big business&#8217; (is that so bad?), and the fall out will be difficult for many, but we will adjust to yet another &#8216;new normal&#8217;. We may even in the long run be better off as a society for it.</p>
<p>Personally, this will be my third major recession, and they are always the most productive times: when no one has money, money stops mattering.</p>
<p><strong>SS: High-Rise is the obvious book to cite when discussing Ballard and architecture. Which of his other works is relevant?</strong></p>
<p>NC: It&#8217;s easier to say which one&#8217;s aren&#8217;t relevant, and the answer to that is probably none! <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> is a personal favourite, I like the perversity of it; it takes the whole modernist fetishisation of technology and mixes it with contemporary obsessions like celebrity cults. The problem with the film was that it was soft-core pornography &#8212; all those shots of Debra Unger&#8217;s stockings &#8212; when really the book is quite hardcore: the leaky orifices, the polysexuality and the car as augmented bodily technology. It&#8217;s a surrealist masterpiece up there with Bataille&#8217;s <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FStory-Eye-Penguin-Modern-Classics%2Fdp%2F0141185384%2F&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Story of the Eye</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;" /> and Duchamp&#8217;s <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Large_Glass">&#8216;The Large Glass&#8217;</a>.</p>
<p><strong>SS: When I interviewed Geoff Manaugh, he defined &#8216;Ballardian space&#8217; as &#8216;psycho spatial&#8217;. I&#8217;d be interested in your take.</strong></p>
<p>NC: If you take Jameson&#8217;s postmodern hyperspace, remove the post-structuralist jargon, add some dark humour and set it on the periphery of any declining western industrialised city &#8212; especially London &#8212; then you are pretty close.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Does this relate to Unit 15&#8217;s research into &#8217;synthetic space&#8217;?</strong></p>
<p>NC: Synthetic space is the merging of the actual and virtual; writers like Ballard and Burroughs have been describing synthetic space for years. Within architectural terms, I see it as the inability to differentiate between spaces and their representations &#8212; where spatial representations are increasingly becoming spatial propositions.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Ballard is famously obsessive <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-ballardian-primer-car-parks">about multi-storey car parks</a>. What do they mean to him, do you think?</strong></p>
<p>NC: The defining symbol of the 20th century is the motor car, and car parks are part palace and part mausoleum. They also tend to be quite ugly and boring, though often in a strangely beautiful and interesting way, and that sort of perversity defines Ballard&#8217;s aesthetic.</p>
<p><strong>SS: For my PhD, I was researching contemporary attitudes towards modernist architecture and came across the critical reaction to the 2006 exhibition on modernist art at the V&#038;A. I was completely shocked by <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2006/apr/07/comment.society">Simon Jenkins&#8217; response</a>, which verged on demonic possession. He took particular exception to modernist architects, who he said were &#8216;the worst offenders because they became the most powerful&#8217;, and equates them with Hitler. (But as Deyan Sudjic <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2006/apr/09/modernism">riposted</a>, such a caricature misrepresents &#8216;the full and often contradictory range of Modernist expression&#8230; none of which seemed to be inspiring much actual terror on the day I went&#8217;.) Why does Brutalist architecture in Britain continue to provoke such rage?</strong></p>
<p>NC: The British establishment, and the English in particular, still have a real suspicion of architectural modernism, seeing it as &#8216;elitist&#8217;, &#8216;European&#8217; and &#8217;socialist&#8217;. Brutalism especially has become a scapegoat for the failure of that post-war welfare state optimism. Of course, this is rubbish: the real failure lies in the political and cultural failure to actually bring about a more egalitarian and democratic society.</p>
<p><strong>SS: On the other hand, as the antithesis to Jenkins, <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2006/mar/20/architecture.communities">Ballard said</a>: &#8216;I have always admired modernism and wish the whole of London could be rebuilt in the style of Michael Manser&#8217;s brilliant Heathrow Hilton&#8217;.</strong></p>
<p>NC: I always imagine that Eden-Olympia in Super-Cannes was designed by someone like Manser. But lets face it, we can&#8217;t always trust such pronouncements by Jim, especially if it was for the benefit of the Guardian &#8212; imagine all that liberal angst and hand wringing.</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: A film by Peter Kidger, produced for Nic Clear&#8217;s Unit 15 course, &#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;.</em></p>
<p><strong>SS: In his review of Davis&#8217;s <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FNEW-City-Quartz-Excavating-Angeles%2Fdp%2F1844675688%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1230087613%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">City of Quartz</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;" />, Ballard welcomes &#8216;unrestricted urban sprawl, the decentred metropolis, a transient airport culture, gated communities and an absence of traditional civic pride&#8217;. He suggests that architects and urban planners need to &#8216;make the most of this&#8217;, letting the environment guide them almost as if it is sentient, rather than conforming to the reverse, ie, the old ideal of the arrogant architect imposing his grand vision on the environment (in High-Rise, this was the downfall of the architect Royal). Do you agree with Ballard?</strong></p>
<p>NC: &#8216;Unrestricted&#8217; would be the key term; the brilliance of Davis&#8217;s analysis is to show how clearly urban planning follows such a narrow set of vested interests. Less planning, less controls, less regulation would only work if it also meant less greed, and what are the chances of that? It reminds me of that Noam Chomsky quote on the free market: &#8216;it sounds like a great idea, maybe we should try it sometime&#8217;.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Rem Koolhaas seems to bear more than a passing resemblance to some of the architects in Ballard&#8217;s stories: the ego, the vainglory, the architect as self-styled eccentric&#8230;</strong></p>
<p>NC: He probably likes to think he does. I like Ballard&#8217;s architects: they seem genuinely optimistic and have a faith, albeit misguided, in the power of architecture to change society for the good. They are of a much older generation &#8212; Ballard&#8217;s. I bet <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Robert Maitland</a> would send angry letters into <a href="http://www.bdonline.co.uk">Building Design</a>, the weekly British architectural newspaper, complaining about these new-fangled projects.</p>
<p>Rem&#8217;s recent work, <a href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.08/beijing.html">especially in China</a>, strikes me as cynical. His obsession with celebrity, especially his own, seems to be his main driving force, and like many &#8216;good&#8217; Marxists of his generation, he has become a consummate capitalist. He is much more like Wilder Penrose from Super-Cannes &#8212; without the humour.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Does architecture still have an image problem, then, in terms of this archetype of the arrogant, narcissistic architect imposing his vision on the people? </strong></p>
<p>NC: Yes, because most of us <em>are</em> arrogant and narcissistic.</p>
<p><strong>SS: In books such as Concrete Island and stories like &#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, Ballard depicts architecture as an instrument of oppressive capitalism, and architects as contributing to that oppression. For Ballard, it seems to me, no architect can be truly radical, or can truly think of architecture as &#8216;art&#8217; when they are either carrying out the wishes of the State, mobilising state funds to realise their designs, or carrying out the desires of big business. Is this an accurate summation of architectural practice today? How would you reconcile that frustration with a pure creative spirit?</strong></p>
<p>NC: I started my postgraduate dissertation in 1989 with a quote from Frederic Jameson: &#8216;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.&#8217;</p>
<p>Little has changed since; in fact, things have got worse. Architecture is now synonymous with the architectural profession (or Corporate Architectural Complex), speculation is financial rather than intellectual, and architects have been complicit with the kind of greedy thinking and acting that has got us into the current global financial crisis. We have to stop thinking about architecture simply in terms of building buildings &#8212; that&#8217;s why I am so interested in looking at other models and disciplines to draw inspiration from.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Ballard <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2007/oct/08/architecture.bilbao">says that</a> &#8216;Novelty architecture dominates throughout the world, pitched like the movies at the bored teenager inside all of us.&#8217; Any thoughts on that?</strong></p>
<p>NC: For novelty architecture, see my answer on Rem. A couple of years ago I used the phrase &#8216;Shapist Architecture&#8217;, taken from Tony Hancock&#8217;s 1961 film <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FTony-Hancock-Collection-Punch-Rebel%2Fdp%2FB000HEVTNQ%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Ddvd%26qid%3D1230088105%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Rebel</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;" />, a satire on the art world. At one point he says, &#8216;I don&#8217;t paint the object, I paint the shape around the object&#8217;. Developments in the use of computer software have allowed architects to come up with a variety of three-dimensional forms, which has led to a whole raft of &#8216;blobby&#8217; buildings, a lot of which appear to be self-indulgent and that confuse &#8216;looking interesting&#8217; with &#8216;being interesting&#8217; and &#8216;looking complex&#8217; with &#8216;complexity&#8217;. We have an architecture of the image.</p>
<p><strong>SS: In Ballard, architecture is often used as a form of social control. Did you perceive any similarities between the nature and cause of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_civil_unrest_in_France"><em>banlieue</em> riots</a> in France in 2005, and the breakdown of society depicted in High-Rise? </strong></p>
<p>NC: Not really. High Rise is about a rejection of convivial social structures and returning to a more &#8216;primitive&#8217; social model. There is a brilliant French film from 1973 called <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FThemroc-Michel-Piccoli%2Fdp%2FB00004SC7J%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Ddvd%26qid%3D1230088246%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Themroc</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;" /><br />
 directed by Claude Faraldo, which seems to have a greater affinity with High-Rise, published two years later. In it, a blue-collar worker rejects his mundane life, knocks the front wall out of his apartment and starts living like a caveman. However, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>, in many ways, does describes the type of anomie and alienation that dominates the urban periphery. Boredom and disenfranchisement brought about by simply being defined by what we consume are the most incendiary factors in the contemporary city.</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: A film by Dan Farmer, produced for Nic Clear&#8217;s Unit 15 course, &#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;.</em></p>
<p><strong>SS: Do you think Ballard has much at all to do with psychogeographical conceptions of urban space? He appears to have been <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/his-personal-horizon-sinclair-and-self-on-ballard">co-opted into the &#8216;movement&#8217;</a>, such as it is.</strong></p>
<p>NC: It seems everyone&#8217;s a psychogeographer nowadays. Psychogeography was originally articulated by the Situationists as an experimental form of urbanism that attempted a critique of the hegemonic values of urban planning and zoning by emphasising the &#8216;transience&#8217; of the urban experience. The political aspect of psychogeography has been diminished in favour of a &#8216;poetics&#8217; of the city. I think Ballard in some of his writing retains a lot more of that political conception of psychogeography than many who have fashionably co-opted that term.</p>
<p><strong>SS: What role does film, video, animation and motion graphics play in your course? How can film methodology help to illuminate architectural design?</strong></p>
<p>NC: My main interest in time-based techniques is the ability to tell stories. However, at a pedagogic level, working with film, video and animation does teach a whole number of organisational and aesthetic skills, so despite my anti-profession rhetoric, I seem to be doing a very good job in equipping students to operate very successfully within the profession.</p>
<p><strong>SS: In The Atrocity Exhibition, there are many scenarios in which mental patients are encouraged to make their own films as therapy. Without wishing to casting aspersions on the mental health of your students(!), were the many references to DIY film aesthetics in the book an inspiration for your decision to use Ballard and film as a way into thinking about architecture? (Recall that in Atrocity, these amateur films recast the media landscape and the built environment in &#8216;ways that make sense&#8217;.)</strong></p>
<p>NC: The way I teach is very much geared toward helping students find a voice, whether that is therapeutic is unimportant (to me) &#8212; besides, I hate that psychoanalytic model of teaching, just as much as I hate the paternalistic model.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Sure, but I wasn&#8217;t really referring to the thereaputic aspects, though, more the DIY angle and the mediation of the built environment.</strong></p>
<p>NC: The main decision to start using film in the way I teach architecture, which I have been doing since 1999, was simply because it was what I was doing myself. The rise of CGI, animation and the availability of digital video made it a much more accessible and viable way of generating, developing and communicating architectural and spatial ideas and narratives. The influence of lo-fi (as opposed to DIY) artists and filmmakers such as Bruce Nauman or Burroughs was an attraction, but it was the availability of the technology that got me going.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Do you think Ballard is an especially &#8216;filmic&#8217; or &#8216;cinematic&#8217; writer?</strong></p>
<p>NC: Yes, which is why the English literary establishment still treats him with suspicion since he is not a &#8216;literary&#8217; writer. Ballard wants to create images and tell stories rather than impress with literary form.</p>
