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	<title>Ballardian &#187; nuclear war</title>
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		<title>Apollo Roulette, Part 2</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/apollo-roulette-part-2</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/apollo-roulette-part-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Feb 2012 11:58:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brian Baker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conspiracy theory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deep time]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hyperreality]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nuclear war]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[space relics]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[In this, the final thrilling instalment of Brian Baker's Apollo Roulette, the sequel to his 2009 Fleming/Ballard mashup, Baker continues to apply the method to desert imagery in Ballard's work, uncovering the deadly secret that powers the American 'nuclear state': an apocalyptic game of APOLLO ROULETTE!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/fleming2.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>APOLLO ROULETTE, PART 2</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>In part 2 of &#8216;Apollo Roulette&#8217;, Brian Baker&#8217;s sequel to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text">&#8216;Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text&#8217;</a>, an &#8216;auto-displacement&#8217; Ian Fleming/J.G. Ballard mashup, Baker continues to apply the method to desert imagery in Ballard&#8217;s work. </p>
<p>In this, the final thrilling instalment, Baker finally uncovers the deadly secret that powers the American &#8216;nuclear state&#8217;: an apocalyptic game of APOLLO ROULETTE!</p>
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<p><em>Now read on for Part 2, or return to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/apollo-roulette-part-1">Part 1</a> and the supercharged moment when it all began!</em></p>
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<p><strong>Serenity. </strong>Patient B had been driving his Aston Martin convertible towards La Tzoumaz on a clear, sunny early summer’s day. According to the Swiss police reports appended to the file Bluffield had received from the Service, there were signs of a second automobile in the vicinity of the accident, but the Aston was the lone vehicle found at the crash site. The car had ricocheted from the stone balustrade and careered across the road, impacting against the wall of the mountain road almost head-on. The passenger in the car, Theresa B, his wife of some four days, was killed instantaneously. Despite impact fractures to knees, leg and hip, B escaped major trauma to vital organs, although blood loss was marked. B had remained conscious while Swiss paramedics and emergency rescue teams had reached the crash site an estimated 90 minutes after the incident, and was also conscious while being extricated from the crushed cabin of the Aston. He was airlifted to a private clinic in Geneva, while his wife’s remains were returned to her family in Marseille.</p>
<p><strong>Viva Las Vegas</strong>. In Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">‘Myths of the Near Future’</a>, Sheppard finds his resurrected wife Elaine in what was once ‘no more than a park-keeper’s hut, some bird-watcher’s weekend hide transformed by the light of its gathering identities into this miniature casino’ (1082). The impacted, ‘annealed’ images of itself project the hut into some kind of ideal state, just as Sheppard had encountered the elderly images of a roadside hamlet transfigured into younger, idealised versions of themselves earlier in the story. Sheppard mis-recognises the co-presence of multiple identities as Las Vegas neon, a profane city of light illuminating Cold War deserts.</p>
<p><strong>When Eight Bells Toll. </strong>‘You could have <em>asked</em> me, B, instead of sneaking around like a thief in the back yard,’ said Felicity as they drove in the Cadillac towards Groom Lake. ‘I think we’ve found our mail has gone unanswered lately,’ said B, trying not to sound affronted. ‘And in any case, my trespass is not exactly, well, official.’ Felicity looked over at her long-time friend and colleague, and saw a ragged, rather bruised man, and not from his recent ordeal. ‘We’d heard that you’d had an accident, or that you’d gone rogue,’ she said, frowning. ‘Licence revoked?’ ‘No, not exactly,’ he said, looking back at her ruefully, ‘but it’s more than what you’d call a holiday. I think they wanted me to take a little rest in a village they have set up on the coast, but I needed some answers first.’ As they drew up to the checkpoint, B asked, ‘Do we have clearance?’ ‘Not to worry,’ said Felicity. ‘Forget the Official Secrets Act. You’re in God’s Own Country now. Welcome to Wonderland.’</p>
<p><strong>Fugue Time</strong>. Ballard’s paired stories <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">‘News from the Sun’</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">‘Memories of the Space Age’</a>, plus ‘Myths of the Near Future’ have analogous structures.<a title="" href="#_edn1">[1]</a> The protagonist, a doctor, undergoing the effects of ‘space sickness’ connected to the NASA space program, searches for a ‘door in the universe’ out of time itself. The protagonist’s wife, emotionally or sexually involved with a provocative, perhaps unbalanced male antagonist, precedes her husband into the zone of transcendence (symbolically if not literally). In ‘Myths of the Near Future’, this is figured as a kind of resurrection. Mallory, in ‘Memories of the Space Age’, a flight-physician once attached to the Shuttle program, travels back to Florida to confront the meaning of the space sickness, and the former astronaut Hinton, whose murder of a fellow astronaut in orbit precipitates the time-crisis. Hinton now occupies the Cape Kennedy launching grounds. Mallory suffers from, and gradually starts to embrace increasing periods of ‘fugue time’, when he enters a kind of fugue and time coagulates, then solidifies around him. This is most iconic in the ‘block’ of water he suspends himself in when submerged in Gale Shepley’s swimming pool: ‘Once he immersed himself in the pool, delighted to be embedded in this huge block of condensed time’ (1059). </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/memories_potter_myths.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Artwork by Jeffrey K. Potter for ‘Myths of the Near Future’ (commissioned for Ballard&#8217;s short-story collection Memories of the Space Age).</em></p>
<p>In his musings about Gale’s pet cheetahs, or the tiger kept in a nearby cage (whose door he would like to open) there is something Edenic about Mallory’s appreciation of fugue-time: the lion can indeed lie down with the lamb in ‘condensed time’. As in ‘News from the Sun’ the space/ time-sickness is a doorway to transcendence, precipitated by the space program but superseding it. At the end of ‘News from the Sun’, the doctor Franklin (who had worked at a clinic treating astronauts and other who exhibited fugue symptoms, as he does himself) and the astronaut’s daughter Ursula Trippett speak a kind of infant ‘babble’ in fugue, an index of a return to human existence <em>prior to</em> the fall of language (Babel) or even the structuration of the subject. While an earlier story, ‘Mr F is Mr F’ narrates a male protagonist’s return (literally) to the womb, this is figured as vampiric, and the story ultimately descends itself into misogyny. In the ‘fugue time’ stories, the return to a uterine pre-subjectivity is cast as a polyvalent, multiple continuity with a revivified nature (where even the desert is restored by endlessly multiplying palm trees, reproduced perceptually in, and out of, time).</p>
<p><strong>Level 9</strong>. As they entered facility 51, two technicians in white protective suits barred their way into the atrium. ‘Sorry,’ said Felicity. ‘I’m afraid they’ll give you the full decontamination treatment, as you’ve never been here before. We have some, ah, <em>friends</em> in this facility that might catch a cold. I’ll go through and see you downstairs later.’ She left him to be guided into a booth, where he undressed and threw his clothes into a chute to be incinerated. His body was inspected, enumerated, diagnosed. His skin, cleaned, depilated and abraded. His brain, scanned. His torso and vital organs monitored, his internal fluids filtered. His hair, cropped; his chin, chest and genitals shaved; his eyes, inspected by a senior ophthalmic surgeon; his mouth, investigated by an orthodontist; his anus, probed by a noted proctologist. At each cleansing, at each scan, he descended down a level, from red, to yellow, to purple, to grey, to white. As he cleared Scanning, dressed all in white, his body glowing, he felt altogether a new man.</p>
<p><strong>The winged man. </strong>Flight is a recurring motif in Ballard’s <em>oeuvre</em>, and Gregory Stephenson notes this in relation to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>The imagery by which the transcendent character of the experience of automobile collision [...] conveyed in the novel is that of light and luminosity, of ascension or flight.<a title="" href="#_edn2">[2]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This imagery is found throughout Ballard’s writing, most notably in the stories ‘News from the Sun’, ‘Memories of the Space Age’ and ‘Myths of the Near Future’, but can also be found in the novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-unlimited-dream-company">The Unlimited Dream Company</a> (written around the same time, and published in 1979, but set in Ballard’s own locale, Shepperton). There, the protagonist Blake crashes a light aircraft into the Thames at the beginning of the novel, but achieves a curious kind of resurrection. He brings with him fantastical powers to transform the suburb of London. At one point in the narrative, he attempts, Pied Piper-like, to draw the townsfolk into the air:</p>
<blockquote><p>The sky was brightening as we rose through the cool air. I felt the townspeople lying serenely within me, sleeping passengers in this ascending gondola propelled by some profound upward dream. They were carrying me away towards the sun, eager to lose themselves in a communion of light’.<a title="" href="#_edn3">[3]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This ascension ultimately fails, but in the contemporaneous stories, the flight imagery is indeed connected with an escape from time. They also have an evolutionary dynamic. In ‘Memories of the Space Age’, Hinton, the astronaut-murderer, is first seen flying WWI biplanes. As the narrative progresses, the aircraft ‘descend’ the evolutionary ladder in terms of powered flight: ‘as every day passed these veteran machines tended to be of increasingly older vintage’ (1041). Like Kerans in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a>, whose consciousness descends back ‘down the spinal column’ as the novel goes on, evolution in Ballard’s texts is typed both in terms of a kind of <em>de</em>-evolutionary imperative for the human psyche (towards the liberation or transcendence offered by the ‘macrocosmic zero’) and in terms of the false ‘progress’ of evolutionary mis-steps. The NASA space program is itself figured as an ‘evolutionary crime’ in ‘News from the Sun’ (1019), one that ‘cracks the hour-glass of time’ and causes the fugues and ‘space sickness’. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/undreamco.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>By contrast, human-powered heavier-than-air craft are typed as benign: Gale Shepley, the murdered astronaut’s daughter, pilots one in ‘Memories of the Space Age’; Martinsen flies a ‘cat’s cradle of plastic film and piano wire’ (1063) in ‘Myths of the Near Future’; and in Hello America, the fleet of crystalline aircraft that appear above Las Vegas at the end of the narrative indicate most clearly the fragility of this image of flight as transcendence. The mythic, metaphorical imagery of flight always supersedes human attempts to traverse the heavens, from Kittihawk to Cape Kennedy. The image that encapsulates this is at the beginning of ‘Myths of the Near Future’, where Sheppard sits in the cockpit of a crash-landed Cessna on Cocoa Beach. After being rescued from the stranded craft, Sheppard realises that Martinsen has drawn a massive Aztec bird upon the sand, which grasps the Cessna symbolically in its talons. Soon after, the light aircraft is caught by the tide and broken into pieces.</p>
<p><strong>Islands.</strong> Bluffield found it difficult, in fact nearly impossible, to penetrate the psychological armature patient B had erected. He would not talk about his wife, nor about the crash itself. In exchange for the run of the clinic and its park, B had agreed to keep a journal. Bluffield had hoped that the estranged form, the distance between writing and reading, might allow B to slip his armour, inadvertently perhaps. Any signs or clues would be an improvement on the impassive non-engagement Bluffield faced on a daily basis. Bluffield lit a cigarette and opened B’s journal. He found there technical drawings, calculations, a series of versions of da Vinci machines, worked through again and again, compulsively, exactingly. It provided little enough evidence of anything but the precision and determination B had demonstrated throughout his career. Bluffield was not surprised, but still, a little disappointed.</p>
<p>On his second read-through, Bluffield thought he had indeed found what he was looking for. On a page dominated by a drawing of an aero-screw, covered almost entirely by mathematical equations, a compulsive palimpsest, Bluffield read: ‘Report on the assassination of Theresa B by unknown forces.’ Bluffield looked for a continuation throughout the journal, but found nothing. The phrase itself was illuminating, revealing a high degree of paranoia; the seeming externalisation of guilt as outside agency; the ascribing of malign purpose in the word ‘assassination’; and once more, the desire to estrange and distance in the objective ‘report’. But was there a connection between the phrase and the drawings?</p>
<p><strong>Double constellations. </strong>In his essay ‘The Solar Anus’, Georges Bataille conjures images of circularity which are bound up both with elemental (natural) forces and with sexuality, figured as an excessive dream in which a man lying in bed with his female lover inhabits some kind of cosmological pattern of arousal: ‘trees bristle the ground with a vast quantity of flowered shafts raised up to the sun. [...] From the movement of the sea, uniform coitus of the earth with the moon, comes the polymorphous and organic coitus of the earth with the sun’.<a title="" href="#_edn4">[4]</a> The phallicism of masculine desire is arrayed against the liquidity of the feminine: ‘The sea, then, has played the role of the female organ that liquefies under the excitation of the penis’ (7). The essay encodes a growing <em>excitation</em>, with the sexual images becoming more extreme and violent, until the penultimate paragraph in which the narrator declares ‘I want to have my throat slashed while violating the girl to whom I will have been able to say: you are the night’ (9). Sexuality and violence (violation) are a crucial connection for Bataille, as a kind of overflow or excess (a key term) which countermand the imperatives of taboo that order and regulate work towards work and reason: ‘there is in nature and there subsists in man a movement which always exceeds the bounds, that can never be anything but partially reduced to order’.<a title="" href="#_edn5">[5]</a> This excess does not equate with transgression, however, for ‘<em>transgression does not deny the taboo but transcends it and completes it</em>’ (63). </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/empsun.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Poster for Spielberg&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/dreams-ransom-steven-spielbergs-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a>.</em></p>
