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	<title>Ballardian &#187; memory</title>
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		<title>Miracles of Life: foreword to the Greek edition</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/miracles-of-life-foreword-to-the-greek-edition</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/miracles-of-life-foreword-to-the-greek-edition#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Oct 2009 22:29:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[autobiography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[medical procedure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shanghai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[This is the foreword to the Greek edition of Ballard's Miracles of Life, to be published by Oxy in November 2009.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/oxy_miracles.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Miracles of Life" /></p>
<p><em>This is the foreword to the Greek edition of Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-miracles-of-life">Miracles of Life</a>, due to be published by Oxy in November 2009.</em></p>
<p>In 2006 <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/rattling-other-peoples-cages-the-jg-ballard-interview">I interviewed Jim Ballard</a>. I was nervous at the thought of matching wits with this towering figure but my anxiety was quickly banished, for he was a charming and generous conversationalist. Although taxed from the recent discovery of the cancer that would claim him, he applied his blowtorch intelligence to everything from CSI and the ‘soft fascism’ of consumer culture to the surreality of having an English queen as an Australian head of state, weaving such cultural flashpoints in among the warps and wefts of a philosophy that has sustained his writing across 19 novels and around 100 short stories. Performing a similar function, but in reverse, his wonderful memoir contextualises some of the darkest and strangest corners of his fiction – as elements hotwired into his life. </p>
<p>It was never easy, perhaps not even possible for Ballard to separate his life from his work. Nominally English, he was born in Shanghai and lived in the expatriate community there before being interned in 1943 with his family in Lunghua, a Japanese war camp. He didn’t see England until he was 16. Accordingly, the Shanghai years, and the squalor and horror of Lunghua, take up almost half of Miracles, an index to its deep psychological fissures. Marguerite Duras once said she only truly recognised herself in her novels, not the biographies written about her. Perhaps Ballard felt the same. Like Duras, who also wrote iterative, fictionalised accounts of her expatriate upbringing in Saigon, he has practised a form of time travel throughout his career, most famously in the 1984 novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a>, reinhabiting his Lunghua memories in numerous stories, blurring the edges in each incarnation, incrementally shifting the background scenery, erasing forever the demarcation between fiction and reality. The summoning of memory is a key theme in Miracles. But it is memory that becomes hopelessly, irrevocably contaminated with the writer’s imaginative life. The sudden death of his wife, Mary, in 1964 takes up barely a page, but Ballard’s dream of her returning to his world to say goodbye takes up considerably more, as does a discussion of his experimental novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a>, which Ballard has said was in part his attempt to sublimate the hurt and anger he felt at losing Mary so unexpectedly. Motifs from Ballard’s fiction bleed into the autobiographical frame, reversing the process set in train by Empire. When he writes that he was drawn to science fiction because it examined the trend towards ‘politics conducted as a branch of advertising’, we recognise the echoes from <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a>, where the phrase was first used in the original introduction to that work. </p>
<p>Significantly, when he describes his holidays with his girlfriend Claire and his children, he says they took very few photographs for ‘memory is the greatest gallery in the world, and I can play an endless archive of images of the happy time’. Looking back at the creative process that led to Empire, he suggests, ‘I was frisking myself of memories that popped out of every pocket. By the time I finished, Shanghai had advanced out of its own mirage and become a real city again’. Bizarrely, when Empire becomes <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/dreams-ransom-steven-spielbergs-empire-of-the-sun">a Spielberg film</a> and production begins at the studios near his home in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/paradigm-of-nowhere-shepperton-photo-essay-1">Shepperton</a>, Ballard describes how his neighbours are recruited as extras in the film, portraying his fellow Lunghua inmates. Christian Bale, playing the young Jim, comes up to him to announce, ‘Hello, Mr Ballard, I’m you’. At every turn, Lunghua erupts from the subconscious well. The sense is of a man simultaneously cursed and blessed with the task of processing a remarkable upbringing – blessed, because to Ballard Lunghua was his ‘happy childhood’, an experience that, although shocking, fed the first stirrings of his startling imagination. </p>
<p>Perhaps surprisingly for an autobiography, there’s very little ego on display and not much gossip, save for a scurrilous tale about Kingsley Amis, which sounds like it’s common coin anyway. But there is extraordinary detail. Interspersed throughout are lingering snapshots that impart a sense of a man enamoured of his three children (the ‘miracles of life’ that give the book its title), of his wife Mary and, later, Claire … and of cats. Ballard’s eye is as scalpel-sharp as ever, and his remembrances of domestic bliss, ‘days of wonder’ with the kids – like the vivid scene where he takes them scavenging among abandoned film sets – resonate with as much intensity as the immorality of the early Shanghai street scenes, or the bleak humour inhabiting his medical-student days when he would dissect corpses and keep skeletons under his bed. </p>
<p>Finally, Miracles of Life is another version of his past, as gloriously open-minded as all his fiction. It is brief, modest, honest – and poignant, with Ballard confronting his cancer in the final chapter. But shortly before this terminal appointment, Ballard realises ‘the true nature of my assignment. I was looking for my younger self’. Perhaps he is like the man in Chris Marker’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/la-jetee">La Jetée</a>, a film that he openly admired, about the mutability of memory. In La Jetée, the man, via the peculiarities of time travel, realises that as a boy he had witnessed his own death. In Miracles, via the peculiarities of auto(bio)graphy, Ballard time travels with the ongoing revelation that as a boy, Lunghua was the map of his future. Miracles, then, reunites his younger self with the older man, allowing Ballard to again see through young Jim’s eyes, viewing his own impending death with detached, yet remarkably clear vision.</p>
<p><em>Simon Sellars, June 2009.</em></p>
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		<title>Re-Placing the Novel: Sinclair, Ballard and the Spaces of Literature</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/re-placing-the-novel-sinclair-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/re-placing-the-novel-sinclair-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Oct 2009 13:21:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David Cunningham</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[academia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bluewater]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Petit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marc Auge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[non-place]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychogeography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Situationists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speed & violence]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[JG Ballard and Iain Sinclair have often been cast in a simple narrative of compatible writers and thematic consistencies. David Cunningham's wide-ranging article forces a new appreciation of this complex relationship.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballard_sinclair.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Iain Sinclair" /></p>
<p><em>Image: JG Ballard and Iain Sinclair in London Orbital (dirs. Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair, 2002).</em></p>
<p>by <strong><a href="http://www.wmin.ac.uk/sshl/page-1498">David Cunningham</a></strong></p>
<p><strong>There are few concepts</strong> in contemporary social and cultural theory whose meaning is so apparently nebulous, and whose historical novelty (or even reality) is so disputed, as that of ‘globalisation’. Yet, for better or worse, the questions that it serves to frame are ones that increasingly work to define a trans-disciplinary problematic across all the humanities and social sciences, as attested to by a range of celebrated publications in the last few years. In the case of the critical analysis of cultural and artistic production, perhaps of utmost importance has been the issue of the historical transformations being undergone by ‘local’ forms and practices in the face of the global generalization of capitalist relations of production and exchange; an issue which, for literary theory and criticism, goes beyond, and in some sense historically sublates, the specific problematic of post-colonialism.<a href="#1">[1]</a> As such, what is customarily thought to be at stake here might, in its broadest terms, be summarised in the following questions: If there is, for the first time, now (tendentially at least) a ‘single spatial ground to the definition of the historical present’, what happens to <em>place</em> as a spatial variable in such a new global economy of a capitalist modernity? How is it inscribed ‘in the [new] spaces of culture?&#8217;<a href="#2">[2]</a> And what critical ‘role’ can cultural forms and practices, that have been historically associated with the specificities of place and localised traditions, realistically hope to play at such an historical moment?</p>
<p>While then its qualitative historical newness has undoubtedly been over-exaggerated in some quarters, the emergent spatial dominance of what Castells terms the ‘space of flows’ that traverses the planetary ground of contemporary capitalist modernity &#8212; ‘flows of capital, flows of information, flows of technology, flows of organisational interaction, flows of images, sounds and symbols’ &#8212; clearly <em>does</em> bring radically into question the ontological character of what has traditionally been understood as spaces of <em>place</em>, whether ethnologically or sociologically; that is, a ‘locale whose form, function and meaning are self-contained within the boundaries of physical contiguity’. It is the ‘concrete outcome’ of such an immanent negation that, famously, the French anthropologist Marc Augé, and, more recently, Hardt and Negri, have sought to articulate as new forms of <em>non</em>-place: the proliferation of spaces which ‘cannot be defined as relational, historical and concerned with identity’, and which, indeed, resist all localised patterns of legibility. Materially, and most visibly, it is these spaces that are reproduced through the now familiar ‘glass phantasms’ of an ‘architectural Esperanto’ &#8212; the built form and ambiences of airports, motorways, corporate towers, and retail outlets &#8212; populating an ‘urban panorama’ across the planet, which progressively engenders an ‘inexorable sameness of…landscape that turns all travel into arrival at the same destination’.<a href="#3">[3]</a></p>
<p>If such presently operative ideas &#8212; several of the most influential articulations of which I have rather bundled together here &#8212; provoke certain questions in relation to the specific concerns of this essay, it is, of course, because if there is one distinctive aspect of the work of Iain Sinclair &#8212; a formal and thematic principle that might seem to unify his entire oeuvre &#8212; it would relate to the intimate association it suggests between literary production and the <em>particularities</em> of place; in Sinclair’s own case the unique locale of East London. ‘The poet’, he claims in a 1979 interview, is distinguished by the way in which he or she is necessarily ‘drawn to a specific location; to activate a monologue that is already available there&#8217;: &#8216;Place needs the person to give it voice. Place activates the poet’.<a href="#4">[4]</a> Nearly twenty years on, such a poetics is re-iterated in Sinclair&#8217;s essay &#8216;The Shamanism of Intent&#8217;, in which the contemporary shaman&#8217;s &#8216;sickness-vocation&#8217; is explicitly defined as the capacity to &#8216;re-enchant place&#8217; through ‘working their own turf’. For the true artist as shaman: ‘The life-force of the city is measured in the candlepower of its keepers, the activators of place’. The writer is a <em>chronographer</em>, ‘hungry for place as expressively potent, place as experience…as a trigger to memory, imagination, and mythic presence’.<a href="#5">[5]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/orbital_sinclair.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Iain Sinclair" /></p>
<p><em>Image: Iain Sinclair in London Orbital (dirs. Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair, 2002).</em></p>
<p>In its literary origins, such a poetics of place is in fact most immediately traceable in Sinclair’s work, not to the present resuscitation of the politicised European avant-gardism of Surrealist re-mappings and Situationist psychogeography, with which it has been latterly associated, but rather to the largely occluded influence of a certain post-Poundian, mainly American poetry that played a crucial role within the so-called British poetry revival of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Perhaps most important, in this respect, would be Charles Olson&#8217;s Maximus Poems, centred around his home town of Gloucester, Massachusetts, and their poetic conception of a ‘new localism&#8217;; a modulation of Poundian epic ambitions in which writing, as the construction of spatio-temporal matrices capable of generating form, becomes what Eric Mottram describes as a &#8216;locationary action&#8217;.<a href="#6">[6]</a> Nonetheless, whatever the distinctive cultural roots of such an ‘action’, as it manifests itself within Sinclair’s writing, it is fair to say that its somewhat belated mainstream <em>fashionablity</em> has coincided with a far more culturally generalised ‘poetics of place’ which would seem to draw together a bewilderingly wide range of different artistic forms and practices of the last few decades, and which appears &#8212; if we are to judge by current academic discourses &#8212; to have reached a certain fever pitch in our own contemporary moment. To note this is not to diminish the <em>singularity</em> of Sinclair’s work. Rather it is, I want to suggest, to provide a necessary interpretative framework for the kind of critical reflection that may serve to bring forth this singularity all the more forcefully within its contemporary context.<a href="#7">[7]</a></p>
<p>Potential examples of the contemporary ‘hunger’ for place are various: the proclaimed return in architectural theory, after the final disintegration of the Modern Movement, back towards what Christian Norberg-Schulz terms ‘the &#8220;vocation&#8221; of place&#8217; and the regulative ideal of the <em>genius loci</em>;<a href="#8">[8]</a> the increasing dominance of site-specific works within post-conceptualist art practice of a type that would seek &#8216;to animate old sites &#8230; reoccupy lost cultural spaces, and propose historical counter-memories&#8217;;<a href="#9">[9]</a> the seductive melancholia of W. G Sebald’s books that conjure a ‘heartache…caused by the vortex of past time’ accumulated on the sites of Liverpool Street Station or the Sailors’ Reading Room in Southwold;<a href="#10">[10]</a> and what might best be described as the <em>pseudo</em>-Situationist and Benjaminian aspirations of much contemporary urban theory.<a href="#11">[11]</a> The desire for what the architectural theorist Kenneth Frampton calls a <em>critical regionalism</em>, whose ‘salient cultural precept’ would be that of ‘place creation’, is seemingly rampant in our time.<a href="#12">[12]</a></p>
<p>Yet what cultural function does such an apparently ubiquitous ‘precept’ serve in a resurgent globalised capitalism? As one recent commentator on contemporary art has put it, it is certainly hard not to suspect, given the increasing ‘historical <em>loss</em> of distinctions of place’, that ‘the ideological function of site-specific work’ is ‘now to manufacture such distinctions artificially, in order to compensate and cover over the loss’. For if, in the words of Hal Foster, ‘the local and the everyday are [commonly] thought to resist economic development, they can also attract it, [insofar as] such development <em>needs</em> the local and the everyday even as it erodes these qualities, renders them siteless’. The renewed importance, within globalised capitalist development, of &#8216;monopoly rent&#8217; &#8212; the &#8216;exclusive control over some directly or indirectly tradeable item which is in some respects unique and non-replicable&#8217; &#8212; gives rise to a very contemporary form of what we might call the ‘capital of location’, and to new forms of financial speculation that follow from it. In a familiar pattern, the regeneration of the East End of London, with which Sinclair has long been concerned, might well be understood as exemplary in these terms, promoting itself on the basis of a collective symbolic capital deriving from its distinctive (spectacularised) history and myth (from the distant pathos of Huguenot and Jewish immigrants to the gothic frisson of Jack the Ripper and gangster chic). Yet, as David Harvey observes, this process rapidly heads &#8216;deep into contradiction&#8217;. For &#8216;as opportunities to pocket monopoly rents galore present themselves on the basis of [this] collective symbolic capital &#8230; so their irresistible lure draws more and more homogenising commodification in its wake&#8217;. It is the tension at work here that determines the cultural politics of globalization in general.<a href="#13">[13]</a></p>