<p><strong>SS: I think the films your students have turned out are simply stunning, especially considering they don&#8217;t have a &#8217;studio budget&#8217; to work with &#8212; the filmmakers, as well as you and everyone involved, should be applauded. But besides making films, you also looked at feature-film versions of Ballard&#8217;s work. How can an analysis of these adaptations help in understanding &#8217;speculative, narrative architectures&#8217; in Ballard&#8217;s writing? </strong></p>
<p>NC: I have taken this particular position for two reasons: to engage with a critique of contemporary architecture, and because it&#8217; s fun. The filmic analysis was just a starting point; out of all the films we watched, Jonathan Weiss&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/weiss-interview">Atrocity Exhibition</a> and Sinclair and Petit&#8217;s <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%3D1230088740%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&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> were the most influential.</p>
<p>Architecture should not be left to architects &#8212; the whole discourse needs opening up. The reason why I earlier questioned whether architectural criticism exists is simply because architecture is an incredibly insular and hermetic discipline &#8212; no one dares criticise the Rems, the Dannys or the Zahas for fear of being locked out. Magazines need content and they publish pretty much anything and everything without questioning it; if they did question it, then the content would dry up.</p>
<p><strong>SS: It&#8217;s good to see Jonathan Weiss&#8217;s film gaining recognition. What do you appreciate about it?</strong></p>
<p>NC: The fact that he had the guts to take it on with virtually no budget. The Atrocity Exhibition is the most &#8216;Burroughsian&#8217; of all Ballard&#8217;s writing and I think Weiss has captured that. The use of found footage and the dislocated time line have echoes in the literary character of the book, and bits of the film are extremely beautiful to look at. I can&#8217;t stand the criticism that it doesn&#8217;t make sense or is difficult: these criticisms seem to ignore the difficulties of the original text.</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;The Knife&#8217; by Mario Balducci, produced for Nic Clear&#8217;s Unit 15 course, &#8216;Crash: Architectures of the Near Future&#8217;.</em></p>
<p><strong>SS: Who else do you think would make a good fist of adapting Ballard?</strong></p>
<p>NC: Taakishi Miike to direct High Rise as a total gore-fest, Michael Mann to direct Super-Cannes &#8212; and I&#8217;m working on an adaptation of &#8216;Motel Architecture&#8217;.</p>
<p><strong>SS: Taakishi Miike? Good call! But tell me about your own adaptation.</strong></p>
<p>NC: I&#8217;m going through the shower scene from Pyscho frame by frame to develop the analysis that JG alludes to in &#8216;Motel Architecture&#8217;. I&#8217;ve mapped out a rough script and hope to shoot something in the new year. Part of what I am doing for &#8216;The Near Future&#8217;, the issue of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architectural_Design">Architectural Design</a> I&#8217;m guest editing, will be based on this project (some sort of &#8216;House Of The Future&#8217;) &#8212; the other part is an essay/rant against the architectural profession.</p>
<blockquote><p>At the time he had been sitting in his chair in the centre of the solarium, bathing in the warm artificial light that flowed through the ceiling vents and watching the shower sequence from Psycho on the master screen. The brilliance of this tour de force never ceased to astonish Pangborn. He had played the sequence to himself hundreds of times, frozen every frame and explored it in close-up, separately recorded sections of the action and displayed them on the dozen smaller screens around the master display. The extraordinary relationship between the geometry of the shower stall and the anatomy of the murdered woman&#8217;s body seemed to hold the clue to the real meaning of everything in Pangborn&#8217;s world, to the unstated connections between his own musculature and the immaculate glass and chromium universe of the solarium. In his headier moments Pangborn was convinced that the secret formulas of his tenancy of time and space were contained somewhere within this endlessly repeated clip of film.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, &#8216;Motel Architecture&#8217; (1978).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>SS: The guest issue of AD was originally going to be explicitly &#8216;Ballardian, wasn&#8217;t it?</strong></p>
<p>NC: The publication, in its current form, has changed from being explicitly about Ballard and Ballard&#8217;s writings to something more general: an antidote to the shiny &#8216;bigness&#8217;, &#8216;everything&#8217;s great&#8217; vision of contemporary architecture presented by the mainstream architectural press. The guiding principles are still thoroughly &#8216;Ballardian&#8217;, even though I have opened the discussion up. I would still like to do a purely Ballardian book and will use The Near Future as a first step.</p>
<p>This is the blurb for the issue, which I think neatly sums up my aims for the whole Near Future project:</p>
<blockquote><p>For the last 20 years, the architectural profession has been complicit with the laissez-faire ideology of late capitalism, assuming that the economic forces of growth and expansion are the only means by which society can develop and prosper.</p>
<p>The current economic crisis makes us question whether a future of unlimited growth is not only possible, but taking into account environmental factors, actually advisable. We have reached a moment of crisis &#8212; economic, environmental and technological &#8212; where we have to make choices about the type of future that we want, but also the type of future we can actually achieve.</p>
<p>It would appear that the Architectural Profession has nothing to say except &#8216;business as usual&#8217;, as it continues to produce bright, shiny renders of schemes that will sit empty for years. This proposed issue of Architectural Design offers a series of alternate voices, developing some of the neglected areas of contemporary urban life and trying to find visions of the future, not simply images of the future.</p>
<p>The proposed issue offers a diverse set of ideas that explore a number of possible &#8216;Near Futures&#8217; &#8212; futures that may be influenced the resurgence of gout in Swindon, or take precedent from an analysis of the political landscape of Southern Italy where in some areas a state of effective lawlessness exists.</p>
<p>The issue combines critical analysis with gorgeous graphics, and features work produced at the margins of contemporary architectural practice. Drawing on topics as diverse as synthetic space, psychoanalysis, post-modern geography, post-economics, cybernetics, developments in neurology as well as the fictional writings of authors such as J G Ballard and William Gibson, &#8216;The Near Future&#8217; will present a series of polemical blasts that are intended to rock the cosy world of architectural discourse.</p></blockquote>
<p><em>Thank you, Nic Clear and Unit 15. &#8216;The Near Future&#8217;, the issue of Architectural Design guest-edited by Nic, will be published in September 2009.</em></p>
<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/-tlMzrAcGp4&#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/-tlMzrAcGp4&#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: &#8216;Nic&#8217;s right-hand talking to Evis, starring Nic Clear&#8217;. Video via <a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/archimaxx">archimaxx</a>.</em></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>Drained Granny Pools</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/drained-granny-pools</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/drained-granny-pools#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 05:09:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drained swimming pools]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=956</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A group of Sydney architects are doing their best to rob us of a Ballardian future.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/drained_granny.jpg" alt="Ballard: Drained swimming pools" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Granny takes a trip&#8230; underground.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cifali_londonfieldslido.jpg" alt="Ballard: Drained swimming pools" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: London Fields Lido, by <a href="http://www.gigicifali.com">Gigi Cifali</a>.</em></p>
<p>A group of Sydney architects are doing their best to rob us of a Ballardian future.</p>
<p>As BLDGBLOG <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2008/12/down-under.html">wryly notes</a>, said architects are rehabilitating &#8216;backyard swimming pools into subterranean &#8220;granny flats&#8221; &#8230; a spatially innovative, if unexpected, way to assuage Sydney&#8217;s growing housing shortage&#8217;&#8230; The regions 360,000 swimming pools would first be emptied of their water and then transformed, through architectural intervention, into a comfortable domestic space, &#8220;complete with a small bedroom, living room, kitchen, bathroom, garden alcove and rooftop windows.&#8221;&#8216;</p>
<p>Imagine if this idea had caught on during Ballard&#8217;s formative years&#8230; No more <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/drained-london">disused, abandoned swimming pools</a>; no more post-industrial anomie.</p>
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		<title>The Real Concrete Island?</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/the-real-concrete-island</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/the-real-concrete-island#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 13:04:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike Bonsall</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychogeography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speed & violence]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=882</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mike Bonsall sets out on a mission to find The Real Concrete Island, and is surprised by what he finds: 'Ballard must have walked the same streets that years later I was to haunt with my own damaged crew. Living within sight of the Westway, which I felt must have helped form his motorway mythology, I was moved to do some geo-detective work...']]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong>MIKE BONSALL</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crubellier_westway.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crubellier_westway.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>The Westway from a spot near Little Venice, west London. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/simon-crubellier">Simon Crubellier</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;J.G. Ballard, the visionary creator of drowned worlds, Vermillion Sands, and now at work on a novel about a motorway desert island&#8230;&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Emma Tennant, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FBurnt-Diaries-Emma-Tennant%2Fdp%2F1841950181%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1228025280%26sr%3D1-3&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Burnt Diaries</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>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Soon after three o&#8217;clock on the afternoon of April 22nd 1973, a 35-year-old architect named Robert Maitland was driving down the high-speed exit lane of the Westway interchange in central London. Six hundred yards from the junction with the newly built spur of the M4 motorway, when the Jaguar had already passed the 70 m.p.h. speed limit, a blow-out collapsed the front nearside tyre.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/google_westway.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/google_westway.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" height="380" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>The <a href="http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&#038;hl=en&#038;geocode=&#038;q=westway,+london&#038;sll=53.800651,-4.064941&#038;sspn=10.457248,18.413086&#038;ie=UTF8&#038;ll=51.513537,-0.219887&#038;spn=0.005375,0.008991&#038;t=h&#038;z=17&#038;iwloc=addr">real</a> Concrete Island?</em></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>I WAS FASCINATED TO DISCOVER</strong> that Ballard had hung around Notting Hill in the 70s with <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/angry-old-men-michael-moorcock-on-jg-ballard">Moorcock and the New Wave SF writers</a>, and <a href="http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/books?articleid=4345414">Emma Tennant</a> and the Bananas magazine crowd. He must have walked the same streets that years later I was to haunt with my own damaged crew. Living within sight of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westway_(London)">the Westway</a>, which I felt must have helped form his motorway mythology, I was moved to do some geo-detective work on <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a>, that great updating of Crusoe, and was surprised by what I found.</p>
<p>I think the evidence is quite strong for The Concrete Island to be based on the thin, V-shaped area to the south of the Westway interchange, trapped between the two arms of the West Cross Route. This grassed area can be clearly seen at the bottom centre of the Google map above, complete with tyre tracks from more recently crashed vehicles.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crubellier_westway2.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crubellier_westway2.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" height="380" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>The Westway: photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/simon-crubellier">Simon Crubellier</a>. Surely Ballard would have made his way past this site when rushing back to the suburbs from parties with the Ladbroke Grove crowd?</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;By now Ballard has shot off down the motorway he hymns, in the dark-green station wagon that adds to the image of the solid bourgeois&#8230;&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Emma Tennant, Burnt Diaries.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cbrd_westway.gif" alt="Ballardian: The Real Concrete Island?" /></p>
<p><em>The intended radial motorway. Image via <a href="http://www.cbrd.co.uk/histories/ringways/ringway1/west.shtml">Chris&#8217;s British Road Directory</a>.</em></p>
<p>There was a plan in the 1970s to extend the M4 motorway into central London and create a series of radial motorways, of which the Westway interchange would have been a node. In Concrete Island, JGB is merely working in his favourite time &#8212; the near future. Evidence for the motorway master plan can be seen at the northern apex of the Westway interchange, where the buds of the feeder roads for the northward part of the radial motorway, which was never built, can still be seen.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/holliday_westway.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Concrete Island" /></p>
<p><em>Under the Westway. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/24211444@N06/2902017167">Mike Holliday</a>.</em></p>