<p>Transgression, paired with taboo, are organised into a social system that regulates expenditure and consumption. The sun, for Bataille, becomes what Fred Botting and Scott Wilson call ‘the supreme solar giver. Giving heat, light, life, the sun signifies the purest form of the gift, pouring out energy with no thought of return.’<a title="" href="#_edn6">[6]</a> This expenditure is the type and source of excess or overflow, and in ‘The Solar Anus’ is explicitly marked as violent: ‘The Sun exclusively love the Night and directs its luminous violence, its ignoble shaft, toward the earth, but finds it incapable of reaching the gaze or the night, even though the nocturnal territorial expanses head continuously toward the indecency of the solar ray’ (9). The Sun is the frustrated lover of the Night, the night which finds its own material image in the anus of the young woman. Defecation is (though the image of the volcano) opposed to, yet is analogous to the orgasmic expenditure of the sun’s ejaculation; love, screaming in the narrator’s throat, is ‘the filthy parody of the torrid and blinding sun’ (9). Parody, however, <em>connects</em>: ‘each thing is a parody of another’ (5). At the beginning of the essay, the narrator screams ‘I AM THE SUN’ (5), but the rest of the essay marks the inability of that sun/subject to achieve orgasm, remaining in a state of excitation. The Sun, the desiring male subject, desires the night, the anus of the young female lover, but ultimately the opposition between sun and anus, transcendent overflow and base materiality, collapses into the palindrome of the sun/anus: ‘the <em>solar annulus</em> is the intact anus of her body at eighteen years to which nothing sufficiently blinding can be compared except the sun, even though the <em>anus</em> is the <em>night</em>’ (9).</p>
<p><strong>The Tenth Circle</strong>. Hand in hand, B and Felicity, dressed in identical environment suits of bright white cloth, wandered into the Garden, a habitat of gymnosperms, ferns and bryophytes, located on Level 9. Kneeling by the side of a pathway was a small man in a white labcoat, digging with a hand-trowel in the tilth. Hearing them, he stood up, brushed his hands together to remove the earth, and waited for them, both hands extended in welcome – or benediction. ‘How are our friends?’ asked Felicity. ‘All is well,’ replied the man, in English with a light French accent. ‘Introductions,’ smiled Felicity. ‘B, this is Doctor Lacombe, the Director of our Institute of Xenogamy here at the facility. Doctor, this is B, a visitor.’ ‘A visitor?’ repeated Lacombe. ‘Are we all not visitors here, at the centre of the Earth?’ Lacombe moved to B’s side, interlocked his arm, and began to walk them through the Garden. ‘I think you must have come a long way to find us, my dear B. What is it that you want?’ ‘Certainty,’ said B.</p>
<p><strong>Apostles of the Prismatic Sun</strong>. In Ballard’s <em>Crash</em>, the terminal transgression occurs when the narrator ‘James Ballard’ sodomizes Vaughan, the renegade scientist. Ballard meets Vaughan for the last time in “the mezzanine lounge of the Oceanic Terminal [...] this house of glass, of flight and possibility”.<a title="" href="#_edn7">[7]</a> They then both take LSD, and embark on a drive through London. The city is transformed into a tableau of light, and this vision is accompanied by both physical intimacy and images of transcendence:</p>
<blockquote><p>Taking my eyes off the road, I clasped Vaughan’s hand in my own, trying to close my eyes to the fountain of light that poured through the windshield of the car from the vehicles approaching us. An armada of angelic creatures, each surrounded by an immense corona of light, was landing on the motorway either side of us. [...] With my right hand I parted his buttocks, feeling for the hot vent of his anus. For several minutes, as the cabin walls glowed and shifted, as if trying to take up the deformed geometry of the crashed cars outside, I laid my penis at the mouth of his rectum. [...] As I moved in and out of his rectum the light-borne vehicles soaring along the motorway drew the semen from my testicles. [...] Sitting together, we were washed by the light flowing in every direction across the landscape (21: 199; 202).</p></blockquote>
<p>The sun/anus is achieved through a consummation of the act of sodomy deferred in Bataille’s ‘The Solar Anus’, but this transcendence is only temporary. At the beginning of the next chapter, Ballard experiences a vision of a ‘retinal horde’, a veil of flies that returns him to the base material, the excremental: ‘Flies crawled across the oil-smeared windshield, vibrating against the glass. The chains of their bodies formed a blue veil between myself and the traffic moving along the motorway. I turned on the windshield wipers, but the blades swept through the flies without disturbing them. Vaughan lay back on the seat beside me, trousers around his knees. [...] The flies covered Vaughan’s face, hovering around his mouth and nostrils as if waiting for the rancid liquors distilled from the body of a corpse’ (22: 204). Transcendence, visions of angels and of light, collapse back into the pit. The excremental vision is also found in Ballard’s <em>The Drowned World </em>(1963), where London, transformed into a post-catastrophic lagoon, is drained: ‘Veils of scum draped from the criss-crossing telegraph wires and tilting neon signs, and a thin coating of silt cloaked the faces of the buildings, turned the once limpid beauty of the underwater city into a drained and festering sewer’.<a title="" href="#_edn8">[8]</a> For Ballard, beneath the visions of light there always lurks the materiality of shit.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/apollo_crash.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>Ocean’s Eleven. </strong>‘I want to know what is really happening’, said B. ‘Is this really happening?’ asked Lacombe. ‘Why, where do you think you are?’ ‘In Wonderland&#8230;’ said B, gazing at this primeval Garden folded deep within the Earth. ‘Dr Lacombe, will the visitors..?’ Lacombe smiled patiently. ‘Return your wife to you? Perhaps only if you do not look over your shoulder on the way back to the surface.’ Lacombe guided them through the Garden towards a portal, where he stopped, stood before B and took his hands. ‘I cannot tell you what you will find’, he said. ‘It may be the answer you seek. It may be a doorway into a very private hell. Do you wish to continue?’ B nodded slowly. ‘You are sure, I can see. Very well, my dear B. I envy you.’</p>
<p><strong>News from the Sun</strong>. ‘[I]t seems entirely reasonable to think that every now and then the energy of a whole generation comes to a head in a long fine flash, for reasons that nobody really understands at the time [....] And that, I think, was the handle – that sense of inevitable victory over the forces of Old and Evil. Not in any mean or military sense; we didn’t need that. Our energy would simply <em>prevail</em>. There was no point in fighting – on our side or theirs. We had all the momentum; we were riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave. So now, less than five years later, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West, and with the right kind of eyes you can almost <em>see</em> the high-water mark – that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back.’<a title="" href="#_edn9">[9]</a></p>
<p><strong>Majestic Twelve</strong>. ‘Come with me,’ Felicity said as she punched the code into the portal lock. As the door ascended in its frame, they entered an enormous space, like an aircraft hanger the size of a landing field. He looked behind him to see control booths and a large screen; before them, lights receded into the darkness. As they began to halo and evanesce, he looked up into the darkness of the roof space. Stars constellated the darkness, and as he watched, they began to move and congregate, patterning onto whorls and galaxies and spiral arms. The lights expanded, moved downwards. Time cooled. Amber, cobalt and scarlet balls floated above the apron, sentient, glowing. He watched as a large presence, dark light, extruded from the vault, extended downwards, and pulsed halfway along the runway. He looked down and saw his hands sparkle, flaked with gold, flickering with crystalline images of themselves, a diamantine body occupying the same space as himself. His clean, pure body rang with celestial song. Felicity smiled, her head Madonna-like, eyes burning with divine fire. He watched in wonder as angels began to drift down from the stars, their beauty a thousand suns. He raised his arms and began to ascend into the air, his body encased in a celestial coronation armour. He embraced the secret and benign inhabitants of the air, their love a star that filled him with white.</p>
<p><strong>Thirteen to Centaurus. </strong>In total, there were eleven manned Apollo missions ‘proper’. Apollo 7 to 10 were training and testing flights, two in Earth orbit, two in lunar orbit. Apollo 11, crewed by Neil Armstrong, ‘Buzz’ Aldrin and Michael Collins, were the first Apollo mission to land on the surface of the moon, in July 1969. Apollo 12 was crewed by Pete Conrad, Alan Bean and Richard Gordon, who, at the charismatic Conrad’s instigation, wore identical Hawaiian shirts and bought identical sports cars when training. Apollo 12’s Saturn V was struck by lightning – twice – on takeoff, but the crew managed to avoid aborting the mission. Al Bean subsequently left NASA and now paints highly colourful painting of lunar landscapes, incorporating actual moondust and pieces of his mission patches. Apollo 14’s Commander, Alan Shepherd, the only one of the original ‘Mercury Seven’ astronauts (commemorated by Tom Wolfe’s <em>The Right Stuff</em>) to command an Apollo mission, took a golf club with him and played on the lunar surface.<a title="" href="#_edn10">[10]</a> Apollo 17 was the last lunar mission, in 1972. Apollo 18-20 were cancelled due to budgetary constraints. Apollo 13’s mission nearly ended in disaster. An explosion aboard the craft on the way to the moon meant that the landing was aborted, and the lunar module used as a ‘life raft’ to get the crew back to Earth. </p>
<p>However, these would not have been the first casualties of the Apollo program. Apollo 1 (as it was later designated) never launched. Its crew, Virgil (Gus) Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee, were killed on the launch pad when a fire swept through the Command Module in a test situation. There are two plaques remaining on the launch pad where the disaster occurred. One reads: <em>LAUNCH COMPLEX 34, Friday, 27 January 1967, 1831 Hours. Dedicated to the living memory of the crew of the Apollo 1: USAF. Lt. Colonel Virgil I. Grissom, USAF. Lt. Colonel Edward H. White, II, U.S.N. Lt. Commander Roger B Chaffee. They gave their lives in service to their country in the ongoing exploration of humankind&#8217;s final frontier. Remember them not for how they died but for those ideals for which they lived</em>. </p>
<p>The other reads: <em>In memory of those who made the ultimate sacrifice so others could reach for the stars,</em> Ad astra per aspera, [<em>a rough road leads to the stars</em>] <em>God speed to the crew of Apollo 1</em>.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/astro_suicide.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>From the photographic series <a href="http://www.astronautsuicides.com">Astronaut Suicides</a> by Neil Dacosta.</em></p>
<p><strong>Storms.</strong> Doctor Bluffield set down the sheaf of case notes and walked to the large window of his office. As he stood and watched two nurses hurry across the afternoon furnace of the piazza, he realised the futility of his work with Patient B. B’s refusal to engage in discussion about the death of his wife, his refusal even to acknowledge it, indicated some deeper trauma. ‘He clearly feels a deep-seated guilt about the death of his wife,’ said Bluffield, ‘but I simply cannot reach him. Perhaps it is time to consider a more radical form of therapy.’ He turned and smiled at his female colleague, who was sitting in the Eames chair opposite his desk. ‘I know you’ve published on psycho-drama and role-play, Felicity. What is your clinical opinion about its possible effectiveness in patient B’s case?’</p>
<p><strong>Coda: Apollo 13</strong>. He woke up in his room at the Stardust. It was dark. He fell off the bed, groped to the bathroom and turned on the light. In the mirror he saw a shaven man, stubbled skull, naked, eyes a scorched blue. A straight razor had been dropped in the sink. He closed his eyes and pressed his hands together. Clearly he would find no answers in Las Vegas, nor in the desert. He would have to go to the launching grounds at Canaveral. Perhaps, among the gantries and the detritus of the Apollo program, he would find peace, and find her again.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/roulette_roulette2.jpg" alt="" /></p>
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<p><em>Now return to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/apollo-roulette-part-1">Part 1</a> and the supercharged moment when Brian Baker&#8217;s APOLLO ROULETTE all began!</em></strong></p>
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<div><strong>NOTES</strong></div>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref1">[1]</a> J.G. Ballard, ‘News from the Sun’, pp.1010-1036; ‘Memories of the Space Age’, pp.1037-1060; ‘Myths of the Near Future’, pp.1061-1084; <em>The Complete Short Stories</em> (London: Flamingo, 2001).<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref2">[2]</a> Gregory Stephenson, <em>Out of the Night and into the Dream: A Thematic Study of J.G. Ballard</em> (New York, Westport CT &amp; London: Greenwood Press, 1991), p.71.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref3">[3]</a> J.G. Ballard, <em>The Unlimited Dream Company</em> (1979) (London: Triad/Panther, 1981), ch.27, p.161.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref4">[4]</a> Georges Bataille, ‘The Solar Anus’, <em>Visions of Excess: Selected Writings, 1927-1939</em>, ed Allan Stoekl, trans. Allan Stoekl, Carl R. Lovitt and Donald M. Leslie Jr (Minneapolis: Minnesota University Press, 1985), p.7.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref5">[5]</a> Bataille, <em>Eroticism</em> (1957) trans. Mary Dalwood (New York &amp; London: Marion Boyars, 1987), p. 40.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref6">[6]</a> Fred Botting and Scott Wilson, <em>Bataille</em> (Houndsmills: Palgrave, 2001), p.96.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref7">[7]</a> J.G. Ballard, <em>Crash</em> (1973) (London: Vintage, 1995), ch.21, p.193.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref8">[8]</a> J.G. Ballard, <em>The Drowned World</em> (1963) (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1965), ch.10, p.119.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref9">[9]</a> Hunter S. Thompson, <em>Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream</em> (1971) (London: Flamingo, 1993), p.67; p.68.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref10">[10]</a> Tom Wolfe, <em>The Right Stuff</em>  (1980) (London: Picador, 1990).</p>