<p>Explicitly resistant, then, as his work may well be to the contemporary construction of literature’s latest ideological role as an effective branch of the heritage industry &#8212; fetishising the quirky and mildly exotic signs of ‘local colour’ for a global market &#8212; the marks of such a problematic complicity with the forces of investment capital cannot be entirely erased from Sinclair&#8217;s own works, as he is clearly aware. Indeed it is an alertness to the <em>danger</em> of such complicity which is increasingly, even obsessively, self-reflexively enunciated, in a familiar narratorial conceit, throughout the pages of a novel like Downriver. &#8216;Would it be <em>ethical</em> to make our discovery public?’, the narrator asks at one point. ‘To endanger this time-warped reservation?&#8217;. For to ‘make public’ is always to risk feeding those who need ‘a mythology to underwrite property values’; the ‘standard pre-development scenario’:</p>
<blockquote><p>When artists walk through a wilderness in epiphanous ‘bliss-out’, fiddling with polaroids, grim estate agents dog their footsteps…The visionary reclaims the ground of his nightmares only to present it, framed in Perspex, to the Docklands Development Board .<a href="#14">[14]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Such self-conscious marking out of the changing socio-economic processes which would culturally enframe and threaten his poetics of place &#8212; the reshaping of London by the ‘occult logic of “market forces”’ which serve to dictate ‘a new geography’ &#8212; is a persistent feature of the ironic distance apparent within the narrative voices of Sinclair’s recent prose; a specific modulation of the kind of reflexive commentary that ‘is so thoroughly interwoven with action that the distinction between the two disappears’.<a href="#15">[15]</a> Indeed, something of the distinctiveness of Sinclair’s recent works is precisely to be found &#8212; unlike in, say, the ultimately conservative pleasures of Sebald’s superficially similar writings &#8212; in the ways in which they immanently register a certain <em>crisis</em> within their own mode of literary production. For if it is indeed a certain &#8216;magnetism&#8217; of place that activates the &#8216;poet&#8217;, the historical loss of distinctions of place clearly raises questions about the contemporary possibility of poetic experience <em>in general</em>, as Sinclair conceives it. Moreover, and as such, this problematic comes to constitute far more than a mere historical ‘backdrop’ or thematic ‘context’, but necessarily manifests itself as an immanent problem of <em>form</em>; rendering visible within its own formal structures, and stylistic constellations, the social contradictions that it engages.</p>
<p>If, therefore, the conception of literary production as ‘locationary action’ is evidently one that persists, in a certain continuous fashion, through all of Sinclair’s writings, up to the present day, it must <em>also</em> be thought of as subject to, and as immanently registering, an irresistible transformation. The stories and forms of poetic experience engendered by what Patrick Wright describes as ‘the precipitations of history, rumour and memory which were still clinging to the streets of Whitechapel as Sinclair knew them in the seventies’ &#8212; and which provide much of the material for Lud Heat, Suicide Bridge and White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings &#8212; are, by the early 1990s, presented as progressively fragile in the face of the ‘deregulated energies’ unleashed by Thatcherism. In the pages of Downriver and Radon Daughters, one previously ‘disregarded landscape’ after another is ‘dragged from cyclical time’ to the ‘pragmatic time’ of capital accumulation.<a href="#16">[16]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/orbital_ballard.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Iain Sinclair" /></p>
<p><em>Image: JG Ballard in London Orbital (dirs. Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair, 2002).</em></p>
<p>What might be at stake in this for the politics of contemporary literature, more generally, is something that I want to consider here through the staging of a ‘confrontation’ between the very different &#8212; in some sense, <em>opposed</em> &#8212; manifestations of the contemporary novel’s spatial and formal possibilities to be found within the oeuvres of Sinclair and of J.G. Ballard. Such a confrontation is not one that is imposed from the outside. It is, crucially, <em>internal</em> to Sinclair’s writings of the last five years, and, I want to claim, serves, in part, to mediate their developing relations both to the history of the novel form and to the contemporary problematics of place and non-place, of spaces of places and spaces of flows. Yet, as such, this textual presence of Ballard is a rather more <em>disturbing</em> presence within Sinclair’s writing than are the familiar allusions to Blake, Dickens, Conrad, et al. For Ballard’s own style and concerns, in their <em>tension</em> with Sinclair’s, mark something like an introjected point of resistance (which cannot simply be digested or overcome) to the poetics of place upon which the latter continues to insist.</p>
<p>In London Orbital, Sinclair records an actual meeting with Ballard at his home in Shepperton &#8212; an act of ‘homage’, he suggests &#8212; but we find the first explicit staging of this confrontation a few years earlier in the short book on <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a>, written for the BFI Modern Classics series, in which Sinclair addresses, at some length, his particular interest in Ballard&#8217;s definitive ‘fascination with a frozen aesthetic of motorways, business parks, airport hotels &#8230; A present tense world of swift, sharp sentences&#8217;. This is a fiction that ‘grows out of [an] undisclosed, over-familiar urban landscape. Ballard&#8217;s trick [is] to forge a poetic out of that which contains least poetry&#8217; (Crash 77). In this way, Sinclair argues, Ballard’s writing conforms, in its own idiosyncratic manner, to a poetics of place. Like the areas of London that, in Lights Out For The Territory, Sinclair parcels out to the likes of Angela Carter, Allen Fisher and Aidan Dun, this fiction can be <em>sited</em>, insofar as it is a particular <em>place</em>, Sinclair claims—&#8217;the transitional landscape of gravel pits, reservoirs and slip-roads that surround Heathrow&#8217; —  that activates Ballard the poet. The &#8216;psychogeographical field&#8217; of Crash &#8216;was posited entirely on the London perimeter, the Heathrow pentagram that Ballard knew so well&#8217;.<a href="#17">[17]</a></p>
<p>Yet it is worth noting that there is &#8212; by contrast to Fisher or Dun, who fully subscribe to their own versions of an Olsonian poetics of place &#8212; a rather deliberate <em>elision</em> of certain key aspects of Ballard’s own self-understanding apparent in such a reading; an elision which is, for example, revealed in discussion with Sinclair’s sometime collaborator Chris Petit. As Sinclair relates the latter&#8217;s conversations with Ballard around the possibility of making a film of Crash, he recounts that a major problem for Petit concerned his difficulty in imagining it &#8216;being <em>set</em> anywhere except the isthmus between the Westway, Heathrow and Shepperton&#8217;. The implicit basis for such a view is re-iterated in Sinclair&#8217;s own judgement on the David Cronenberg film that was eventually made, where, he writes, &#8216;the strange particulars of London that Ballard pressed into a Blakean mapping of his own…dissolve into the netherworld of &#8230; Toronto&#8217;. Yet, as Sinclair is also compelled to acknowledge here, such disappointment was emphatically not shared by Ballard himself. Indeed Ballard would <em>love</em> Cronenberg’s film.<a href="#18">[18]</a></p>
<p>Now, the dissensus at this point can, perhaps, precisely be conceptualised in terms of the dialectic of space and place at work, respectively, in Ballard&#8217;s novel and in Sinclair&#8217;s reading &#8212; or, rather, creative <em>mis</em>-reading &#8212; of it. As Petit relates, Ballard himself saw ‘Crash as much a Tokyo novel or a Toronto novel as a London novel&#8217;; the reasoning for which is made quite evident in Sinclair&#8217;s own interview with the writer:</p>
<blockquote><p>The areas peripheral to great airports are identical all over the world. You can land at any airport these days and for the first twenty minutes, as you take your cab, you go through a landscape that is identical &#8230; Two-storey factories, flat housing, warehouses.<a href="#19">[19]</a></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/orbital_ballard2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Iain Sinclair" /></p>
<p><em>Image: JG Ballard in London Orbital (dirs. Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair, 2002).</em></p>
<p>In this sense, <em>for Ballard himself</em>, the &#8216;spatial field&#8217; of Crash, and of the novels that followed, is not, in fact, related to a &#8216;place&#8217;, as Sinclair might like to imagine, but to a necessarily generalised <em>non-place</em>, in something like Augé&#8217;s terms. The spaces of Ballard’s fiction are those populated by ‘the <em>same</em> car-rental agencies and hotel rooms, with their adult movies and deodorized bathrooms’. As one of his characters says of the central ‘location’ in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a>: ‘Estrella de Mar isn’t anywhere’.<a href="#20">[20]</a></p>
<p>In exemplary ethnological fashion, such spaces of non-place are taxonomised by Augé himself as including &#8216;air, rail and motorway routes, the mobile cabins called &#8220;means of transport&#8221;…the airports and railway stations, hotel chains, leisure parks, and large retail outlets&#8217;, both &#8216;transit points and temporary abodes&#8217;, &#8216;holiday clubs and refugee camps&#8217;, as well as the spaces &#8216;where the habitué of supermarkets, slot machines and credit cards communicates wordlessly, through gestures, with an abstract, unmediated commerce&#8217;.<a href="#21">[21]</a> I will not be entirely the first to note that this check-list in fact reads like a thematic summary of Ballard&#8217;s own fiction, from the concrete dystopias of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> and Crash through to the decadent, gated communities of Cocaine Nights and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a>.<a href="#22">[22]</a> And the spaces of such fiction cast a considerable shadow over much of Sinclair’s recent work, most obviously London Orbital, obsessively returned to throughout its pages. Indeed, this latter book might well be read as a kind of self-conscious encroachment upon, and rewriting of, what Sinclair regards as Ballard’s own territory, from the Bluewater shopping centre &#8212; described as a ‘Ballardian resort’ &#8212; to the ‘enclaves with no memory’ that constitute the new housing estates ringing London, to, above all, the M25 itself.<a href="#23">[23]</a> The echoes of Ballard would thus seem entirely deliberate. Compare, for example, the following two fictional ‘spaces’, selected almost at random; the first from a recent Ballard novel, the second from London Orbital:</p>
<blockquote><p>Despite its title, the Pangbourne Village estate was not built near the site of any former or existing village…[It] has no connections, social, historical or civic with Pangbourne itself…Secure behind their high walls and surveillance cameras, these estates in effect constitute a chain of closed communities whose lifelines run directly along the M4 to the offices and consulting rooms, restaurants and private clinics of central London.</p>
<p>A colony of the disenchanted in a panorama of disenchantment. Amnesiaville…Chafford Hundred thrives because it is not really there. It’s displaced, not placed: 2,000 (and rising) pristine, anti-vernacular units. Scimitar-shaped Draylon-grass carpets. Second cars. An empty-by-day enclave with no centres and no purpose.<a href="#24">[24]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>In this way, Ballard’s work provides something like the intertextual point of mediation for Sinclair’s own engagement with the contemporary dialectic of place and non-place; that is, with what is earlier figured by the ‘sorry meniscus’ of the Millenium Dome, Canary Wharf’s ‘crystal synthesis of capital’ — ‘Treeless, broad, focusing on nothing’ — or the ‘discreet tyranny of &#8220;now&#8221;’ established in the ‘money lake’ of the City of London’s archetypal space of flows. The British supermarket chain Sainsbury’s, Sinclair writes in London Orbital, ‘is universal…In supermarket heaven, you’re at home everywhere’. You are, in other words, lodging in <em>Ballard’s</em> home; a home which is, it might be said, no kind of home at all. Just as Sinclair seeks to re-read Crash through his own poetics of place, so we might say, more generally, that he thus seeks also to <em>re-place</em> the fictional spaces of Ballard’s novels through what is described as a tenuous act of <em>re</em>-enchantment. In doing so, the formal and conceptual <em>dialogue</em> between these two poles of contemporary British writing is rendered internal to the text, allowing the remorseless absences and solitudes of Ballard’s own spatial configurations to immanently inscribe the historical limitations of Sinclair’s poetics; a kind of dialogic imperative which, collapsing the distinction between form and reflection, allows the dialogue to debate the very <em>basis</em> of the work itself. Ballard’s stripped-down language of dislocation, with its unvarying stylistic register, comes to be dialectically entwined with Sinclair’s own characteristically dense prose style and its encyclopaedic accumulation of literary and cultural allusions, as if the lexical variety and richness of the latter might overcome the emptiness that it confronts; re-vivifying place through a Rimbaudian alchemy of the word. At the same time, if the imagistic intensity of Sinclair’s prose, with its dazzling expansiveness of diction, would seek, in an act of memory and ‘counter-magic’, to re-instate the image of place within the space of flows, the present-tense ‘images’ of Ballard’s writing, and of its ‘willed limbo’, provide its opposition and resistance. As Vidler writes of Martha Rossler’s (very Ballardian) photographs of American freeways and airport terminals, they ‘assert’ that ‘not only is no orientation possible in the technically determined scheme of road and vehicle [or passages and ramps], but that no amount of image proliferation will restore orientation’.<a href="#25">[25]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/orbital_ballard3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Iain Sinclair" /></p>
<p><em>Image: JG Ballard in London Orbital (dirs. Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair, 2002).</em></p>
<p>At the structural heart of this tense conjunction is, of course, the endless dislocated space of the M25 itself. ‘Out here on the motorway rim’, Sinclair writes, ‘there were no memories’. ‘Back stories’ are ‘erased’; history is ‘revised on a daily basis’.<a href="#26">[26]</a> The great gambit of London Orbital is to try &#8212; against all odds &#8212; to re-form the images and paths of place and memory <em>within</em> this kind of non-place that Ballard’s texts so powerfully render; creating, through a familiar urban metaphorics of the body, the organic pump of blood that would circulate around the tourniquet which might otherwise kill the city.<a href="#27">[27]</a> For Augé, contemporary &#8216;traveller&#8217;s space&#8217; is &#8216;the archetype of non-place&#8217;. The artist&#8217;s &#8216;counter-magic&#8217;, the &#8216;pedestrian circuit of London&#8217;s orbital motorway&#8217;, thus might be understood as a re-placing of the anthropological &#8216;route&#8217; or &#8216;path&#8217; — what, for Bakhtin famously, was the pivotal ‘space of encounter’ for one of the novel’s dominant historical chronotopes — in the exemplary non-place of the continuous motorway.<a href="#28">[28]</a> Although Sinclair claims, in his conversations with Kevin Jackson, that the ‘road is the river, the M25 is the equivalent of the Thames’, he must know that in fact an unbridgeable history divides them. (The trick is, if only for a moment, to bring them together). For if the rivers and roads, that are the sites of the journeys in Downriver, still (just) retain a liberatory passage to past and future — in the ‘posthumous brilliance’ of their history — the endless, circular ‘ribbon’ of the orbital allows for no such opening. Perhaps its most obvious prefiguring in the earlier novel is found in the central metonymic image of the nineteenth-century establishment of ‘railway time’ in chapter six, which, pressed forward by the capitalist <em>ratio</em>, already abstracts and negates the temporal nuances of place. Yet, even here, the train itself provides a novelistic space of encounter and narrative production &#8212; Strangers on a Train, Murder on the Orient Express, Woolf’s ‘Mrs Brown’ &#8212; that the ‘mobile cabins’ circulating the motorway cannot.</p>