<p>In the book, we learn that Maitland is on his way from his Marylebone office to pick up his son in Richmond Park, six miles away. The optimal Google Maps route suggested for this journey approaches the Westway interchange from the East via Marylebone Road and leaves it on the first exit down the West Cross route heading south. The Westway interchange is almost exactly six miles from Richmond Park. The exit onto the West Cross route forms the right-hand arm of the V shape below the circular roundabout and is, I suggest, the right-hand boundary of The Concrete Island.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Shielding his eyes from the sunlight, Maitland saw that he had crashed into a small traffic island, some two hundred yards long and triangular in shape, that lay in the waste ground between three converging motorway routes. The apex of the island pointed towards the west and the declining sun, whose warm light lay over the distant television studios at White City. The base was formed by the southbound overpass that swept past seventy feet above the ground. Supported on massive concrete pillars, its six lanes of traffic were sealed from view by the corrugated metal splash-guards installed to protect the vehicles below.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Ballard, Concrete Island.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/google_westway2.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/google_westway2.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" height="443" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>The iconic circular <a href="http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&#038;hl=en&#038;geocode=&#038;q=westway,+london&#038;sll=53.800651,-4.064941&#038;sspn=10.457248,18.413086&#038;ie=UTF8&#038;ll=51.511634,-0.223031&#038;spn=0.005375,0.008991&#038;t=h&#038;z=17">BBC TV Centre building</a> at bottom left, visible from the island.</em></p>
<p>The cut-off space between the roads is indeed about two hundred yards long, and looking West beyond this island, Maitland would see the BBC TV studios &#8212; the circular building at the bottom left of the Google Map above. Looking east, he would be able to see his high-rise office in Marylebone, barely three miles away. Looking north, he would see the massive high-level circular interchange. What the Westway interchange is missing is a &#8216;tunnel below the overpass&#8217;, though I would suggest this is added for the dramatic effect of the noises it produces and its cave-like entrance to the &#8216;underworld&#8217; that is the island. The orientation of my island is also North&#8211;South as opposed to West&#8211;East, but this might be confusion on JGB&#8217;s part &#8212; after all, it did, for him, point the way to his home in the West.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/adams_westway.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Concrete Island" /></p>
<p><em>The <a href="http://www.openage.co.uk/st%20quintin%20history%20for%20website/page_11.htm">Edwardian terraces of Oxford gardens</a> on the St Quentin Estate, part of which lies under The Island. Photo: Eddie Adams Collection.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;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&#8217;s yard and its wrecked cars had been superimposed on the still identifiable streets and alleyways.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Ballard, Concrete Island.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Turning to the interior of the island, Maitland quickly discovers the remaining outlines of a series of Edwardian terraced houses. This is a fairly specific dating: strictly speaking, ‘Edwardian’ covers the period from 1901 to 1910. And sure enough, the St Quentin Estate, including the part of Latimer Road that was destroyed by the building of the Westway, was built between 1905 and 1914. A &#8216;central valley&#8217; of Ballard&#8217;s Island is formed by a demolished former street. I suggest this could be Bard Road, or the road parallel to it; this can be seen on the overlayed 1953 and modern maps.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bonsall_westway.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bonsall_westway.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Overlay of modern Google Map and 1953 OS Map.</em></p>
<p>There is something quite unreal and magically marginal about this whole area of London. The Stadium that can be seen to the west of the island on the 1953 map is the White City stadium, where the 1908 Olympics were held, an emergency measure after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. This was also the site of the fantastical Franco-British exhibition which gave White City its name.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/franco_westway.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/franco_westway.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>Part of the White City Exhibition.</em></p>
<p>The bandstand at the bottom of the above photo can be seen on the overlaid map; it is now buried beneath the BBC TV complex. The exhibition contained a number of &#8216;Colonial Villiages&#8217;, including an &#8216;Irish Villiage&#8217;, Ballymaclinton, home of 150 colleens. Had visitors travelled a few hundred yards east, they would have come across the &#8216;Latimer Road Gypsy Caravan Site&#8217;, and might have seen a less airbrushed version of the Irish experience:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;The ugliest place we know in the neighbourhood of London, the most dismal and forlorn &#8230; is the tract of land torn up for the brickfield clay half consisting of field laid waste in expectation of the house-builder, which lies just outside Shepherd&#8217;s Bush and Notting Hill. There it is that the gypsy encampment may be found, squatting within an hour&#8217;s walk of the Royal Palaces &#8230;&#8217;</p>
<p><em>London Illustrated News, 13 Dec 1879.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Over a hundred years later, things had not improved much for the travellers:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;The filth and destruction were unimaginable &#8230; Physical chaos ruled half the site. An avenue of garbage had led me into the place. Rotting detritus lay in piles on pitches just inside the entrance. So did the wrecked bodies of a bus and caravan lying amid broken glass, smashed plywood and twisted metal.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Christopher Griffin, on being made warden of the Westway travellers site, May 1984, from his book Nomads Under the Westway.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>And here&#8217;s a demonstration that the events of Concrete Island were all too possible:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;[In 1979] An articulated Customs and Excise lorry carrying a cargo of bonded whiskey crashed through the flyover and teetered on the parapet above two of the caravans, before the cabin crashed to the ground, killing its occupant. It is said that Travellers, Gypsies and policemen enjoyed liquor for weeks afterwards and that a bottle could be bought very cheaply in the neighbourhood.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Griffin, Nomads Under the Westway.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The North boundary of the real island is made up of the modern travellers encampment, their caravans clearly visible in the first Google map. Is Concrete Island&#8217;s damaged tumbler, Proctor, intended to be some kind of carnie echo of the travellers? The island is also within a few hundred yards of the site of 10 Rillington Place, where John Christie carried out his grisly murders, a story that left an impression on Ballard as he recalls in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-miracles-of-life">Miracles of Life</a>. The whole street was demolished to make way for the Westway.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;this was Christie country, and Rillington Place (later renamed), where the ghastly John Christie committed his murders, was only a few hundred yards away. Back in 1953 &#8230; I was walking up Ladbroke Grove when I found a huge crowd outside the police station. They filled the side street, watching the entrance to the car park behind the station. A police car approached, siren ringing, followed by a police van. The crowd drew back, leaving a woman in a red coat standing in the middle of the side street. The constables guarding the car park entrance made no attempt to move her, and she stood her ground, watched admiringly by the crowd as the police car and van swerved at speed through the gates.</p>
<p>The woman in the red coat was the sister of Timothy Evans, a mentally retarded friend of Christie who had been charged with the murder of his son and hanged in 1950. In fact, Christie had murdered the infant, and was himself hanged in 1953. Evans, too late, received a posthumous pardon in 1966. I can still remember the woman in the red coat, and her implacable gaze as she stared at the police van. Inside was John Christie, a now-deranged figure who had just been arrested for the murders he had committed at Rillington Place.</p>
<p><em>Ballard, Miracles of Life.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>I wandered throughout this area in 1980, deep in therapy but pre-Concrete Island. I picked up my welfare cheques from the Post Office next to Hawkwind&#8217;s <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hall_of_the_Mountain_Grill">Hall of the Mountain Grill</a>, bought frayed copies of Frendz from angry hippies, stumbled unchallenged into non-white shebeens, mourned the deaths of burned-out friends, and eventually chanced on the bizarrely named Maxilla Walk nearby. Finally, gloriously, I was drawn into the concrete cathedral under the Westway roundabout, where I felt the presence of the master. A couple of traveller lads asked me for a fag but soon twigged I had even less than them. This land under the drumming motorway was raw and magical and empty and beautiful, in a way I felt I could never explain.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kensington_westway.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Concrete Island" /></p>
<p><em>North Kensington Amenity Trust poster. Image via <a href="http://www.historytalk.org/nottinghilltimeline.htm">Notting Hill History Timeline.</a></em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;Following on from the Westway opening demos in 1970, there was a campaign against the GLC plan for a bus garage between Portobello Road and Ladbroke Grove. This resulted in the founding of the North Kensington Amenity Trust (now the Westway Development Trust), to develop the 23 acres under the flyover for the benefit and use of the local community. After &#8216;Robert Maitland&#8217; crashed through the barrier on to the Westway roundabout Concrete Island and found himself stuck there in the book, the director of the Westway Trust from 1976 to 2005 was Roger Matland. The motorway also features in JG Ballard&#8217;s more notorious 1973 novel Crash, and Trellick Tower influenced his 1975 book High Rise. Ballard contributed to Michael Moorcock&#8217;s New Worlds science fiction magazine when it was at 307 Portobello Road, and Hawkwind came up with a `High Rise&#8217; track featuring the line &#8216;It&#8217;s a human zoo, a suicide mission.&#8217; Ballard&#8217;s urban myths of the near future would also influence such punk and post-punk groups as the Clash, Joy Division, Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire, Ultravox, the Human League, the Normal/Mute Records, Grace Jones and 23 Skidoo, most of whom would appear &#8217;under the flyover&#8217; at Acklam Hall.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Tom Vague, <a href="http://www.historytalk.org/nottinghilltimeline.htm">Notting Hill History Timeline</a>, chapter 13: Underground Overground 1972-76.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ladbroke_westway.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Real Concrete Island?" /></p>
<p><em>A war-torn Ladbroke Grove. Image via <a href="http://www.historytalk.org/nottinghilltimeline.htm">Notting Hill History Timeline.</a></em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;In the centre of the island were the air-raid shelters among which he was sitting.&#8217;</p>
<p><em>Ballard, Concrete Island.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>As the area was bombed in WWII, there would almost certainly have been a number of air-raid shelters surviving &#8212; to my surprise I discovered the foundations of an Anderson shelter when replacing the back lawn of my house in West Norwood in London, in 1990.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/images/holliday_westway2.jpg"><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/holliday_westway2.jpg" alt="" title="The Real Concrete Island?" width="570" class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-906" /></a></p>
<p><em>The Island today, now filled in and a shadow of its former self, as seen from the railway. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/24211444@N06/2902782522">Mike Holliday</a>.</em></p>
<p>Further evidence of the locality: there is a breaker&#8217;s yard under the Westway, to the West of Stable Way, just outside my imagined island. There is also a traffic sign on my island, as in the book, visible in the photo above. Although I haven&#8217;t found evidence of a cinema or a churchyard, I&#8217;m sure they can&#8217;t have been far away!</p>
<p>We also learn that a sergeant from Notting Hill police station urinated on Proctor. The actual police station is less than a mile from my island, at 100 Ladbrooke Grove. And finally, the mysterious Jane Sheppard says she is staying with friends near the Harrow Road, again within a mile of the site. I&#8217;m imagining her character might be based on another woman, on the run from her rich family, in nearby Notting Hill.</p>
<p>At one point Maitland assumes: &#8220;At any moment the ambulance attendants would arrive, he would be carried away to a hospital bed in Hammersmith.&#8221; This would surely be Hammersmith Hospital itself, the only large hospital in the area, virtually within sight of the Westway interchange and, ironically, where JGB now meets with his cancer specialist.</p>
<p>Of course the real location of Concrete Island is only to be found inside Ballard&#8217;s head.  Nevertheless, I think it is interesting to wander around this little slice of Ballardland and breathe in the fumes that helped form that most modern story of a Crusoe stranded in the middle of a giant metropolis.</p>
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		<title>&#8216;Content in their little prisons&#8217;: J.G. Ballard on &#8216;The Towers&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/content-in-their-little-prisons</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Nov 2008 13:44:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dan OHara</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Dan O'Hara back-translates a brief interview with J.G. Ballard, originally published in French in 1975. Here, Ballard discusses the research he did into the link between criminal behaviour and urban environments, a seed of insight that would sustain his writing right up until Kingdom Come.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/lile_de_breton.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Concrete Island" /></p>
<p><em>L&#8217;ile de béton (Concrete Island), French edition, Calman-Lévy (1974). Thanks to Herve for the scan.</em></p>
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<p>Interview by Philippe R. Hupp.</p>
<p><em>Translation by <a href='http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/englisch/abteilungen/berressem/ohara/cv.html'>Dan O&#8217;Hara</a>.</em></p>
