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		<title>A Fascist State? Another Look at Kingdom Come and Consumerism</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/fascist-state-another-look-at-kingdom-come</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/fascist-state-another-look-at-kingdom-come#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2010 11:21:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike Holliday</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Ballard’s final novel, Kingdom Come, a dystopian account of consumerism as a type of ’soft fascism’, received lukewarm reviews and suggestions that the author was, perhaps, finally losing his touch. Others were eager to point to parallels between it and events around us: aggressive car commercials, racist behaviour by sports fanatics. In this article, Mike Holliday re-examines Kingdom Come and asks: can we really equate consumerism with fascism?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bentall_centre.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Bentall Centre. Photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/fr3d/4730716706/in/photostream/">Fr3d.org</a>. Reproduced under Creative Commons.</em></p>
<div class='hr'>
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<p>by <strong><a href="http://www.holli.co.uk">Mike Holliday</a></strong></p>
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<hr /></div>
<blockquote><p>Why do I dislike the Bentall Centre so much? Because it&#8217;s so&#8230; cretinous. [The consumers] seem to be moving though a kind of commercial dream space and vague signals float through their brains.</p>
<p>J.G. Ballard in interview, 2006.<a href="##1">[1]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Ballard&#8217;s final novel, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>, a dystopian account of consumerism as a type of &#8216;soft fascism&#8217;, <a href="##2">[2]</a> received lukewarm reviews and suggestions that the author was, perhaps, finally losing his touch &#8211; that the metaphors seemed strained, the text confusing and ambiguous.<a href="##3">[3]</a> M John Harrison, one of Ballard&#8217;s fellow authors in New Worlds back in the 1960s, commented that &#8216;Perhaps, after all, it is not the consumers who have fallen for the dream of the Metro-Centre; it is the alienated intellectual of the London suburbs &#8230; For the old metaphorista, perhaps, the hidden terror of the shopping centre is that it is just somewhere people go to shop&#8217;.<a href="##4">[4]</a> Other commentators were eager to point to parallels between Kingdom Come and events in the world around us &#8211; aggressive car commercials, racist behaviour by sports fanatics &#8211; but appeared reluctant to delve into the novel&#8217;s theses in any depth. In this article, I re-examine Kingdom Come and ask: can we really equate consumerism with fascism?</p>
<blockquote><p>How you convert a metaphor into the arming device of a political conspiracy, or how the consumerist dream might be co-opted to produce the kinds of hard results associated with the nationalist dream of the 1920s and 30s, Ballard seems less sure. In reality, there are only a lot of people buying American sports utility vehicles, Tanzanian fish, Chinese teddy bears, French five-hob stoves &#8230; Do unconscious dreams of mass violence need to figure? </p>
<p>M John Harrison, &#8216;Narratives of the mall&#8217;.<a href="##5">[5]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>The elements of Kingdom Come are taken straight from the world that the author would have seen around him &#8230; a giant shopping mall (loosely based on the <a href="http://www.thebentallcentre-shopping.com"> Bentall Centre</a> in Kingston) which is not just a place to buy things but somewhere to take the family for a day out; low-level racist behaviour against ethnic minorities in the suburbs of West London; an upsurge in interest in sporting events such as the World Cup that enable displays of national or tribal identity. These realistic components can prompt a straightforward reading of the novel: Kingdom Come is rendered as the idea that consumerism in 21st century England can be seen &#8211; with the help of a modest dosage of imagination and metaphor &#8211; to be a type of fascism. Such realist readings appear to lie behind M John Harrison&#8217;s complaints, as well as <a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/rod_liddle/article1267260.ece">Rod Liddle&#8217;s attack on the book</a> as &#8216;deeply silly and patronising&#8217;.<a href="##6">[6]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bentall_bears.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Bentall Centre. Photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/joannebelinda/235285635/in/set-72157594271736891">Joanne Murray</a>. Reproduced with permission.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;I remember four or five years ago going into the Bentall Centre, a huge shopping mall in Kingston, a town I hate. It was before Christmas, and there were these three gigantic bears on a plinth in the centre of this huge atrium &#8230; automatons, moving to Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. The place was packed; crowds looking up at them. And I thought, God, these people have left their brains somewhere. What’s going on here? And then I noticed that my head was moving, too. I thought, Jesus, get out fast.&#8217; </p>
<p>Ballard in interview, 2006.<a href="##7">[7]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>If Kingdom Come is a realistic reading of the English suburbs, then various of its details fail to convince. It seems odd to emphasize the violence of spectator sports when the most popular, soccer, has become far less brutal, among both participants and spectators, than was the case 25 or more years ago. And the portrayal of ethnic minorities as antipathetic to consumerism seems equally unrealistic, and risks an accusation of the very racism that the author wants to attack &#8211; for implying that they aren&#8217;t interested in consumer goods or sport because their culture is different from ours.<a href="##8">[8]</a></p>
<p>Beyond the details, there seems to be a conspicuous problem with the novel&#8217;s underlying theme, since fascism was always anti-consumerist in its temperament. As Peter N Stearns puts it in his review of <a href="http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415395878/">Consumerism in World History</a>: &#8216;For fascist leaders, modern society had become too disunited and individualistic. Consumerism was a fundamental part of modern degeneracy&#8217;.<a href="##9">[9]</a></p>