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		<title>Apollo Roulette: part 1</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/apollo-roulette-part-1</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jan 2012 02:29:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brian Baker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[alternate worlds]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[In this sequel to Brian Baker's Ian Fleming/J.G. Ballard mashup from 2009, Baker applies the method to desert imagery in Ballard's work. Finally, we are able to uncover the secret logic at play in the American 'nuclear state' - a deadly game of APOLLO ROULETTE!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballflem.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>APOLLO ROULETTE, PART 1</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>In this sequel to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iterative-architecture-a-ballardian-text">&#8216;Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text&#8217;</a>, an &#8216;auto-displacement&#8217; Ian Fleming/J.G. Ballard mashup, Brian Baker applies the method to desert imagery in Ballard&#8217;s work. </p>
<p>Finally, Baker uncovers the hidden logic at play in the American &#8216;nuclear state&#8217; &#8211; a deadly game of APOLLO ROULETTE!</p>
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<p><em>Tune into Ballardian.com for <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/apollo-roulette-part-2">Part 2</a>: the final thrilling instalment of Brian Baker&#8217;s Apollo Roulette!</em></strong></p>
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<p><strong>Double Zero Wheel. </strong>He clicked the cartridge into the chamber of the service revolver, carefully closed the cylinder, and placed the mouth of the barrel against his temple. What was it he had said to Markham? ‘I understand that double-O’s have a very short life expectancy.’ He wondered now how many of those deaths were suicides. Somehow the service revolver seemed right, for doing the decent thing. He had killed too many men with the Walther, and didn’t want to be a notch on his own gun.</p>
<p><strong>The Gernsback Continuum</strong>. At the beginning of Hunter S. Thompson’s <em>Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas</em> (1971), the narrator and his attorney are on the way to cover the ‘fabulous Mint 400’ in Las Vegas. The text famously begins: ‘We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold. I remember saying something like “I feel a bit lightheaded; maybe you should drive&#8230;” And suddenly there was a terrible roar all around us and the sky was full of what looked like huge bats, all swooping and screeching and diving around the car, which was going about a hundred miles an hour with the top down to Las Vegas’ (3). Thompson is driving along the former Route 66, now known as Interstate 15. To the west of Barstow is Edwards Air Force Base. Edwards was the site of the X-plane testing program in the 1950s, which eventually gave way to the ‘spam in a can’ astronautics of the Friendship, Mercury and Apollo programs. The men of Edwards Air Force Base, ‘folk heroes of our time’ according to Lyndon Johnson,<a title="" href="#_edn1">[1]</a> inhabited a variant of frontier masculinity appropriate to Edwards’s desert setting, and was exploited in Tom Wolfe’s <em>The Right Stuff</em> and its screen adaptation.</p>
<p>Thompson, driving east of Edwards towards Barstow, experiences an hallucination, a <em>fata morgana</em>, a common desert phenomenon. Brought on by the desert light and psychotropic drugs, Thompson hallucinates what William Gibson, in ‘The Gernsback Continuum’, would call ‘semiotic ghosts’, ‘semiotic phantoms, bits of deep cultural imagery that have split off and taken on a life of their own’.<a title="" href="#_edn2">[2]</a> In this story, the narrator encounters a vision of ‘the air thick with ships: giant wing-liners, little darting silver things [...], mile-long blimps, hovering dragonfly things that were gyrocopters [and] smooth silver shapes like beads of running mercury’ (8-9). He sees Tucson as ‘a dream Tucson thrown up out of the collective yearning of an era’ (9), ‘an idealized city that drew on <em>Metropolis</em> and <em>Things to Come</em>’ (8). Thompson sees not a fascist utopia, but bats; and not bats, but UFOs; and these UFOs are the semiotic phantoms of the American Space Program made manifest by a cocktail of narcotics and desert speed.</p>
<p><strong>One, Two, Three. </strong>No, not yet. He lowered the gun and placed it gently on the glass-topped table by his right hand, where it settled with a hard double click. His hand went automatically to the shaker and poured the last of the vodka martini, but he already felt nauseated by the two glasses he had downed before. Dutch courage? He shuddered. He really was finished if he needed help to pull the trigger. Some of his fellow agents, he knew, had descended into a whiskey-sodden fugue before the inevitable end had come, a danger to themselves and to others and their deaths ultimately something of a mercy. When the instrument begins to feel, he thought, it’s past time for the Service to hone the edge of a new blade.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hello_roulette.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>Algebras of chance. </strong>In <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-hello-america">Hello America</a>, the roulette wheel becomes the means by which the deranged President Manson decides which of the ruined cities of America to target with the remaining stockpile of cruise missiles and ICBMs. In the words of President Manson, Ballard diagnoses the ‘American dream’ of migration and aspiration as a gamble, with Las Vegas the latter-day cradle of the modern USA. ‘Europe doesn’t exist for me any more, Wayne – except that I see that it is waking now like an old dog, smelling us here and trying to get its snout into this new America I’ve built. It was a gamble, Wayne, a gamble with my own life. I put everything on the one spin of the wheel each of us is given, a small stack of dreams and hopes’ (153). Manson’s is a materialist vision, lacking the transcendent: even hopes and dreams are but small chips in an unwinnable game.</p>
<p><strong>Clouds. </strong>Doctor Bluffield stood at his office window and gazed across the piazza of the clinic, which opened towards the saucer-shaped water tower that blazed white in the southwestern sun. The clinic was a plate-glass spacecraft fallen among the green knolls of the science park. The sculpted gardens reflected the serenity of purpose of the bio-medical corporation under whose aegis the clinic operated. The clinic’s main building incorporated a heat-reflective skin which maintained a carefully-controlled temperate environment within. Outside, the heat was well over a hundred degrees, according to the monitor on Bluffield’s desk. In the piazza, by the fountain – an indulgence in this climate, as were the lawns – a man in a loose-fitting, white tracksuit was calmly proceeding though a T’ai Chi warm-down sequence,  like some kind of swaddled and articulated mannequin.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/roulette_roulette.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>Fata Morgana</strong>. Vermillion Sands is a desert resort that is the location of a sequence of short stories that were collected in the 1971 volume <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-vermilion-sands">Vermillion Sands</a>.<a title="" href="#_edn3">[3]</a> In the fantastical desert space of the resort and its outlying desert villas, Lagoon West and Lizard Key, glider pilots carve cloud formations into mobile sculpture, flying ‘sand rays’ are hunted akin to the Albatross in Coleridge’s ‘The Ancient Mariner’, and the pathologies of the resort’s inhabitants – movie stars, poets, glitterati – are made manifest. In ‘The Thousand Dreams of Stellavista’, a psychotropic house, in which a film star murdered her husband, ‘recalls’ these emotions and causes the relationship of the new inhabitants to disintegrate. In a sense, ‘Stellavista’ is a ghost story, a haunted-house narrative. The emotional ‘ghosts’ are technological revenants; the house itself takes on the psychosis of its owner as a kind of pathological prosthesis, and itself becomes murderous. The pathology of the male narrator also becomes aligned with the trauma encoded in the house’s psychoactive circuits and the phantasmal ‘presence’ of the <em>femme fatale</em>/ murderess, Gloria Tremayne. 99 Stellavista is a classic Ballardian pathologised technology that threatens but ‘beckons more and more persuasively from the margins of the technological landscape’.<a title="" href="#_edn4">[4]</a></p>
<p><strong>Two Tribes.</strong> In the morning B hired an open-topped Corvette Sting Ray and put the hiking gear in the trunk, using the Swiss passport and a sheaf of soft dollar bills he had won at blackjack two nights before. It certainly wasn&#8217;t baccarat at the Royale, but the sharp spike of adrenalin, even dressed in casual clothes among these holidaying Midwesterners, so anxious to lose their roll, as they called it, was gratifying. It was even something of a relief. If it wasn’t the pleasures of the roulette wheel in the warmth of a Mediterranean evening, at least it wasn&#8217;t sitting alone with a loaded revolver at his right hand. The heat was oppressive on Highway 15 as it spooled north from the city limits. The resort shrank like a discarded postcard in the rear-view mirror, and like those other desert cities, Phoenix and Reno, seemed as unreal as a <em>fata morgana</em> once left behind. Runnels of sweat slicked his white linen shirt to his back, and he had to blink away salty droplets behind the incognito of his glasses. The desert called to him, but the still-rational remainder of his mind worried that the Corvette might not prove reliable. He didn&#8217;t like the idea of buzzards and coyotes picking at his bones. It reminded him too much of what he did for the Service.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/vegas_roulette.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Image: ‘Las Vegas Club’ by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/light-painter-mojave-d-troy-paiva">Troy Paiva</a>. </em></p>
<p><strong>Synchronoclasmique</strong>. ‘The secret affinity between gambling and the desert: the intensity of gambling reinforced by the presence of the desert all around the town. The air-conditioned freshness of the gaming rooms, as against the radiant heat outside. The challenge of all the artificial lights to the violence of the sun’s rays. Nights of gambling sunlit on all sides; the glittering darkness of these rooms in the middle of the desert. Gambling itself is a desert form, inhuman, uncultured, initiatory, a challenge to the natural order of value, a crazed activity on the fringes of exchange. But it too has a strict limit and stops abruptly; its boundaries are exact, its passion knows no confusion. Neither the desert nor gambling are open areas; their spaces are finite and concentric, increasing in intensity toward the interior, toward a central point, be it the spirit of gambling or the heat of the desert – a privileged, immemorial space, where things lose their shadow, where money loses its value, and where the extreme rarity of the traces of what signals to us there leads men to seek the instantaneity of wealth.’<a title="" href="#_edn5">[5]</a></p>
<p><strong>Three Days of the Condor</strong>. He awoke in the passenger seat of the Corvette, parked under some scrub out of sight of the highway. He had tried to limit his water intake in order to preserve his supplies for his hike to Groom Lake, and had taken the salt tablets, but still he felt drained by the sun. The relative coolness of the evening revived him slightly as he climbed out of the automobile and retrieved his gear from the trunk. Night was falling over the Range like a soft rain. A bar of gold light at the horizon faded as he looked up at the enormous sky, the constellations seemingly close enough to touch. He had heard that other lights, other shooting stars, had been seen in the Tikaboo valley and by motorists on Route 375, but he dismissed these reports as black propaganda. Since the demise of the Sky Flash program, British involvement in advanced aeronautics had been limited to client status, and the Service would dearly have liked to obtain hard information about what research was being pursued at NAFR. His trespass would not be the first by a British agent, and he often wondered what side he was meant to be on. This intrusion, however, had its own agenda.</p>
<p><strong>Survival Kits. </strong>Throughout <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a> (1969), a collection of experimental short-story ‘condensed novels’, there are references to a group of items (photographs, documents, physical objects) called a ‘kit’: there are eleven in total.<a title="" href="#_edn6">[6]</a> Kits are also found in ‘News from the Sun’ and ‘Myths of the Near Future’. In ‘News from the Sun’, the kit is a ‘shrine’ left for the doctor Franklin by Slade, the would-be astronaut whom Franklin refused to allow on the space program on psychological grounds.  The kit consists of: a fragment of lunar rock; a photograph of Marion Franklin in the shower; a faded reproduction of Dali’s <em>Persistence of Memory</em>; a set of leucotomes; an emergency brain donor card (1016). The function of such a kit is made much more explicit in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time">‘Myths of the Near Future’</a>, where Sheppard suggests that the kit is a ‘machine, of a kind. A time-machine’ (1077). It consists of: ‘a framed reproduction of Magritte’s <em>The March of Summer</em>, a portable video-cassette projector, two tins of soup, a well-thumbed set of six <em>Kamera Klassic</em> magazines, a clutch of cassettes labelled <em>Elaine/Shower Stall I-XXV</em>, and a paperback selection of Marey’s <em>Chronograms</em>’ (1068).This ‘survival kit’ (‘of a special kind’) is quite typical in its references to Marey, Surrealist art, sexual experimentation or transgression, and visual technology. These are themselves condensed representations of key Ballardian icons and concerns: time, sex, vision.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/baudrillard_roulette.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>The Four Horsemen</strong>. It had been simple enough to evade the guards in their pick-up, though the warnings about the use of deadly force on the ‘Restricted Area’ signs had given him some pause. Trespass was one thing, but shooting dead an American serviceman, even an armed one, was something else entirely. He kept tramping in the cool desert air, his body responding as of old to exertion and deprivation. He felt the straps of the backpack on his shoulders, but the discomfort was familiar and welcome. The first fingers of dawn light were haloing the horizon off to his left, and so he had perhaps an hour until he needed to find a hide, from the sun and from surveillance. He wasn’t far from Groom Lake now, but would wait until tonight to try to penetrate the area proper. Until then, he would manage his body’s needs, and his thoughts.</p>