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<p>Ballard&#8217;s novels have always been translated into French with alacrity. His 1974 novel, <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a></em>, was already in translation in time for review in the January 1975 edition of the major Paris literary organ Magazine Littéraire, and Antoine Griset&#8217;s review was both penetrating and positive. Griset immediately connected the predicament of Ballard&#8217;s protagonist, stranded on an urban desert island between motorway intersections, with the extremes of social inequality within our society.</p>
<p>‘The image or the idea of a man dying of hunger only a step away from a haven of abundance is tragically familiar’, Griset writes, noting how absurd it is that such distress has become a banal commonplace. Whilst admiring the ‘immense talent’ of Ballard in transforming a vague, banal terrain into a hallucinatory hell &#8212; a feat also achieved in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> &#8212; Griset observes that although <em>Concrete Island</em> may be a continuation of the earlier novel, this time the automobile is a mere symbolic pretext for an examination of the flip-side of our ordered, automated, aseptic lifestyle.</p>
<p>Griset sees the real focus of <em>Concrete Island</em> as being on the flotsam of urban Man Fridays (or should that be &#8216;Men Friday&#8217;?) living in the interstices of modern cities: the invisible masses we observe daily from behind the safety of the windscreen or the office window. In the novel Maitland, an affluent architect who crosses this invisible barrier, decides to remain on the concrete island, having triumphed over its obstinate vagrants. Yet Griset suggests that, if the Maitland who first arrived on the island dies and is transformed into a new, stronger version of himself, he also remains afraid to recognize his own true nature. In a brilliant insight into Ballard&#8217;s metafictional method, Griset implies that this transformation of the protagonist is intended to provoke a similar transformation in the reader. <em>Concrete Island</em> is less concerned with awakening a new moral knowledge than with demonstrating the ways in which the mirror-world of own native brutality is just on the other side of the windscreen.</p>
<p>The following brief interview was printed alongside Griset&#8217;s review. Mostly concerned with the novel he was then in the early stages of writing, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-high-rise"><em>High-Rise</em></a>, it does however contain an intriguing reference to Ballard conducting research on the relation between criminal behaviour and the urban environment. Whatever the sources of this research might have been, it seems that it started a line of enquiry which became a central topos of his writing, leading from <em>Concrete Island</em> through <em>High Rise</em> to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-running-wild"><em>Running Wild</em></a> and the loose tetralogy bookended by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-cocaine-nights"><em>Cocaine Nights</em></a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-kingdom-come"><em>Kingdom Come</em></a>.</p>
<p><em><strong>Dan O&#8217;Hara</strong> </em></p>
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<p><strong>PHILIPPE R. HUPP: You’re in the process of writing a new novel called <em>The Towers</em>&#8230;</strong></p>
<p><strong>JGB:</strong> In fact I still haven’t found a title. It’s a book about what in England and the USA are called ‘high-rises’, these residential towers which can have forty or fifty floors or more. I saw a film about Poland last week, in which one complex of apartments had twenty floors and was a kilometre in length! I’ve been interested for several years now in new lifestyles which permit modern technology; skyscrapers have always attracted me. The life led there seems to me very abstract, and that’s an aspect of setting with which I&#8217;m concerned when I write &#8212; the technological landscape.</p>
<p><strong>Have you read <em>The World Inside</em> by Robert Silverberg? It’s a novel in which people live in groups of 800 thousand in vertical cities. And Silverberg, instead of simply planting the people of today in a futuristic setting, is concerned with showing how their mentality and their social life would be affected. </strong></p>
<p>I haven’t read that book, but what interests me is the present. I don’t want to extrapolate too far – there’s the risk of becoming detached from reality. Although I did write a story a few years ago, ‘Build up’, in which one city occupied the entire universe. It’s a quite fascinating subject.</p>
<p><strong>You’ve already examined housing schemes? </strong></p>
<p>I did research before sitting down to write. For example, in cities, the degree of criminality is affected by liberty of movement; it’s higher in culs-de-sac. And high-rises are culs-de-sac: two thousand people jammed together in the air&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>Entirely isolated.</strong></p>
<p>Cut off from the rest of the world. In this kind of situation, all sorts can happen. Above all I’d like to examine the psychological modifications which occur without the knowledge of the inhabitants themselves, to see to what degree the mind of someone who drives a car or lives in a concrete high-rise has been altered. In the course of my investigations, I observed that there now exists a new race of people who are content in their little prisons, who tolerate a very high level of noise, but for whom the apartment is nothing more than a base allowing them to pass the night in comfort, as they’re absent during the day.</p>
<p><strong>Will this new novel be as symbolic as <em>Crash</em> and <em>Concrete Island</em>? </strong></p>
<p>I think it will be in the same vein, although this time I&#8217;m no longer concentrating on one single character.</p>
<p><strong>And after that, will you further continue your series on the ‘technological landscape’? </strong></p>
<p>No. I don’t have an idea for a novel, but I’d very much like to write several stories that I haven’t had the time to write these last few years. And it’s been a long time since  I’ve written anything in the way of imaginative narratives, romances&#8230;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jgb_igh.jpg" alt="Ballardian: High-Rise" /></p>
<p><em>I.G.H. (High-Rise), French edition, Calmann-Levy, Dimensions SF (1976). Thanks to Herve for the scan.</em></p>
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<p><em>Originally published in French as ‘Entretien avec J. G. Ballard’, </em><em>Magazine Littéraire</em> 96 (January 1975), 54.</p>
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		<title>K08 Sequel: &#039;Galactic Eyes&#039;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/k08-sequel-galactic-eyes</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Nov 2008 03:59:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=875</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A man shrugs off the clucking of his family and makes his way to International Departures. With the ticketing formalities over, he slumps at the bar and orders drinks. A flat, synthetic boarding call and he remembers his trip: ‘Last call for Silverwing 501. Please make your way to Gate 23.’]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/barce_airport1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: El Prat Airport, Barcelona. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
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<p>A man shrugs off the clucking of his family and makes his way to International Departures. With the ticketing formalities over, he slumps at the bar and orders drinks.</p>
<p>He sits and waits.</p>
<p>To escape.</p>
<p>A wicked love gone horribly, horribly wrong. Sour times polyfill the cracks, forcing him to seek joy in sepia-youth: he remembers Mum and Dad so beaming and proud and pictures the first time he was here. The first time, all those years ago…</p>
<p>He was all of ten years old then, sitting in the Airport Bar, and there was a big crowd because it was Sunday and the place was always packed on Sundays. Not just travellers &#8212; it was the only pub open in Melbourne on our Day of Rest. The bar was decked out like a sleazy suburban beer-and-brawl-barn: purple skylights meshed with brown and yellow carpet, fake-wood panelling. God knows what new arrivals thought. But it was exciting for him because he was just a kid and they were at the airport and those people all around were drunk and everyone seemed to be forging an incredible bond with each other, animatedly discussing the cricket and <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/sports_talk/1973226.stm">Packer’s Revolution</a>.</p>
<p>‘Wow, a revolution,’ the boy marvelled. ‘Here in Melbourne!’</p>
<p>And where were those planes going? They were all going somewhere and he was just a kid, just ten years old, imagining the Moon or Mars, the stars their destination.</p>
<p>His father impatiently looked at his watch. Mother wiped the boy’s face with a spit-worn hankie. They were waiting for some long-forgotten cousin to arrive from the UK, another straggler from their far-flung clan. Father had a Scotch on the rocks, Mother a shandy. The boy sucked on raspberry lemonade. Australia — their Australia — had a freckly innocence, an immature nation finding its feet.</p>
<p>A bloke at the next table introduced himself as ‘Thommo’: he gave the boy a wink and sang the South Melbourne footy club’s theme song. Behind Thommo’s back, his mate &#8212; ‘Bazza’ &#8212; flashed the wanker sign at Thommo, eyes rolling for the youngster’s benefit. The boy giggled shyly.</p>
<p>Thommo and Bazza sported handle-bar moustaches and feather-cut hairdos. Their women drank from ‘ladies’ glasses’ and kept quiet; everyone knew their place. It was a strange time but the boy savoured the moment, relishing the cartoon caricatures around him. His cousin and Mother and Father faded into nothing because he knew that soon, all this would be his. Life seemed impossibly easy, so neat. That’s the myth of mateship, of male pride.</p>
<p>It’s now. Today.</p>
<p>Years later.</p>
<p>He’s old. Smells the crackle of neon. The ugly ockers of his childhood have vanished, replaced by Aussie gold Olympians: Cuthbert, Landy, Ford. A gallery of sporting heroes adorning the walls of the bar, spirit of the ‘56 Olympics, touched up and sprinkled with star-dust and Photoshop magic. Can technology proselytise the past? Can it invest those clapped-out icons with a metallic sheen, to cover their dried rot?</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/melb_airport.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Tullamarine Airport, Melbourne. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<p>A wide-bodied jet rumbles into view. He stares in awe. The windows of the bar are massive and he can see that the jet is a beautiful machine, a work of art.</p>
<p>He trusts it to deliver him to safety.</p>
<p>His mind races. He feels the lattice of power, underpinnings, strings that pull the puppets: Melbourne Airport’s secret industry. What dramas are played out behind those white walls? Reinforced concrete, strong and able, houses the sub-structure through which electronics peep. Luggage chutes reach for the skies, inclined upward to who knows where. And how many lives have been saved by last-gasp quarantine dumps? Suspended between Touchdown and Customs, old norms and new; last chance to ditch your contraband, all to be forgotten, as the flowers turn rotten and the plastic is old and grey.</p>
<p>Who speaks their own body language well enough to play the game?</p>
<p>Sweaty palms, shaky-legs… versus complex surveillance systems that count the hairs on your mole.</p>
<p style="margin-left:1in;text-indent:0in;"><em>galactic eyes<br />
sharper than a poison claw<br />
see into the beyond</em></p>
<p>Easy prey, the jet-lagged walk the gleaming chrome, resolving to greet the future head-on.</p>
<p>A flat, synthetic boarding call and he remembers his trip: ‘Last call for Silverwing 501. Please make your way to Gate 23.’</p>
<p>Just enough time for a slash. He makes for the toilet.</p>
<p>The international pictogram for ‘man’ is suspended over the toilet door: straight-backed, featureless, brain-pan wiped clean. His &#8216;partner&#8217;, not ten metres away, is identical except for two half-triangles on either side of her legs. Some distinction! Merged seamlessly with tomorrow, poor Bazza and Thommo never had a chance to evolve. No time. How humiliating for them to witness their wives sprouting careers, orgasms…</p>
<p>Even robots need love.</p>
<p>On his way to Check-In he passes a glass cabinet marked <strong>QUARANTINE SEIZURES</strong>, prohibited goods snatched from hapless voyagers:</p>
<p style="margin-left:1in;text-indent:0in;">:: <em>snake wine from Hong Kong</em><br />
:: <em>.22 calibre &#8216;purse-guns&#8217; from Freedom, Wyoming</em><br />
:: <em>used opium pipes from Marrakesh</em><br />
:: <em>’Harrods Dog Treats’ from the Mother Country</em></p>
<p>Next to this, an overlit ad sells Southbank Apartments — &#8216;opposite Casino&#8217;.</p>
<p>This airport is hyper-life, sniff-dogs pissed in the gene pool turn rabid on command. Robo-shotguns blast unattended luggage, a suspected bomb; hidden eyes spy digital ghosts, spool-and-replay eternal. There is a lack of overt ‘heat’ — where are the uniforms and sunglassed meat? They melt into light. Take one last look: flesh-and-blood for the dear, dying, departed. It’s a system built on deception and shadow-play, set up to tame its own kind.</p>
<p>He doesn’t know where this is going, anymore. Do you? Write to him, often…</p>
<p>Write him.</p>
<div class="hr">
<hr /></div>
<p><em>Silverwing five-oh-one holding short of runway. I request start-up clearance. My initial route is Barcelona two-eight, via Singapore and London. Wind two-six-oh at one-two. Eight-oh knots. Vee-one.</p>
<p>Rotate.</p>
<p>Silverwing five-oh-one now climbing to six thousand feet. Change to one-one-nine point three.</p>
<p>Autopilot engaged.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/barce_airport2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kosmopolis 08" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: El Prat Airport, Barcelona. Photo: Simon Sellars.</em></p>
<div class="hr">
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>&#8230;:: <em>Previously on Ballardian</em>:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-landing-gear">Kosmopolis 08: Landing Gear</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kosmopolis-08-switching-stations">Kosmopolis 08: Switching Stations</a></p>
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		<title>Feral architecture</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/feral-architecture</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/feral-architecture#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Nov 2008 01:07:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=866</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BLDGBLOG on Ballard, resampled architecture, homogenous global space and Michael Winterbottom.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dujardin.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Filip Dujardin" /></p>
<p>Photos by <a href="http://www.filipdujardin.be">Filip Dujardin</a>.</p>
<p>Junkspace, controlspace, blurred zones &#8230; Ballardian space (&#8216;The Ultimate City&#8217;, in particular). <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2008/11/resampled-space.html">BLDGBLOG on the &#8216;resampled space&#8217; of Belgian photographer Filip Dujardin</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Filip Dujardin makes images of unexpected buildings – that is, he &#8220;combines photographs of parts of buildings into new, fictional, architectonic structures,&#8221; Mark Magazine explains.</p>