<p>Following Bakhtin, in his 1998 ‘atlas’ of the nineteenth-century novel Franco Moretti asserts that ‘in modern European novels, <em>what</em> happens depends a lot on where it happens’; ‘without a certain kind of space, a certain kind of story is simply impossible’. Hence what he describes as the ‘place-bound nature’ of the novel (what Reiner Hawsherr calls <em>Ortegebunden</em>) &#8212; its ‘peculiar geometry, its boundaries, its spatial taboos and favourite routes’ &#8212; a ‘platial’ character which he traces through its relation to the formation of the modern spatial configurations of the nation state and the nineteenth-century metropolis. It is the changing ‘chronotopes’, formally constitutive of the novel, that serve, Moretti argues, to explain its historical development in complex relation to ‘an actual material reality’. Citing the exceptional moments of the late nineteenth-century Russian novel of ideas and post-war Latin American Magic Realism, ‘in both cases’, he asserts, ‘the new model is the product of a new space…A new space poses new problems &#8212; and so asks for new answers’.<a href="#29">[29]</a> Yet what new <em>stories</em> might the spaces of non-place and of flows provoke? What answers might be given to the problems that it poses? The M25, as Petit states in the London Orbital film, seemingly ‘resists any kind of story’. Without beginning or end &#8212; a kind of purgatorial eternity &#8212; no narrative or image can finally stick. ‘What other than a surveillance camera’, asks the soundtrack, ‘would want to record its ceaseless undramatic motion?’ In the absence of the orientations of place, the dynamics of story are displaced by the perpetual, un-editable loop.<a href="#30">[30]</a></p>
<p>The power of Ballard’s writings &#8212; no doubt, in some sense, for Sinclair himself &#8212; come, then, from the ways in which they imply the <em>irresistible</em> submission of the novel’s narrative modes to the contemporary forms of a present-tense ‘information loop’ that characterise a globalised commodity culture. The attempt to locate a sub-Benjaminian agenda of redemption here in a kind of ‘technological uncanny’ — such as is apparent in, for example, Roger Luckhurst’s (otherwise very useful) book on Ballard — fails to engage what is most challenging in this work:<a href="#31">[31]</a> its absolute self-dissolution into a contemporary language of abstraction and dislocation, of advertising copy, technocratic jargon and cheap pornography. As Tafuri writes of Mies van der Rohe’s post-war sheets of reflective glass, Ballard’s texts ‘assume <em>in themselves</em> the ineluctability of absence that the contemporary world imposes on the language of forms’. They ‘negate dwelling as they reflect the metropolis’. For Ballard, in Adorno’s withering phrase, ‘dwelling, in the proper sense, is now impossible’. Against this, the danger inherent within the current obsessions with memoration, as supposed ‘act of resistance against the totality of spectacularisation’, is simply that, as Stewart Martin argues, it in fact becomes an art of forgetting; a forgetting of real historical movements and of the changed conditions of present. In a world of heritage, retro and Rough Guide-style ‘alternative’ tourism, to evoke the flâneur or the rag picker (or, even, the Situationist <em>dérive</em>) is, <em>without qualification</em>, to fail to understand the road historically travelled. Sinclair’s force as a writer comes from his (only rarely acknowledged) refusal to do so; re-asserting a poetics of place only through the textual introjection of that which would historically challenge it.<a href="#32">[32]</a></p>
<p>It is not here a fatuous question of <em>choosing</em> between Sinclair and Ballard — as if such a thing were possible — but of tracing, through their immanent confrontation, the role of writing, and of cultural production more generally, at an historical moment marked by the particular spatial relations generated by the dialectic of places and flows; an historical moment in which &#8216;the relationships between the local and the global are all in flux&#8217;. If, as Adorno once suggested, it is part of the modern novel’s distinctive fate to incorporate its ongoing dissolution within its very form, then it is perhaps as a new stage in such a process that the (dialectically inseparable) novelistic forms of space and time inscribed within the singular prose styles of Sinclair and Ballard might best be understood.<a href="#33">[33]</a> What, in time, will come to re-place the novel remains, of course, an open question.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/orbital_ballard4.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Iain Sinclair" /></p>
<p><em>Image: JG Ballard in London Orbital (dirs. Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair, 2002).</em></p>
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<p><em>This essay was first published in Robert Bond and Jenny Bavidge (eds), <a href="xhttp://ballardian.com/three-recent-reviews">City Visions: The Work of Iain Sinclair</a> (Cambridge Scholars Press, 2007), pp. 134-146. Reprinted with permission.</em></p>
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<p><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<p>[1]<a name="1"></a> See David Cunningham, ‘Notes on Nuance: Rethinking a Philosophy of Modern Music’ in Radical Philosophy 125 (May/June 2004), 22-26.<br />
[2]<a name="2"></a> Peter Osborne, ‘Non-Places and the Spaces of Art’ in The Journal of Architecture 6, 2 (Summer 2001), 184; Saskia Sassen, &#8216;Analytic Borderlands: Economy and Culture in the Global City&#8217; in D: Columbia Documents of Architecture and Theory, Volume Three (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993), p. 5.<br />
[3]<a name="3"></a> Manuel Castells, The Rise of the Network Society (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000), pp. 442, 423. See also pp. 408-9; Marc Augé, Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity, trans. John Howe (London &#038; New York: Verso, 1995), pp. 77-8. See also Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000), pp. 216-7; Manfredo Tafuri and Francesco Dal Co, Modern Architecture/2, trans. Robert Erich Wolf (New York: Rizzoli, 1976), p. 339; Anthony Vidler, Warped Space: Art, Architecture, and Anxiety in Modern Culture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000), p. 173.<br />
[4]<a name="4"></a> Iain Sinclair, unbroadcast interview with Paul Green for BBC radio (1979).<br />
[5]<a name="5"></a> Lights, pp. 246-7, 252; Orbital, p. 101.<br />
[6]<a name="6"></a> See Jerome Rothenberg &#038; Pierre Joris (eds.), Poems for the Millenium Volume Two (Berkeley &#038; Los Angeles: University of California Press 1998), p. 102; See Peter Barry, &#8216;Allen Fisher and &#8220;Content-Specific&#8221; Poetry&#8217; in Robert Hampson &#038; Peter Barry (eds.), New British Poetries: The Scope of the Possible (Manchester: Manchester University Press 1993), pp. 198-215. The Olsonian character of Sinclair’s early poetics of place is clearest in the opening piece of Suicide Bridge (1979), ‘Intimate Associations: Myth and Place’ (Lud/ Suicide pp. 147-154).<br />
[7]<a name="7"></a> For even if it is a question here of resisting the facile appropriation of Sinclair’s work in the name of some fairly dubious forms of cultural politics, then it must be in relation to such a context that this resistance is articulated.<br />
[8]<a name="8"></a> Christian Norberg-Schulz, ‘The Phenomenon of Place’ in Kate Nesbit (ed.), Theorizing a New Agenda for Architecture: An Anthology of Architectural Theory 1965-1995 (New York: Princeton University Press, 1996), p. 426.<br />
[9]<a name="9"></a> Hal Foster, The Return of the Real (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 1996), p. 197.<br />
[10]<a name="10"></a> W. G. Sebald, Austerlitz, trans. Anthea Bell (London: Penguin, 2002), pp. 182-3. See also W. G. Sebald, Rings of Saturn, trans. Michael Hulse (London: Harvill Press, 1998).<br />
[11]<a name="11"></a> See, for example, Ash Amin and Nigel Thrift, Cities: Reimagining the Urban (Cambridge: Polity, 2002); Steve Pile and Nigel Thrift (eds.), City A-Z: Urban Fragments (London &#038; New York: Routledge, 2000); Iain Borden, Joe Kerr, Alicia Pivana and Jane Rendell (eds.), Strangely Familiar: Narratives of Architecture in the City (London &#038; New York: Routledge, 1996).<br />
[12]<a name="12"></a> Kenneth Frampton, ‘Prospects for a Critical Regionalism’ in Nesbit (ed.), p. 482.<br />
[13]<a name="13"></a> Peter Osborne, ‘Installation, Performance or What?’ in Oxford Art Journal 24, 2 (2001), 151-2; Foster, Return of the Real, p. 197; David Harvey, Spaces of Capital: Towards a Critical Geography (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2001), pp. 395, 406.<br />
[14]<a name="14"></a> Downriver, p. 397; Rodinsky, pp. 66-7; Downriver, pp. 16, 265.<br />
[15]<a name="15"></a> Theodor Adorno ‘The Position of the Narrator in the Contemporary Novel’ in Notes to Literature, Volume One, trans. Shierry Weber Nicholson (New York: Columbia University Press, 1991), p. 34;<br />
[16]<a name="16"></a> Patrick Wright, ‘Rodinsky’s Place’ in The London Review of Books 9, 19 (October 29 1987), 3-5. In his conversations with Kevin Jackson, Sinclair remarks that, in the 1970s, Brick Lane in London’s East End ‘still had the ambience of the Late Victorian era, a derelict area with the brewery as its focus’ (Verbals, p. 71). By the 1990s, of course, the brewery, in which Sinclair once worked, had stopped brewing, having been ‘redeveloped’ as a complex of bar, offices and studios; Downriver, pp. 158, 33.<br />
[17]<a name="17"></a> Crash, pp. 37, 77. Lights, pp. 145-6; Crash, p. 15.<br />
[18]<a name="18"></a> Ibid., pp. 87, 11.<br />
[19]<a name="19"></a> Ibid., pp. 87, 48.<br />
[20]<a name="20"></a> J. G. Ballard, Cocaine Nights (London: Flamingo, 1997), pp. 10, 17.<br />
[21]<a name="21"></a> Augé, pp. 79, 78.<br />
[22]<a name="22"></a> See Roger Luckhurst, The Angle Between the Walls: The Fiction of J. G. Ballard (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1997), pp. 129-31.<br />
[23]<a name="23"></a> Orbital, pp. 388, 136.<br />
[24]<a name="24"></a> J. G. Ballard, Running Wild (London: Flamingo, 1997), pp. 11-12; Orbital, p. 400.<br />
[25]<a name="25"></a> Downriver pp. 276-7; Lights pp. 91, 107; Orbital p. 262; Ballard, Cocaine Nights, p. 34; Vidler, Warped Space, p. 175.<br />
[26]<a name="26"></a> Orbital, pp. 141, 123-4.<br />
[27]<a name="27"></a> Given the organicist tendencies which always underlie the metaphor of city as body, Sinclair’s admiration for the liberal Christian account of the city to be found in the work of Richard Sennett is perhaps less surprising than it might otherwise seem. See Richard Sennett, Flesh and Stone: The Body and the City in Western Civilization (London: Faber &#038; Faber, 1994), especially chapter eight on the anthropomorphic projections in urbanism derived from Harvey’s work on the circulation of blood (pp. 255-281).<br />
[28]<a name="28"></a> Augé, p. 86; See Mikhail Bakhtin, The Dialogic Imagination, trans. Caryl Emerson &#038; Michael Holquist (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1981), pp. 243-5; Verbals, p. 135; Downriver, pp. 6, 170-1.<br />
[29]<a name="29"></a> Franco Moretti, Atlas of the European Novel 1800-1900 (London &#038; New York: Verso, 1998), pp. 70, 100, 5, 196.<br />
[30]<a name="30"></a> Soundtrack to Iain Sinclair and Chris Petit, London Orbital (Illuminations Films/Channel 4, 2002).<br />
[31]<a name="31"></a> See Luckhurst, p. 135. Luckhurst’s argument for an uncanny return of the repressed at work in Ballard rests on the evidence of a fairly short passage in the novel Concrete Island &#8212; in which the central character stumbles upon the half-buried ‘grand-plans of Edwardian terraced houses’ &#8212; and draws (all-too-typically) on that conception of the ‘outmoded’ to be found in Benjamin’s 1929 essay on Surrealism. But there is, it seems to me, little ‘revolutionary nostalgia’ at work in Ballard’s fictional world, little sense of an alternative future figured within that which lies derelict and discarded in ‘the interstices of new economies’, only a rigorously non-nostalgic vision of a coming desert in which all ‘cultural accretions’ are finally erased.<br />
[32]<a name="32"></a> Tafuri &#038; Dal Co, p. 312; Massimo Cacciari, ‘Eupalinos or Architecture’, trans. Stephen Sartarelli, in K. Michael Hays (ed.), Architecture Theory Since 1968 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998), p. 400. See also David Cunningham, ‘The Phenomenology of Non-Dwelling: Massimo Cacciari, Modernism and the Philosophy of the Metropolis’ in Crossings: A Counter-Disciplinary Journal 7 (Fall 2004), 156-8; Theodor Adorno, Minima Moralia, trans. E. F. N. Jephcott (London &#038; New York: Verso, 1978), p. 38. As Sinclair acknowledges in London Orbital, for Ballard the ‘“local” was finished as a concept’ (Orbital 177); Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, Neo-Avant-Garde and Culture Industry (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000), p. xxv; See Stewart Martin, ‘W. G. Sebald and the Modern Art of Memory’ in David Cunningham, Andrew Fisher &#038; Sas Mays (eds.), Photography and Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Press, 2005), pp. 180-201.<br />
[33]<a name="33"></a> Harvey, Spaces of Capital, p. 226; See Adorno, ‘Position of the Narrator’, pp. 30-36.</p>
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<p><strong>&#8230;:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iain-sinclair-when-in-doubt-quote-ballard">&#8216;When in doubt, quote Ballard&#8217;: An Interview with Iain Sinclair</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/obeying-the-surrealist-formula-iain-sinclair-hermione-lee-on-ballard">&#8216;Obeying the surrealist formula&#8217;: Iain Sinclair &#038; Hermione Lee on Ballard</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://ballardian.com/his-personal-horizon-sinclair-and-self-on-ballard">&#8216;His personal horizon&#8217;: Sinclair and Self on Ballard</a></p>
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		<title>Conference paper on Ballard and &#8216;circular time&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/conference-paper-on-ballard-and-circular-time</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Sep 2009 11:34:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I'm giving a paper on Ballard, circular time and the nouvelle vague this Thursday, October 1, at 3pm at ACMI in Melbourne, as part of the time.transcendence.performance conference. Come and say hello.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/la_jetee_ttp.jpg" alt="Ballardian: La Jetee" /></p>
<p><em>Still from La Jetée (1962), dir. Chris Marker.</em></p>
<p>If you&#8217;re in Melbourne this Thursday, come and say hello! I&#8217;m giving a paper on Ballard, circular time and the nouvelle vague this Thursday, October 1, at <del datetime="2009-10-01T04:54:46+00:00">3pm</del> 3.45pm at ACMI in the city. It&#8217;s part of the <a href="http://arts.monash.edu.au/drama-theatre/conferences/ttp/2009">time.transcendence.performance conference</a>, held over three days at ACMI and Monash University&#8217;s Caulfield campus. Guests include Stelarc (very exciting, for me), Brian Massumi and more. Here&#8217;s the conference blurb, followed by the abstract for my paper:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>time.transcendence.performance</strong> brings together artists, designers and thinkers who work with time, to explore how they might inform each other. How do performers think time? How do thinkers perform time? What shared or different understandings are at work in the different practices?</p>
<p>Even before Aristotle wrote that time is the number of motion with respect to before and after, and Heraclitus observed that it was impossible to step into the same river twice, philosophers &#8211; Eastern and Western &#8211; have wondered about time. Is it real or just an abstraction? Is it reversible? Does it pass? Do we experience it directly? Is it relative or constant? Does it exist? So far, the consensus is that we do not have satisfactory answers to these questions.</p>
<p>More than an academic conference: the three-day program features public performances, exhibitions, installations, screenings and workshops.</p></blockquote>
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<p><strong>‘CONFRONTING OURSELVES’: J.G. BALLARD &#038; CIRCULAR TIME</strong><br />
Dr Simon Sellars<br />
School of English, Communication &#038; Performance Studies<br />
Monash University, Clayton</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard’s oeuvre features numerous examples of self-contained societies that many critics perceive as disguised versions of Lunghua, the insular WWII camp he was interned in as a child. His novel, Empire of the Sun, widely seen as Ballard’s ‘authentic’ autobiography and the key to decoding his fiction, activated this perception. However, by cross-examining his body of work, I will argue that there is no definitive reconstruction of this wartime experience – rather, Empire should be viewed as Ballard’s life seen through the holograph of his fiction – and that, moreover, this holistic recycling of memory forms the model for a program of resistance to late capitalism. In wider terms, Ballard positions time as an artificial construct imposing control on the chaotic subconscious: the clock stops, past and future collapsed in the drive to homogenise the planet. Liberation derives from circular time – revisiting memory – and even sideways time, restaging and reinhabiting parallel worlds. </p>
<p>To illustrate this, the paper analyses Ballard’s affinity with nouvelle vague cinema &#8212; non-linear film technique, which, incorporated into the fabric of his work, reveals the &#8216;true&#8217; nature of perception, time and memory. Ballard&#8217;s fiction is the fictional doubling of Deleuze’s work on the cinema of the &#8216;time-image&#8217;: both locate &#8216;nodes of resistance&#8217; in post-war cinema, deploying the nouvelle vague as revealing the truth of the merger between the virtual and the actual. Focusing on repetition and déjà vu, the critical concept of revisiting and reinhabiting memory emerges in Ballardian and Deleuzian philosophy. Ballard’s malleable, circular Lunghua memories become a mutant psychopathology that focuses on inner mental states as reality and the external world of media and consumerism as irreality – a reversal that his work posits as the only viable antidote to an increasingly stylised and mediated post-war realm, the only effective form of resistance to totalising, naturalised systems of control.</p>
<p><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:<br />
+</strong> <a href="http://ballardian.com/confronting-ourselves-ballard-and-circular-time">&#8216;Confronting Ourselves&#8217;: Ballard and Circular Time</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">Ballard and the Vicissitudes of Time</a></p>