<p>But any such straightforward reading of Kingdom Come surely founders on the fact that Ballard is simply not, and never has been, a realist writer. Deeply influenced by the surrealist artists, and by Freud&#8217;s distinction between manifest and latent content, Ballard&#8217;s descriptions are no more &#8216;realist&#8217; than Dali&#8217;s clock-faces or Delvaux&#8217;s mysterious women. He described his semi-autobiographical novel, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-empire-of-the-sun">Empire of the Sun</a>, as an effort to reach some sort of psychological truth, as opposed to a depiction of actual events in the camp at Lunghua in which he was interned, and Kingdom Come is perhaps best viewed in like manner, as a surrealistic attempt to discover the latent psychological meaning behind consumerist society, rather than as a portrayal, however exaggerated, of the behaviour of sports fans and visitors to shopping malls.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/dali_persistence.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Dali&#8217;s &#8216;The Persistence of Memory&#8217;.</em>	</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/jgb_delvaux.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Ballard in front of his commissioned reproduction of a lost painting by Delvaux. Photo: David Levenson.</em></p>
<p>This still leaves us with the underlying concept, reiterated by Ballard in contemporaneous interviews, of consumerism as a soft fascism. An obvious temptation is to interpret Ballard as agreeing with the frequently articulated view that modern consumerist societies are totalizing &#8211; enclosing individuals in a perpetual obligation to choose, but allowing no alternative ways of living outside of the marketplace and the media &#8211; and concluding that therefore such societies can be regarded as fascist.</p>
<blockquote><p>If there is no principle restricting who can consume what, there is also no principled constraint on what can be consumed: all social relations, activities and objects can in principle be exchanged as commodities. This is one of the most profound secularizations enacted by the modern world &#8230; [and] places the intimate world of the everyday into the impersonal world of the market and its values. Moreover, while consumer culture appears universal because it is depicted as a land of freedom in which everyone can be a consumer, it is also felt to be universal because everyone must be a consumer: this particular freedom is compulsory. </p>
<p>Don Slater, &#8216;Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity&#8217;.<a href="##10">[10]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>But seen as an interpretation of Kingdom Come, this makes little sense. Ignoring Ballard the surrealist, it instead concentrates on an all-too-easy transition from &#8216;totalizing&#8217; to &#8216;fascist&#8217;, a transition which effectively empties the term &#8216;fascist&#8217; of meaningful content and historical context. Yet Ballard&#8217;s novel is full of such context &#8211; from the explicit references to the Third Reich in the set-speeches, to the marching groups of supporters and over-lit sports stadia, and even to small details such as the cable-TV presenter naming his new Mercedes limousine &#8216;Heinrich&#8217;. On the proposed interpretation all this detail becomes mere window-dressing, and the novel adds little or nothing to the political critique on which its main thesis supposedly rests. I therefore suggest that Ballard really does intend arguing for the more substantive, if less obvious, notion that modern consumer societies can mutate into something best understood in terms of 1930s Nazi Germany.</p>
<p>To see how this might be the case, I think we should start by recognizing that Ballard&#8217;s understanding of society is principally in terms of psychology, and that Kingdom Come re-emphasizes, and links together, two of his long-standing motifs &#8211; that the future will be boring, and that humans are dangerous and violent animals.</p>
<blockquote><p>Consumerism rules, but people are bored. They&#8217;re out on the edge, waiting for something big and strange to come along. &#8230; They want to be frightened. They want to know fear. And maybe they want to go a little mad. </p>
<p>Ballard, Kingdom Come.<a href="##11">[11]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Lying behind Ballard&#8217;s expectations of a boring and empty suburban world is the notion of human reality as a constructed reality, the roots of which seem to lie with his early grasp, as a child in Shanghai, of the everyday world as a stage-set.<a href="##12">[12]</a> For Ballard, the human brain has presented us with &#8216;a kind of ramshackle construct&#8217; suitable to the lives of all those countless ancestors who were engaged in the struggle for food, shelter, and safety. But we no longer live in an age of day-to-day scarcity and insecurity, and as a result the external world no longer forces its interpretation upon us. Therefore the conventional ways in which we viewed the world, which had been buttressed by traditional social structures and conforming behaviours, have weakened their hold over us. The external environment has become fictionalized, and &#8216;reality&#8217; &#8211; that which is of most significance in our lives &#8211; has retreated inside our minds, to be represented by our hopes, desires and obsessions.<a href="##13">[13]</a> One way in which we establish meaningful relationships between events and objects is via our <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballard-and-the-vicissitudes-of-time"> our notion of time</a>, by working out causal relationships and by connecting the present to the past through memories, either individual or social, or to the future through our intentions and expectations. However, as Ballard has emphasized, the past as a guide and the future as a destination no longer have much meaning for us.<a href="##14">[14]</a> Nowadays, an understanding of events and objects cannot simply be read off from the external world, nor can we link them in a straightforward temporal manner. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/bentall_roof.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Bentall Centre. Photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/elyob">elyob</a>. Reproduced under Creative Commons.</em></p>