<p>The resulting projects look like old factory sites in the American rust belt – Mark describes them as &#8220;informal and often dilapidated structures with unspecified functions&#8221; – or, in some cases, new projects by LOT-EK, Simon Ungers, or OMA.<br />
&#8230;<br />
There seem to be multiple sub-themes, and even sub-projects, within the larger effort. There are surreal detached structures, for instance, like the image that opens this post, standing free amidst a recognizable but anonymous landscape. In some of these we see that even geological forms become subject to resampling. But then there are also what could be called a back series – that is, the backs of incredible buildings whose facades you can barely imagine.</p>
<p>These are groves of architecture, weird islands of form, like the city as seen from a rail line: sheds and retaining walls, stained by rain, their bricks chipped away behind piles of rubbish, their corrugated steel repeating ever onward in infinite ridges.</p></blockquote>
<p>And if you&#8217;re in London this November, you could a lot worse than catch Geoff from BLDGBLOG in action at what sounds like two fascinating events. From BLDGBLOG:</p>
<blockquote><p>On Monday, November 24, I&#8217;ll be hosting a live interview at the Barbican in London with director Michael Winterbottom, for a special screening of his film Code 46. You can read a bit more about the event – as well as buy tickets – here. This is part of an ongoing series called Architecture on Film, curated by the Architecture Foundation.</p>
<p>The purpose of the event is to talk about film and architecture – or, in this case, cities, urban design, memory, science fiction, landscape, globalization, and the built environment. As you can see from the list of locations used for the film&#8217;s production, Code 46 is very well-traveled, stitching together urban – and exurban – environments from London, Shanghai, Dubai, Hong Kong, and even the deserts of Rajasthan.</p>
<p>That the film achieves the feel of science fiction simply through a well-edited depiction of existing landscapes says as much about the film as it does about the nature of city-building today; perhaps one might only half-jokingly suggest that people build cities today in order to live inside science fiction films. </p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>I&#8217;ve got two more events coming up in London, both on Wednesday, November 26. I&#8217;ll post more info about the first event in a bit. The second one, in the evening, has been organized by the Complex Terrain Laboratory, and it will take place in the J.Z. Young Lecture Theatre at UCL, inside the Anatomy Building on Gower Street. Here is a map.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll be teaming up with Antoine Bousquet, Lecturer in International Relations at Birkbeck College, and author of the forthcoming book The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity to discuss our work in relation to space, war, and the city.<br />
&#8230;<br />
For my own part, I&#8217;ll be discussing a pretty broad swath of ideas about &#8220;feral cities&#8221; – what I like to call cities gone wild – ranging from Richard J. Norton&#8217;s seminal paper on the topic to Mike Davis&#8217;s research on &#8220;the Pentagon as global slumlord,&#8221; via reference to J.G. Ballard, Eyal Weizman, Stefano Boeri, Reza Negarestani, and many others. </p></blockquote>
<p>More info <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2008/11/code-46.html">here</a> and <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2008/11/feral-cities.html">here</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>
		<category><![CDATA[Toby Litt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[celebrity culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[crime]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inner space]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media landscape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surrealism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[theme parks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visual art]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=863</guid>
		<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>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[body horror]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deep time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[flying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[posthumanism]]></category>
		<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>Spanish Ghost Cities</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/spanish-ghost-cities</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/spanish-ghost-cities#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2008 09:59:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drained swimming pools]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban decay]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=847</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Solveig Nordlund's Ballard adaptation, Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude, is rooted in reality, as this report on Spain's ghost towns demonstrates.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/spanish_ghost_city.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Spain&#8217;s economic downturn means that its rampant property development is galloping way, way ahead of potential buyers. And this means ghost cities &#8212; in one instance just 750 people living in a development  comprising 13,000 residential units. It&#8217;s a trend across the Iberian peninsula: Solveig Nordlund filmed Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude, her <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/like-alice-in-wonderland-nordlund-on-ballard">2002 feature-film adaptation</a> of Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;Low-Flying Aircraft&#8217;, in and around a similar development in Portugal. This was a very canny move on her part, welding this real-world urban slipstream with Ballard&#8217;s own disconnected un-reality in a story about dwindling population levels and the high strangeness of techno-capitalism.</p>
<p>Watch this <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7584458.stm">BBC video report</a> for more background on the current state of Spain&#8217;s ghost cities. The lack of company wouldn&#8217;t bother me. I&#8217;d move in there in a heartbeat. Imagine the <em>solitude</em>.</p>
<p>[thanks, Joe McNally]</p>
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		<title>&#039;Brecht Meeting Ballard&#039;: Militant Modernism</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/brecht-meeting-ballard-militant-modernism</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/brecht-meeting-ballard-militant-modernism#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2008 12:15:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=857</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Announcement for Owen Hatherley's new book, Militant Modernism.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/militant_modernism.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Owen Hatherley" /></p>
<p>Here&#8217;s <a href="http://www.o-books.com/product_info.php?products_id=563">an announcement</a> of a new book, Militant Modernism, which I&#8217;m sure will appeal to Ballardian readers, written by Owen Hatherley of the fabulous architecture blog <a href="http://nastybrutalistandshort.blogspot.com">Sit Down Man, You&#8217;re A Bloody Tragedy</a>. The following press release features endorsements from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/simon-reynolds-on-the-ballard-connection">Simon Reynolds</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/crimes-of-the-near-future-baudrillard-ballard">Ben Noys</a>, who have both featured on this site.</p>
<blockquote><p>This book is a defence of Modernism against its defenders. In readings of modern design, film and especially architecture, it attempts to reclaim a revolutionary modernism against its absorption into the heritage industry and the aesthetics of the luxury flat.</p>
<p>Militant Modernism argues for a Modernism of everyday life, immersed in questions of socialism, sexual politics and technology. It features new readings of some familiar names &#8211; Bertolt Brecht, Le Corbusier, Vladimir Mayakovsky &#8211; and much more on the lesser known, quotidian modernists of the 20th century. The chapters range from a study of industrial and brutalist aesthetics in Britain, Russian Constructivism in architecture, the Sexpol of Wilhelm Reich in film and design, and the alienation effects of Brecht and Hanns Eisler on record and on screen.</p>
<p>Against the world of &#8216;there is no alternative&#8217;, this book tries to excavate Modernism’s other futures.</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>With svelte prose, agile wit, and alarming erudition, Owen Hatherley pries open the prematurely closed case of early 20th Century modernism. This slim and shapely, ideas-packed and intensely-felt book is neither a misty-eyed memorial nor a dour inquest, but a verging-on-erotic mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Rediscovering the enchantment of demystification and the sexiness of severity, Hatherley harks forward to modernism&#8217;s utopian spirit: critical, radically democratic, dedicated to the conscious transformation of everyday life, determined to build a better world.</p>
<p><strong>Simon Reynolds, Author of Rip It Up and Start Again &#8211; Postpunk 1978-84</strong></p>
<p>A call to have the courage to be modern against all the current postmodern pieties of exhaustion and fragmentation, Owen Hatherley’s brilliant reactivation of the utopian impulses of the modernist avant-garde is Brecht meeting Ballard to create the science-fiction of socialism.</p>
<p><strong>Benjamin Noys, Author of Georges Bataille and The Culture of Death</strong></p></blockquote>
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		<title>Unique visual complexities: A review of Grande Anarca</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/unique-visual-complexities-a-review-of-grande-anarca</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/unique-visual-complexities-a-review-of-grande-anarca#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Aug 2008 12:58:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jamie Sherry</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Jamie Sherry reviews a unique on-screen adaptation of Ballard's work, now showing on BallardoTube: the Italian animation, Grande Anarca, based on JGB's 1985 short story, 'Answers to A Questionnaire'. Can the filmmakers succeed where other, big-name suitors have failed -- decanting Ballard's experimental literary narratives into a more linear cinematic language? Or does Ballard resist classification yet again?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>GRANDE ANARCA (Italy, 2003) </strong></p>
<p>review by <strong>Jamie Sherry</strong></p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: Grande Anarca, part 1 (2003; dir. Alvise Renzini).</em></p>
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<p><strong>Runtime:</strong> 18 mins<br />
<strong>Voice:</strong> Ermanna Montanari<br />
<strong>Sound:</strong> Davide Sandri<br />
<strong>Music:</strong> Egle Sommacal<br />
<strong>Editor:</strong> Benedetto Lanfranco<br />
<strong>Photography:</strong> Alvise Renzini<br />
<strong>Animation:</strong> Alvise Renzini<br />
<strong>Script:</strong> Lucio Apolito (based on the short story &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217; by <strong>J.G. Ballard</strong>)<br />
<strong>Director:</strong> Alvise Renzini<br />
<strong>Producer:</strong> <a href='http://www.opificiociclope.com'>Opificio Ciclope</a></p>
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<p><strong>NOTE: </strong><em>An English translation of the voiceover can be found <a href='http://www.opificiociclope.com/gavoceoffeng.htm'>here</a>.</em></p>
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<p>In discussion about his adaptation of Marcel Proust&#8217;s Swann in Love (1984), the director Volker Schlöndorff famously remarked that &#8216;if I make a movie which Proustians celebrate for its fidelity, I will have failed as a director&#8217;. Predictably, the film was widely criticised for misrepresenting the source material and for perceived acts of violent reductionism. It was these issues that framed my viewing of the Italian animation <a href='http://www.opificiociclope.com/grandeanarcaeng.htm'>Grande Anarca</a>, based on my favourite Ballard short story, <a href='http://www.poetrymagazines.org.uk/magazine/record.asp?id=4120'>&#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217;</a> (1985). As a devotee of Ballard&#8217;s post-60s <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete-short-stories'>short stories</a>, I was expecting to be underwhelmed by the film, regardless of my interest in the idea of adapting such an un-cinematic work of prose. The film ended up actually exceeding my expectations, deviating from the demands of a faithful adaptation, yet finding a life of its own amongst the wider architecture of the Ballardian.</p>
<p>The study of <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_adaptation'>literature on film</a> has largely liberated itself from the confines of the &#8216;fidelity debate&#8217; and aesthetic judgements regarding how close the film is deemed to be to the &#8217;spirit of the book&#8217;. Cartmell and Whelehan&#8217;s Adaptations (1999), Stam and Raengo&#8217;s Literature and Film (2004) and Elliott&#8217;s Rethinking the Novel/Film Debate (2003), amongst others, have done much to progress the study of adaptation, a field that has privileged the status of literature over film. For too long film adaptations have been viewed as misrepresenting, reducing, despoiling and ultimately failing to capture an essential essence somehow contained in the source text. Film adaptations are judged by what they fail to do, or what they omit, rather than what they achieve, or add. Within an atheistic, <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-structuralist'>post-structuralist</a> view of adaptation, the novel does not contain a &#8217;spirit&#8217;, but is rather an intertextual assortment of many precursor texts that make up the <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bricolage'>bricolage</a> landscape of culture. It is with this more open and democratic approach to adaptation that Grande Anarca should be approached, appreciating the intertextual methodology that has been employed in the adaptation process.</p>
<p>First published in <a href='http://www.poetrymagazines.org.uk/magazine/issue.asp?id=279'>Ambit 100</a> (Spring 1985), &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217; is a fascinating, if unlikely, choice of source material for a film adaptation. Very much an understudied story, it sits alongside &#8216;Notes Towards a Mental Breakdown&#8217; (1976) and <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/indexed-out-of-existence'>The Index</a> (1977) as Ballard&#8217;s most experimental and playful self-contained short stories, whilst also sharing many of his central themes concerning madness and incarceration. Eventually published together in the compendium <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FWar-Fever-J-G-Ballard%2Fdp%2F0374286450%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1219149017%26sr%3D8-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">War Fever</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;" /> (1990), these stories mischievously subvert classical notions of structure, form and content, unifying Ballard&#8217;s playful deployment of <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paratext'>paratexts</a> as narrative medium. The French literary theorist <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerard_Genette'>Gérard Genette</a> coined the neologism &#8216;paratext&#8217; to describe subsidiary and secondary material such as prefaces, post-scripts, footnotes and illustrations, which illuminate, but are ultimately subservient to, the principle text. As Ballard himself noted in <a href='http://www.theparisreview.org/viewissue.php/prmIID/94'>Paris Review</a> (Winter,1984): &#8216;lists are fascinating; one could almost do a list novel&#8217;.</p>