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		<title>“Extreme Possibilities”: Mapping “the sea of time and space” in J.G. Ballard’s Pacific fictions</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/extreme-possibilities-jgbs-pacific-fictions</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/extreme-possibilities-jgbs-pacific-fictions#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Aug 2009 11:44:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[What's the connection between J.G. Ballard, Hakim Bey and Fredric Jameson? Tracking Ballard's surreal visions of nuclear conflict to Ground Zero in the Pacific, the paper maps his peculiar, irradiated sense of “affirmative dystopias", a template for his more enduring urban works (famously, Crash) that, finally, intersects in striking ways with the writings of Bey and Jameson.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong><a href="http://www.simonsellars.com">Simon Sellars</a></strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_terminal.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The Terminal Beach. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.brookings.edu/projects/archive/nucweapons/runit.aspx">Brookings</a>: &#8220;Beneath this concrete dome on Runit Island (part of Enewetak Atoll), built between 1977 and 1980 at a cost of about $239 million, lie 111,000 cubic yards (84,927 cubic meters) or radioactive soil and debris from Bikini and Rongelap atolls. The dome covers the 30-foot (9 meter) deep, 350-foot (107 meter) wide crated created by the May 5, 1958, Cactus test. Note the people atop the dome&#8221;.</em></p>
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<p><em>This essay was first published in <a href="http://colloquy.monash.edu.au/issue017">Colloquy no. 17</a>, August 2009, pp. 44-61. Reprinted with permission.</em></p>
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<p>One of the more enduring misconceptions surrounding the work of J.G. Ballard is that it operates in the classical dystopian narrative mode, <a href="#1">[1]</a> supposedly mining pessimism, repression and the negativity of a post-industrial age. Robert Collins’s commentary is typical, placing Ballard’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> (1973) at number three in a list of &#8220;the top 10 dystopian novels&#8221;:</p>
<blockquote><p>Fictional dystopias are almost always cautionary tales – warnings of where our political, cultural and social surroundings are taking us. The novels [on this list] share common motifs: designer drugs, mass entertainment, brutality, technology, the suppression of the individual by an all-powerful state – classic preoccupations of dystopian fiction. These novels picture the worst because, as Swift demonstrated in his original cautionary tale, Gulliver’s Travels, re-inventing the present is sometimes the only way to see how bad things already are. <a href="#2">[2]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>However, to locate Ballard within this literary tradition is a fundamental misreading. The &#8220;state,&#8221; for example, barely features in his writing, and politicians or any kind of external authority are almost wholly absent. This is amplified to comical proportions when the police make a token appearance in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> (1975), which depicts the breakdown of the social order in a high-tech apartment block. At first suspicious about the building’s car park, with its damaged vehicles and debris thrown from balconies, they are quickly turned away by a group of residents, who set about &#8220;pacifying the policemen, reassuring them that everything was in order, despite the garbage and broken bottles scattered around the building&#8221;; <a href="#3">[3]</a> the police duly leave and are never seen again, even as the high-rise descends further into anarchy. The residents prefer to remain within their &#8220;dystopia,&#8221; rather than reacting against it, embracing the &#8220;brutality and technology&#8221; that Collins suggests they should be reacting against – there is no external &#8220;Big Brother&#8221; forcing their hand. For the residents:</p>
<blockquote><p>even the run-down nature of the high-rise was a model of the world into which the future was carrying them, a landscape beyond technology where everything was either derelict or, more ambiguously, recombined in unexpected but more meaningful ways. <a href="#4">[4]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This dynamic is even more apparent in the subset of &#8220;Pacific fictions&#8221; in Ballard’s oeuvre, stories set on abandoned Pacific islands where there is no need to even allude to the presence of the State, for these are stateless worlds – &#8220;between owners.&#8221; They are neither straight utopia nor classical dystopia, but an occupant of the imaginative space between: what might be termed &#8220;affirmative dystopias,&#8221; which reach similar conclusions as to the question of how to &#8220;revive the spirit of utopia&#8221; that Fredric Jameson does in his exhaustive study, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FArchaeologies-Future-Desire-Science-Fictions%2Fdp%2F1844675386%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1251015561%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. As such, they provide an enduring template for Ballard’s more well-known urban works, of which Crash is the exemplar.</p>
<p>Ballard’s fascination with the Pacific stems from his childhood in Shanghai, where he was born and where he lived until he was 16. His semi-autobiographical novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> (1984) draws on his experiences as an internee in the Lunghua civilian camp, and it ends with Jim (the character based on the young Ballard) witnessing the atomic flash over Nagasaki, enabling a potent metaphor for the post-war era that Ballard would consistently return to throughout his career:</p>
<blockquote><p>The B-29s which bombed the airfield beside Lunghua Camp, near Shanghai, where I was interned during the Second World War, had reportedly flown from Guam. Pacific Islands, with their silent airstrips among the palm trees, Wake Island above all, have a potent magic for me. The runways that cross these little atolls, now mostly abandoned, seem to represent extreme states of nostalgia and possibility, doorways into another continuum. <a href="#5">[5]</a></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/wake_boom.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Wake Island" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Wake Island. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/30248805@N05/2943989456">USMCFLYR</a>: &#8220;A boom from a KC-135 Stratotanker over Wake Island&#8221;.</em></p>
<p>In Ballard’s short story &#8220;My Dream of Flying to Wake Island&#8221; (1974), he returns to these &#8220;extreme states of possibility,&#8221; which overwhelm the account. The story remains in perpetual fugue – a concrete narrative arc never coalesces, and there is perpetual yearning enveloping the central character, Melville, a former astronaut who flew a solitary mission in space, during which he suffered a mental breakdown broadcast live to millions of viewers on Earth. Humiliated, he resolves to fly to remote Wake, fascinated by the island’s geographical isolation and &#8220;psychological reduction&#8221; (deriving from its real-world role as a former World War Two military base; Wake has never had a permanent indigenous population), which mirrors his own. For Melville, Wake Island is a portal. Referring to photographs of the military airstrip, he enthuses: &#8220;‘Look at those runways, everything is there. A big airport like the Wake field is a zone of tremendous possibility – a place of beginnings, by the way, not ends’.&#8221; <a href="#6">[6]</a> The story is indicative of Ballard’s deployment of the rich seam of metaphor provided by the region, and the manner in which he uses abandoned Pacific islands as sites of radical reinvention, imagistic buffer zones representing the sovereignty of the imagination.</p>
<p>According to the anarchist author Hakim Bey, classical utopias – &#8220;from Plato’s republic to Brook Farm&#8221; – depend on abstraction, which renders them susceptible to &#8220;a correspondingly high level of authoritarian control. As a result, most Utopias in practice have proven oppressive and deadening – ‘social planning’ would seem to be an offense by definition against the ‘human spirit’.&#8221; <a href="#7">[7]</a> In the novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-rushing-to-paradise">Rushing to Paradise</a> (1994), Ballard is also concerned with social planning, which, similarly, is seen as eventually numbing and destroying the human spirit. In fact, the novel indicts the very idea of utopia.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/rushing_big.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Rushing to Paradise is set on the remote (and fictional) Pacific atoll of Saint-Esprit, claimed by France as a site for possible nuclear testing, where the renegade Dr Barbara has gathered a ragtag crew on the premise of saving the island’s endangered albatross (the French have relocated the original inhabitants and set up their nuclear equipment, but abandoned the island for Muroroa). Although the mission is initially pitched as environmentalist, each crewmember has wildly differing, concealed motives for making the journey, thus rendering impossible the idea of a genuinely shared utopia. The Hawaiian, Kimo, dreams of establishing an independent Hawaiian kingdom, &#8220;rid forever of the French and American colonists,&#8221; <a href="#8">[8]</a> while the boy Neil is obsessed with the relics of a bygone nuclear age, and excited by the news that the French might be returning to the island for testing:</p>
<blockquote><p>For all Dr Barbara’s passion for the albatross, the nuclear testing-ground had a stronger claim on his imagination. No bomb had ever exploded on Saint-Esprit, but the atoll, like Eniwetok, Muroroa and Bikini, was a demonstration model of Armageddon, a dream of war and death that lay beyond the reach of any moratorium. <a href="#9">[9]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Dr Barbara has her own, highly secretive, and ultimately destructive, reasons – not to save the albatross, but to establish Saint-Esprit as a radical feminist enclave. She is determined to achieve this by any means: &#8220;If Saint-Esprit, this nondescript atoll six hundred miles south-east of Tahiti, failed to match her expectations, it would have to reshape itself into the threatened paradise for which she had campaigned so tirelessly.&#8221; <a href="#10">[10]</a> Superficially, this echoes Ballard’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a> (1974), in which the architect Robert Maitland, after a car accident, is stranded on a triangle of wasteland underneath a busy motorway. Feverish from his injuries, he imagines the physical environment as an outcrop of his psyche: &#8220;More and more, the island was becoming an exact model of his head.&#8221; <a href="#11">[11]</a> Yet the fundamental difference is that Dr Barbara wants the island of her mind to reshape everyone else’s reality, too. This makes Rushing to Paradise, at one level, an allusion to utopian gurus such as David Koresh and Jim Jones, similarly charismatic leaders who built isolated, essentially micronational, communities and coerced others into joining them, before destroying everything as the authorities closed in. As one character says to Neil, after the boy asks whether Dr Barbara’s mission is how new religions start: &#8220;there’s nothing new here. It’s the oldest religion there ever was – sheer magnetic egoism.&#8221; <a href="#12">[12]</a></p>
<p>In Archaeologies of the Future, Jameson devotes considerable space to analysing failures in the wider utopian imagination. In his attempt to re-map the potential of utopian desire, he concludes:</p>
<blockquote><p>What is Utopian becomes … not the commitment to a specific machinery or blueprint, but rather the commitment to imagining possible Utopias as such, in their greatest variety of forms. Utopia is no longer the invention and defense of a specific floorplan, but rather the story of all the arguments about how Utopia should be constructed in the first place. It is no longer the exhibit of an achieved Utopian construct, but rather the story of its production and of the very process of construction as such. <a href="#13">[13]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Re-placing Rushing to Paradise within Jameson’s framework, it becomes possible to read the story of Saint-Esprit as &#8220;the story of all the arguments&#8221; about how the Pacific should be constructed.</p>
<p>The region has always had an unstable identity and an especially volatile sense of nationalism, from perpetually coup-ridden Fiji in the South Seas to the perpetually colonised islands north of the equator. The Republic of Palau in Micronesia is sometimes cited as an archetypal tropical utopia, but could in fact embody the root definition of &#8220;utopia,&#8221; as &#8220;no place.&#8221; It has been used as a pawn by various colonial powers almost continuously since the late 17th century, rapidly lost its traditional culture and become a melange of other cultures. It has changed hands between Spain, which enforced Christianity on the Palauans; Germany, which commanded them to work as plantation slaves; Japan, which forced them to speak a subservient form of Japanese and turned the main island into a closed-off, heavily fortified military base; and the US, which bombed the islands to get at the Japanese in a series of bloody World War Two battles and then claimed them as American territory until 1994.</p>
<p>Mimicking the Pacific’s jagged history, Ballard populates Saint-Esprit with idealistic Germans, scientifically-minded Japanese and single-minded Americans, as well as Kimo, symbol of an oppressed indigenous people, Dr Barbara, an archetypal British colonialist, and, crucially, Neil, an echo of young Jim himself, both teenagers obsessed with dreams of nuclear war and of holding their own among deluded and dangerous adults in an artificial community. After the death of the character Mark Bracewell, the American, Carline, verbalises a metaphor that neatly sums up these duelling versions of utopia:</p>
<blockquote><p>Contrary to the general belief, no-one’s death diminishes us. Nature in its wisdom created death to give each of us our unique sense of life. We’re not part of the main. Each of us is an island, every bit as real as Saint-Esprit, and death is the price we pay to keep ourselves from drowning in the larger sea. Like Kimo here, we’re all island people … especially young Neil, dreaming about another kind of island. Mark Bracewell lived for twenty-seven years, and his island still floats in the sea of time and space. <a href="#14">[14]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This seems to correspond with Jameson, who proposes to &#8220;think of our autonomous and non-communicating Utopias … as so many islands: a Utopian archipelago, islands in the net, a constellation of discontinuous centers, themselves internally decentred.&#8221; <a href="#15">[15]</a> This discontinuity suggests the ideal resting state for Ballard’s ideal of a neural, free zone of the imagination – a &#8220;morally free psychopathology of metaphor, as an element in one’s dreams,&#8221; <a href="#16">[16]</a> which, although powerful and liberatory, has a dark underside. If one tries to apply it to other people, then Micronationalism <a href="#17">[17]</a> – the utopian imagination, no less – turns into dangerous cultism through which lives can be destroyed, a very real danger that arises when the metaphor is literalised into &#8220;the domain where it has no place, an id-driven psychopathology that lays waste to human life.&#8221; <a href="#18">[18]</a> Neil’s surreal, internalised visions of nuclear war therefore contrast markedly with Dr Barbara’s hard, external authoritarianism, further corresponding to Jameson’s conception of utopian desire, which &#8220;must be marked as Utopian and thereby as partaking in a specific and very special kind of aesthetic unreality: otherwise it falls into the world and, particularly if realized, spells the end of Utopias in the way wryly distinct from the usual prognoses of their current disappearance.&#8221; <a href="#19">[19]</a> Subsequently, the novel sours traditional utopian thought by highlighting the oppressive hypocrisy of its &#8220;abstracted authoritarianism,&#8221; to appropriate Bey’s term. Once Kimo has used his muscle to build the community and Neil his youth to impregnate the idealistic women who flock to the island, they become expendable, with no place in a feminist paradise.</p>
<p>Indeed, Dr Barbara manages to kill off almost all the men (although Neil survives) when they contract fever and she administers fake medicine. By the novel’s end, she is feverish and hiding out in the forest, burrowing deeper and further away from the French authorities that have come to retake the island. This seems a deliberate reference to the legendary stories of Japanese soldiers hiding out in the Pacific jungles of Guam long after the war had ended, terrified, as is Dr Barbara, at the prospect of an imperialism perishing with the onslaught of newer, more localised and &#8220;internally decentred&#8221; voices, American-led globalism, no less – overrun by an &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; imagination (again, after Jameson, in opposition not to straight dystopia, but to unworkable utopia) that has evolved organically from the discontinuities and disjunctions of the modern world, and that is centrally represented by Neil. As Jameson writes of the wider dynamic:</p>
<blockquote><p>Multiplicity becomes the central theme of this imaginary resolution, whose conceptual dilemma remains that of closure. Yet we may well suppose that this new development will have had some impact on the Utopian form itself, accounting for the seeming extinction of the traditional kinds and the emergence of newer more reflexive forms. <a href="#20">[20]</a> </p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_1958_hardtack.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Observers at Operation Hardtack nuclear test (1958) on Enewetak.</em></p>