<p><strong>Signs of the mineral</strong>. ‘Why [...] are the deserts so fascinating? It is because you are delivered from all depth there – a brilliant, mobile, superficial neutrality, a challenge to meaning and profundity, a challenge to nature and culture, an outer hyperspace, with no origin, no reference points.’<a title="" href="#_edn7">[7]</a></p>
<p><strong>Space/Time Crisis. </strong>As he walked down the main staircase, Bluffield could see the man in white framed in the large windows that let polarised light into the atrium of the clinic. The man was a rather troubling patient, but there was little enough to distinguish him from either his fellow patients or the clinicians. Bluffield left the building by the large plate-glass doors and immediately began to perspire. He stepped across the paving to where the man went through his warm-down exercises.</p>
<p>‘How are you with muscle strains, Professor?’ asked the man. ‘Do they come under your area of expertise?’</p>
<p>‘I’m afraid not,’ said Bluffield.</p>
<p>‘So you can mend complicated machines,’ said the man, indicating his forehead suggestively, ’but not simple ones?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t really consider myself an engineer,’ said Bluffield.</p>
<p>‘The metaphysical rather than the material?’ asked the man. ‘Well, never mind, I’ll persevere.’ He continued with his slow, graceful articulations.</p>
<p>‘Two o’clock,’ said Bluffield brusquely, somewhat nettled by the man’s self-possession. He resumed his walk across to the car park. The water tower cast a dark shadow in the morning light. The fronds of the palms, moving in the slight breeze, whispered some secret arboreal language to the desert air.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/white_sands.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Image: Atomic fireball, Trinity test, White Sands, 1945.</em></p>
<p><strong>Alamagordo.</strong> ‘The first atomic-bomb test against the backdrop of White Sands, the pale blue backcloth of the mountains and hundreds of miles of white sand – the blinding artificial light of the bomb against the blinding light of the ground.’<a title="" href="#_edn8">[8]</a></p>
<p><strong>Saturn V.</strong> His chest screamed as he ran in ballooning strides down the scree slope, a tiny avalanche of dust and gravel ploughing ahead of him. The hammering blades of the helicopter broke waves of pulverizing sound upon his head as he dashed sideways out of the searchlight beam, a jack-rabbit fleeing the hunter’s gun. He felt he was being flushed towards a trap, but exhaustion and terror dulled his reactions. Time became a chain of moments as he hopped from rock to rock, scuttled from brush to brush in a vain attempt to deceive his pursuers. He ran up a cleft in the rocks, a small island on the desert floor, hoping for some crevice into which he could push himself, some tunnel into which he could bolt. As he jumped down the other side, he saw several guards standing in the beams of their pick-ups, and he knew the chase was over. He stumbled towards them, heaving for air, and then fell to his knees. After a few seconds, he found a small, scratchy voice. ‘Where are you going to take me?’ he asked. A man in a dark suit came forward through the blinding beams of light, offering a hand to help him onto his feet. ‘We’re going to take you to our leader,’ he said, smiling.</p>
<p><strong>A simultaneous structure</strong>. In the 1971 film <em>The Andromeda Strain</em>, directed by Robert Wise, a ‘crystalline’ alien virus lands in the American desert attached to a meteorite, and causes catastrophic effects on the human circulatory system, The focus of the narrative is to find a solution for this virus through scientific means: by understanding why a very young baby and an alcoholic old man did not fall victim to the virus that devastated a small desert town. A group of scientists descend 5 ‘biologically cleaner’ underground levels of a top-secret base until they arrive at a secure and sterile environment in which to study the alien life form. This base is located at Lake Mead, Nevada, south-east of Las Vegas and on the opposite point of the compass to the Groom Lake testing grounds. Its location places the base in a clear relation to both underground nuclear missile silos and secure Cold War ‘bunkers’ used to protect military chains of command in the event of a nuclear war. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/andromeda_roulette.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Still from The Andromeda Strain (dir: Robert Wise, 1971).</em></p>
<p>The security of biological hygiene is short lived in <em>The Andromeda Strain</em>, however: the virus also corrodes the flexible seals that close off ‘secure’ spaces. It is not by human agency that the virus is rendered harmless: it mutates into a non-lethal form, and it is the <em>failure</em> to ‘destroy’ the virus by a nuclear detonation (that would have caused exponential mutation and growth and widespread dissemination of the virus) that is the major human achievement therein. <em>The Andromeda Strain</em> is a diagnostic text for Cold War science fiction in its discourses of hygiene and security, and its near-phobic coding of the alien as biological other. In Kubrick’s <em>Dr Strangelove </em>(1964), the insane SAC General Jack D. Ripper’s paranoia migrates from Reds-under-the-bed rhetoric to phobias about his own body: he avoids fluoridated water (and sexual orgasm) as he is concerned to protect the integrity of his own ‘precious bodily fluids’ from contamination. This discourse informs <em>The Andromeda Strain</em>, as it does Ballard’s <em>Hello America </em>(1981), where the (again, insane) ‘President’ Charles Manson reveals to the protagonist Wayne his use of the remaining American nuclear stockpile after an environmental catastrophe has rendered the USA half desert, half jungle:</p>
<blockquote><p>‘I had to take them out, Wayne, there was a threat of plague in the east. I used the old cruise missiles. Before his breakdown my partner renovated the warheads and guidance systems. They’re slow but reliable, like homing pigeons going back to a hot supper. Think of it as a necessary prophylactic measure.’<a title="" href="#_edn9">[9]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The ‘plague’ is the threat of the eastern seaboard of North America being re-colonised from Europe: the discourses of infection and ‘cure’ are deployed to rationalise the destruction of a threat of invasion.</p>
<p><strong>Six of One. </strong>The dark-suited man offered little in the way of conversation as they sped along Groom Lake Road in the pick-up, but his body language was unthreatening, even friendly. The other guards had gone about their business, leaving him alone with the suited man, although he had been asked, politely, to hand over the Walther. The police-band radio squawked occasionally on the dash, but there seemed little else going on in the Range. The sun was coming up behind and to the left of them, and the desert was emerging from the night in grey and blue and ochre. The pick-up slowed as it approached what seemed to be an abandoned desert diner, a dusty roadside shack with wooden porch and lettering on the roof, an old Burma-Shave sign out front, and long dark shadows painted across the blacktop. Parked at an angle to the porch was a clean, black government-issue Cadillac, the kind of car that Agency officers drove, not without a sense of irony, around Langley. As they pulled up in a volume of dust, he wondered who the driver could be.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/memories_roulette.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Ballard&#8217;s short-story collection ‘Memories of the Space Age’ (1988), with Ernst&#8217;s &#8216;Europe After the Rain&#8217; on the cover.</em></p>
<p><strong>L’Amerique sidereal</strong>. The military-industrial complex, a phrase coined by President Eisenhower in a jeremiad delivered on his leaving office, is crucial to the post-war economy of Southern California. According to Dale Carter:</p>
<blockquote><p>Simultaneously, by transferring over $17.5 billion to the southern and western United States between Fiscal years 1962 and 1969, the space agency’s budget made a proportionally greater contribution to what was ultimately the more painful mechanism, not only of the Rocket State’s growth but also of its eventual succession. The contribution itself had two distinct yet related dimensions. On the one hand, the more than $13 billion worth of prime contracts and subcontracts which initiated the rapid growth of the Cape Canaveral region and secured the prosperity of the Houston and Los Angeles industry and commerce during the 1960s indirectly helped elevate new generations of Florida real estate speculators, California construction firms, and other Sunbelt entrepreneurs and financiers: a new community  of interest born of the Vietnam war boom whose relative independence from the power elite’s east coast operational core would allow them to ride out the recessions of the early 1970s and underwrite the rise of the New Right during the rest of the decade. </p>
<p>On the other hand, vast prime contracts awarded to companies like Boeing and North American Rockwell by NASA during the 1960s directly fuelled corporate giants which, while more closely aligned with the Republican establishment or pro-military Democrats than with the New Right’s highest circles, were nevertheless integral to Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980 (234-5)</p></blockquote>
<p>The American ‘rocket state’, in which the space program (and especially Apollo) acts as the spectacle element in the economic system of the Cold War, is most in evidence in the prosperity of Southern California and Florida, both critical sites for Ballard’s short fictions.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">***</p>
<p><strong>Now: Zero. </strong>On an American roulette wheel, there are 36 numbers, 18 red and 18 black, from 1 to 36. There are also two green sections of the wheel: Zero (0) and Double Zero (00). Both pay the house.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">***</p>
<p><strong>Seven Days to Noon</strong>. Strangely, the dark-suited man used some kind of electronic card-reader and keypad to open the door of the diner, which led directly down a short flight of steps. He blinked in the bright overheads as he took in a modern institutional canteen, in brushed steel, white melamine and glass. Several men, Special Agents by the cut of their jackets, were collecting food at a self-service counter, while others sipped coffee, chatted or scanned documents at an archipelago of small tables. At one, a tall chestnut-haired woman in a midnight-blue trouser suit stood up and faced them, as the dark-suited man guided him by the elbow to her table. Now he knew he the driver was. ‘Felicity Vespertine,’ he said, smiling. ‘Why are you here?’ ‘B,’ she said warmly, clasping his hand firmly and pulling him toward her, kissing him on both cheeks. ‘Howard,’ she said to his companion, could you grab a couple of coffees for us before you go, and a sandwich? B here looks famished.’ ‘I think the word you’re looking for, Felicity,’ said B, ‘is finished.’</p>
<p><strong>Macrocosmic Null-X</strong>. In <em>Hello America</em>, the young protagonist Wayne finds himself, towards the end of the narrative, in a mocked-up ‘War Room’ at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, in which the deranged President Manson spins a roulette wheel to determine which ‘infected’ North American city will be targeted by what remains of the Cold War nuclear arsenal. Reluctantly, Wayne throws:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>Zero</em>.</p>
<p>Wayne watched the ball circle the illuminated bowl, safe and defused in its empty niche. No city was marked against it!</p>
<p>With relief he blurted: ‘Mr President, there’s nothing there, no city – ’</p>
<p>Manson laughed affably, the chuckle of a conjuror who has just deceived a small child.</p>
<p>‘Zero pays the house, Wayne.&#8217; (215-6)</p></blockquote>
<p>In his article ‘&#8221;Zero Pays the House&#8221;: The Las Vegas Novel and Atomic Roulette’, Ken Cooper suggests that Las Vegas and ‘the bomb’ are inextricably intertwined, not only by the city’s proximity to the Nevada testing grounds, but through metaphor: ‘<em>everyone</em> is a subject of the nuclear state; we are all in the same casino. So, to extend the metaphor, How do we get out of the casino when we’re tired of playing atomic roulette?’<a title="" href="#_edn10">[10]</a> The ‘game’ of MAD is a game of chance, but all outcomes are ultimately that of defeat. Wayne in <em>Hello America</em>, however,<em> </em>flees the city by ‘Sunlight Flier’, a fleet of crystalline human-powered aircraft that provide an irresistibly surrealist gloss on Ballard’s motif of flight as transcendence. The dream of Las Vegas inhabited by Wayne, that of a ‘past America [and] city of antique gamblers’ (236), is itself the final victim of the logic of the Cold War.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/vermilion_roulette.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><strong>Vapours.</strong> Patient B had arrived at the clinic in Vermillion Sands some three months ago, after a long convalescence in Geneva. The Swiss clinicians had performed exemplary work on B’s physical injuries – on cursory examination, one would hardly notice the fractured tibia, cracked hip, two broken patellas and contusions around sternum and ribcage – but B’s physical condition was of less concern to Bluffield than the psychological. B was clearly a highly intelligent individual, but his strongly practical cast of mind caused him to disengage from Bluffield’s approaches, or even reject them outright. B had no interest in the problem, it seemed, no insight into his own psychological processes, and Bluffield had failed to interest his patient intellectually in the clinical models at work. B seemed content to live in a quotidian world of regular exercise and small-scale concerns. To explain that, Bluffield knew, there was no need for recourse to deep theoretical structures.</p>
<p><strong>Helios</strong>. Apollo, the Greek and Roman god of the arts, but also of rationality and architecture, became increasingly identified with Helios, the sun god, in Hellenic times. Why is Apollo, the sun-deity, named for the NASA <em>moon</em> programme? Perhaps the reason is that Apollo is patron of the arts <em>and</em> of philosophy, of music (of the spheres) and science. Apollo is also an oracular god, implicitly a deity of <em>what is to come</em>. More troublingly, perhaps, Apollo was the centre of a cult of masculine youth. With goddesses Artemis/ Selene more properly identified with the moon, is the NASA Apollo program a conquering, or erasure, of the cosmologically feminine?</p>
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<p><em>Tune into Ballardian.com for <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/apollo-roulette-part-2">Part 2</a>: the final thrilling instalment of Brian Baker&#8217;s APOLLO ROULETTE!</em></strong></p>
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<div><strong>NOTES</strong></div>