<p>The retreat of past and future and the internalization of reality &#8211; both of which are ultimately grounded in increased prosperity &#8211; are viewed by Ballard in two very different ways. On the positive side, our freedom and possibilities for fulfillment are enhanced. But, because we lack the sense of meaning provided by a stable external reality and by an awareness of time, we can experience emptiness and boredom. In the 1960s and 1970s, Ballard chose to emphasize the use of our imaginative powers as a way of providing us with different perspectives and of transcending our conventional outlook on the world. But the way Ballard told it to Carol Orr in 1974, this seemed a demanding and daunting task: &#8216;people will behave in a very lunar way, very isolated from each other. Does that appeal to me? Yes, it does, because I think people will have more freedom there. I mean, the freedom of isolation, the freedom of complete choice in one&#8217;s behaviour.&#8217;<a href="##15">[15]</a> Fifteen years later, there was more urgency in his comments to Rolling Stone: &#8216;the suburbanization of the soul [forces] the individual to recognize that he or she is all he or she has got. And this sharpens the eye and the imagination. The challenge is for each of us to respond, to remake as much as we can of the world around us, because no one else will do it for us. We have to find a core within us and get to work. Don&#8217;t worry about worldly rewards. Just get on with it!&#8217;<a href="##16">[16]</a> Using the imagination and following one&#8217;s obsessions may, perhaps, be rewarding, but it certainly doesn&#8217;t sound easy psychologically, more like hard work. By the early 1990s the warning was starker: &#8216;If people are going to survive they will need to do this on the plane of the imagination much more than they have done. Otherwise, they&#8217;ll simply become a mark on some consumer chart.&#8217;<a href="##17">[17]</a></p>
<p>The reasons for concern are clear: if we do not use our imaginations and obsessions, we are at risk of being governed by forces outside ourselves which still operate, such as capitalism or purposeless social conformity. Ballard has drawn attention to the way in which moral structures and decision-making powers have been externalized out into the environment by technology &#8211; from traffic lights to CCTV cameras &#8211; providing us with a safe passage through our lives,<a href="##18">[18]</a> and in like manner we may find it psychologically easier to decline the freedom to utilize the imagination that comes with a safe and prosperous, but individualistic, society. People might instead be content to be governed by forces of social conformity, and to let themselves be directed by their emotions &#8211; which Ballard thinks of as tending to reinforce existing social conventions and as restricting, rather than expanding, the possibilities for action.</p>
<blockquote><p>It may be that we thrive when certain of our relationships are drained of emotion, that we may then be able to explore our lives more fully, because emotions tend to act as a brake. They reinforce the status quo. They set up a kind of tyranny rather like the psychology of a very small child, which may be entirely governed by passionate emotions that are in fact very limiting. It&#8217;s only when the child learns to control its emotions that he can begin to explore all sorts of interesting possibilities at the other end of the nursery. </p>
<p>Ballard in interview, 1997.<a href="##19">[19]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>If this is the bare bones of the psychology that underpins Kingdom Come, we can perhaps add some flesh by considering the social aspects of consumerism. Peter Stearns points out that the growth of consumer behaviour was closely connected with the decline of long-established social structures under the pressures of industrialization and urbanization. In earlier times, social hierarchies were much more rigidly observed, and any crossing of social boundaries or individualistic behaviour tended to be viewed negatively, especially by the upper-classes. The latter had luxury, i.e. their wealth was displayed, rather than consumed, and in standard formats with an absence of individuality or any concern about fashion.<a href="##20">[20]</a> However, once this social edifice began to lose its grip, consumer behaviour helped people cope with the resulting uncertainty and insecurity about social status, and with the disruption to established patterns of behaviour, by providing alternative ways of fulfillment and by enabling an individual to demonstrate personal achievement, no matter how limited. This was particularly the case in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when the growth of large firms meant that many in the middle-classes found themselves working for others rather than themselves and in jobs with a high degree of routine: satisfaction and success were no longer an integral element of their occupation, and had to be sought elsewhere.<a href="##21">[21]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/utama_centre.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em> <a href="http://www.1utama.com.my/aboutus.aspx">Utama shopping centre, Malaysia</a></em></p>
<p>But there is a malign dialectic at work here. I buy things in order to try and reassert my identity, but as the marketplace grows I am offered an increasing variety of goods and services, and associated ways of living, from which to choose. Now my identity is even more in question, because it is something that I myself have to select and realize. The impact is heightened as the material prosperity of society increases &#8211; even something as basic as food becomes no longer a matter of survival and physical well-being, but a decision about life-style.<a href="##22">[22]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>Yet coherent identity seems to be precisely the main problem of modern existence and is itself something to be chosen and achieved. &#8230; Consumerism simultaneously exploits mass identity crisis by proffering its goods as solutions to the problems of identity, and in the process intensifies it by offering ever more plural values and ways of being. &#8230; That the self must be a project is dictated to us by a pluralized world and must be pursued within that pluralized world. This entails a high level of anxiety and risk. In terms of consumer culture, there is high anxiety because every choice seems to implicate the self: all acts of purchase or consumption, clothing, eating, tourism, entertainment, &#8216;are decisions not only about how to act but who to be&#8217;. </p>