<p>Neil, with his dreams of nuclear war, symbolises this &#8220;more reflexive form&#8221; and the perverse and paradoxical &#8220;absolute freedom&#8221; it brings. He comes to embody the &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; spirit of the book, or, more accurately, he embodies the Ballardian sense of &#8220;affirmative dystopia,&#8221; a sense of which is given by Gregory Stephenson’s overview:</p>
<blockquote><p>The themes of transcendence and illusion inform nearly all of Ballard’s work, and have often been misconstrued by critics as representing a nihilistic or fatalistic preoccupation on the part of the author with devolution, decay, dissolution and entropy … these themes represent neither an expression of universal pessimism nor a negation of human values and goals, but, rather, an affirmation of the highest humanistic and metaphysical ideal: the repossession for humankind of authentic and absolute being. <a href="#21">[21]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Rushing to Paradise is not a disaster novel per se, but in his reimagining of the apocalypse, Neil virtually wills the disaster to happen. In so doing, he does not &#8220;colonize the future with Utopian blueprints,&#8221; as the Pacific’s invading powers have so wilfully done (indeed, as Dr Barbara has done), but rather, embodies what Jameson defines as:</p>
<blockquote><p>Disruption … the name for a new discursive strategy … which insists that its radical difference is possible and that a break is necessary. The Utopian form itself is the answer to the universal ideological conviction that no alternative is possible, that there is no alternative to the system. But it asserts this by forcing us to think the break itself, and not by offering a more traditional picture of what things would be like after the break. <a href="#22">[22]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Jameson briefly touches upon this strain of disruption in Ballard, without referring directly to the stories under discussion here: &#8220;Ballard’s work – so rich and corrupt – testifies powerfully to the contradictions of a properly representational attempt to grasp the future directly.&#8221; <a href="#23">[23]</a></p>
<p>Extrapolating from there, my contention is that, in his Pacific fictions, Ballard &#8220;forces us to think the break&#8221; by repeatedly drawing on the spectre of nuclear testing, of which there are numerous real-world examples in the region. French Polynesia, for instance, was employed as a testing site for almost 10 years, with the result that high radiation levels were detected 4,500km away in Fiji. Bikini Atoll was rendered uninhabitable by American nuclear tests, its inhabitants forcibly relocated, like those of Saint-Esprit, never to return. The inhabitants of Eniwetok were also forcibly relocated in 1948 to make way for American atomic bomb tests; only comparatively recently has the US government, under overwhelming global pressure, cleared the island of active waste, allowing the islanders to resettle the southern part of the atoll after 33 years in exile. In Ballard, the thermonuclear age brings with it an advanced technology that renders objective perception meaningless, thus beginning the era of simulation, an increasingly abstracted, stylised and mediated realm, riding on the decline of Japanese imperialism and the rise of American-led globalisation.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/re7QJs8QFvY&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1&#038;"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/re7QJs8QFvY&#038;hl=en&#038;fs=1&#038;" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Nuclear testing on Bikini Atoll. Music by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard">Cousin Silas</a>.</em></p>
<p>To examine this motif, it is interesting to contrast Ballard’s reworking, and remapping, of the region to that of the travel writer Simon Winchester, whose <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FPacific-Simon-Winchester%2Fdp%2F0091734851%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1251015828%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Pacific</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> provides a thorough history of changes since the war. Ballard has written: &#8220;I used to dream of the runways of Wake Island and Midway, stepping stones that would carry me back across the Pacific to the China of my childhood.&#8221; <a href="#24">[24]</a> Compare with Winchester’s account of American mariners at the start of the 19th century, seizing and settling &#8220;Midway, Wake, Guam … thus creating a series of stepping-stones, a lifeline of tropical islands that led all the way to that greatest and most elusive prize, the Middle Kingdom, China&#8221; <a href="#25">[25]</a> – a process that leads eventually to the bombing of Japan and subsequent irradiation of Pacific islands like Eniwetok. The similarities (references to Wake Island, Midway, China, especially &#8220;stepping stones&#8221;) are startling, yet these positions are opposed nonetheless. Ballard wants to resettle, and bulwark, the imagination, where the American forces wanted to colonise and wipe clean whole territories. One wishes to explore hidden folds within the map, the other to claim every available point on the map; both coexist in paradoxical dreams of the Pacific. The paradox is even rooted in temporal reality, as Winchester notes, when he visits the island of Tonga. There, he ponders the arbitrary division of the dateline, which ensures that Tonga sees the world’s first dawn each day:</p>
<blockquote><p>I had imagined … that I would be able to catch a glimpse of Mount Silisili [in Samoa] … just a few miles away across the water. [It] would be enjoying precisely the same clock time as here in Tonga, but exactly one day before. The simultaneous sighting of two periods of time separated by an entire 24 hours seemed a paradox well worth experiencing. <a href="#26">[26]</a> </p></blockquote>
<p>In Ballard, these paradoxical time tracks form a lasting metaphor for a certain nexus of confusion in the post-war world, a notion made explicit in the note that begins Empire of the Sun: &#8220;The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour took place on Sunday morning, 7 December 1941, but as a result of time differences across the Pacific Date Line it was then already the morning of Monday, 8 December in Shanghai.&#8221; <a href="#27">[27]</a> For Ballard, the bomb signifies the end of history and the coming of an age of surfaces, a recombinant age of planing identities, as he makes clear in the introduction to Crash, which applies the metaphor of chronological confusion to the mediated reality of the Western world:</p>
<blockquote><p>Increasingly, our concepts of past, present and future are being forced to revise themselves. Just as the past, in social and psychological terms, became a casualty of Hiroshima and the nuclear age, so in its turn the future is ceasing to exist, devoured by the all-voracious present …  Options multiply around us, and we live in an almost infantile world where any demand, any possibility, whether for life-styles, travel, sexual roles and identities, can be satisfied instantly. <a href="#28">[28]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The past &#8220;as a casualty of the nuclear age&#8221; would be reframed 11 years after Crash, in Empire of the Sun, the latter part of which is set in a destroyed stadium filled with prisoners and the detritus of war. Suddenly, the stadium is illuminated by light from the atom bomb exploding on Nagasaki – a blinding, overwhelming orb. Andrés Vaccari correctly identifies the world &#8220;presided over by this nuclear sun&#8221; as the &#8220;real Empire of the Sun. It is the metaphoric birth of the post-war world, the omnipresent subject of Ballard&#8217;s fiction&#8221; <a href="#29">[29]</a> – the coming of a nihilistic world with no boundaries, no spatial coordinates except those of inner space, the cognitive remapping of a world that has lost its bearings in time and space. <a href="#30">[30]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_terminal2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The Cactus Dome on Runit Island, part of Enewetak Atoll. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.artificialowl.net/2008/11/nuclear-trash-can-of-pacific-on.html">Artificial Owl</a>.</em></p>
<p>This notion of planing identities (planing time tracks) is also embodied in Ballard’s short story &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; (1964), set on Eniwetok (also known as &#8216;Enewetak&#8217;), in which the character Traven, an ex-air force pilot, finds himself similarly searching for identity among the island’s abandoned concrete bunkers and blockhouses, which have been used for thermonuclear trials. He comes across plastic, human mannequins used in the weapons testing, with their &#8220;half-melted faces, contorted into bleary grimaces [gazing] up at him from the jumble of legs and torsos.&#8221; <a href="#31">[31]</a> Attempting to escape from US servicemen who appear on the island, he hides &#8220;in one of the target basins, lying among the broken bodies of the plastic models. In the hot sunlight their deformed faces gaped at him sightlessly from the tangle of limbs, their blurred smiles like those of the soundlessly laughing dead.&#8221; <a href="#32">[32]</a> When he scavenges among &#8220;the litter of smashed bottles and cans in the isthmus of sand separating the testing ground from the air-strip,&#8221; <a href="#33">[33]</a> we find layers of recent cultural history, buried and then recovered as if in an archaeological find. Confronted with this effacement of geographical and human boundaries (the latter effectively represented by the undifferentiated slagheap of molten mannequins), Traven is, in a sense, reborn, scrambling for meaning among the detritus of the old world.</p>
<p>The effect is replicated in Concrete Island, in which the patch of underpass comes to symbolise the archetypal liminal space of Ballardian fiction. It is a zone of buried layers of urban cartography comprising &#8220;the unintended, forgotten, abjected corners of town planning.&#8221; <a href="#34">[34]</a> In the fragmented post-war world, with its shifting national boundaries and national identities, Ballard seems to suggest the only effective strategy is to remake the world through bricolage, or what Andrzej Gasiorek terms &#8220;a kind of fugitive reappropriation of an otherwise seemingly monolithic set of structures and relations.&#8221; <a href="#35">[35]</a> In Concrete Island, Maitland, the architect, was all too willing to submit to the conformity of capitalism, favouring the demands of finance and big business over any sense of public obligation or civic duty. Gasiorek observes that he had &#8220;a predilection for modernism,&#8221; specifically &#8220;hard, affectless architecture&#8221; and &#8220;stylised concrete surfaces,&#8221; marked as &#8220;hostile to the forging of human relations … a kind of dead end for life.&#8221; <a href="#36">[36]</a> Before his crash, Maitland seemed a ruthless autocrat forcing people into inhumane living conditions to justify his ego, but he is confronted with the underside of this &#8220;dead end for life&#8221; when, marooned on the concrete island, he is required to come to terms with the tradition he wilfully discarded in his work. Like Traven, he uncovers historical layers paved over by the demands of the motorway system – the strictures of advanced technology:</p>
<blockquote><p>Parts of the island dated from well before World War II. The eastern end, below the overpass, was its oldest section, with the churchyard and the ground-courses of Edwardian terraced houses. The breaker’s yard and its wrecked cars had been superimposed on the still identifiable streets and alleyways.</p>
<p>In the centre of the island were the air-raid shelters among which he was sitting. Attached to these was a later addition, the remains of a Civil Defence post little more than fifteen years old. <a href="#37">[37]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Maitland meets the human equivalents of this discarded landscape in the form of Proctor and Jane, two homeless dwellers who have made the island their own, both on the run from oppressive systems of control. Jane is a victim of patriarchy, hiding from an apparently abusive husband and bitter memories of her father, and now working as a motorway prostitute. Proctor is an old tramp who has suffered ritual humiliation at the hands of the local police. The island, reconfigured by Ballard as a container of social debris (both geographical and human, as in &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221;) becomes a space where social relations can begin again, where the social order is decommissioned, recombined, reconstructed and reshaped in ways that subvert dominant systems of thought. Maitland comes to see the island much as Proctor and Jane do, as a psychic &#8220;go-zone&#8221; where he can escape the pressures of his relationships with his wife and mistress and of his job – free &#8220;to rove forever within the empty city of his mind.&#8221; <a href="#38">[38]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/concrete_cover.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" class="picleft" /> In his later career, immediately after Rushing to Paradise, Ballard embarked on a cycle of novels in which he would explore a much harder version of micronationalism, manifest in the savage gated communities of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a> (1996) through to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a> (2006). It would no longer be necessary to look to mythical lands to remake and remodel maps of alienation – instead he began to focus on a parallel examination of the type of urban &#8220;non-place&#8221; that has come to be associated with the anthropologist Marc Augé. For Augé, our world is so saturated by superabundant fictions that it produces a conception of simultaneous time, representative of a homogenous, mediated society. The physical result is non-place, transitional zones detached from history and culture, inorganic, in-between zones where individuals are linked by this superabundance of information and technology rather than community or historical awareness, which paradoxically creates a pervasive sense of inwardness and isolation. Examples of non-place include motorways, hospitals, airports (especially duty-free zones), gated communities, business parks and housing estates – rich Ballardian territory, as the &#8220;urban disaster trilogy&#8221; of Crash, Concrete Island and High-Rise makes abundantly clear.</p>
<p>Ballard anticipates Augé, whose anthropological studies turned away from the &#8220;foreign field [towards] more familiar terrain,&#8221; due to the fact that &#8220;the contemporary world itself, with its accelerated transformations, is attracting anthropological scrutiny: in other words, a renewed methodical reflection on the category of otherness.&#8221; <a href="#39">[39]</a> In &#8220;The Terminal Beach,&#8221; Ballard describes Eniwetok as &#8220;synthetic, a man-made artefact with all the associations of a vast system of derelict concrete motorways.&#8221; <a href="#40">[40]</a> This is a description that foreshadows Concrete Island, and in the introduction to the latter, Ballard makes the link explicit: &#8220;The Pacific atoll may not be available, but there are other islands far nearer to home, some of them only a few steps from the pavements we tread every day. They are surrounded, not by sea, but by concrete, ringed by chain-mail fences and walled off by bomb-proof glass.&#8221; <a href="#41">[41]</a></p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8220;A clip of the Hydrogen Bomb test at Enewetak Atoll on November 1, 1952, and the first time one was exploded. The fireball was big enough to cover most of Manhattan Island. This clip shows more of the aftermath of the nuclear cloud than most films.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Just as Traven declares Eniwetok a &#8220;state of mind,&#8221; <a href="#42">[42]</a> so, too, does Maitland, indirectly, in Concrete Island when he insists: &#8220;I am the island.&#8221; <a href="#43">[43]</a> Here, &#8220;state&#8221; has a double meaning, as a condition of being, but also as a sovereign, independent territory. Both locations are potent symbols of the post-war era: Eniwetok, a tabula rasa of nationalism and patriotism; the motorway underpass, the archetypal non-place of supermodernity. As Traven’s existence in Eniwetok’s &#8220;thermonuclear noon&#8221; becomes increasingly hallucinatory (it is not clear whether he is dead, dying or feverish from irradiation), he finds that by saying goodbye in his mind to the disasters of the external world, he can come to terms with it. Standing among the abstract concrete blocks of the testing bunkers, he produces a strange incantation:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Goodbye Eniwetok&#8221; … Somewhere there was a flicker of light, as if one of the blocks, like a counter on an abacus, had been plucked away.<br />
Goodbye Los Alamos. Again, a block seemed to vanish. The corridors around him remained intact, but somewhere in his mind had appeared a small interval of neutral space.<br />
Goodbye, Hiroshima.<br />
Goodbye, Alamogordo.<br />
Goodbye, Moscow, London, Paris, New York … <a href="#44">[44]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The opening up of this &#8220;small interval&#8221; of neu(t)ral space represents a kind of psychological DMZ, an imaginative form of resistance that, along with Neil’s apocalyptic dreams, symbolises an intent that is the polar opposite to that of Dr Barbara (who, we recall, literalised a megalomania that proved unstoppable, and fatal). Traven surmises that time on Eniwetok has become &#8220;quantal,&#8221; an eternal present obliterating past and future. But is Ballard’s sense pejorative? <a href="#45">[45]</a> As Traven declares: &#8220;For me the hydrogen bomb was a symbol of absolute freedom. I feel it’s given me the right – the obligation, even – to do anything I want.&#8221; <a href="#46">[46]</a> This may well be the defining statement of the author’s career, brought into sharp relief by John Gray’s perceptive appraisal that Ballard’s &#8220;achievement is not to have staked out any kind of political position. Rather it is to have communicated a vision of what individual fulfilment might mean in a time of nihilism.&#8221; <a href="#47">[47]</a> It is a concept Ballard has alluded to in interview, when asked if his writing is interested in decadence:</p>