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<p><a title="" href="#_ednref1">[1]</a> Dale Carter, <em>The Final Frontier: The Rise and Fall of the American rocket State</em> (London: Verso, 1988), p. 153<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref2">[2]</a> William Gibson, ‘The Gernsback Continuum’, <em>Mirrorshades: The Cyberpunk Anthology</em>, ed. Bruce Sterling (London: Paladin, 1988), pp.1-11 (p.7).<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref3">[3]</a> J.G. Ballard, <em>Vermillion Sands</em> (1971) (London: Phoenix, 1992).<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref4">[4]</a> J.G. Ballard, ‘Introduction’ to <em>Crash</em> (1973) (London: Vintage, 1995), unpaginated.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref5">[5]</a> Jean Baudrillard, <em>America</em>, (1986) (London: Verso, 2010), pp.137-8.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref6">[6]</a> J.G. Ballard, <em>The Atrocity Exhibition</em> (1969) (London: Harper Perennial, 2006).<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref7">[7]</a> Baudrillard, <em>America</em>, p.133.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref8">[8]</a> Baudrillard, <em>America</em>, p.4.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref9">[9]</a> JG Ballard, <em>Hello America</em> (1981) (London: Flamingo, 1993), ch.20, p.154.<br />
<a title="" href="#_ednref10">[10]</a> Ken Cooper, ‘”Zero Pays the House”: The Las Vegas Novel and Atomic Roulette’, <em>Contemporary Literature </em>33:3, Fall 1992, 528-544(p.534)</p>
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		<title>&#8220;Ambiguous aims&#8221;: a review of Crash: Homage to J.G. Ballard [NSFW]</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ambiguous-aims-a-review-of-crash-homage-to-j-g-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ambiguous-aims-a-review-of-crash-homage-to-j-g-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Mar 2010 07:19:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ben Austwick</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andy Warhol]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[celebrity culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media landscape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nuclear war]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Salvador Dali]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Ballard's writing has a strong connection to visual art. It informed his work and led to him befriending some of the leading artists of his time, while in turn his work has influenced today's crop. As Ben Austwick reports, the exhibition Crash: Homage to J.G. Ballard represent these diverse strands in a haphazard, yet always interesting fashion.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_mcewen.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Adam McEwen. Honda Teen Facial, 2010. Boeing 747 undercarriage. Approximately: 137 13/16 x 118 1/8 x 71 11/16 inches (350 x 300 x 182 cm).</em></p>
<p>JG Ballard&#8217;s writing has <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/category/visual-art">a strong connection to visual art</a>, from surrealism to Pop. It informed his work and led to him befriending some of the leading artists of his time, while in turn his work has been an influence on today&#8217;s crop. The <a href="http://www.gagosian.com/exhibitions/2010-02-11_crash">Crash: Homage to J.G. Ballard</a> at the London Gagosian attempts to represent these diverse strands. It&#8217;s a timely exhibition, organised in the wake of Ballard&#8217;s death but a long time coming given his growing influence over the last few years. Works have been sourced to the best abilities of a private if respected gallery, explaining a haphazard exhibition that, although at times stretching the definition of its remit, always holds interest.</p>
<p>The first item on entrance is Adam McEwen&#8217;s &#8220;Honda Teen Facial&#8221;, an imposing Boeing 747 undercarriage that summons half-remembered, grainy footage of the Lockerbie bombing, or more appropriately Ballard&#8217;s short story The Air Disaster. McEwen&#8217;s aims are ambiguous. In an aerospace museum, this piece would mean something quite different, but in connection with Ballard it can only mean violence and death. This simple juxtaposition, summoning connections that aren&#8217;t necessarily there, is reminiscent of some of Ballard&#8217;s earlier writing and was also a mainstay of the surrealists, some of whose work is in an easily-missed room to the left.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_bellmer.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Hans Bellmer. Story of the Eye, 1946. Etching, red ink and pencil on paper. 12 x 9 3/4 inches (30.5 x 24.8 cm).</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_currin.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>John Currin. Rotterdam, 2006. Oil on canvas. 28 x 36 inches (71.1 x 91.4 cm).</em></p>
<p>Salvador Dali, Man Ray and Hans Bellmer are represented, each with rather underwhelming works that belie the Gagosian&#8217;s limited pulling power. Dali&#8217;s pencil drawing of a head with a lobster holding a sewing machine on top is self-derivative as only Dali can be. Unsurprisingly, Bellmer&#8217;s drawings exhibit a twisted sexuality that is cringeworthy yet fascinating. His illustration for Bataille&#8217;s The Story of the Eye (itself a work of displaced sexuality with obvious Ballardian resonances) depicts the pucker of a lady&#8217;s anus, acting like a magnet to the eye. While Ballard&#8217;s love of surrealism excuses Bellmer, John Currin&#8217;s &#8220;Rotterdam&#8221;, a contemporary painting of a sex act copied from a pornographic magazine, is not only irrelevant but misrepresentative, suggesting the curators have taken inspiration from false media imagery surrounding the author.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/chem_project.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Detail from Ballard’s &#8220;Project for a new novel&#8221; (1958).</em></p>
<p>There is a suggestion that this odd little room is meant to be a look into Ballard&#8217;s psyche, and one of the most interesting works is the writer&#8217;s own &#8220;Project for a New Novel&#8221;, a collage of photocopies from the pages of Chemistry and Industry magazine, where <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballards-experiment-in-chemical-living">Ballard worked briefly</a> after leaving Cambridge University. The yellowed pieces of text deserve academic scrutiny but fall short compared to the more rounded works around them. They feel unfinished, a prototype for later work, which in a way, of course, they are. Next to them is a simple Man Ray photograph of a woman, different from his more famous manipulated precursors of filmic special effects. The photo is uncanny in its similarity to an often reproduced photo of Ballard&#8217;s dead wife Helen. Perhaps I&#8217;m also making unnecessary juxtapositions, but it is an otherwise baffling edition to the exhibition, though quite possibly the only Man Ray the curator could get hold of.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_chapman.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>LEFT: Chris Foss&#8217;s artwork for the cover of Ballard&#8217;s Crash (Panther, 1975). RIGHT: Dinos &#038; Jake Chapman. Bang, Wallop. By J and D Ballard, 2010. Book: 7 3/4 x 5 x 3/4 inches (19.4 x 12.8 x 2.2 cm.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_greaud.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" class="picleft" /> <em>LEFT: Louis Gréaud. The Future, 2009. Oil on canvas. 57 x 41 inches framed (145 x 104 cm).</em> </p>
<p>Other rooms aren&#8217;t as themed, revealing an eclectic and extensive exhibition that can be hard to take in, with its almost random sensory overload. Some of the least successful works are the ones most obviously inspired by Ballard. Loris Gréaud&#8217;s &#8220;The Future&#8221; is a canvas displaying painted text of Ballard&#8217;s famous equation &#8220;sex x technology = the future&#8221;, along with a reproduction of his signature. It is an uninteresting work that buys into Ballard&#8217;s cachet with little effort. Another piece of text painted onto a canvas, Ed Ruscha&#8217;s &#8220;Fountain of Crystal&#8221;, which reads &#8220;A Fountain of Spraying Crystal Erupted Around Them&#8221; vies with it for blandness. The Chapman Brothers&#8217; manipulated Ballard texts, &#8220;Bang, Wallop. By J&#038;D Ballard&#8221;, a stack of fake paperback books on sale for a tempting but ultimately mercenary 25 quid, at least inject a bit of disrespectful humour, despite a familiar shallowness of thought. Who knows, though &#8212; maybe there is something hidden in their exhausting pages of random sentences.</p>
<p>Of the famous contemporary British artists on display, the divisive Damien Hirst is most successful. &#8220;When Logics Die&#8221;, a metal table covered in surgical instruments overlooked by glossy photographs of medical procedures, is both a nod to Ballard&#8217;s experiences as a medical student and a simplified expression of the connection between technology and flesh that Ballard found so philosophically interesting and that Hirst finds so rewarding visually. Turner Prize runner up Roger Hiorn is represented by an engine coated in his trademark copper sulphate crystals, which inevitably reminds of the more famous &#8220;Seizure&#8221;, an entire council flat given the same treatment.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_mccarthy.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Paul McCarthy. Mechanical Pig, 2003-2005. Silicone, platinum, fiberglass, metal and electrical components 40 x 58 x 62 inches (101.6 x 147.3 x 157.5 cm).</em></p>
<p>Works with an, at-best, tangential connection to Ballard stand out, foremost being Paul McCarthy&#8217;s &#8220;Mechanical Pig&#8221;, an astonishingly life-like plastic sow cruelly wired up to machinery, twitching and heaving in a tortured coma. This freakshow attraction goes beyond sensationalism to bring us face to face with our mechanised use of livestock, and is a great example of contemporary art&#8217;s relationship with impact advertising. I was mesmerised by its laboured breaths, each one threatening to be its last. In the same room, a strange, ramshackle structure of untreated timber and plywood juts from a wall. Accessed through an innocuous but incongruously aged door in the adjacent room, Mike Nelson&#8217;s &#8220;Preface to the 2004 Edition (Triple Bluff Canyon)&#8221; is a replica of a public room, a theatre lobby perhaps, its expert, dusty detail indistinguishable from the forgotten spaces it draws inspiration from. Like German artist Gregor Schneider, who creates replicas of the anonymous cellars of his suburban childhood, Nelson&#8217;s installation is eerie and unsettling. The familiar is made unfamiliar and we are inevitably reminded of fiction, ghost stories and horror films, finishing Nelson&#8217;s artwork ourselves. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_nelson.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Mike Nelson. Preface to the 2004 Edition (Triple Bluff Canyon), 2004. Film booth. Dimensions variable.</em></p>
<p>These two works are the most immediate in the exhibition and rightly stand out, but Crash&#8217;s real triumph is the handful of pieces that marry both a deep, unequivocal connection with Ballard and artistic brilliance. Inevitably some are by well-known names, but there are a couple of surprises. Easily missed is Malcolm Morley&#8217;s &#8220;The Age of Catastrophe&#8221;, an oil painting of a sunny, Mediterranean harbour overlaid by a plummeting aeroplane and a submarine suspended from an abstract frame. Chaotic and complex, the painting&#8217;s creation date of 1976 is important, suggesting a fascination with WWII&#8217;s long-lasting, violent psychological presence &#8212; familiar to any reader of Ballard.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_dean.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Tacita Dean. Teignmouth Electron, Cayman Brac (Ballard), 1999. Color photograph. 44 1/8 x 51 3/16 inches framed (112 x 130 cm).</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_holdsworth.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Dan Holdsworth. Untitled (Autopia), 1998. Chromogenic print. Diptych: 41 7/8 x 52 3/16 inches each (106.5 x 132.6 cm). </em></p>
<p>Photography is well represented. Tacita Dean&#8217;s &#8220;Teignmouth Electron, Cayman Brac (Ballard)&#8221;, where an abandoned scientific concrete structure barely reveals itself through lush trees, provides a perfect visual accompaniment to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a> or <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-rushing-to-paradise">Rushing to Paradise</a>. Dan Holdsworth&#8217;s photos of empty, night-time motorways directly and effectively channel one of Ballard&#8217;s most familiar obsessions. But it is the in moving image that Ballard&#8217;s vision really comes to life. Jane and Louise Wilson&#8217;s DVD installation, &#8220;Proton, Energy, Blizzard&#8221;, with its footage of a rusting and seemingly abandoned Soviet rocket installation that nevertheless clanks and hums with mechanical life, is an hypnotic film that posits an answer to the perplexing problem of translating Ballard&#8217;s work to film. Stripped of narrative, this purely visual film manages to convey the awesome majesty of failed, large-scale scientific endeavour, and the mundane machinery behind nuclear annihilation, as well as our pathetic attempts to explore the universe. It reminded me of the human insignificance and terrible entropy so beautifully explored in one of my favourite Ballard stories, &#8220;The Voices of Time&#8221;.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_paolozzi.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /> </p>
<p><em>Eduardo Paolozzi. Two prints from the General Dynamic F.U.N. series (1970). 50 plates. 20 frames: approx. 12 x 18 1/8 inches each (30.5 x 46 cm).</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.studio-international.co.uk/archive/Paolozzi-1971-182.asp">Eduardo Paolozzi</a>&#8216;s two sets of screen prints, &#8220;General Dynamic F.U.N.&#8221; and &#8220;Zero Energy Experiment Pile (Z.E.E.P.)&#8221;, go further, dealing with the fundamental philosophical ideas behind Ballard&#8217;s work. Paolozzi was an influence on a youthful Ballard and later a mentor and friend, and his prints are both dazzlingly original and directly tuned to Ballard&#8217;s vision. In an overwhelming array of brightly coloured pop-culture images taken from space-exploration books, boys&#8217; comics and Jane&#8217;s weaponry textbooks, images of missiles, bombs, rockets, tanks and submarines &#8212; along with diagrams, motifs and cutaway illustrations &#8212; are infused with a gaudy joy at odds with the often frightening technology they depict. The light-speed rate of change in the 60s, which Ballard cannily emphasised as technological and communications based, as opposed to more commonly referenced societal critiques, is expressed brilliantly by Paolozzi, who cleverly adds a sheen of psychedelic colour &#8212; the filter through which society saw, and dealt with, this technological future shock.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/gagosian_warhol.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Gagosian exhibition" /></p>
<p><em>Andy Warhol. Green Disaster (Green Disaster Twice), 1963. Acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas. 48 x 41 3/4 inches (121.9 x 106 cm).</em></p>