<p>Slater, &#8216;Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity&#8217;.<a href="##23">[23]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>To make matters worse, the psychological support that might have been available from kinship ties, the local community, religion, voluntary organizations, and such like, is now much weaker &#8211; in fact, involvement in these is as much a life-style choice as everything else. Yet the evidence is that people with a rich variety of social connections are less likely to suffer depression and anxiety than those without.<a href="##24">[24]</a> As well as support that I might obtain directly from others, I am better able to cope if I am &#8216;not just the local lawyer, but also the coach of the cricket team, the friendly neighbour, and the person who always sings at the christmas party&#8217;, as a setback in one role is of less significance to my sense of identity and self-esteem.<a href="##25">[25]</a></p>
<p>Without a traditional social fabric around me, I live in a world of endless possibilities but any failure to find fulfillment in my life must somehow reflect my own inadequacies. Hence, as Zygmunt Bauman suggests, we are nowadays more likely to suffer from depression &#8211; caused by the fear of inadequacy in the face of endless possibilities &#8211; than from neurosis arising from guilt caused by the transgression of prohibitions.<a href="##26">[26]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>The more we are allowed to be the masters of our fates, the more we expect ourselves to be. We should be able to find education that is stimulating and useful, work that is exciting, socially valuable, and remunerative, spouses who are sexually, emotionally, and intellectually stimulating and also loyal and comforting. Our children are supposed to be beautiful, smart, affectionate, obedient, and independent. And everything we buy is supposed to be the best of its kind. &#8230; [Hence,] almost every experience people have nowadays will be perceived as a disappointment, and thus regarded as a failure &#8211; a failure that could have been prevented with the right choice. </p>
<p>Barry Schwartz, &#8216;The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less&#8217;.<a href="##27">[27]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>In such circumstances, the temptation is to seek comfort and easy pleasures. But experimental psychology suggests that the systems of the brain which control desire are not the same as the systems that control pleasure.<a href="##28">[28]</a> Hence, some things &#8211; sex, good food &#8211; will both activate desire and bring pleasure, but others &#8211; such as a bigger, higher-definition TV &#8211; may provoke desire but not add much to our happiness. Biologically speaking, happiness is a spur to action, not some end-state that we are programmed to seek out, and this is reflected in the wealth of data indicating a lack of correlation between absolute levels of income and happiness (other than at extremely low levels of income), whether it be between different societies, different individuals in the same society, or individuals over time.<a href="##29">[29]</a></p>
<p>Ballard&#8217;s recognition that we &#8216;construct our own reality&#8217; implies an understanding that happiness is not some &#8216;default&#8217; or natural state, and that nowadays we have to create the conditions for our own satisfaction and fulfillment; failure to do this in a world that does not impose its meanings on us will lead to emptiness, boredom, and anxiety. What we seem to have, therefore, are the possible conditions for a social crisis rooted in personal reactions to the complexity and uncertainty inherent in a prosperous, individualistic, consumer society, exacerbated by the lack of established social structures that might provide support. And here we can make start to make the connection with fascism &#8230;</p>
<p>Given the near unintelligibility of the Nazi regime,<a href="##30">[30]</a> any interpretation of its causes needs to explain why it developed in Germany (and not, say, the U.S.A. or France) and in the 1930s (rather than some earlier or later date). Generic explanations based on the &#8216;German psyche&#8217;, or some form of &#8216;moral crisis&#8217; in modern capitalism, fail to convince precisely because they have no answer to these questions.</p>
<blockquote><p>Under a leader who talked in apocalyptic tones of world power or destruction and a regime founded on an utterly repulsive ideology of race-hatred, one of the most culturally and economically advanced countries in Europe planned for war, launched a world conflagration which killed around 50 million people, and perpetrated atrocities &#8211; culminating in the mechanized mass murder of millions of Jews &#8211; of a nature and scale as to defy imagination. </p>
<p>Ian Kershaw, &#8216;The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems &#038; Perspectives Of Interpretation&#8217;.<a href="##31">[31]</a></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>No explanations I&#8217;ve seen are ever convincing of why cultivated and intelligent people like the Germans and Italians should plunge into this insane world-view. </p>
<p>Ballard <a href="http://www.tobylitt.com/ballardinterview.html">in interview</a>, 2006.</p></blockquote>
<p>A promising approach is to start from the idea that inter-war Germany was suffering from a crisis that was simultaneously political, economic, social, and existential. Fascism is then seen to result from a generalized sense of trauma, where stresses in one arena &#8211; say the economic or the existential &#8211; cannot find an outlet in another, such as the political or social. Such an explanation of fascism owes a debt to Erich Fromm&#8217;s prognosis in his 1941 book <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fear_of_Freedom">Escape from Freedom</a>, where he described the fascist regimes, and Nazi Germany in particular, as resulting from the isolation, powerlessness, and anxiety that people felt following modernization and industrialization in countries where traditional structures had lost much of their strength, and which had suffered hyper-inflation and extremely high unemployment.<a href="##32">[32]</a></p>