<p>Ballard sets out to exploit these paratextual narrative devices to self-consciously confront the reader, and include us in an ironic discourse with the text. Notes Towards a Mental Breakdown (not to be confused with the chapter of the same name in <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition'>The Atrocity Exhibition</a>) commences with a lone 18-word sentence; the rest of the story comprising eighteen footnotes cited from each word, the sentence savagely deconstructed by a mental asylum inmate into its constituent units. The story is reminiscent of, and arguably indebted to, Vladimir Nabokov&#8217;s metafictional novel <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_Fire'>Pale Fire</a> (1962), a narrative famously comprised of a character&#8217;s foreword, index and commentary on a murdered poet&#8217;s 999-line poem. As Pale Fire progresses, rather than shedding light on the elliptical poem, these fictional paratexts instead begin to illuminate the delusional psychological state of the annotator.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/grande_anarca1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Grande Anarca" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Still from Grande Anarca (2003; dir. Alvise Renzini).</em></p>
<p>Continuing these techniques, the use of the classical paratext as a vehicle for story is probably best encapsulated in Ballard&#8217;s The Index. The narrative is conveyed via the listed index to an imaginary autobiography that, as the short introduction informs us, is missing, or may never have existed at all. Small snippets of information in the index ultimately converge to form narratives that spectacularly reveal Ballardian obsessions with mental breakdown, sexual deviance, murder, psychological spaces and institutional confinement.</p>
<p>It is these themes that also dominate &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217;, a piece that functions more by exclusion, than inclusion. Employing the metafictional technique of showing only the answers to questions set by an unknown authoritarian presence, a narrative becomes clear that would traditionally far exceed the limitations of a short story. As the answers progress, we learn that the interviewee is a man living surreptitiously in Ballard&#8217;s beloved <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/heathrow-hilton'>Heathrow Airport</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>1) Yes.<br />
2) Male (?)<br />
3) c/o Terminal 3, London Airport, Heathrow.<br />
4) Twenty-seven.<br />
5) Unknown.<br />
6) Dr Barnado&#8217;s Primary, Kingston-upon-Thames; HM Borstal, Send, Surrey; Brunel University Computer Sciences Department.</p></blockquote>
<p>Sometimes the answers are deliberately obtuse, with no obvious allusion to a potential question. At other times the answers are detailed in an ironic way, completely out place with the sequence of narrative events (see answer 14 below). We soon learn about the interviewee, including his criminal history:</p>
<blockquote><p>10) Manchester Crown Court, 1984.<br />
11) Credit card and computer fraud.<br />
12) Guilty.<br />
13) Two years, HM Prison, Parkhurst.<br />
14) Stockhausen, de Kooning, Jack Kerouac.<br />
15) Whenever possible.<br />
16) Twice a day.<br />
17) NSU, Herpes, gonorrhoea.</p></blockquote>
<p>It becomes clear that the interviewee believes he befriended the second coming of Jesus within Heathrow Airport, and begins to help him with his project to provide mankind with the power of immortality:</p>
<blockquote><p>27) I took him to Richmond Ice Rink where he immediately performed six triple salchows. I urged him to take up ice-dancing with an eye to the European Championships and eventual gold at Seoul, but he began to trace out huge double spirals on the ice. I tried to convince him that these did not feature in the compulsory figures, but he told me that the spirals represented a model of synthetic DNA.<br />
35) When he was drunk. He claimed that he brought the gift of eternal life.<br />
61) He stated that synthetic DNA introduced into the human germ plasm would arrest the process of ageing and extend human life almost indefinitely.<br />
81) Government White Paper on Immortality.<br />
82) Compulsory injection into the testicles of the entire male population over eleven years.</p></blockquote>
<p>The protagonist accompanies this man, as he meets with members of the royal family, politicians and celebrities in a bid to raise money for the Immortality project. The plan clearly gets out of control for the interviewee, as he takes matters into his own hands:</p>
<blockquote><p>88) Assassination.<br />
89) I was neither paid nor incited by agents of a foreign power.<br />
90) Despair. I wish to go back to my cubicle at London Airport.<br />
97) I was visited in the death cell by the special envoy of the Archbishop of Canterbury.<br />
98) That I had killed the Son of God.<br />
99) He walked with a slight limp. He told me that, as a condemned prisoner, I alone had been spared the sterilising injections, and that the restoration of the national birthrate was now my sole duty.<br />
100) Yes.</p></blockquote>
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<p><em>ABOVE: Grande Anarca, part 2 (2003; dir. Alvise Renzini).</em></p>
<p>Ballard&#8217;s investment in us as active readers also allows meaning to be gained from absence. Ballard finds his preoccupations and themes best explored through the paratexts that traditionally surround culture&#8217;s dominant storytelling mediums. A list of answers, an index, and the footnotes of a single sentence become vehicles for the Ballardian. It is within this free interplay with the reader that we are able to construct a narrative, regardless of how unreliable the protagonist may or may not be. Within these empty spaces and narrative vacuums, the reader is empowered to create meaning. The dichotomous function of these omissions provoke us to address the character&#8217;s mental state, and serves to further problematise the role of the unreliable narrator/s within. As the author Ursula K Le Guin states in <a href='http://www.nytimes.com/books/98/07/12/specials/ballard-war.html'>her review of War Fever</a>, Ballard opts for storytelling in which we see the &#8216;condition of fictional bones without flesh &#8212; crystals without molecular instabilities to cloud the clarity&#8217;. Ballard uses metatextual techniques to highlight the devices of fiction and in doing so, provokes the reader to dwell on the relationships between fantasy and reality, concepts central to &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217;.</p>
<p>It is these narrative devices so rooted in the literary form of the story that potentially problematise a cinematic adaptation (yet also make the concept very alluring). Conceived from the perspective that the source material is merely a starting point, Alvise Renzini&#8217;s short animation Grande Anarca diverts from &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217; in a number of notable ways. Although strongly influenced by the unusual structure of Ballard&#8217;s original text, the film completely dispenses with the central storyline of &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217;, ignoring the second-coming, immortality project, murder of Jesus plot points. However, there is continuity in the film&#8217;s eerie <a href=''http://www.opificiociclope.com/gavoceoffeng.htm '>voiceover</a>, as the omnipotent narrator answers a set of unheard questions. Replacing the Jesus narrative with a story regarding a genetic experiment carried out on the inhabitants of a block of flats, the film also manages to confront and adapt the medium-specific tropes encoded in the literary form of the source material.</p>
<p>Although Renzini is credited with photography, animation and direction, the film is clearly a group effort, produced under the &#8216;joint tradename&#8217; of <a href='http://www.opificiociclope.com/'>Opificio Ciclope</a>. Producers of various media forms, including music videos, TV graphics and documentaries, the Italian collective purports to have a &#8217;shared interest for interacting, mixed techniques and hybrid formats&#8217;. It is certainly this mastering of art/media forms that bestows Grande Anarca with a unique visual complexity.</p>
<p>The film is literally multi-layered, the images painstakingly built up in successive levels. Firstly, the background is hand-illustrated, the images then photographed and projected as slides. These slide projections are then shot using 35mm film, the individual frames then serving as a canvass to be painted and etched upon. Finally, digital post-production provides the last layer to complete the film. This inter-medial technique for building a film layer-by-layer brings to mind the German short film <a href='http://www.widrichfilm.com/copyshop/core_en.html'>Copyshop</a> (2001) in which a photocopy shop worker begins to literally replicate himself in an endless cycle. The short is produced by filming almost 18,000 photocopies of digital frames. It could be said that these animation devices, particularly well executed in Grande Anarca, in which the viewer is confronted with the mechanics and textual processes of the medium, somehow mirror the self-conscious literary referencing of Ballard&#8217;s original story.</p>
<p>And it is within this visual process that Grande Anarca evokes much of its drama. Dark fractured imagery blends onto inanimate objects which drift into our vision, as obscured tower blocks meld into shimmering close-ups of cells and bacteria. Distorted alien-like bodies glimmer before us, gasworks flash, abject bodies morph into DNA structures. Buildings vying for dominance over nature obtain a hallucinatory quality as swift editing coupled with repetitious music (dramatic repeating violin chords) compliment the images of tree like cells inhabiting cityscapes. The film ranges between stark black and white before displaying sepia tinted browns and blues. Although ostensibly an animation, the film does feature real footage of apartment blocks and abandoned train stations. The geometrics of man-made, Vorticist shapes mingle haphazardly with biological structures. The calm, dispassionate <a href=''http://www.opificiociclope.com/gavoceoffeng.htm '>voiceover</a> and the melodious repetition of the music almost produce a feeling that we are watching a propaganda film, benevolently advertising a social experiment, only the visuals offering a sinister reminder that all is not well.</p>
<p>The story that unfolds in Grande Anarca is clearly a major deviation from Ballard&#8217;s source story, but it is the narrative replacements that really illuminate the film-makers application to the task. The answers start off relatively dull, though are notable by their contrast to Ballard&#8217;s original text:</p>
<blockquote><p>01) Corals.<br />
02) Light.<br />
03) A face-shaped flower vase.<br />
04) Glaciers.<br />
05) Emerald green.<br />
06) Science fiction books: Fritz Leiber, James Ballard, Stanislaw Lem.</p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/grande_anarca2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Grande Anarca" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Still from Grande Anarca (2003; dir. Alvise Renzini).</em></p>
<p>As the film develops, it becomes clear that the narrator was involved in a complex genetic experiment on the inhabitants of a huge multi-storey building:</p>
<blockquote><p>20) Tenants were selected from thousands of applicants.<br />
21) Yes, I think it was a crucial event in my life.<br />
22) Apartments were identical in shape, size, and decors. The building was divided into 22 units, identified with a letter. Each unit had 8 floors. Each floor housed 64 persons in as many apartments. The whole of the tenants were divided in 4 groups: A, T, C, G. The building contained 5632 persons.<br />
23) I was part of the original project team, and I came up with several of the ideas in the experiment.</p></blockquote>
<p>Importantly, the inhabitants of the building are represented by the protagonist as being both co-operative and willing participants:</p>
<blockquote><p>30) All the tenants were aware of the nature of the experiment in different ways. I would not therefore paint in-house relations as unconscious.<br />
31) They were deeply involved in the experiment, and they talked about it regularly: when they met on the stairs or in the garden, or during building meetings.<br />
32) Each tenant had to spend 4 hours with the other three individuals on his team, then 8 hours on his own. He had to write 4 pages a day. In the early stages, that was how we looked for similar descriptions, cross-references, reoccurring words. At a later stage, they were forced to write about their personal desires. Finally, about their dreams.<br />
33) In each apartment, a pneumatic system provided food rations in exchange for the reports. Locks were automatically operated. To open the doors, tenants had to deliver their daily reports.</p></blockquote>
<p>Eventually we see thematic cross-overs with Ballard&#8217;s original story, as the synthetic depiction of DNA creates a startling psycho-pathologic relationship:</p>
<blockquote><p>36) The building was a to-scale replica of the DNA from algae. Tenants represented nucleotides.<br />
37) We wanted to communicate directly with the DNA, with no go-betweens.<br />
38) We wanted to endow it with some sort of awareness.<br />
39) By collecting the tenants&#8217; dreams.<br />
40) We measured everything: heartbeats, the patterns created on the windows by electric light, decibels. Everything.</p></blockquote>
<p>As the <a href='http://www.opificiociclope.com/gavoceoffeng.htm'>voiceover</a> draws the film to a close we start to view the possibility that Renzini is sourcing more than just one Ballard text, with allusions to the effects of the building architectures acting as a kind of <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_of_alienation'>Tarkovskian Zone</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>48) During the third stage, the building started to emit a frequency at night, while the tenants slept. The wave reached a range of over 20 kilometers. Suddenly everyone was aware of the experiment.<br />
49) The wave from the building reverberated through the dreams of whoever lived in the area. It was those obsessive dreams that spurred the riots.<br />
50) Lies, now as before, you keep repeating your lies.<br />
51) That was not our purpose.<br />
52) I would rather not talk about that.<br />
53) Several such buildings were destroyed by mistake.<br />
54) Scientific research is not a democratic system, nor should it be.<br />
55) The experiment could be repeated.</p></blockquote>
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<p><em>ABOVE: Grande Anarca, part 3 (2003; dir. Alvise Renzini).</em></p>