<p>A more familiar artist from this period is Andy Warhol, who Ballard believed was one of the few Pop artists to stand the test of time. Warhol&#8217;s &#8220;Green Disaster (Green Disaster Twice)&#8221; is an almost perfect depiction of the changes in communication in the 60s &#8211; the immediacy, sensationalism and brutality. The rapid deployment of mass visual entertainment in television, coupled with existential attitudes to morality brought about by WWII, combined to produce a bloody but newly distanced fascination with death, tempered with the fetishisation of celebrity explored by Ballard in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">The Atrocity Exhibition</a> and, later, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a>. The piece is understated and easily overlooked. A green monochrome print featuring repeat images of a car crash complete with supine victim, it presents these ideas in their very simplest terms and is devastatingly effective. The celebrity side of the equation is of course represented by Warhol himself, the first artist to present himself as a product, churning out signed works in his Factory. This aspect of Warhol is often dismissed as egotistical, money grubbing, but that viewpoint ignores his nuanced reflection of the world he existed in. Ballard wrote about celebrity while being scared of it himself; Warhol embraced this new phenomenon, revelling in it.</p>
<p>It is Warhol&#8217;s brilliant translation of the changes around him that connects him to Ballard and makes &#8220;Green Disaster (Green Disaster Twice)&#8221; the most important work in the exhibition. Both men represent a mature artistic culture that distanced itself from the political hectoring of pre-WWII art, and absorbed and translated a world of rapid change with cool detachment. The exhibition&#8217;s motorways, cars, aircraft and sexual imagery are only superficially Ballard. Tucked away on a back wall, in a small and at first insignificant-looking work, is where you find the essence of Ballard&#8217;s work presented succinctly by another twentieth-century great.</p>
<p><em>Many thanks to Mike Bonsall for his help with this review. </em></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>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Aug 2009 11:44:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/?p=1857</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What's the connection between J.G. Ballard, Hakim Bey and Fredric Jameson? Tracking Ballard's surreal visions of nuclear conflict to Ground Zero in the Pacific, the paper maps his peculiar, irradiated sense of “affirmative dystopias", a template for his more enduring urban works (famously, Crash) that, finally, intersects in striking ways with the writings of Bey and Jameson.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong><a href="http://www.simonsellars.com">Simon Sellars</a></strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_terminal.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The Terminal Beach. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.brookings.edu/projects/archive/nucweapons/runit.aspx">Brookings</a>: &#8220;Beneath this concrete dome on Runit Island (part of Enewetak Atoll), built between 1977 and 1980 at a cost of about $239 million, lie 111,000 cubic yards (84,927 cubic meters) or radioactive soil and debris from Bikini and Rongelap atolls. The dome covers the 30-foot (9 meter) deep, 350-foot (107 meter) wide crated created by the May 5, 1958, Cactus test. Note the people atop the dome&#8221;.</em></p>
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<p><em>This essay was first published in <a href="http://colloquy.monash.edu.au/issue017">Colloquy no. 17</a>, August 2009, pp. 44-61. Reprinted with permission.</em></p>
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<p>One of the more enduring misconceptions surrounding the work of J.G. Ballard is that it operates in the classical dystopian narrative mode, <a href="#1">[1]</a> supposedly mining pessimism, repression and the negativity of a post-industrial age. Robert Collins’s commentary is typical, placing Ballard’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a> (1973) at number three in a list of &#8220;the top 10 dystopian novels&#8221;:</p>
<blockquote><p>Fictional dystopias are almost always cautionary tales – warnings of where our political, cultural and social surroundings are taking us. The novels [on this list] share common motifs: designer drugs, mass entertainment, brutality, technology, the suppression of the individual by an all-powerful state – classic preoccupations of dystopian fiction. These novels picture the worst because, as Swift demonstrated in his original cautionary tale, Gulliver’s Travels, re-inventing the present is sometimes the only way to see how bad things already are. <a href="#2">[2]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>However, to locate Ballard within this literary tradition is a fundamental misreading. The &#8220;state,&#8221; for example, barely features in his writing, and politicians or any kind of external authority are almost wholly absent. This is amplified to comical proportions when the police make a token appearance in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-high-rise">High-Rise</a> (1975), which depicts the breakdown of the social order in a high-tech apartment block. At first suspicious about the building’s car park, with its damaged vehicles and debris thrown from balconies, they are quickly turned away by a group of residents, who set about &#8220;pacifying the policemen, reassuring them that everything was in order, despite the garbage and broken bottles scattered around the building&#8221;; <a href="#3">[3]</a> the police duly leave and are never seen again, even as the high-rise descends further into anarchy. The residents prefer to remain within their &#8220;dystopia,&#8221; rather than reacting against it, embracing the &#8220;brutality and technology&#8221; that Collins suggests they should be reacting against – there is no external &#8220;Big Brother&#8221; forcing their hand. For the residents:</p>
<blockquote><p>even the run-down nature of the high-rise was a model of the world into which the future was carrying them, a landscape beyond technology where everything was either derelict or, more ambiguously, recombined in unexpected but more meaningful ways. <a href="#4">[4]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This dynamic is even more apparent in the subset of &#8220;Pacific fictions&#8221; in Ballard’s oeuvre, stories set on abandoned Pacific islands where there is no need to even allude to the presence of the State, for these are stateless worlds – &#8220;between owners.&#8221; They are neither straight utopia nor classical dystopia, but an occupant of the imaginative space between: what might be termed &#8220;affirmative dystopias,&#8221; which reach similar conclusions as to the question of how to &#8220;revive the spirit of utopia&#8221; that Fredric Jameson does in his exhaustive study, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FArchaeologies-Future-Desire-Science-Fictions%2Fdp%2F1844675386%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1251015561%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. As such, they provide an enduring template for Ballard’s more well-known urban works, of which Crash is the exemplar.</p>
<p>Ballard’s fascination with the Pacific stems from his childhood in Shanghai, where he was born and where he lived until he was 16. His semi-autobiographical novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a> (1984) draws on his experiences as an internee in the Lunghua civilian camp, and it ends with Jim (the character based on the young Ballard) witnessing the atomic flash over Nagasaki, enabling a potent metaphor for the post-war era that Ballard would consistently return to throughout his career:</p>
<blockquote><p>The B-29s which bombed the airfield beside Lunghua Camp, near Shanghai, where I was interned during the Second World War, had reportedly flown from Guam. Pacific Islands, with their silent airstrips among the palm trees, Wake Island above all, have a potent magic for me. The runways that cross these little atolls, now mostly abandoned, seem to represent extreme states of nostalgia and possibility, doorways into another continuum. <a href="#5">[5]</a></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/wake_boom.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Wake Island" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Wake Island. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/30248805@N05/2943989456">USMCFLYR</a>: &#8220;A boom from a KC-135 Stratotanker over Wake Island&#8221;.</em></p>
<p>In Ballard’s short story &#8220;My Dream of Flying to Wake Island&#8221; (1974), he returns to these &#8220;extreme states of possibility,&#8221; which overwhelm the account. The story remains in perpetual fugue – a concrete narrative arc never coalesces, and there is perpetual yearning enveloping the central character, Melville, a former astronaut who flew a solitary mission in space, during which he suffered a mental breakdown broadcast live to millions of viewers on Earth. Humiliated, he resolves to fly to remote Wake, fascinated by the island’s geographical isolation and &#8220;psychological reduction&#8221; (deriving from its real-world role as a former World War Two military base; Wake has never had a permanent indigenous population), which mirrors his own. For Melville, Wake Island is a portal. Referring to photographs of the military airstrip, he enthuses: &#8220;‘Look at those runways, everything is there. A big airport like the Wake field is a zone of tremendous possibility – a place of beginnings, by the way, not ends’.&#8221; <a href="#6">[6]</a> The story is indicative of Ballard’s deployment of the rich seam of metaphor provided by the region, and the manner in which he uses abandoned Pacific islands as sites of radical reinvention, imagistic buffer zones representing the sovereignty of the imagination.</p>
<p>According to the anarchist author Hakim Bey, classical utopias – &#8220;from Plato’s republic to Brook Farm&#8221; – depend on abstraction, which renders them susceptible to &#8220;a correspondingly high level of authoritarian control. As a result, most Utopias in practice have proven oppressive and deadening – ‘social planning’ would seem to be an offense by definition against the ‘human spirit’.&#8221; <a href="#7">[7]</a> In the novel <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-rushing-to-paradise">Rushing to Paradise</a> (1994), Ballard is also concerned with social planning, which, similarly, is seen as eventually numbing and destroying the human spirit. In fact, the novel indicts the very idea of utopia.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/rushing_big.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p>Rushing to Paradise is set on the remote (and fictional) Pacific atoll of Saint-Esprit, claimed by France as a site for possible nuclear testing, where the renegade Dr Barbara has gathered a ragtag crew on the premise of saving the island’s endangered albatross (the French have relocated the original inhabitants and set up their nuclear equipment, but abandoned the island for Muroroa). Although the mission is initially pitched as environmentalist, each crewmember has wildly differing, concealed motives for making the journey, thus rendering impossible the idea of a genuinely shared utopia. The Hawaiian, Kimo, dreams of establishing an independent Hawaiian kingdom, &#8220;rid forever of the French and American colonists,&#8221; <a href="#8">[8]</a> while the boy Neil is obsessed with the relics of a bygone nuclear age, and excited by the news that the French might be returning to the island for testing:</p>
<blockquote><p>For all Dr Barbara’s passion for the albatross, the nuclear testing-ground had a stronger claim on his imagination. No bomb had ever exploded on Saint-Esprit, but the atoll, like Eniwetok, Muroroa and Bikini, was a demonstration model of Armageddon, a dream of war and death that lay beyond the reach of any moratorium. <a href="#9">[9]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Dr Barbara has her own, highly secretive, and ultimately destructive, reasons – not to save the albatross, but to establish Saint-Esprit as a radical feminist enclave. She is determined to achieve this by any means: &#8220;If Saint-Esprit, this nondescript atoll six hundred miles south-east of Tahiti, failed to match her expectations, it would have to reshape itself into the threatened paradise for which she had campaigned so tirelessly.&#8221; <a href="#10">[10]</a> Superficially, this echoes Ballard’s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-concrete-island">Concrete Island</a> (1974), in which the architect Robert Maitland, after a car accident, is stranded on a triangle of wasteland underneath a busy motorway. Feverish from his injuries, he imagines the physical environment as an outcrop of his psyche: &#8220;More and more, the island was becoming an exact model of his head.&#8221; <a href="#11">[11]</a> Yet the fundamental difference is that Dr Barbara wants the island of her mind to reshape everyone else’s reality, too. This makes Rushing to Paradise, at one level, an allusion to utopian gurus such as David Koresh and Jim Jones, similarly charismatic leaders who built isolated, essentially micronational, communities and coerced others into joining them, before destroying everything as the authorities closed in. As one character says to Neil, after the boy asks whether Dr Barbara’s mission is how new religions start: &#8220;there’s nothing new here. It’s the oldest religion there ever was – sheer magnetic egoism.&#8221; <a href="#12">[12]</a></p>
<p>In Archaeologies of the Future, Jameson devotes considerable space to analysing failures in the wider utopian imagination. In his attempt to re-map the potential of utopian desire, he concludes:</p>
<blockquote><p>What is Utopian becomes … not the commitment to a specific machinery or blueprint, but rather the commitment to imagining possible Utopias as such, in their greatest variety of forms. Utopia is no longer the invention and defense of a specific floorplan, but rather the story of all the arguments about how Utopia should be constructed in the first place. It is no longer the exhibit of an achieved Utopian construct, but rather the story of its production and of the very process of construction as such. <a href="#13">[13]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Re-placing Rushing to Paradise within Jameson’s framework, it becomes possible to read the story of Saint-Esprit as &#8220;the story of all the arguments&#8221; about how the Pacific should be constructed.</p>
<p>The region has always had an unstable identity and an especially volatile sense of nationalism, from perpetually coup-ridden Fiji in the South Seas to the perpetually colonised islands north of the equator. The Republic of Palau in Micronesia is sometimes cited as an archetypal tropical utopia, but could in fact embody the root definition of &#8220;utopia,&#8221; as &#8220;no place.&#8221; It has been used as a pawn by various colonial powers almost continuously since the late 17th century, rapidly lost its traditional culture and become a melange of other cultures. It has changed hands between Spain, which enforced Christianity on the Palauans; Germany, which commanded them to work as plantation slaves; Japan, which forced them to speak a subservient form of Japanese and turned the main island into a closed-off, heavily fortified military base; and the US, which bombed the islands to get at the Japanese in a series of bloody World War Two battles and then claimed them as American territory until 1994.</p>
<p>Mimicking the Pacific’s jagged history, Ballard populates Saint-Esprit with idealistic Germans, scientifically-minded Japanese and single-minded Americans, as well as Kimo, symbol of an oppressed indigenous people, Dr Barbara, an archetypal British colonialist, and, crucially, Neil, an echo of young Jim himself, both teenagers obsessed with dreams of nuclear war and of holding their own among deluded and dangerous adults in an artificial community. After the death of the character Mark Bracewell, the American, Carline, verbalises a metaphor that neatly sums up these duelling versions of utopia:</p>