<p>By the early decades of the 20th century, the German economy was the most developed in Europe and becoming dominated by large organizations: the local boss whom the worker knew on a personal basis was being replaced by distant and amorphous management, and the individual&#8217;s sense of their place in the whole was increasingly opaque. In politics, the parties of the new Weimar democracy were concerned with large-scale, intractable issues at the federal level, weakening the significance of local or work-place participation in political or trade union affairs; and the advent of radio was about to kick-start the transformation of politics into a form of advertising and manipulation of the emotions &#8211; as the Nazis were quick to realize.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hitler_25.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Hitler practices his acting skills. &#8216;Apocalyptic, visionary, convincing&#8217;: three photos by Heinrich Hoffman from 1925.</em></p>
<p>The individual was no longer compensated for a lack of security and purpose by the strength of those long-standing and powerful elements of German society to which he had been accustomed. The monarchy had been abolished; the military (who had virtually run the country during 1914-1918) had been defeated in a war largely of their own devising; the once all-powerful German state could no longer even honour the commitments on its own bank notes as a result of massive inflation which had destroyed middle-class savings &#8211; together with the resulting bourgeois sense of certainty and security; rapid political change, military defeat, and economic problems had left the older generation lost in the world and the young looking elsewhere than to tradition and family. The lack of &#8211; or decline in &#8211; local social participation and intermediate-level structures, such as voluntary organizations, led to what Gino Germani referred to as &#8216;street corner society&#8217;.<a href="##33">[33]</a> And there were all too many whose recourse was to the street &#8211; unemployment rose following the 1929 Wall Street Crash until by 1932 an estimated one-third of the workforce were without a job.<a href="##34">[34]</a> To many, the world no longer made sense, and in the words of the Marxist historian TW Mason: civil society was no longer able to reproduce itself.<a href="##35">[35]</a></p>
<p>In such circumstances, one psychological recourse for the individual is to seek to give up their independence and to fuse with somebody &#8211; or something &#8211; else, in an attempt to somehow recreate the lost bonds that had existed at societal level. Hence the attraction to many of an authoritarian party, such as the Nazis, with a clear leader on whom the party member or citizen could project qualities which &#8211; especially in the case of Hitler &#8211; they clearly lacked, but which were the counterpart of the psychological needs of the adherent. As Ballard once put it: &#8216;It&#8217;s almost as if what [a politician] needs is sort of a reverse charisma now. Not a light that shines outwards, but the ability, like a black hole, to draw light inwards! You&#8217;ve got to be able to draw other people&#8217;s fantasies to you&#8217;.<a href="##36">[36]</a> For the disciple, doubt is assuaged by accepting the opinions and directions of others, and uncertainty is conquered by relying on the conviction of the emotions instead of trusting in rational thought and debate &#8211; in a world that no longer makes sense, emotions appear a surer guide than reason. As Michael Burleigh puts it in The Third Reich: A New History: &#8216;Nazism was truly ahead of its time &#8230; This was politics as feeling&#8217;.<a href="##37">[37]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/fans_96.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Not a light that shines outwards, but the ability, like a black hole, to draw light inwards! You&#8217;ve got to be able to draw other people&#8217;s fantasies to you.</p>
<p>Ballard on the requirements for modern politician, <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.co.uk%2FJ-G-Ballard-Conversations-J-G%2Fdp%2F1889307130%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Dbooks%26qid%3D1278500731%26sr%3D8-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">interview, 1997</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&#038;l=ur2&#038;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />.</p></blockquote>
<p>Hitler himself understood all this perfectly well, as he displayed in Mein Kampf: &#8216;The mass meeting is necessary if only for the reason that in it the individual, who in becoming an adherent of a new movement feels lonely and is easily seized with the fear of being alone, receives for the first time the pictures of a greater community, something that has a strengthening and encouraging effect on most people. &#8230; If he steps for the first time out of his small workshop or out of the big enterprise, in which he feels very small, into the mass meeting and is now surrounded by thousands and thousands of people with the same conviction &#8230; he himself succumbs to the magic influence of what we call mass suggestion.&#8217;<a href="##38">[38]</a></p>
<p>Fascist ideology was therefore concentrated on a mythic core constituted by the image of the nation reborn, purified, and following its &#8216;destiny&#8217;,<a href="##39">[39]</a> and practical politics accordingly relied heavily on symbols, mass spectacles, and a continuously reiterated vocabulary of basic ideas.</p>
<blockquote><p>A dreadful mass sentimentality, compounded of anger, fear, resentment and self-pity, replaced the customary politics of decency, pragmatism, property and reason &#8230; Belief, faith, feeling and obedience to instinct routed debate, scepticism and compromise. People voluntarily surrendered to group or herd emotions &#8230; Among committed believers, a mythic world of eternal spring, heroes, demons, fire and sword &#8211; in a word, the fantasy world of the nursery &#8211; displaced reality. Or rather invaded it, with crude images of Jews, Slavs, capitalists and kulaks populating the imagination. This was children&#8217;s politics for grown-ups, bored and frustrated with the prosaic tenor of post war liberal democracy, and hence receptive to heroic gestures and politics as a form of theatrical stunt. </p>