<p>In Grande Anarca we see the narrative structure of &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217; married to the Ballardian tropes of urban alienation, techno-surveillance, sociological experimentation and the psychological consequences of man-made environments, as best exemplified in <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise'>High-Rise</a> (1975). So whilst the film may break free from the plot points of the source story, it still exists within a wider Ballardian universe. We see the moral complexity of social experimentation, the actions of a closed community reverting to a primal state and the symbiotic relationship between man and urban structures. As <a href='http://www.rickmcgrath.com/index.html'>Rick McGrath</a> states in his <a href='http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/highrise.html'>affectionate and incredibly detailed analysis</a> of the novel, &#8216;Reconstructing High-Rise&#8217;:</p>
<blockquote><p>The horror of meaningless acts piled high with Ballard&#8217;s trademark detatched omnipotent narrator. High-Rise can both shock and exhilarate its reader, and its insistence that the &#8216;ends justify the means&#8217; reinforces Ballard&#8217;s geometry of violence&#8230; </p></blockquote>
<p>Further to this we see textual equivalents in the actions of individuals acting as a group, and the type of belief systems (religious, political and moral) that can become normalised in the reverie of community psychology. McGrath again illuminates these notions of the intoxicating myth:</p>
<blockquote><p>J.G. Ballard has often told interviewers that his characters all seek a kind of highly personal psychic salvation, and that they will, if necessary, create their own self-defining mythologies and pursue them to their furthest logical ends, no matter how illogical it seems, or what the cost. In High-Rise, Ballard has created an isolated environment for the close study of the deconstruction of an ultra-modern apartment block into a new, devolved society&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<p>The compliance of the subjects in the film to willingly engage with these socio-scientific experiments, even though their food can be kept from them if they do not co-operate, draws on some well explored Ballardian areas. What is exposed in both High-Rise and Grande Anarca is a pathological willingness to be imprisoned or otherwise confined in institutional regimes. As Ballard puts it in a 2001 <a href='http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/literary_review2001_interview.html'>Literary Review article</a>, we can see &#8216;hints that a benign version of a Sadeian society is still emerging, of tormentors and willing victims&#8217;. Ballard explores the willingness to be dominated by these <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-architectures-of-control'>architectures of control</a>, as the character Sinclair notes in <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes'>Super-Cannes</a> (2000), these &#8216;totalitarian systems of the future would be subservient and ingratiating, but the locks would be just as strong&#8217;.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, Grande Anarca is far from perfect, and at least for me, fails on one quite fundamental level. In most cases I am an admirer of extreme deviation from the adapted source material, but Renzini, like so many others, appears to disregard or ignore the ironic humour that saturates most pages of Ballard&#8217;s writing. From the opening line of High-Rise, through to most of the chapter titles in The Atrocity Exhibtion, Ballard is able to infuse his stories with subtle but biting wit. Taking &#8216;Answers to a Questionnaire&#8217; as an example, many of the protagonist&#8217;s answers are nothing more than in-jokes as Ballard plays with the edges of humour in ways that are reminiscent both of Bret Easton Ellis and <a href='http://www.realitystudio.org'>William S Burroughs</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>33) Porno videos. He took a particular interest in Kamera Klimax and Electric Blue.<br />
34) Almost every day.<br />
36) At the Penta Hotel I tried to introduce him to Torvill and Dean&#8230;<br />
37) Females of all ages.<br />
38) Group sex.<br />
58) He had a keen appreciation of money, but was not impressed when I told him of Torvill and Dean&#8217;s earnings.<br />
63) He announced that Princess Diana was immortal.<br />
71) He wanted me to become the warhead of a cruise missile.</p></blockquote>
<p>The humour found in Ballard&#8217;s work is usually satirical, sometimes surreal, and always illustrative of the moral malaise infused through the story. To ignore Ballard&#8217;s humour, as I feel the makers of Grande Anarca have done, is to reduce Ballard to less than the sum of his parts. But these actions could be considered deliberate aesthetic acts, removing humour for the sake of some artistic achievement.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/grande_anarca3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Grande Anarca" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Still from Grande Anarca (2003; dir. Alvise Renzini).</em></p>
<p>Traditionally, fans of Ballard&#8217;s writing have had an uneasy relationship with adaptations of his writing. It seems that for some, films that explore Ballardian themes, or which have influenced Ballard, can offer more comforting routes to understand his work. These include both Tarkovsky&#8217;s <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079944'>Stalker</a> (1979), and <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0069293'>Solyaris</a> (1972), Godard&#8217;s <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0058898'>Alphaville</a> (1965), Lucas&#8217; <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066434'>THX 1138</a> (1971), and of course the most potent Ballardian film, Chris Marker&#8217;s remarkable short <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/la-jetee'>La Jetée</a> (1962). All benefit from their potential to be arguably more useful cinematic texts with which to contextualise Ballardian tropes, than actual official adaptations of his own books. These films are liberated from the compare-contrast analysis that dogs literal Ballard adaptations such as Cronenberg&#8217;s Crash (1996), Spielberg&#8217;s <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/dreams-ransom-steven-spielbergs-empire-of-the-sun'>Empire of the Sun</a> (1987) and Weiss&#8217; <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/weiss-interview'>The Atrocity Exhibition</a> (2000), amongst a host of others. The confining responsibility of fidelity can raise the stakes for the Ballard reader, in which we are not always able to read these films either objectively or fairly.</p>
<p>Cronenberg, both in <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0102511'>Naked Lunch</a> (1991) and <a href='http://www.cronenbergcrash.com'>Crash</a> attempts to decant experimental literary narratives into a more linear cinematic language (albeit an idiosyncratically unorthodox one). Perhaps to the point where his earlier films <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086541'>Videodrome</a> (1983) and <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094964'>Dead Ringers</a> (1988) could be seen as a more fitting arena to explore the Ballardian. Likewise, Spielberg&#8217;s moral subjectivity, a kind of revisionist 50&#8217;s idea of &#8216;Boys Own&#8217; heroism and the inevitable triumph of good over evil, constrains his adaptation of Empire of the Sun. To the point where many, as before, may find more interesting material in his <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067023'>Duel</a> (1971) and <a href='http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075860'>Close Encounters of the Third Kind</a> (1977) with which to better understand the relationship between Ballard and cinema. It is left to one&#8217;s imagination to wonder what could have occurred if counter-intuitively, Cronenberg had taken on Empire the Sun, and Spielberg tackled the auto-erotic allegories of Crash.</p>
<p>I believe that Weiss&#8217; over-faithful use of iconic 60s imagery in his bold reworking of The Atrocity Exhibition makes the film stand out for me, in contrast to <a href='http://www.ballardian.com/weiss-atrocity-exhibition-review'>some who believe</a> that these images lack cultural punch due to their sell-by-date expiring. In contrast to this, Renzini instead prefers to place further abstractions onto the source text. However, what the film does share with both Cronenberg and Weiss is a desire to inhabit the universe of the Ballardian. Far from slavishly conforming to Roland Barthes&#8217; <a href='http://social.chass.ncsu.edu/wyrick/debclass/whatis.htm'>battle-cry</a> that the &#8216;birth of the reader must be at the cost of the death of the Author,&#8217; Renzini pursues a thornier path – casting aside the author&#8217;s original narrative and replacing it with something that is loosely Ballardian, rather than strictly Ballard.</p>
<p>Perhaps there is something inherent in Ballard&#8217;s writing that actively resists successful adaptation. McGrath&#8217;s previous mention of Ballard&#8217;s trademark &#8216;detatched omnipotent narrator&#8217; could be regarded as a profoundly uncinematic central character. Taking this further, McGrath expounds on the dynamically impotent character of Laing in High-Rise and the way in which he &#8217;survives because his driving psychic force is self-preservation through isolation and passivity&#8217;. Again, perhaps cinematic narratives resist passive characters, demanding more open, morally unambiguous, actively obstacle defeating heroes. This in marked contrast to the types that survive the carnage of High-Rise simply by keeping their head down, staying quiet and isolating themselves from the mayhem. It could also be argued that some adaptations fail because the source material is so prescriptive; readerly texts that imprint visual codas onto the reader, allowing little in the way of artistic flourishes for the adaptor. However, with Ballard the opposite could be true. The moral ambiguity, detached solipsism, and exclusion of characters&#8217; first person psycho-dynamics mean that we can only form vague (yet highly personal) ideas of main protagonists. When we encounter these people on screen, in the flesh, saying words, and reacting to external agents, it is possible that we balk at both the unavoidable physical humanity before us, and the distinctly un-Ballardian theatrics of film-acting which we excluded from our original reading.</p>
<p>Grande Anarca enjoys a curiously dichotomous romance with Ballard. The aims seem contradictory: rejecting Ballard&#8217;s authority over the story, yet clearly conforming to the author&#8217;s recognised signifiers and themes. In the process of leaving the story behind, the makers of this film enter into a new dialogue, re-inhabiting and re-acquiring universal themes of the Ballardian, displaying what the Collins English Dictionary famously describes as &#8216;dystopian modernity, bleak man-made landscapes and the psychological effects of technological, social or environmental developments&#8217;.</p>
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<p><strong>&#8230; MORE INFO:</strong></p>
<p><strong>+</strong> Information on Grande Anarca at <a href='http://www.opificiociclope.com/grandeanarcaeng.htm'>Opificio Ciclope</a></p>
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<p><strong>&#8230; GRANDE ANARCA:</strong></p>
<p><strong>+</strong> <a href='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhazd9OQIjc'>Grande Anarca Part 1</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UenQ_YecdRg'>Grande Anarca Part 2</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQCTjUOMNPk'>Grande Anarca Part 3</a></p>
<p><strong>+</strong> <a href='http://www.opificiociclope.com/gavoceoffeng.htm'>English translation of the voiceover</a>.</p>
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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>

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		<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>
<div class="hr">
<hr /></div>
<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">
<hr /></div>
<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>Tribute to J.G. Ballard &amp; Brian Eno</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/tribute-to-jg-ballard-brian-eno</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/tribute-to-jg-ballard-brian-eno#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jul 2008 07:31:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brian Eno]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[leisure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[utopia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=818</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ballard &#038; Eno: quite possibly the 'two greatest British thinkers of the second half of the 20th Century'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballardeno1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Tribute to J.G. Ballard &#038; Brian Eno" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Ballard, late 60s. Photo via <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html">The Terminal Collection</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote><p><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-vermilion-sands">Vermilion Sands</a> is a kind of cross between Palm Springs and Juan-les-Pins, a version of the leisure society we were about to enter, though for some reason we stopped and turned away at the door. Music by Brian Eno, metal foil architecture by Frank Gehry, dreams by Sigmund Freud, decor by Paul Delvaux.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, Literary Review, 2001.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Vermilion Sands is a synthetic and synaesthetic landscape of psychotropic houses that respond to their inhabitants’ desires and fears, singing sculptures, and a place where everything in sight seems to glitter, to take on the qualities of crystal, a flickering chromaticism suffusing everything from stairways to hair colour and eye pigments&#8230; could there be here a sort of affirmative retort to the insistence that all Modernist or utopian communities inevitably end up in dystopia?</p>
<p><em>Owen Hatherley, <a href="http://themeasurestaken.blogspot.com/2007/05/ballards-banlieue-radieuse.html">&#8216;Ballard&#8217;s Banlieue Radieuse&#8217;</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>It is a great injustice that Eno tends to be best known for either the &#8220;invention&#8221; of ambient music or for putting a slightly avant-garde gloss on sundry rock superstars. His records, and attendant theories, in the decade from 1972 to 1982 exhibit an astonishing range of modes and ideas, from the preening glam rock of Here Come the Warm Jets to the opiated drift of Discreet Music, the apocalyptic My Life in the Bush of Ghosts to the deliberate blankness of Music for Airports. Without Eno as catalyst and protagonist, the landscape of popular music would be a far less interesting place: he popularised, through his own records and work with Bowie, Talking Heads and others, noise, sampling, studio-as-instrument, surface over &#8220;depth&#8221; and manifold other strategies against what was, by the early 1970s, a form in danger of becoming a hidebound arena of proper songs played on real instruments.</p>