<blockquote><p>Decadence? I can’t remember if I ever said I enjoyed the notion, except in the sense of drained swimming pools and abandoned hotels, which I don’t really see as places of decadence, but rather … as psychic zero stations, or as &#8220;Go,&#8221; in Monopoly terms. <a href="#48">[48]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Here, Ballard appears to inform the concept of the &#8220;Temporary Autonomous Zone&#8221; (TAZ), codified by Bey in 1985 and enormously influential on anarchists, musicians and a myriad of underground artists. The TAZ calls for a mode of radical intervention in the form of creation of temporary spaces – whether &#8220;geographic, social, cultural, imaginal&#8221; <a href="#49">[49]</a> – that will serve to confound formalised control systems. Bey’s main focus was on the liberation of mind states, what he terms &#8220;psychotopology (and -topography)&#8221; as an antidote to the State’s &#8220;psychic imperialism&#8221;:</p>
<blockquote><p>Only psychotopography can draw 1:1 maps of reality because only the human mind provides sufficient complexity to model the real. But a 1:1 map cannot &#8220;control&#8221; its territory because it is virtually identical with its territory. It can only be used to suggest, in a sense gesture towards, certain features. <a href="#50">[50]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This particular strategy within the TAZ can be traced to Alfred Korzybski’s oft-repeated remark that &#8220;the map is not the territory,&#8221; since duplication is simply simulation, and able to be recouped as such. In opposition, Bey suggests that these sovereign mindscapes are enfolded within the folds of the cartographical matrix: &#8220;We are looking for ‘spaces’ with potential to flower as autonomous zones – and we are looking for times in which these spaces are relatively open, either through neglect on the part of the State or because they have somehow escaped notice by the mapmakers, or for whatever reason.&#8221;<a href="#51">[51]</a></p>
<p>Ballard actually paraphrases Korzybski in Empire of the Sun: &#8220;Never confuse the map with the territory,&#8221; <a href="#52">[52]</a> while the patch of underpass in Concrete Island, built over the leavings of industrial culture, has been neglected by the State, and is so far off the map as to be invisible. Moreover, Maitland liberates an area of land or imagination (depending how we read the novel), without ever engaging directly with systems of control, with the State. As Ballard makes clear in the introduction: &#8220;What would happen if, by some freak mischance, we suffered a blow-out and plunged over the guard-rail onto a forgotten island of rubble and weeds, out of sight of the surveillance cameras?&#8221; <a href="#53">[53]</a> For Bey, confrontation with the State occurs through &#8220;the Spectacle,&#8221; in Guy Debord’s sense, where images rule by virtue of their monopoly of social space. Because society defines itself through the dissemination and experiencing of this space, the process appears natural, a self-contained feedback loop: &#8220;What appears is good; what is good appears.&#8221; <a href="#54">[54]</a> Such confrontation is doomed to failure since the machinery of simulation will merely absorb any display of &#8220;spectacular violence&#8221;. For Bey, as for Ballard, radical action therefore lies not in the deployment of spectacular violence, but in withdrawal, in becoming invisible, in merging with, and therefore rehabilitating, the by-products of supermodernity.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/sonsorol.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sonsorol" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Sonsorol. Photo by <a href="http://www.sonsorol.com/gallery/index_Sonsorol060811.htm">Hisayuki Kubota</a>.</em></p>
<p>Elsewhere, Ballard’s prototypical Pacific fictions seem an obvious influence on Bey’s &#8220;Visit Port Watson!,&#8221; <a href="#55">[55]</a> which uses their cue to forecast similar micronational and imaginative possibilities in the region. Written as a faux travel guide, it describes the micronation of Port Watson on the Pacific island of Sonsorol (the island actually exists – it is part of Palau – but Port Watson does not). Bey charts the history of Sonsorol and its colonisation by Spanish, Dutch, Japanese, New Zealand and Australian forces. He writes that when the island finally gained independence, the Port Watson enclave was set up by the island’s &#8220;Sultan&#8221; (a legacy of Sonsorol’s fictional 17th-century invasion by Moorish pirates), who had been influenced by libertarian-anarchist philosophy while studying in America. Offshore banking funded the enclave: &#8220;the creation of wealth out of nothing, out of pure imagination.&#8221; <a href="#56">[56]</a> Port Watson therefore develops as a libertarian-anarchist micronation with no laws or currency save for a &#8220;computerised&#8221; barter system, where a hamburger stand is called &#8220;McBakunins,&#8221; most people refuse to work since everyone has stakes in the banking system, and &#8220;public fucking&#8221; is encouraged.</p>
<p>This notion of a libertarian-anarchist enclave powered by &#8220;pure imagination&#8221; has clear Ballardian overtones, <a href="#57">[57]</a> especially in light of Ballard’s career-long &#8220;libertarian and anarchic stance … [a] scepticism about all communal laws.&#8221; <a href="#58">[58]</a> As Ballard himself wrote in Empire of the Sun: &#8220;After three years in the camp the notion of patriotism meant nothing.&#8221; <a href="#59">[59]</a> And, like Ballard, Bey’s external mapping of utopian space can in fact be read as a travel guide to inner space, unlocking the potential of the imagination to transcend laws, authority and corporate structure, all built upon the metaphorical/micronational possibilities of the Pacific. In &#8220;Visit Port Watson!,&#8221; this is consummated in the final paragraph, where Bey &#8220;quotes&#8221; an editorial from the local gazette, written by the Sultan, in answer to whether such a utopia can exist only on a tropical island: &#8220;Sonsorol could be created anywhere – nothing stands in the way but false consciousness and the grim power of those rulers who feast on false consciousness like vampires … ‘Don’t despair: Port Watson exists within you, and you can make it real’.&#8221; <a href="#60">[60]</a></p>
<p>This internal collapse – this conflation of inner and outer space – reminds us of the power of Ballard’s original Pacific fictions, which reinhabit the frame to present a clearinghouse in which corporate and national governance is overthrown and regoverned as a &#8220;state of mind&#8221; – dystopia becomes the real utopia, and utopian ideals, typically represented as a stifling of the imagination, the true dystopia. But Ballard’s insistence that the imagination must remain sovereign territory – the &#8220;last nature reserve,&#8221; as he has termed it <a href="#61">[61]</a> – also aligns him once more with Jameson, who describes &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; thought as:</p>
<blockquote><p>a new form of thinking … a new dimension of the exercise of the imagination. It’s only when people come to realize that there is no alternative that they react against it, at least in their imaginations, and try to think of alternatives … [affording] a process where the imagination begins to question itself, to move back and forth among the possibilities. <a href="#62">[62]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Ballard’s reimagining of the Pacific archipelago – as a vast, disjunctive region of abandonment and reinvention, with multiple islands floating in the &#8220;sea of time and space&#8221; – and its subsequent superimposition onto urban landscapes, provides an excellent example of a pluralism of utopias (multiple subjectivities) steeped in an &#8220;aesthetic unreality&#8221;: affirmative dystopias that are finally, unmistakably, <em>Ballardian</em>.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_templeton.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sonsorol" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Enewetak today. Photo by <a href="http://pic.templetons.com/brad/photo/eclipse09">Brad Templeton</a>.</em></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/my-dream-of-flying-to-tinian-island">My Dream of Flying to Tinian Island</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/review-demanding-the-impossible">How to Build a Utopia in your Spare Time</a></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<p>[1]<a name="1"></a> According to Tom Moylan: &#8220;The critical logic of the classical dystopia is … a simplifying one. It doesn&#8217;t matter that an economic regime drives the society; it doesn&#8217;t matter that a cultural regime of interpellation shapes and directs the people; for the social evil to be named, and resisted, is nothing but the modern state in and of itself.&#8221; Tom Moylan, &#8220;‘The moment is here … and it&#8217;s important’: State, Agency, and Dystopia in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Antarctica and Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Telling’ in Dark Horizons: Science Fiction and the Dystopian Imagination, eds Raffaella Baccolini and Tom Moylan (New York and London: Routledge, 2003) 136.<br />
[2]<a name="2"></a> Robert Collins, &#8220;Robert Collins&#8217;s top 10 dystopian novels,&#8221; The Guardian, 24 August 2008, date of access: 29 November 2008, < http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2005/aug/24/top10s.dystopian.novels >.<br />
[3]<a name="3"></a> J.G. Ballard, High-Rise [1975] (London: Flamingo, 1993) 131.<br />
[4]<a name="4"></a> Ballard, High-Rise 47. David Cronenberg, discussing his film version of Crash, identified this dynamic as a cornerstone of the Ballardian technique: &#8220;The police are a very minor presence in the book and in the film, because the exercise is not to see what would happen realistically now if people did this, it’s to allow them to do it unhindered, to see where it takes them psychologically … it’s still legitimate to say that the movie is not to be taken literally or realistically but as more metaphorically.&#8221; Chris Rodley, &#8220;Crash Talk: David Cronenberg and J.G. Ballard in conversation with Chris Rodley,&#8221; Guardian Lecture [transcript], British Film Institute, 10 November 1996, date of access: 29 November 2008, <http ://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/jgb_cronenberg_1996.html>.<br />
[5]<a name="5"></a> J.G. Ballard, The Atrocity Exhibition [1970] (London: Flamingo, 2001), annotations 52.<br />
[6]<a name="6"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;My Dream of Flying to Wake Island&#8221; [1974], The Complete Short Stories: Volume 2 (London: Flamingo, 2001) 337.<br />
[7]<a name="7"></a> Anonymous, &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; in Semiotext(e) SF, eds Rudy Rucker, Peter Lamborn Wilson and Robert Anton Wilson (New York: Autonomedia, 1989) 317.<br />
[8]<a name="8"></a> J.G. Ballard, Rushing to Paradise [1994] (New York: Picador, 1996) 12.<br />
[9]<a name="9"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 15-16.<br />
[10]<a name="10"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 10.<br />
[11]<a name="11"></a> J.G. Ballard, Concrete Island 1974] (London: Vintage, 1994) 69.<br />
[12]<a name="12"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 94.<br />
[13]<a name="13"></a> Fredric Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions [2005] (London and New York: Verso, 2007) 217.<br />
[14]<a name="14"></a> Ballard, Rushing to Paradise 74.<br />
[15]<a name="15"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 221.<br />
[16]<a name="16"></a> Graeme Revell, &#8220;Interview with JGB by Graeme Revell&#8221; in RE/Search #8/9: J.G. Ballard, eds V. Vale and Andrea Juno (San Francisco: Re/Search Publications, 1984) 47.<br />
[17]<a name="17"></a> In a forthcoming essay, I examine in detail Ballard’s mapping of micronational space, which I describe as &#8220;predicated on a vocabulary of secession, and &#8230; filled with depictions of colonies, anomalous enclaves, virtual city-states, ‘zones of transition.’&#8221; To quote further from that piece: &#8220;The political (or, rather, anti-political) potential of these spaces is interesting, since their structure and interaction with the outside world strongly parallels the successes and failures of the real-world phenomenon of micronations. The term ‘micronation’ refers to an attempt, usually by small groups of individuals, to found small, often ephemeral ‘nations’, often without land, but sometimes claiming the types of ‘non-space’ Ballard describes. Micronational enterprises can be satirical, or a component of an art project, but occasionally they can have serious political intent. Micronations are sometimes called ‘model nations’, since they mimic the structure of independent nations and states, but are not recognised as such by established states.&#8221; Simon Sellars, &#8220;‘Zones of Transit’: Micronationalism in the work of J.G. Ballard&#8221; in J.G. Ballard: &#8220;From Shanghai to Shepperton,&#8221; eds Jeannette Baxter, Mark Currie and Rowland Wymer (Palgrave, projected date of publication: 2009).<br />
[18]<a name="18"></a> Andrzej Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard (Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 2005) 212.<br />
[19]<a name="19"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 234.<br />
[20]<a name="20"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 216.<br />
[21]<a name="21"></a> Gregory Stephenson, Out of the Night and Into the Dream: A Thematic Study of the Fiction of J.G. Ballard (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1991) 2-3.<br />
[22]<a name="22"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 231-2.<br />
[23]<a name="23"></a> Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future 288.<br />
[24]<a name="24"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;Airports,&#8221; The Observer, 14 September 1997.<br />
[25]<a name="25"></a> Simon Winchester, The Pacific (London: Arrow Books Limited, 1991) 17.<br />
[26]<a name="26"></a> Winchester, The Pacific 12.<br />
[27]<a name="27"></a> Ballard, Empire of the Sun [1984] (London: Grafton Books, 1988) 5.<br />
[28]<a name="28"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;Some words about Crash!: 1. Introduction to the French edition of Crash! [sic],&#8221; Foundation, The Review of Science Fiction 9 (November 1975) 47-8.<br />
[29]<a name="29"></a> Andrés Vaccari, Awakening the Entropy Within: The Novels of J.G. Ballard, unpublished monograph, 1996.<br />
[30]<a name="30"></a> This is core subject matter that would endure right across Ballard’s career, beginning with his 1962 short story, &#8220;Thirteen to Centaurus,&#8221; and his novel from the same year, The Drowned World. While treating very different subject matters, both feature central characters haunted by dreams of a beating, burning, amniotic sun, a super-enhanced inner landscape of the mind that begins to merge with the burning sun of the external, overheated world.<br />
[31]<a name="31"></a> J.G. Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; [1964] The Complete Short Stories: Volume 2 33.<br />
[32]<a name="32"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 44.<br />
[33]<a name="33"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 30.<br />
[34]<a name="34"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 110.<br />
[35]<a name="35"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 212.<br />
[36]<a name="36"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 120.<br />
[37]<a name="37"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 69.<br />
[38]<a name="38"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 142.<br />
[39]<a name="39"></a> Marc Augé, Non-places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity, trans John Howe (London and New York: Verso, 1995) 23-4.<br />
[40]<a name="40"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 30.<br />
[41]<a name="41"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 4.<br />
[42]<a name="42"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 30.<br />
[43]<a name="43"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 71.<br />
[44]<a name="44"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 45-6.<br />
[45]<a name="45"></a> Augé argues that non-space is a negative aspect of supermodernity, as Gasiorek indicates in his overview of Augé’s links to Ballard’s work: &#8220;[In] Ballard [the] future is a dead zone already destroyed by the relentless drive to reduce everything to the present moment and thus to collapse all the time that has passed and is still to come into the tyrannic embrace of the ever-same now, hence his claim that &#8220;the future is ceasing to exist, devoured by the all-voracious present&#8221; … Augé’s contention that the question of space has come to the fore because it is ‘difficult to make time into a principle of intelligibility, let alone a principle of identity’ fits well with Ballard’s concerns.&#8221; Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 110.<br />
[46]<a name="46"></a> Ballard, &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; 43.<br />
[47]<a name="47"></a> John Gray, &#8220;Modernity and its discontents,&#8221; New Statesman (10 May 1999) 42.<br />
[48]<a name="48"></a> Thomas Frick, &#8220;The Art of Fiction: J.G. Ballard,&#8221; Paris Review, 94 (1984) 138.<br />
[49]<a name="49"></a> Hakim Bey, &#8220;The Psychotopology of Everyday Life&#8221; in The Temporary Autonomous Zone (New York: Autonomedia, 1985), date of access: 29 November 2008 </http><http ://www.hermetic.com/bey/taz3.html#labelThePsychotopology>.<br />
[50]<a name="50"></a> Bey, &#8220;The Psychotopology of Everyday Life.&#8221;<br />