<p>Michael Burleigh, &#8216;The Third Reich: A New History&#8217;.<a href="##40">[40]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Fascism therefore offers an irrational escape from apparently intractable difficulties. As Ballard pointed out long ago, in his review of Mein Kampf for New Worlds,<a href="##41">[41]</a> Hitler was successful precisely because he dispensed with any rationalization of his prejudices, and was therefore able to tap directly into the unconscious of his followers.</p>
<p>More prosaically, a sense of place and safety could be supplied by hierarchy and control: a 1938 decree introduced general labour conscription by forcing people to work wherever the State decreed, but this effectively gave the well-behaved worker job security, in stark contrast to the early 1930s and to other countries;<a href="##42">[42]</a> and the small-holding farmer was tied to the soil just as much as a feudal serf, but was protected against creditors forcing him to sell his property.<a href="##43">[43]</a> Independent groups and sources of power which were not destroyed were assimilated into the system: Nazi ideology did not consider a person to have an identity separate from their obligations as a citizen, and it followed that if one was, say, an engineer, a mother, or a writer, one&#8217;s own particular concerns could be most effectively met within the context of the Nazi regime. Organizations such as employee associations or trade unions, or women&#8217;s and children&#8217;s groups, were therefore effectively incorporated into the party or the administration. For example, sports and recreational societies all functioned under the <a href="http://www.feldgrau.com/KdF.html"> Kraft durch Freude</a> (&#8216;Strength through Joy&#8217;) organization, and one of the tasks legally accorded to the Reich Chamber of Commerce was to &#8216;gather together the creative artists in all spheres into a unified organization under the leadership of the Reich [which] must not only determine the lines of progress, mental and spiritual, but also lead and organize the professions&#8217;.<a href="##44">[44]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/nazi_metro.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>The Nazi&#8217;s &#8216;Metro-Centre&#8217;? A detail from an illustration for an article in the propaganda magazine <a href="http://www.signalmagazine.com/signal.htm">Signal</a> c. 1941, describing the organization of the Nazi Party: &#8216;Any creative initiative to be introduced in health and hygiene, the training of youth, welfare work on behalf of the working man &#8230; whatever revolutionary idea is to be introduced into the crafts, industry, trade or among the peasantry, all flows through the channels of the Party organization&#8217;</em>.</p>
<p>The Nazi state was not a completely controlled society, but rather one where existing societal organizations were subject to a form of &#8216;capture&#8217;. Hence, Germany was no longer a pluralist society in the sense of accepting variation in aims, opinions, and interests; variety could exist but it was merely a functional variety &#8211; a diversity in unity. As Kevin Passmore puts it: &#8216;civil society was absorbed into fascism&#8217;.<a href="##45">[45]</a> The sense of community was now workers and managers marching in the same procession or rally, all shouting Heil Hitler together whilst feeling the same emotions.<a href="##46">[46]</a> One advantage of such a non-pluralist society was that it was able to limit the extent to which the functional and social complexity of modern societies impacted on human subjectivity: common activities and emotions, communal gatherings, signs and slogans, all represented psychological simplifications that helped nullify the difficulties of a complex, modern world. The result of this reliance on myth, symbols and emotions was that fascism transformed consciousness rather than society: &#8216;The idea of the &#8220;national community&#8221; was not a basis for changing social structures, but a symbol of transformed consciousness. &#8230; [Nazism's] intentions were directed towards a transformation of value- and belief systems &#8211; a psychological &#8220;revolution&#8221; rather than one of substance.&#8217;<a href="##47">[47]</a></p>
<p>So there are indeed similarities between inter-war Germany and 21st century consumerist societies: in particular, people can feel they live in a world without meaning and have somehow lost control of their lives. Obviously there are also major differences &#8211; one could hardly suggest that boredom and ennui were a major factor in 1920s Germany, for example, and the economic backgrounds are dissimilar &#8211; but these can obscure the psychological resemblances.<a href="##48">[48]</a> In both cases, customary social and political structures are debilitated, providing little tangible or intangible support, and the sense of community is weakened. Traditional politics are viewed as irrelevant or with contempt: there is an absence of debate and we are left with politics as emotion and advertising. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reichsparteitag_38.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/reichsparteitag_glaube.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>A Nazi mass gathering: the 1937 Reichsparteitag at Nuremberg, including a spectacular performance from the young girls of the &#8216;Glaube und Schönheit&#8217; (&#8216;Belief and Beauty&#8217;) organisation.</em></p>
<p>The &#8216;solutions&#8217; in the two cases are analogous. A sense of pseudo-community is created through common activities and attendance at mass spectacles, by the channeling of emotions into a narrow range, and through a strengthening of the sense of commonality by means of an emphasis &#8211; vague but insistent &#8211; on &#8216;outsiders&#8217;. Community and a shared-culture may still be with us, but no longer based on locality or history: &#8216;What&#8217;s the point of privacy if it&#8217;s just a personalized prison? Consumerism is a collective enterprise. People here want to share and celebrate, they want to come together. When we go shopping we take part in a collective ritual of affirmation. &#8230; Shared dreams and values, shared hopes and pleasures&#8217;, claims Sangster in Kingdom Come.<a href="##49">[49]</a></p>