<blockquote><p>Contrary to the general belief, no-one’s death diminishes us. Nature in its wisdom created death to give each of us our unique sense of life. We’re not part of the main. Each of us is an island, every bit as real as Saint-Esprit, and death is the price we pay to keep ourselves from drowning in the larger sea. Like Kimo here, we’re all island people … especially young Neil, dreaming about another kind of island. Mark Bracewell lived for twenty-seven years, and his island still floats in the sea of time and space. <a href="#14">[14]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This seems to correspond with Jameson, who proposes to &#8220;think of our autonomous and non-communicating Utopias … as so many islands: a Utopian archipelago, islands in the net, a constellation of discontinuous centers, themselves internally decentred.&#8221; <a href="#15">[15]</a> This discontinuity suggests the ideal resting state for Ballard’s ideal of a neural, free zone of the imagination – a &#8220;morally free psychopathology of metaphor, as an element in one’s dreams,&#8221; <a href="#16">[16]</a> which, although powerful and liberatory, has a dark underside. If one tries to apply it to other people, then Micronationalism <a href="#17">[17]</a> – the utopian imagination, no less – turns into dangerous cultism through which lives can be destroyed, a very real danger that arises when the metaphor is literalised into &#8220;the domain where it has no place, an id-driven psychopathology that lays waste to human life.&#8221; <a href="#18">[18]</a> Neil’s surreal, internalised visions of nuclear war therefore contrast markedly with Dr Barbara’s hard, external authoritarianism, further corresponding to Jameson’s conception of utopian desire, which &#8220;must be marked as Utopian and thereby as partaking in a specific and very special kind of aesthetic unreality: otherwise it falls into the world and, particularly if realized, spells the end of Utopias in the way wryly distinct from the usual prognoses of their current disappearance.&#8221; <a href="#19">[19]</a> Subsequently, the novel sours traditional utopian thought by highlighting the oppressive hypocrisy of its &#8220;abstracted authoritarianism,&#8221; to appropriate Bey’s term. Once Kimo has used his muscle to build the community and Neil his youth to impregnate the idealistic women who flock to the island, they become expendable, with no place in a feminist paradise.</p>
<p>Indeed, Dr Barbara manages to kill off almost all the men (although Neil survives) when they contract fever and she administers fake medicine. By the novel’s end, she is feverish and hiding out in the forest, burrowing deeper and further away from the French authorities that have come to retake the island. This seems a deliberate reference to the legendary stories of Japanese soldiers hiding out in the Pacific jungles of Guam long after the war had ended, terrified, as is Dr Barbara, at the prospect of an imperialism perishing with the onslaught of newer, more localised and &#8220;internally decentred&#8221; voices, American-led globalism, no less – overrun by an &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; imagination (again, after Jameson, in opposition not to straight dystopia, but to unworkable utopia) that has evolved organically from the discontinuities and disjunctions of the modern world, and that is centrally represented by Neil. As Jameson writes of the wider dynamic:</p>
<blockquote><p>Multiplicity becomes the central theme of this imaginary resolution, whose conceptual dilemma remains that of closure. Yet we may well suppose that this new development will have had some impact on the Utopian form itself, accounting for the seeming extinction of the traditional kinds and the emergence of newer more reflexive forms. <a href="#20">[20]</a> </p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_1958_hardtack.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Observers at Operation Hardtack nuclear test (1958) on Enewetak.</em></p>
<p>Neil, with his dreams of nuclear war, symbolises this &#8220;more reflexive form&#8221; and the perverse and paradoxical &#8220;absolute freedom&#8221; it brings. He comes to embody the &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; spirit of the book, or, more accurately, he embodies the Ballardian sense of &#8220;affirmative dystopia,&#8221; a sense of which is given by Gregory Stephenson’s overview:</p>
<blockquote><p>The themes of transcendence and illusion inform nearly all of Ballard’s work, and have often been misconstrued by critics as representing a nihilistic or fatalistic preoccupation on the part of the author with devolution, decay, dissolution and entropy … these themes represent neither an expression of universal pessimism nor a negation of human values and goals, but, rather, an affirmation of the highest humanistic and metaphysical ideal: the repossession for humankind of authentic and absolute being. <a href="#21">[21]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Rushing to Paradise is not a disaster novel per se, but in his reimagining of the apocalypse, Neil virtually wills the disaster to happen. In so doing, he does not &#8220;colonize the future with Utopian blueprints,&#8221; as the Pacific’s invading powers have so wilfully done (indeed, as Dr Barbara has done), but rather, embodies what Jameson defines as:</p>
<blockquote><p>Disruption … the name for a new discursive strategy … which insists that its radical difference is possible and that a break is necessary. The Utopian form itself is the answer to the universal ideological conviction that no alternative is possible, that there is no alternative to the system. But it asserts this by forcing us to think the break itself, and not by offering a more traditional picture of what things would be like after the break. <a href="#22">[22]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Jameson briefly touches upon this strain of disruption in Ballard, without referring directly to the stories under discussion here: &#8220;Ballard’s work – so rich and corrupt – testifies powerfully to the contradictions of a properly representational attempt to grasp the future directly.&#8221; <a href="#23">[23]</a></p>
<p>Extrapolating from there, my contention is that, in his Pacific fictions, Ballard &#8220;forces us to think the break&#8221; by repeatedly drawing on the spectre of nuclear testing, of which there are numerous real-world examples in the region. French Polynesia, for instance, was employed as a testing site for almost 10 years, with the result that high radiation levels were detected 4,500km away in Fiji. Bikini Atoll was rendered uninhabitable by American nuclear tests, its inhabitants forcibly relocated, like those of Saint-Esprit, never to return. The inhabitants of Eniwetok were also forcibly relocated in 1948 to make way for American atomic bomb tests; only comparatively recently has the US government, under overwhelming global pressure, cleared the island of active waste, allowing the islanders to resettle the southern part of the atoll after 33 years in exile. In Ballard, the thermonuclear age brings with it an advanced technology that renders objective perception meaningless, thus beginning the era of simulation, an increasingly abstracted, stylised and mediated realm, riding on the decline of Japanese imperialism and the rise of American-led globalisation.</p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: Nuclear testing on Bikini Atoll. Music by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/cousin-silas-another-flask-of-ballard">Cousin Silas</a>.</em></p>
<p>To examine this motif, it is interesting to contrast Ballard’s reworking, and remapping, of the region to that of the travel writer Simon Winchester, whose <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FPacific-Simon-Winchester%2Fdp%2F0091734851%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1251015828%26sr%3D1-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">The Pacific</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> provides a thorough history of changes since the war. Ballard has written: &#8220;I used to dream of the runways of Wake Island and Midway, stepping stones that would carry me back across the Pacific to the China of my childhood.&#8221; <a href="#24">[24]</a> Compare with Winchester’s account of American mariners at the start of the 19th century, seizing and settling &#8220;Midway, Wake, Guam … thus creating a series of stepping-stones, a lifeline of tropical islands that led all the way to that greatest and most elusive prize, the Middle Kingdom, China&#8221; <a href="#25">[25]</a> – a process that leads eventually to the bombing of Japan and subsequent irradiation of Pacific islands like Eniwetok. The similarities (references to Wake Island, Midway, China, especially &#8220;stepping stones&#8221;) are startling, yet these positions are opposed nonetheless. Ballard wants to resettle, and bulwark, the imagination, where the American forces wanted to colonise and wipe clean whole territories. One wishes to explore hidden folds within the map, the other to claim every available point on the map; both coexist in paradoxical dreams of the Pacific. The paradox is even rooted in temporal reality, as Winchester notes, when he visits the island of Tonga. There, he ponders the arbitrary division of the dateline, which ensures that Tonga sees the world’s first dawn each day:</p>
<blockquote><p>I had imagined … that I would be able to catch a glimpse of Mount Silisili [in Samoa] … just a few miles away across the water. [It] would be enjoying precisely the same clock time as here in Tonga, but exactly one day before. The simultaneous sighting of two periods of time separated by an entire 24 hours seemed a paradox well worth experiencing. <a href="#26">[26]</a> </p></blockquote>
<p>In Ballard, these paradoxical time tracks form a lasting metaphor for a certain nexus of confusion in the post-war world, a notion made explicit in the note that begins Empire of the Sun: &#8220;The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour took place on Sunday morning, 7 December 1941, but as a result of time differences across the Pacific Date Line it was then already the morning of Monday, 8 December in Shanghai.&#8221; <a href="#27">[27]</a> For Ballard, the bomb signifies the end of history and the coming of an age of surfaces, a recombinant age of planing identities, as he makes clear in the introduction to Crash, which applies the metaphor of chronological confusion to the mediated reality of the Western world:</p>
<blockquote><p>Increasingly, our concepts of past, present and future are being forced to revise themselves. Just as the past, in social and psychological terms, became a casualty of Hiroshima and the nuclear age, so in its turn the future is ceasing to exist, devoured by the all-voracious present …  Options multiply around us, and we live in an almost infantile world where any demand, any possibility, whether for life-styles, travel, sexual roles and identities, can be satisfied instantly. <a href="#28">[28]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The past &#8220;as a casualty of the nuclear age&#8221; would be reframed 11 years after Crash, in Empire of the Sun, the latter part of which is set in a destroyed stadium filled with prisoners and the detritus of war. Suddenly, the stadium is illuminated by light from the atom bomb exploding on Nagasaki – a blinding, overwhelming orb. Andrés Vaccari correctly identifies the world &#8220;presided over by this nuclear sun&#8221; as the &#8220;real Empire of the Sun. It is the metaphoric birth of the post-war world, the omnipresent subject of Ballard&#8217;s fiction&#8221; <a href="#29">[29]</a> – the coming of a nihilistic world with no boundaries, no spatial coordinates except those of inner space, the cognitive remapping of a world that has lost its bearings in time and space. <a href="#30">[30]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_terminal2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: The Cactus Dome on Runit Island, part of Enewetak Atoll. Photo courtesy <a href="http://www.artificialowl.net/2008/11/nuclear-trash-can-of-pacific-on.html">Artificial Owl</a>.</em></p>
<p>This notion of planing identities (planing time tracks) is also embodied in Ballard’s short story &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221; (1964), set on Eniwetok (also known as &#8216;Enewetak&#8217;), in which the character Traven, an ex-air force pilot, finds himself similarly searching for identity among the island’s abandoned concrete bunkers and blockhouses, which have been used for thermonuclear trials. He comes across plastic, human mannequins used in the weapons testing, with their &#8220;half-melted faces, contorted into bleary grimaces [gazing] up at him from the jumble of legs and torsos.&#8221; <a href="#31">[31]</a> Attempting to escape from US servicemen who appear on the island, he hides &#8220;in one of the target basins, lying among the broken bodies of the plastic models. In the hot sunlight their deformed faces gaped at him sightlessly from the tangle of limbs, their blurred smiles like those of the soundlessly laughing dead.&#8221; <a href="#32">[32]</a> When he scavenges among &#8220;the litter of smashed bottles and cans in the isthmus of sand separating the testing ground from the air-strip,&#8221; <a href="#33">[33]</a> we find layers of recent cultural history, buried and then recovered as if in an archaeological find. Confronted with this effacement of geographical and human boundaries (the latter effectively represented by the undifferentiated slagheap of molten mannequins), Traven is, in a sense, reborn, scrambling for meaning among the detritus of the old world.</p>
<p>The effect is replicated in Concrete Island, in which the patch of underpass comes to symbolise the archetypal liminal space of Ballardian fiction. It is a zone of buried layers of urban cartography comprising &#8220;the unintended, forgotten, abjected corners of town planning.&#8221; <a href="#34">[34]</a> In the fragmented post-war world, with its shifting national boundaries and national identities, Ballard seems to suggest the only effective strategy is to remake the world through bricolage, or what Andrzej Gasiorek terms &#8220;a kind of fugitive reappropriation of an otherwise seemingly monolithic set of structures and relations.&#8221; <a href="#35">[35]</a> In Concrete Island, Maitland, the architect, was all too willing to submit to the conformity of capitalism, favouring the demands of finance and big business over any sense of public obligation or civic duty. Gasiorek observes that he had &#8220;a predilection for modernism,&#8221; specifically &#8220;hard, affectless architecture&#8221; and &#8220;stylised concrete surfaces,&#8221; marked as &#8220;hostile to the forging of human relations … a kind of dead end for life.&#8221; <a href="#36">[36]</a> Before his crash, Maitland seemed a ruthless autocrat forcing people into inhumane living conditions to justify his ego, but he is confronted with the underside of this &#8220;dead end for life&#8221; when, marooned on the concrete island, he is required to come to terms with the tradition he wilfully discarded in his work. Like Traven, he uncovers historical layers paved over by the demands of the motorway system – the strictures of advanced technology:</p>