<p><em>Owen Hatherley, <a href="http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2008/07/david-sheppard-brian-eno-music">&#8216;Father of Invention&#8217;.</a></em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/enoballard1.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Tribute to J.G. Ballard &#038; Brian Eno" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Dionysian Eno. Photo via <a href="http://www.icomefromreykjavik.com/kontrapunkt/2008/02">Kontrapunkt</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>In another corner of his mind [Eno] was inventing ambient music. Recuperating from an accident, he asked a friend to leave a harp record on, and the one working speaker let its faint strings blend with wind and bird-song. Subliminally, he recognised that this was music. Ambient 1: Music for Airports (1978) announced a theory with, as the title suggested, much in common with JG Ballard&#8217;s eerie mundane modernity.</p>
<p><em>Nick Hasted, <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/brian-eno-as-he-turns-60-the-professor-of-rock-is-as-creative-as-ever-828224.html">&#8216;Brian Eno, the professor of rock&#8217;</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>SIMON SELLARS: You casually injected something interesting into our correspondence — that you see Ballard and Brian Eno as ‘the two greatest British thinkers of the second half of the 20th Century.’ I’m now going to pin you down and ask you to elaborate.</p>
<p>SIMON REYNOLDS: That’s slightly over the top, isn’t it? I wonder if it really stands up. Then again, as thinkers specifically about culture, in the British context, I can’t honestly think of too many rivals. Certainly as people who came out of the Sixties but came into their prime – as artists and as influences – in the Seventies, they are these towering figures, I think.</p>
<p>One of my fantasy projects that I toyed with for a while was a book on Ballard and Eno. They do seem of a type in some ways and they are patron saints of postpunk to an extent. But the project founders immediately owing to the fact that they are so eloquent about what they do and such brilliant writers, that there’d be zero role for any critic or commentator. There’d be very little to mediate or interpret, as they’ve said it all, so much better. They know what they are doing. I suppose you could historicize them, contextualise them. Ballard with the milieu he emerged out of in the Sixties, which was based around the ICA, right? And Eno with the UK art schools.</p>
<p>In some ways the affinity seems as much temperamental as anything ideas-based. There’s this wonderful Englishness. You imagine they would get on like a house on fire, trading ideas over whisky and soda in the Shepperton living room. One thing they both do is take ideas from science and set them loose in culture, find applications. Ballard is like a British McLuhan, except much better because he’s a far better writer, and a better thinker too – more original, more convincing. Eno is almost like a British Barthes, in some ways.</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/simon-reynolds-on-the-ballard-connection">&#8216;&#8221;Magisterial, Precise, Unsettling&#8221;: Simon Reynolds on the Ballard connection&#8217;</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballardeno2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Tribute to J.G. Ballard &#038; Brian Eno" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Ballard, mid-70s. Photo via <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgb.html">The Terminal Collection</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>SIMON SELLARS: When I interviewed Simon Reynolds, he said that Ballard and Brian Eno are ‘the two greatest British thinkers of the second half of the 20th Century.’ Given that Ballard and Eno are two of your major influences, do you agree with him?</p>
<p>COUSIN SILAS: I’ve never really considered Ballard or Eno as thinkers. To me one writes incredibly atmospheric music, the other writes incredibly atmospheric fiction. Both Ballard and Eno are probably my strongest influences, but their influence is very tenuous, difficult to explain. They both invoke that certain mood of isolation. Isolation is a funny thing: it can be forced upon one, or be self-invoked. It seems in today’s world, the last thing you’d really expect is isolation, and yet even in the busiest of places, there are attributes and situations where one can feel it totally. Self-invoked isolation is where the person chooses to step back, away from all the social interaction and so on, to become, in some respects, a suburban exile. I can relate to a lot of Ballard’s fiction and it’s much the same with Eno’s music, although to a lesser extent — Eno isn’t as consistent, and his vocal albums are something else. I don’t mind them, but for me it’s stuff like Music for Films, Apollo, Another Green World, plus a couple of his ambient albums and the two he did with Harold Budd that contain some of the most moody and atmospheric music there is.</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard">&#8216;Cousin Silas: Another Flask of Ballard&#8217;</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/enoballard2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Tribute to J.G. Ballard &#038; Brian Eno" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Eno in 1975. Photo via <a href="http://creativetechnology.salford.ac.uk/fuchs/modules/input_output/Pop/pop_eno.htm">Creative Technology</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>SIMON SELLARS: How successful do you think Brian Eno’s Music for Airports was in providing a soundtrack to Ballard’s ‘future cities’? Eno wanted – in part — to reassure travellers who might be contemplating their death in a possible air crash, although Ballard seems to see the modern airport as a self-sufficient organism that already possesses this inbuilt function.</p>
<p>MIKE RYAN: If no airport is using his music, then I guess it was not successful. I own that CD, but I’ve never sat through the whole thing. I just get bored with it. If I want to contemplate death, I want complete silence, which of course we never can achieve. John Cage once recounted his experience in an anechoic soundproof chamber. When he was in there he asked the sound engineer what all that whooshing and thumping was that he could hear. Turned out that it was the blood rushing through his veins and his heart beating.</p>
<p>In regards to ‘future cities’, judging by recent articles by Nick Tosches and Mike Davis, it sounds like Dubai is the city of the future. Eno should do ‘Music for Dubai’ and see if it catches on. Maybe he could be the first Dubai superstar in the post-Las-Vegas world.</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballardian-music-mike-ryan-interview">&#8216;&#8221;No-one Dances in Ballard&#8221;: An Interview with Mike Ryan.&#8217;</a></em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballardeno3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Tribute to J.G. Ballard &#038; Brian Eno" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Ballard in 1991. Photo by Craig McDean.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/enoballard3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Tribute to J.G. Ballard &#038; Brian Eno" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Appollonian Eno. Photo by Tom Pilston.</em></p>
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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>A Ballardian Burial</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/a-ballardian-burial</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/a-ballardian-burial#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 06:48:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enviro-disaster]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kode9]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=614</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The music of kode9 and Burial: just how 'Ballardian' is it? We investigate the viral spread of this apparent internet meme, detouring via Crash, The Drowned World and 'The Sound-Sweep'.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kode9_burial.jpg" alt="Ballardian: kode9" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: kode9. Photo by <a href="http://www.negrophonic.com/2008/kode-9-airwave-time">Georgie Cook</a></em>.</p>
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<p>Last Wednesday DJ Rupture hosted DJ and dubstep producer kode9 (Steve Goodman) on <a href="http://wfmu.org/playlists/dr">WFMU 91.1 fm 90.1 fm</a> (you can listen to the show via the embedded playlist above). Goodman played a live set of typically tasteful and deliriously immersive beats, of which I am reluctant to assign any genre tags to as these things change so quickly and often (plus I&#8217;ve been out of the loop for quite some time). Goodman has been associated with the dubstep form in recent times, although as he clarifies in the interview following the Rupture set, he is no longer excited by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubstep">dubstep</a> or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grime_%28music%29">grime</a> and instead has been listening to instrumental hip hop from LA and percussive pirate music coming out of the house scene (&#8216;not straight 4/4&#8242;, though). I wonder what this melange will bring forth in Goodman&#8217;s future music? I have been more than inspired and impressed with kode9&#8217;s broken, tangential and swampy beats, and the other acquisitions to Goodman&#8217;s <a href="http://www.hyperdub.com">Hyperdub</a> stable, like the ubiquitous (and anonymous) <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial_(musician)">Burial</a>, have only added to the aura of a true original forging his own conventions to build a convincing new scene.</p>
<p>Goodman is <a href="http://www.uel.ac.uk/ssmcs/staff/steve-goodman">a lecturer</a> in Music Culture in the School of Social Sciences, Media and Cultural Studies at the University of East London, and is currently writing a book about &#8217;sonic warfare&#8217; due for release by MIT Press in 2009. I&#8217;m very intrigued by Goodman&#8217;s ideas in this capacity, specifically about &#8216;the role of sound in an &#8216;echology of fear&#8217;. Is it similar to the way piped music has been used as an instrument of control, I wonder? I&#8217;m thinking of an example <a href="http://www.pipedown.info/index.php?id=14&#038;cmd=page">like this</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>All unwanted noise raises the blood pressure and depresses the immune system. A survey of 215 blood donors at Nottingham University Medical School in January 1995 found that playing piped music made donors more nervous before giving blood and more depressed afterwards than silence. In February 2005 piped television was introduced on some trains in Essex. Passengers hated it so much that they barricaded themselves in the toilets in protest.</p></blockquote>
<p>The question is, then: besides locking themselves in the toilet (or replicating Mangon&#8217;s sonovac in Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;The Sound-Sweep&#8217;), what other guerrilla tactics can embittered consumers employ to fight back? I hope Steve&#8217;s book will provide an answer.</p>
<p>Also, Goodman&#8217;s theoretical examples puts me in mind of Noriega when he was coaxed from his hideout by <a href="http://nofearofthefuture.blogspot.com/2006/12/noriega-playlist.html">the high-volume blasting</a> of Billy Idol and Guns &#8216;n&#8217; Roses by American troops; more recently, American forces have tortured prisoners with the repeated playing of Metallica&#8217;s &#8216;Enter Sandman&#8217;. Out of today&#8217;s crop of rock and pop stars, I wonder, whose music would be the most appropriate for breaking the iron will of a hated and feared dictator deep in the bowels of a hideous place that most likely resembles Abu Ghraib, and why?</p>
<p>Goodman&#8217;s book includes, so I&#8217;m told, a chapter on Ballard, which is appropriate given that in the guise of kode9 he has acknowledged Ballard as an influence on his music. In 2006 Goodman <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballards-sonic-fictions">gave a talk</a> on &#8216;J.G. Ballard&#8217;s Sonic Fictions&#8217; and at one stage I was going to interview him about all of this, but it never happened due to his busy schedule (here, though, is <a href="http://www.simonsellars.com/sleepybrain/steve-goodman-nurturing-rhythmic-bugs">an earlier interview</a> I did with Steve in 2003; there wasn&#8217;t much on the net about kode9 at that stage, so it was all very mysterious and exciting).</p>
<p>Rupture, however, did manage to pin Goodman down on Ballard, and here&#8217;s the relevant transcript from their interview:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>DJ RUPTURE:</strong> This is a totally left-field question, but I was reading about your influences: J.G. Ballard. What books do you like? And does that manifest in your music in any way?</p>
<p><strong>KODE9:</strong> Well, I&#8217;ve read a little about musicians who&#8217;ve been influenced by Ballard, and it always seems to be Crash, that&#8217;s the one. I think that&#8217;s an amazing book, but it wasn&#8217;t the one that got me. In the mid-90s, when jungle was just coming through and early drum &#8216;n&#8217; bass, I read The Drowned World, set in London underwater, a kind of tropical London, most of the city&#8217;s flooded. The creatures undergo this sort of weird negative evolution, so that there are pterodactyls flying down what used to be streets but are now lagoons. And the humidity and clamminess of that idea of London, I was kind of hearing it in jungle.</p>
<p><strong>DJ RUPTURE:</strong> Interesting. A swampy sub-bass?</p>
<p><strong>KODE9:</strong> Yeah. But also just the atmospherics of jungle. And also there&#8217;s a short story by Ballard that I love called &#8216;The Sound-Sweep&#8217;, which is set in a city in which sound doesn&#8217;t dissipate, it just builds up. And there&#8217;s a guy who&#8217;s like a refuge collector for sound, and he drives around with this truck, with this machine called the Sonovac, and he basically goes around cleaning up spaces, sucking sound. And it&#8217;s like, this was written in the early 60s, so it&#8217;s like musique concrete or just sampling, generally, in this story. It&#8217;s just an amazing, prophetic story about noisy cities &#8212; and sampling. So, they&#8217;re the two Ballard things I&#8217;m influenced by most, I think.</p></blockquote>
<p>In 2007, Burial&#8217;s last album was a hot topic in certain areas of the blog world, with Burial, as an entity, often bracketed with kode9, many thinking the two producers were one and the same &#8212; hence the photo heading this post. People really were straining to find the appropriate terms to describe this strange, otherworldly music, and often the conclusion reached was: it&#8217;s Ballardian. I became interested in tracking this meme because, as Steve suggests, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> would invariably be the book that got referenced, yet I couldn&#8217;t really hear Crash&#8217;s themes in the music of either kode9 or Burial. It seemed that Crash was beginning to function as a default Ballardian reference, like 1984 standing in for &#8216;Orwellian&#8217;.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kode9_memories.jpg" alt="Ballardian: kode9" /></p>
<p>But as I was hunting this meme down, I came across an interview kode9 <a href="http://www.factmagazine.co.uk/da/42229">did with k-punk</a>, in which k-punk asserts that the &#8217;strangely lulling, hydroponic humidity&#8217; of Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drwned-world">Drowned World</a> is etched in kode9&#8217;s work. This book does feel like a good fit, and its theme of overlapping time tracks appears espec