<p>The concept of &#8216;us&#8217; implies a &#8216;not-us&#8217; &#8230; an age-old and reliable way of putting strength back into weakening societal bonds: &#8216;David Cruise casually referred to the &#8216;enemy&#8217;, a term kept deliberately vague that embraced Asians and east Europeans, blacks, Turks, non-consumers and anyone not interested in sport. New enemies were always needed&#8217;.<a href="##50">[50]</a> To the extent that I am not an individual but part of a commonality, you are not an individual either, but a category; in Nazi Germany, one was &#8216;no longer a person, but an anti-social, criminal, Gypsy, homosexual, Jehovah&#8217;s Witness, Jew or political, in involuntary anticipation of modern identity politics, with their replacement of persons by categories&#8217;.<a href="##51">[51]</a></p>
<p>The effect of this growth in pseudo-community is the same in Kingdom Come as in Nazi Germany, as Ballard himself described in a discussion with Jeannette Baxter, when he referred to &#8216;the positive features of the new regime [of the Metro-Centre] &#8211; the self-disciplined and healthily glowing families, the sense of a revived community with a new confidence and purpose in life (in short, that &#8220;accommodation&#8221; made by so many in the 1930s in England and Germany who should know better)&#8217;.<a href="##52">[52]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8216;I like the music,&#8217; I commented. &#8216;Though maybe it&#8217;s a little too martial. Somewhere in there I can hear the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst-Wessel-Lied"> Horst Wessel<br />
song</a>. </p>
<p>&#8216;It&#8217;s good for morale,&#8217; Carradine explained. &#8216;We like to keep people cheerful &#8230;&#8217; </p>
<p>Ballard, Kingdom Come.<a href="##53">[53]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>Symbols and myths &#8211; reaching almost religious significance &#8211; start to predominate. &#8216;Politics&#8217; mutates into something else, a mixture of emotion, myth, and violence that comes close to madness. In Kingdom Come, Sangster is convinced that &#8216;some kind of insanity is the last way forward&#8217;, and the psychiatrist, Maxted, draws the parallel with Nazi Germany: &#8216;The Germans were desperate to break out of their prison. Defeat, inflation, grotesque war reparations, the threat of barbarians advancing from the east. Going mad would set them free, and they chose Hitler to lead the hunting party.&#8217;<a href="##54">[54]</a></p>
<p>But what of psychopathology and violence, which I referred to earlier as another of Ballard&#8217;s long-standing themes that runs through Kingdom Come? He has always held &#8211; based in part on his childhood experiences in Shanghai and Lunghua &#8211; that the human psyche has dark and dangerous depths, including an attraction to violence. On Ballard&#8217;s conception, mankind has natural psychopathic tendencies which, although they may not come to the fore in all societies, cannot be eradicated &#8230; a view which has some support from the anthropological and historical evidence, which indicates that hunter-gatherer and primitive agriculturalist societies often had far higher male mortality rates from violence than did Europe and North America in the 20th century, despite our technologies of destruction and two world wars.<a href="##55">[55]</a></p>
<blockquote><p>When I refer to my own childhood, and how people behaved in the Far East during the Second World War, it seemed that some people simply enjoy killing and tormenting others. &#8230; To use a term like &#8216;sadism&#8217; and to construct an elaborate psychological machinery to explain this behaviour, however, is to miss the point. The fact is, we are violent and dangerous creatures. We needed to be to survive all those hundreds of thousands of years when we were living in small tribal groups, faced with an incredibly hostile world. And we still carry those genes. </p>
<p>Ballard in interview, 1997.<a href="##56">[56]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>For the majority of the time that people have lived in crowded urban environments, any proclivity for violence was &#8211; probably of necessity &#8211; contained by social arrangements and by a widely accepted system of morality. However, both of these types of constraints are weakening, something which concerned Ballard as early as this 1974 interview: &#8216;I myself think that Man, if you like, is a naturally perverse animal, that the elements of psychopathology or perversity or moral deviancy are a very large part of his character. I don&#8217;t think that can be changed. I think attempts in the past to provide a very rigid moral framework succeeded to some extent. I think they&#8217;re going to break down now, simply because the opportunities for limitless freedom are so great.&#8217;<a href="##57">[57]</a></p>
<p>The risk is that the erasure of meaning in modern societies produces boredom and emptiness, a gap which a dormant psychopathology can readily fill, fuelled by a preference for emotion over cognition. Hence Ballard frequently links boredom and psychopathic behaviour in his later books and interviews: &#8216;My real fear is that boredom and inertia may lead people to follow a deranged leader &#8230; that we will put on jackboots and black uniforms and the aspect of the killer simply to relieve the boredom.&#8217;<a href="##58">[58]</a> The descriptions of brutality in Kingdom Come &#8211; racist attacks and violent sports events &#8211; are simply taken from Ballard&#8217;s perception of the world around him. Their significance lies not, I suggest, in the precise content, but in their latent meaning: within the absences which permeate both society and our own minds, &#8216;violence and hate, as always, were organizing themselves&#8217;.<a href="##59">[59]</a></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mercedes.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p><em>Aggressive advertising: For Mercedes-Benz, from the Nazi propaganda magazine &#8216;Signal&#8217;, c1943; and, below, for Hummer SUVs in Australia, 2008.