[51]<a name="51"></a> Bey, &#8220;The Psychotopology of Everyday Life.&#8221;<br />
[52]<a name="52"></a> Ballard, Empire of the Sun 129.<br />
[53]<a name="53"></a> Ballard, Concrete Island 5.<br />
[54]<a name="54"></a> Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle [1967], trans Ken Knabb (London: Rebel Press, 2006) 9-10.<br />
[55]<a name="55"></a> Although this piece was published anonymously, it is generally agreed that Hakim Bey wrote it, given the identical stylistic and thematic consistencies to his work (&#8220;Hakim Bey&#8221; is the pseudonym of the Semiotext(e) SF co-editor, Peter Lamborn Wilson).<br />
[56]<a name="56"></a> Anonymous, &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; 317.<br />
[57]<a name="57"></a> The fact that &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; was published in an anthology along with two Ballard stories, along with an editorial acknowledgement of Ballard’s influence on the writers within, also seems to affirm, as with the links with the TAZ, Ballard’s shaping of Bey’s worldview.<br />
[58]<a name="58"></a> Gasiorek, J.G. Ballard 1, 2.<br />
[59]<a name="59"></a> Ballard, Empire of the Sun 169.<br />
[60]<a name="60"></a> Anonymous, &#8220;Visit Port Watson!&#8221; 330.<br />
[61]<a name="61"></a> J.G. Ballard, Super-Cannes [2000] (New York: Picador, 2002) 264.<br />
[62]<a name="62"></a> Quoted in Joshua Glenn, &#8220;Back to utopia: Can the antidote to today&#8217;s neoliberal triumphalism be found in the pages of far-out science fiction?,&#8221; The Boston Globe (20 November 2005).</http>,&#8221; The Boston Globe (20 November 2005).</p>
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		<title>Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jul 2009 12:30:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brian Baker</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Readers hoping to solve the mystery of J.G. Ballard’s ‘The Beach Murders’ may care to approach it in the form of a card game. Some of the principal clues have been alphabetized, some left as they were found, scrawled on to the backs of a deck of cards. Readers are invited to recombine the order of the cards to arrive at a solution. Obviously any number of solutions is possible, and the final answer to the mystery lies forever hidden.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/confetti_royale.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>by <a href="http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/english/profiles/Brian-Baker">Brian Baker</a></p>
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<p><strong>Instructions/ Introduction</strong></p>
<p><em>Readers hoping to solve the mystery of J.G. Ballard’s ‘The Beach Murders’ may care to approach it in the form of a card game. Some of the principal clues have been alphabetized, some left as they were found, scrawled on to the backs of a deck of cards. Readers are invited to recombine the order of the cards to arrive at a solution.* Obviously any number of solutions is possible, and the final answer to the mystery lies forever hidden.</p>
<p>* You may find scissors a useful accessory</p>
<p>Brian Baker, 2009</em></p>
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<p><em>Originally published in 21: Journal of Contemporary and Innovative Fiction, <a href="http://www.edgehill.ac.uk/english/21/index.htm">Issue 1 (autumn/winter 2008/09)</a>. Reproduced with permission.</em></p>
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<p><strong>♣♠♥♦</p>
<p>Clubs ♣</p>
<p>Architecture (A♣).</strong> Physical space is crucial to the Ballardian imaginary, from the eponymous tower block in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> (1975) to the ‘gated communities’ and science parks of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a> (2000) and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-millennium-people">Millennium People</a> (2003). Counterposed to images of flight and transcendence found in many of his stories, the urban environment is often an imprisoning space. In his article <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-architectures-of-control">‘J.G. Ballard and the Architectures of Control’</a>, Dan Lockton argues that ‘One of the many ‘obsessions’ running through Ballard’s work is what we might characterise as <em>the effect of architecture on the individual</em>’, while complicating his argument by acknowledging the mutual implication of inner and outer, psychological and environment: this blurring being Ballard’s method of ‘reflecting the participants’ mental state in the environment itself’. [1] Lockton also suggests that ‘[t]he architecture […] acts as a structure for the story’ in locating the protagonist and ‘plot’ firmly in an ‘obsessively explained and expounded’ architecture. I would like to develop this argument by suggesting that the informing structural principles of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-jg-ballard-the-complete-short-stories">Ballard’s short stories</a>, particularly that of the period beginning with ‘The Terminal Beach’ (1964) and embracing <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a> (1969) but also later short fictions, are spatial and iterative: geometry and algebra.</p>
<p><strong>Ballardian (2♣).</strong> On the BBC Radio 4 arts review programme Front Row, presenter Mark Lawson, in introducing a discussion of Ballard’s autobiography <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-miracles-of-life">Miracles of Life</a>, suggested that ‘he’s one of the few writers to have become an adjective — Ballardian’. [2] An author who attains the status of an adjective runs the risk of reduction to culturally received ideas of their work (often erroneous and masking the texts themselves) or, worse still, it makes them the object of caricature or burlesque. To become an adjective suggests a certain kind of cultural visibility (or even cultural power), but also indicates a possible ossification through repetition: another reduction, to a set of representative images, ideas and tropes. In this case, ‘Ballardian’ signifies a recurrent set of narrative structures, characters, and particularly iconic places and things, many of which were identified by David Pringle in his groundbreaking critical work of the 1970s:</p>
<blockquote><p>Such things as concrete weapons ranges, dead fish, abandoned airfields, radio telescopes, crashed space-capsules, sand dunes, empty cities, […] beaches, fossils, broken juke-boxes, crystals, lizards, multi-storey car-parks, dry lake-beds, medical laboratories, drained swimming-pools, […] high-rise buildings, predatory birds, and low-flying aircraft. [3]</p></blockquote>
<p>To assert a ‘Ballardian’ imaginary is to suggest a limitation to his work, a finite set of materials out of which a range of texts are worked (and re-worked). It is a critical commonplace to note the ‘obsessional’ return to key images, objects and concerns in Ballard’s work – from emptied swimming pools to a desire to transcend time – that could have reduced his texts to a set of symptoms of an identifiable pathology (and did, in the notorious judgement on <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-crash">Crash</a> by a publisher’s reader). At best, Ballard’s ‘obsessional’ return to a limited creative palette can be used to articulate a consistent and particular vision of the world – what Mark Lawson, characterising ‘Ballardian’, called a ‘way of looking at the world and describing it’ – or is, at worst, a boring and repetitive re-working of the same old material by a ‘minor’ (genre) writer who lacks a wider engagement with human life. ‘Ballardian’ is perhaps best understood (a) as a symptom of genre, and the repetition-with-difference pattern of much genre fiction; and (b) as an effect of Ballard’s structural reliance on iteration.</p>
<p><strong>Confetti Royale (9♣).</strong> The original title of the story collected in the 2001 Collected Short Stories as ‘The Beach Murders’ is ‘Confetti Royale’, signifying its intertextual relation to Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale (1953) and the Cold War spy or espionage narrative. The impenetrable motivations of the characters in ‘Confetti Royale’ – two Russian agents, on CIA operative, an ‘absconded State Department cipher chief’ and ‘American limbo dancer’ (whose actions entirely exceed this belittling characterization) – both anticipate the labyrinthine logic of Le Carré’s espionage fiction and compromises the more straightforward and linear adventures of Fleming’s secret agent. There has been <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/my-name-is-maitland-donald-maitland">some recent speculation</a> on the Ballardian website about the connection between Ballard and Fleming, particularly with regard to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind from Nowhere</a> (Ballard’s 1962 ‘disowned’ apprentice novel) and its megalomaniacal industrialist Hardoon, who could be seen as a an analogue of the Bond super-villains who seek the chimera of ‘world domination’. [4]  While ‘Confetti Royale’ is a playful iteration of espionage fiction, its card-game structure raises to a formal principle the centrality of the game between Bond and Le Chiffre in Casino Royale. Here, the 27 textual elements (Introduction plus 26 alphabeticized titled paragraphs) are strewn as ‘confetti’, compromising the ordering principles of the baccarat tables or Cold War ideologies.</p>
<p><strong>Diamonds Are Forever (6♣).</strong> The 1969 James Bond film On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (OHMSS) was the first to be made without Sean Connery. The opening 15 minutes is suffused by a self-reflexivity which marks out the problematic nature of generic repetition-with-difference. The new Bond, George Lazenby, looks directly at the camera at the end of the pre-credits sequence, when the ‘girl’ he has been fighting for drives off, and says ‘This never happened to the other fellah’; the film’s title sequence replays scenes from earlier Bond films; and when Bond ‘resigns’ and clears his office drawer, key objects from earlier films are introduced with <em>aide-memoire</em> musical leitmotifs from previous Bond films overlaid on the soundtrack. Anxiety-provoking difference is suppressed by reference to the recognisable and familiar, even at the risk of disrupting the film diegesis. In 1971, not only did Bond return, but so did Connery. Diamonds Are Forever is Bond’s ‘revenge’ mission for the death, in OHMSS, of Bond’s wife Tracey (the ‘girl’ who escaped him at the beginning), and is largely set in Nixon’s USA. A morally rotten, bloated film (featuring two sadistic homosexual assassins as an index of its gender sensitivities), Diamonds Are Forever’s main location is Las Vegas, the ‘old’ Vegas of the Dunes and the Sands, the excessive, corrupt Vegas of Bugsy Siegel and the Mob.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/diamonds_forever.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p>Diamonds Are Forever plays the megalomaniacal Blofeld – murderer of Bond’s wife and manipulator of the diamond trade to create a laser-bearing ‘killer’ satellite – against one ‘Willard Whyte’, a helpful billionaire resident of a Las Vegas penthouse suite. This character’s good-ole-boy persona fails to mask the fact that he is a Whyte-washed reiteration of a real-life Las Vegas resident, Howard Hughes, who in real life more nearly approximated Blofeld. Unlike Fleming’s Casino Royale (1953) and the 2006 film version of this Bond narrative, where the high-stakes card games function as a trope for ideological conflict and the dangerous fluidity of capital markets and financial flows, Diamonds Are Forever makes little or no play with the casino chronotope. Ballard’s own Las Vegas novel is <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a> (1981), the most generically ‘science fiction’ of his later works. This novel narrates a journey by a European exploratory mission to a depopulated, post-apocalyptic United States, where they find a self-anointed (and self-named) President Charles Manson, who has assumed command of the remainder of America’s nuclear arsenal. Hello America uses the Las Vegas gambling icon of the roulette wheel, rather than the card table, to critique the logic of Mutually Assured Destruction. As Ken Cooper suggests, ‘self-destruction […] is the inevitable payoff of atomic roulette’. [5]</p>
<p><strong>Experimental Fiction (7♣).</strong> Ballard’s most formally experimental period lies between ‘The Terminal Beach’ and The Atrocity Exhibition. Although his later novels are iterative in their narrative and textual patterning, they are much closer to ‘mainstream’ literary fiction’s spatial continuity and temporal causality. However, in his short fiction Ballard did return to formally experimental or innovative texts, often playing with textual conventions. <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/indexed-out-of-existence">‘The Index’ (1977)</a> consists of just that, ‘the index to the unpublished and perhaps suppressed autobiography of a man who may well have been one of the most remarkable figures of the 20th century’, one Henry Rhodes Hamilton, but the mystery of who he was and the status of the text remains unresolved; ‘Notes Towards a Mental Breakdown’ (1976) consists of annotations to the subtitle of the story (‘A discharged Broadmoor patient compiles “Notes Towards A Mental Breakdown”, recalling his wife’s murder, his trial and exoneration’), each word of which is footnoted; and in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/unique-visual-complexities-a-review-of-grande-anarca">‘Answers to a Questionnaire’</a> (1985) the respondent implies that he has assassinated the second incarnation of Christ in 100 ‘answers’. [6] These texts are organised by absence or ellipsis, the architecture of the stories signifying a missing central element or text that reader must configure or enunciate for herself/himself. Non-linear, spatial in design, Ballard’s later experimental short stories are textual games that posit a foundational enigma, a mystery that the reader must work to decode.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/memories_potter.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Artwork by Jeffrey K. Potter for ‘Memories of the Space Age’ (commissioned for the collection Memories of the Space Age).</em></p>
<p><strong>Fugue Fiction (5♣).</strong> The ‘fugue fictions’ are <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">three connected short stories</a> that Ballard published around the turn of the 1980s: ‘News from the Sun’ (1981), ‘Memories of the Space Age’ (1982) and ‘Myths of the Near Future’ (1982). A close examination of these stories discloses the iterative principle at work even in Ballard’s later texts, where formal fragmentation has given way to more linear narrative models. A paragraph from ‘A Question of Re-Entry’ (1962) pinpoints the shared emphases of these stories:</p>
<blockquote><p>The implication was that the entire space programme was a symptom of some inner unconscious malaise afflicting mankind, and in particular the Western technocracies, and that the space-craft and satellites had been launched because their flights satisfied certain buried compulsions and desires. [7]</p></blockquote>
<p>In ‘Memories of the Space Age’, the protagonist Mallory, a doctor in the NASA program, confesses to his unconscious complicity in the first orbital murder, by a borderline-disturbed astronaut named Hinton. This act produced a kind of ‘space-sickness’ of fugue-states and loss of temporal awareness that is centred on Cape Canaveral: ‘he had torn the fabric of time and space, cracked the hour-glass from which time was running’. [8]  The fugues experienced by Mallory and the protagonists of the two other stories are a kind of congealing of time, a transcendence of clock time; in ‘News from the Sun’, these fugues are explicitly typed as a return to a pre-lapsarian state of consciousness. In ‘Myth of the Near Future’, the protagonist Sheppard pursues his terminally ill wife to Canaveral, where the time-effect may ultimately revivify her. All three stories are patterned on a triangulation between the protagonist, his wife (or lover), and an antagonist; a fourth figure is present, outside of the primary triangulation, who is either an astronaut or connected to the space program.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘News from the Sun’: Franklin-Ursula-Slade (Trippett)<br />
‘Memories of the Space Age’: Mallory-Anna-Hinton (Gale Shepley)<br />
‘Myths of the Near Future’: Sheppard-Elaine-Martinsen (Anne Godwin)</p></blockquote>
<p>The triangulations suggests a geometric/architectural emphasis, but the sense that these three fictions, published in sequence, are reworkings of the same conceptual material and re-deploy the same motifs (flight, the space programme, fugue states and time) signifies their centrality to the Ballardian iterative complex.</p>
<p><strong>Gemini. (4♣)</strong> The Space Age is a crucial source for <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/walking-on-the-moon">the Ballardian imaginary</a>, from the negotiations of cargo-cult imperialism in ‘A Question of Re-Entry’ (1963) to the assassination of a messianic astronaut in ‘The Object of the Attack’ (1984). The icon of the astronaut is central to the ‘fugue fictions’ and their sense that NASA’s manned space programs were a cosmic transgression, an hubristic leap out of biological time which has catastrophic psychological consequences. Many of Ballard’s texts are centred on Cape Canaveral, from ‘The Illuminated Man’ (1964) (itself later incorporated – reiterated – into <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">The Crystal World</a> (1965)), where time crystallizes, to ‘Memories of the Space Age’ (1982), where the Cape is the epicentre of a kind of ‘space sickness’. However, it is not Apollo imagery – the Moon landings – that regulate Ballard’s Space Age imaginary. His astronauts have orbital trajectories. In ‘The Dead Astronaut’ (1968) and ‘The Cage of Sand’ (1962) orbiting capsules containing dead astronauts form a kind of artificial constellation in the night sky, while the protagonists wait at Canaveral for their orbits to decay. It is not Apollo, but the Mercury and Gemini programs – manned orbital missions that grew in complexity and duration, but stayed within the ambit of Earth – that provide the backdrop for Ballard’s Space Age. This is no New Frontier, no ascension to other planets, but a limited, problematic endeavour.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/casino_titles.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>Hearts and Minds (8♣).</strong> The title sequence of the 2006 Casino Royale plays with the centrality of the card game and the casino to its narrative. In motion-capture animation (where computer-generated graphics are overlaid on live action), a silhouetted polygon Bond fights, shoots, and is finally shown (in a live-action ‘reveal’) to be Daniel Craig, the ‘new’ Bond. The roulette wheel becomes a sniper-scope target in these graphics, as clubs, diamonds and spades become weapons embedded in the torsos of antagonists, ‘blood’ flowing across the screen from their wounds. Bond is himself ‘cut’ by playing cards in one animated sequence, but is invulnerable; no blood seems to flow there. The interrelationship of the casino, the roulette wheel and the playing card with the neo-colonial adventurism represented by the Bond imaginary invites us to read the film itself as a kind of spectacle or game, masking its ideological premises.</p>