<blockquote><p>Parts of the island dated from well before World War II. The eastern end, below the overpass, was its oldest section, with the churchyard and the ground-courses of Edwardian terraced houses. The breaker’s yard and its wrecked cars had been superimposed on the still identifiable streets and alleyways.</p>
<p>In the centre of the island were the air-raid shelters among which he was sitting. Attached to these was a later addition, the remains of a Civil Defence post little more than fifteen years old. <a href="#37">[37]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Maitland meets the human equivalents of this discarded landscape in the form of Proctor and Jane, two homeless dwellers who have made the island their own, both on the run from oppressive systems of control. Jane is a victim of patriarchy, hiding from an apparently abusive husband and bitter memories of her father, and now working as a motorway prostitute. Proctor is an old tramp who has suffered ritual humiliation at the hands of the local police. The island, reconfigured by Ballard as a container of social debris (both geographical and human, as in &#8220;The Terminal Beach&#8221;) becomes a space where social relations can begin again, where the social order is decommissioned, recombined, reconstructed and reshaped in ways that subvert dominant systems of thought. Maitland comes to see the island much as Proctor and Jane do, as a psychic &#8220;go-zone&#8221; where he can escape the pressures of his relationships with his wife and mistress and of his job – free &#8220;to rove forever within the empty city of his mind.&#8221; <a href="#38">[38]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/concrete_cover.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Enewetak" class="picleft" /> In his later career, immediately after Rushing to Paradise, Ballard embarked on a cycle of novels in which he would explore a much harder version of micronationalism, manifest in the savage gated communities of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights">Cocaine Nights</a> (1996) through to <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a> (2006). It would no longer be necessary to look to mythical lands to remake and remodel maps of alienation – instead he began to focus on a parallel examination of the type of urban &#8220;non-place&#8221; that has come to be associated with the anthropologist Marc Augé. For Augé, our world is so saturated by superabundant fictions that it produces a conception of simultaneous time, representative of a homogenous, mediated society. The physical result is non-place, transitional zones detached from history and culture, inorganic, in-between zones where individuals are linked by this superabundance of information and technology rather than community or historical awareness, which paradoxically creates a pervasive sense of inwardness and isolation. Examples of non-place include motorways, hospitals, airports (especially duty-free zones), gated communities, business parks and housing estates – rich Ballardian territory, as the &#8220;urban disaster trilogy&#8221; of Crash, Concrete Island and High-Rise makes abundantly clear.</p>
<p>Ballard anticipates Augé, whose anthropological studies turned away from the &#8220;foreign field [towards] more familiar terrain,&#8221; due to the fact that &#8220;the contemporary world itself, with its accelerated transformations, is attracting anthropological scrutiny: in other words, a renewed methodical reflection on the category of otherness.&#8221; <a href="#39">[39]</a> In &#8220;The Terminal Beach,&#8221; Ballard describes Eniwetok as &#8220;synthetic, a man-made artefact with all the associations of a vast system of derelict concrete motorways.&#8221; <a href="#40">[40]</a> This is a description that foreshadows Concrete Island, and in the introduction to the latter, Ballard makes the link explicit: &#8220;The Pacific atoll may not be available, but there are other islands far nearer to home, some of them only a few steps from the pavements we tread every day. They are surrounded, not by sea, but by concrete, ringed by chain-mail fences and walled off by bomb-proof glass.&#8221; <a href="#41">[41]</a></p>
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<p><em>ABOVE: &#8220;A clip of the Hydrogen Bomb test at Enewetak Atoll on November 1, 1952, and the first time one was exploded. The fireball was big enough to cover most of Manhattan Island. This clip shows more of the aftermath of the nuclear cloud than most films.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Just as Traven declares Eniwetok a &#8220;state of mind,&#8221; <a href="#42">[42]</a> so, too, does Maitland, indirectly, in Concrete Island when he insists: &#8220;I am the island.&#8221; <a href="#43">[43]</a> Here, &#8220;state&#8221; has a double meaning, as a condition of being, but also as a sovereign, independent territory. Both locations are potent symbols of the post-war era: Eniwetok, a tabula rasa of nationalism and patriotism; the motorway underpass, the archetypal non-place of supermodernity. As Traven’s existence in Eniwetok’s &#8220;thermonuclear noon&#8221; becomes increasingly hallucinatory (it is not clear whether he is dead, dying or feverish from irradiation), he finds that by saying goodbye in his mind to the disasters of the external world, he can come to terms with it. Standing among the abstract concrete blocks of the testing bunkers, he produces a strange incantation:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Goodbye Eniwetok&#8221; … Somewhere there was a flicker of light, as if one of the blocks, like a counter on an abacus, had been plucked away.<br />
Goodbye Los Alamos. Again, a block seemed to vanish. The corridors around him remained intact, but somewhere in his mind had appeared a small interval of neutral space.<br />
Goodbye, Hiroshima.<br />
Goodbye, Alamogordo.<br />
Goodbye, Moscow, London, Paris, New York … <a href="#44">[44]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The opening up of this &#8220;small interval&#8221; of neu(t)ral space represents a kind of psychological DMZ, an imaginative form of resistance that, along with Neil’s apocalyptic dreams, symbolises an intent that is the polar opposite to that of Dr Barbara (who, we recall, literalised a megalomania that proved unstoppable, and fatal). Traven surmises that time on Eniwetok has become &#8220;quantal,&#8221; an eternal present obliterating past and future. But is Ballard’s sense pejorative? <a href="#45">[45]</a> As Traven declares: &#8220;For me the hydrogen bomb was a symbol of absolute freedom. I feel it’s given me the right – the obligation, even – to do anything I want.&#8221; <a href="#46">[46]</a> This may well be the defining statement of the author’s career, brought into sharp relief by John Gray’s perceptive appraisal that Ballard’s &#8220;achievement is not to have staked out any kind of political position. Rather it is to have communicated a vision of what individual fulfilment might mean in a time of nihilism.&#8221; <a href="#47">[47]</a> It is a concept Ballard has alluded to in interview, when asked if his writing is interested in decadence:</p>
<blockquote><p>Decadence? I can’t remember if I ever said I enjoyed the notion, except in the sense of drained swimming pools and abandoned hotels, which I don’t really see as places of decadence, but rather … as psychic zero stations, or as &#8220;Go,&#8221; in Monopoly terms. <a href="#48">[48]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Here, Ballard appears to inform the concept of the &#8220;Temporary Autonomous Zone&#8221; (TAZ), codified by Bey in 1985 and enormously influential on anarchists, musicians and a myriad of underground artists. The TAZ calls for a mode of radical intervention in the form of creation of temporary spaces – whether &#8220;geographic, social, cultural, imaginal&#8221; <a href="#49">[49]</a> – that will serve to confound formalised control systems. Bey’s main focus was on the liberation of mind states, what he terms &#8220;psychotopology (and -topography)&#8221; as an antidote to the State’s &#8220;psychic imperialism&#8221;:</p>
<blockquote><p>Only psychotopography can draw 1:1 maps of reality because only the human mind provides sufficient complexity to model the real. But a 1:1 map cannot &#8220;control&#8221; its territory because it is virtually identical with its territory. It can only be used to suggest, in a sense gesture towards, certain features. <a href="#50">[50]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>This particular strategy within the TAZ can be traced to Alfred Korzybski’s oft-repeated remark that &#8220;the map is not the territory,&#8221; since duplication is simply simulation, and able to be recouped as such. In opposition, Bey suggests that these sovereign mindscapes are enfolded within the folds of the cartographical matrix: &#8220;We are looking for ‘spaces’ with potential to flower as autonomous zones – and we are looking for times in which these spaces are relatively open, either through neglect on the part of the State or because they have somehow escaped notice by the mapmakers, or for whatever reason.&#8221;<a href="#51">[51]</a></p>
<p>Ballard actually paraphrases Korzybski in Empire of the Sun: &#8220;Never confuse the map with the territory,&#8221; <a href="#52">[52]</a> while the patch of underpass in Concrete Island, built over the leavings of industrial culture, has been neglected by the State, and is so far off the map as to be invisible. Moreover, Maitland liberates an area of land or imagination (depending how we read the novel), without ever engaging directly with systems of control, with the State. As Ballard makes clear in the introduction: &#8220;What would happen if, by some freak mischance, we suffered a blow-out and plunged over the guard-rail onto a forgotten island of rubble and weeds, out of sight of the surveillance cameras?&#8221; <a href="#53">[53]</a> For Bey, confrontation with the State occurs through &#8220;the Spectacle,&#8221; in Guy Debord’s sense, where images rule by virtue of their monopoly of social space. Because society defines itself through the dissemination and experiencing of this space, the process appears natural, a self-contained feedback loop: &#8220;What appears is good; what is good appears.&#8221; <a href="#54">[54]</a> Such confrontation is doomed to failure since the machinery of simulation will merely absorb any display of &#8220;spectacular violence&#8221;. For Bey, as for Ballard, radical action therefore lies not in the deployment of spectacular violence, but in withdrawal, in becoming invisible, in merging with, and therefore rehabilitating, the by-products of supermodernity.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/sonsorol.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sonsorol" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Sonsorol. Photo by <a href="http://www.sonsorol.com/gallery/index_Sonsorol060811.htm">Hisayuki Kubota</a>.</em></p>
<p>Elsewhere, Ballard’s prototypical Pacific fictions seem an obvious influence on Bey’s &#8220;Visit Port Watson!,&#8221; <a href="#55">[55]</a> which uses their cue to forecast similar micronational and imaginative possibilities in the region. Written as a faux travel guide, it describes the micronation of Port Watson on the Pacific island of Sonsorol (the island actually exists – it is part of Palau – but Port Watson does not). Bey charts the history of Sonsorol and its colonisation by Spanish, Dutch, Japanese, New Zealand and Australian forces. He writes that when the island finally gained independence, the Port Watson enclave was set up by the island’s &#8220;Sultan&#8221; (a legacy of Sonsorol’s fictional 17th-century invasion by Moorish pirates), who had been influenced by libertarian-anarchist philosophy while studying in America. Offshore banking funded the enclave: &#8220;the creation of wealth out of nothing, out of pure imagination.&#8221; <a href="#56">[56]</a> Port Watson therefore develops as a libertarian-anarchist micronation with no laws or currency save for a &#8220;computerised&#8221; barter system, where a hamburger stand is called &#8220;McBakunins,&#8221; most people refuse to work since everyone has stakes in the banking system, and &#8220;public fucking&#8221; is encouraged.</p>
<p>This notion of a libertarian-anarchist enclave powered by &#8220;pure imagination&#8221; has clear Ballardian overtones, <a href="#57">[57]</a> especially in light of Ballard’s career-long &#8220;libertarian and anarchic stance … [a] scepticism about all communal laws.&#8221; <a href="#58">[58]</a> As Ballard himself wrote in Empire of the Sun: &#8220;After three years in the camp the notion of patriotism meant nothing.&#8221; <a href="#59">[59]</a> And, like Ballard, Bey’s external mapping of utopian space can in fact be read as a travel guide to inner space, unlocking the potential of the imagination to transcend laws, authority and corporate structure, all built upon the metaphorical/micronational possibilities of the Pacific. In &#8220;Visit Port Watson!,&#8221; this is consummated in the final paragraph, where Bey &#8220;quotes&#8221; an editorial from the local gazette, written by the Sultan, in answer to whether such a utopia can exist only on a tropical island: &#8220;Sonsorol could be created anywhere – nothing stands in the way but false consciousness and the grim power of those rulers who feast on false consciousness like vampires … ‘Don’t despair: Port Watson exists within you, and you can make it real’.&#8221; <a href="#60">[60]</a></p>
<p>This internal collapse – this conflation of inner and outer space – reminds us of the power of Ballard’s original Pacific fictions, which reinhabit the frame to present a clearinghouse in which corporate and national governance is overthrown and regoverned as a &#8220;state of mind&#8221; – dystopia becomes the real utopia, and utopian ideals, typically represented as a stifling of the imagination, the true dystopia. But Ballard’s insistence that the imagination must remain sovereign territory – the &#8220;last nature reserve,&#8221; as he has termed it <a href="#61">[61]</a> – also aligns him once more with Jameson, who describes &#8220;anti-anti-utopian&#8221; thought as:</p>
<blockquote><p>a new form of thinking … a new dimension of the exercise of the imagination. It’s only when people come to realize that there is no alternative that they react against it, at least in their imaginations, and try to think of alternatives … [affording] a process where the imagination begins to question itself, to move back and forth among the possibilities. <a href="#62">[62]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Ballard’s reimagining of the Pacific archipelago – as a vast, disjunctive region of abandonment and reinvention, with multiple islands floating in the &#8220;sea of time and space&#8221; – and its subsequent superimposition onto urban landscapes, provides an excellent example of a pluralism of utopias (multiple subjectivities) steeped in an &#8220;aesthetic unreality&#8221;: affirmative dystopias that are finally, unmistakably, <em>Ballardian</em>.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/eniwetok_templeton.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sonsorol" /></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: Enewetak today. Photo by <a href="http://pic.templetons.com/brad/photo/eclipse09">Brad Templeton</a>.</em></p>
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<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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