<p><strong>Iterative (3♣).</strong> Crucial to the idea of a ‘Ballardian’ text is patterning or what I have suggested as iterability. It would be difficult to deny that Ballard returns to similar ideas, or narrative structures throughout his work: it is the effectiveness of the patterning that is crucial, the combination and re-combination of elements to work through a coherent world that provides Ballard’s texts with imaginative power. David Punter, in Modernity, concurs, stating: ‘What is most significant […] is that Ballard is a repetitive writer, a writer of repetition.’ [9] The first formally ‘iterative’ Ballard short story is ‘The Terminal Beach’ (1964), in which the textual fabric of the story is fragmented, split into 22 sections (21 of them subtitled), echoing the psychological fragmentation of the protagonist Traven (the earliest incarnation of the ‘T-‘ figure who recurs, as ‘Tallis’ or ‘Talbot’ or ‘Trabert’) who can also be found in Ballard’s iterative masterwork, The Atrocity Exhibition. ‘The Terminal Beach’ and particularly the Atrocity Exhibition texts are non-linear and non-causal in terms of narrative; in ‘The Terminal Beach’, the concrete blocks of the nuclear testing site Eniwetok Island form a maze, ‘their geometric regularity and finish [seeming] to occupy more than their own volumes of space, imposing on him a mood of absolute calm and order.’ [10]  Here the spatial ordering of the text is more properly geometric rather than algebraic (iterative), but the repetitive, disorienting regularity of the field of blocks is a figure for a space that repeats itself endlessly. This motif can also be found in the more classically dystopian short story ‘The Concentration City’, where the urban ‘build-up’ has no boundary, no end, and a train journey to find its limits returns the protagonist to the starting point is a regressive, looping trajectory; and in the repeated face of Cordobès on the deck of cards placed upon Quimby’s balcony table in ‘Confetti Royale’.</p>
<p><strong>James (10♣).</strong> J.G. Ballard’s first names are James Graham. Only in his Crash alter-ego is Ballard ‘James’, a knowing self-implication in that text’s transgressive sexual material; he was ‘Jimmy’ as a boy, ‘Jim’ to his adult friends. The diminutive, ‘Jim’, humanises Ballard, and it is this name which is given to his ‘autobiographical’ selves in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> (1985) and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com-biblio-the-kindness-of-women">The Kindness of Women</a> (1991). Opposing this is the self-alienated ‘J.G.’, a not-quite <em>nom de plume</em> that masks the ‘real’ Jim Ballard. Ballard’s textual interrogation of unitary subjectivity is reflected in this circulation of names, and the surnames of his protagonists – Sheppard, Maitland, Franklin, Sinclair – are themselves iterative signs. James Bond, by way of contrast, is never ‘Jimmy’, ‘Jim’ or ‘Jamie’: always ‘James’.</p>
<p><strong>Kennedy (J♣).</strong> After his assassination in 1963, President John F. Kennedy’s name was given to the Cape where the NASA space program still has its operational base: Canaveral. This naming has now been reversed, but the Space Center still bears JFK’s name. It is Kennedy who is seen to be the ‘author’ of Apollo, giving the political and economic impetus to reach the Moon through the rhetoric of the ‘New Frontier’ and a sustained arms race (symbolically as well as militarily), though it could be argued that it is Lyndon Johnson who was most committed to the American space program in the 1950s and 1960s. Kennedy’s assassination is, in some sense, a ‘ground zero’ for contemporary American culture, and he looms large in the algebra of icons that Ballard constructs in the period of The Atrocity Exhibition, along with the president’s widow, Jackie. The implication of glamour, celebrity and violent death is embodied in the icon of JFK; in ‘The Assassination of John F. Kennedy Considered as a Downhill Motor Race’, a key text in The Atrocity Exhibition, the moment of assassination also becomes a fatal game.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/split_ballard.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><em>‘Continuously creating his own image’: J.G. Ballard self-portrait, double exposure, 1950 (photo via RE/Search Publications).</em></p>
<p><strong>Lunghua (Q♣).</strong> With the publication of Ballard’s autobiography, Miracles of Life, it became apparent that, as much as I would like to resist a biographical reading of Ballard’s work, it is Ballard’s own childhood that has had a fundamental regulatory effect on the Ballardian imaginary. In Empire of the Sun, Ballard playfully encouraged the reader to ‘spot’ the Ballardian icon in an autobiographical context – the drained swimming pool, the crashed plane – while simultaneously denying that autobiography provided any kind of key or code to understanding his work. His life, as represented in both Empire of the Sun and The Kindness of Women, is filtered through the medium of fiction. In the light of Miracles of Life, I would now like to suggest that it is Lunghua, the resettlement camp into which he, his parents and his sister were interned during the Japanese occupation of Shanghai in World War Two, that is the model for the Ballardian social environment. Lunghua is enclosed, fenced off from the outside world; it is a place where work is scarce; where a system of social codes and conventions regulate personal interaction; where games, hobbies, organised events schedule the lives of its inhabitants; and where existence shades inevitably into a slow decline unto death. A place to rebel against, if space can be found; a space to escape from, if escape is possible. Lunghua is the model for the high-rises, gated communities, science parks and suburban dormitory towns of Ballard’s later fiction.</p>
<p><strong>Metacriticism/metatext (K♣).</strong> ‘What is distinctive about The Arcades Project – in Benjamin’s mind, it always dwelt apart – is the working of quotations into the framework of montage [….] the transcendence of the conventional book form would go together, in this case, with the blasting apart of pragmatic historicism – grounded, as this always is, on the premise of a continuous and homogenous temporality. Citation and commentary might then be perceived as intersecting at a thousand different angles, setting up vibrations across the epochs of recent history, so as to effect “the cracking open of natural teleology.” And all of this would unfold through the medium of hints or “blinks” – a discontinuous presentation deliberately opposed to traditional modes of argument.’ [11]</p>
<p><strong>Spades ♠</p>
<p>(A♠) Macro-economic tidal systems.</strong> B sat down in the oak-panelled room of state opposite Sir Richard Markham. Markham assessed this loose-limbed man in the ragged flying jacket. A constellation of scars around his mouth and jaw-line traced the trajectory of his chequered history as an agent. Markham accepted the logic of the situation – an agent lasted a few years in the field, no more – but B had gone further than most, much further in many ways. The grey, haunted eyes that looked through Markham scanned the ocean bottom of his psyche, cut adrift from the time system of Whitehall.<br />
	‘You’ve been away, B,’ said Markham.<br />
        B’s eyes refocused.<br />
	‘In a manner of speaking.’</p>
<p><strong>(2♠) Auto-intentional displacement.</strong> B realised, as he stood on the moving walkway in the inner hub of Charles de Gaulle airport, that the geometry of the architecture expressed a latent psychopathology. The concrete tunnels of the travellators indicated a profound desire to return to the amniotic peacefulness of the womb, the octagonal central atrium and suspended Perspex walkways revealing a fascist worship of the late General in the form of an architectural homage to his nasal septum and zygomatic arch. B found himself profoundly identifying with the unknown would-be assassin who had missed his opportunity to be the French Oswald in 1965. It was clear to him that the French, for all their insistence on <em>grands projets</em> like CDG, inhabited a fundamental and psychotic cultural landscape in which the tension between their embrace of modernity and their nostalgia for empire went unresolved.</p>
<p><strong>(3♠) Goldeneye.</strong> As he dipped the clutch of the Aston and thrust the gearstick into fifth, B remembered the death of his wife. It was, he now understood, a special form of automobile accident. Blauveldt and Blunt, whom he had previously recognised as enemies, were in fact the agents of an underlying logic of necessity. Since the death of his wife, B had slipped further and further out of time, occupying fugue states where hours slipped by. Now, as blades of sodium light accelerated across his windshield, B felt himself again returning to the fugue state that had plagued him since her death, the Aston congealing in a viscid block of time.</p>
<p><strong>(4♠) Operation Grand Slam.</strong> B opened the attaché case. In it he found what Markham had called his ‘assassination weapon’. It consisted of: (a) reproductions of Marcel Duchamp’s ‘Nude Descending a Staircase’; (b) a pulp spy novel by one Richard Markham; (c) Eadweard Muybridge’s series photographs of horse and rider; (d) soft inner flying helmet and communication rig of B-29 navigator, USAAF issue; (e) November 1963 edition of Time magazine; (f) an unused prophylactic wrapped in a tin foil sachet; (g) black-box voice recording of co-pilot, Concorde air disaster, Charles de Gaulle Airport, Paris; (h) .25 Beretta pistol.</p>
<p><strong>(5♠) Heliotropic.</strong> Dr Catherine Penny waited in the secure car park of the Jodrell Bank radio telescopes, as the man in the ragged flying jacket paced the grounds, where the massive volumes of the dishes sprouted like some monstrous alien crop. Dr Penny thought of B‘s grey, haunted eyes, and turned the heating in the MGC up a notch. What B was looking for, he could not find amongst the files and despatch boxes of Whitehall. Could he find it here, among the constellations?</p>
<p><strong>(6♠) Index of Alienation.</strong> B calculated the angle between Dr Penny’s rigid torso and her splayed thighs, as she sat like an ill-propped mannequin on the edge of his bed. The conjunction between her naked body, the vintage bottle of Bollinger and the torn foil of the prophylactic sachet brought back disconcerting memories of the buckled armcove on Monaco race day. He turned back to the light box he was building to display x-ray plates of his own fractured clavicle, femur, and kneecap.</p>
<p><strong>(7♠) Quantum theory.</strong>  ‘Pay attention, B,’ said Quinn, the head of the special quartermaster stores. ‘One day these things could conceivably save your life.’<br />
	He placed another card on the desk and invited B to respond.<br />
	‘Come on,’ said B. ‘What will it be next? Solitaire? The Tarot pack?’<br />
	‘This is for the good of your health, not mine,’ replied Quinn, ‘though God knows it’s difficult enough to tell the difference these days. How did you find Switzerland?’<br />
	B smiled. ‘The facilities were excellent. The doctors pronounced me in fine physical shape.’ The lie was automatic, almost unconscious, thought Quinn.<br />
	B’s eyes defocused, the deck of cards indecipherable sigils beneath his hands.</p>
<p><strong>(8♠) Beretta .25.</strong> Sitting on the balcony of his room in the Loew’s hotel in Monte Carlo, B watched the workmen fix road markings for the motor racing that would take place next week. The late afternoon sun painted the harbour with gold as he finished the club sandwich and drained the last of the glass of Johnny Walker Black Label. On his knees was the conference pack of the neurosurgery symposium he was attending, where he hoped to catch up with Blufeldt. Blufeldt had assumed the legitimate identity of a specialist doctor and had attached himself to a radical clinic in Bern, Switzerland. He was giving a paper on neurology, brain injury and fugue states. B stood up, brushed the crumbs from his knees, and pinned his identification tag onto his shirt. At least the others would know who he was supposed to be.</p>
<p><strong>(9♠) Jackie O.</strong> As B entered Catherine Penny from behind, he registered the way her hips, flaring out from the waist, repeated the sensual curves of the mouthpiece of the telephone. Her back, bent rigidly over Markham’s desk, echoed the planes of the reclining chair that sat, as in a psychiatrist’s consulting room, to one side of the grand office. As he moved inside her, B thought of the coil that sat in Catherine’s womb like an ironic plastic echo of the DNA double-helix. He held Catherine’s hips as if he were piloting the Aston at high speed down the autobahn between Köln and Berlin.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/flem_ball.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ian Fleming" /></p>
<p><strong>(10♠) Neverland.</strong> ‘Blaufeld is in Florida,’ said Markham, looking at B carefully. ‘Down at the Cape, the disused launch site. We don’t think he’s interested in the physical possibilities of the gantries, but…’<br />
	‘I always wanted to be an astronaut,’ said B. ‘The NASA program drew a lot of astronauts from Navy fliers, like Sheppard. I met him once. A difficult man. He told me flatly that no Royal Navy Commander could ever make NASA grade.’<br />
	‘Space,’ Blaufeld had said, ‘is money.’</p>
<p><strong>(J♠) Solar Transits.</strong> The strip lighting haloed from Bluffield’s large, pink, shaven skull as he looked up at B from under cerebrotonic brows.<br />
	‘You’ve never understood my work, James. God knows I’ve tried to explain. But I knew you’d come. Particularly here, of all places.’<br />
	B looked out of the office windows and saw the rusted, half-ruined gantries propped like a disused stage-set against the Florida sky. He could feel the .25 Beretta in its clam-shell holster beneath his left arm, but knew he would never use it now. The cool afternoon seemed to stretch forever, like the nearby glades.<br />
	‘How long have you been having these fugues, James?’ asked Bluffield.</p>
<p><strong>(Q♠) Restitution.</strong> Karen Blunt sat astride the Yamaha, revving it slowly, her aviator shades reflecting the parking lot where B sat in the open-top Pontiac. One side of B’s face was turning coral in the intense afternoon sun, as he lived out a waking dream, his memory tapping out the algebra of his past. Karen’s dark hair cascaded onto her sturdy shoulders and chest, which were buttoned up in a grubby NASA flight suit scavenged from Kennedy. Here at Cocoa Beach, outside the bar where the astronauts once dreamed of flight, B and Karen pitched in the oceanic tides of time.</p>
<p><strong>(K♠) Pinewood to Shepperton.</strong> In the attaché case B found his instructions from Markham, consisting of a sequence of defaced postcards posted to B by Bloveldt, from Cape Kennedy, Florida; the Alamagordo testing grounds, New Mexico; Utah Beach, Normandy, France; and Fort Knox, Kentucky. They read, in date order: ‘(1) Maiden flight of Concorde (2) Abbey Road (3) Rolling Thunder (4) Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong walks on moon (5) The Wild Bunch (6) Inauguration of President Richard Milhous Nixon (7) Medium Cool (8) d.o.b 20 March (9) Let It Bleed (10) The Stones in the Park (11) Tommy (12) The election of French President Georges Pompidou, succeeding General de Gaulle (13) Woodstock (14) Altamont Speedway (15) On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (16) The Atrocity Exhibition.’</p>
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<p><strong>..:: CONTINUED: >> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text-2">Part 2</a> ::&#8230;</strong></p>
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		<title>Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text, part 2</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jul 2009 11:56:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<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 ♥ [...]]]></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>..:: CONTINUED from >> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text">Part 1</a> ::&#8230;</strong></p>
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<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>&#039;Confronting Ourselves&#039;: Ballard and Circular Time</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/confronting-ourselves-ballard-and-circular-time</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/confronting-ourselves-ballard-and-circular-time#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 12:10:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrei Tarkovsky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Marker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inner space]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[temporality]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[time travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[YouTube]]></category>

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