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/hummer_kc.jpg" alt="" class="picleft" /> How might we view consumerism &#8211; and in particular the totalizing aspects of a consumerist society &#8211; as a result of this analysis of Ballard&#8217;s vision of a &#8216;soft fascism&#8217;? Consumer behaviour is an exercise in choice, and can therefore infiltrate other aspects of our lives, replacing the traditional but declining forms of morality and politics, both of which are essentially ways of choosing between alternatives. This presents us with an obligation to choose from what is on offer, and thereby effectively closes off the possibility of exiting the system &#8211; something that Pearson discovers in Kingdom Come on his first visit to the West London suburbs: &#8216;I moved through the darkened streets, searching for a signpost to guide me back to London. But here by the M25, in the heartland of the motorway people, all signs pointed inwards, referring the traveller back to his starting point&#8217;<a href="##60">[60]</a> (my emphasis). The fictionalization of the external world means that Ballard&#8217;s &#8216;exit door&#8217; through the use of our imaginative faculties is gradually closing, as these powers of the imagination become colonized by the fantasies around us and by our own emotions. This enables consumerism to satisfy our needs, not directly via the goods and services that we purchase, but indirectly by meeting our psychological requirements through our involvement in the activities of consumer society &#8211; shopping, media, leisure. The disassociation between our desires and pleasures &#8211; which might be seen as threatening the consumerist system once we discover that satisfying our desires is unfulfilling &#8211; can now be bridged: we desire the goods and buy them, but our rewards come from elsewhere, from our very participation in the system itself &#8230; from our attendance at Ballard&#8217;s Metro-Centre.</p>
<p>This totalizing effect of consumerism, whereby everything is absorbed into it in much the same way as existing organizations and groupings were subject to &#8216;capture&#8217; by the Nazis, is perhaps reflected in some of those elements of Kingdom Come which perplexed reviewers: Are the group led by the local solicitor Fairfax really opponents of the Metro-Centre, or are they just trying to use it for their own purposes? How much can we trust what the main protagonist, Pearson, says &#8211; or should we regard him as an &#8216;unreliable narrator&#8217;? Why is it not clear, even at the end of the book, whether Pearson really regrets getting involved with the Metro-Centre?<a href="##61">[61]</a> The ambiguity of Ballard&#8217;s narrative is in keeping with the self-reflexive nature of the society that he is describing, where the transgressive gesture rapidly becomes another media item that can be purchased for cash, and an attempt at escape puts you right back at the centre. Any effort at political action or opposition becomes pointless, because this is not &#8211; on Ballard&#8217;s view &#8211; a conspiracy of false needs and false consciousness: by accepting the emotional lie and the feel-good fairy story, we are ourselves complicit in the consumerist society. But if this is right, then we can see the point of Ballard&#8217;s long-held insistence that we must, as he puts it, immerse ourselves in the most dangerous elements and hope that we can swim to the other side<a href="##62">[62]</a> &#8211; a view that infects both the &#8216;extreme hypothesis&#8217; of Crash and the studied ambiguity of Kingdom Come.</p>
<p>Finally, what does Ballard&#8217;s novel tell us about fascistic activity and what it represents? As I have described it here, fascism arises as a result of a generalized sense of crisis in prosperous, complex societies, whereby tensions in each sphere &#8211; the economic, the social, the political, and the personal &#8211; cannot find relief, but actually amplify each other. The result is an escape to pseudo-community, and a surrender to the emotions and to psychopathic urges. This suggests a close similarity to Daniel Woodley&#8217;s recent discussion of the links between fascism, modernity, and capitalism:</p>
<blockquote><p>Modern [critical] theorists have abandoned class reductionism for a more sophisticated account of fascism as a political commodity, a form of ideological production in postliberal capitalism based on the aestheticization of politics and the mobilization of emotion. &#8230; postliberal capitalism entails new forms of ideological justification based on the bureaucratization and societalization of economic life. These structural tendencies increase the pressure for collective solutions to political integration, resulting in a panoply of new ideologies aimed at addressing atomization. &#8230; [Fascism's] timely appearance and reappearance is rooted &#8230; in the aestheticization of depoliticized politics and the fetishization of communal identities which conceal the true nature of the commodity as a structured social practice. </p>
<p>Daniel Woodley, &#8216;Fascism and Political Theory: Critical Perspectives on Fascist Ideology&#8217;.<a href="##63">[63]</a></p></blockquote>
<p>What I have tried to show in this article is that in Kingdom Come Ballard has attempted to unearth this &#8216;latent content&#8217; of fascism by means of his well-honed forensic tools of imagination and surrealistic description.<a href="##64">[64]</a></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>NOTES</strong></p>
<div class='hr'>
<hr /></div>
<p>[1]<a name="#1"></a> &#8216;JG Ballard: The Comforts of Madness&#8217;, interview in The Independent, 15 September 2006.<br />
[2]<a name="#2"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, Fourth Estate (London), 2006, pp 167-169.<br />
[3]<a name="#3"></a> See, for example, Ursula K Le Guin, &#8216;Revolution in the aisles&#8217;, The Guardian, 9 September 2006.<br />
[4]<a name="#4"></a> M John Harrison, &#8216;Narratives of the mall&#8217;, The Times Literary Supplement, 6 September 2006.<br />
[5]<a name="#5"></a> M John Harrison, &#8216;Narratives of the mall&#8217;, op cit.<br />
[6]<a name="#6"></a> Rod Liddle, &#8216;Our simple pleasures go up in smoke&#8217;, Times Online, <a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/rod_liddle/article1267260.ece"></a> http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/rod_liddle/article1267260.ece</a>, accessed 5 May 2010.<br />
[7]<a name="#7"></a> &#8216;From Here to Dystopia&#8217;, interview in the Telegraph Magazine, 2 September 2006.<br />
[8]<a name="#8"></a> A similar sentiment is displayed here: &#8216;A mastery of the discontinuities of metropolitan life has always been essential to the successful urban dweller &#8230; A failure to master these discontinuities, whether social or genetic in origin, leaves some ethnic groups at a disadvantage, forced into enclaves that seem to reconstitute mental maps of ancestral villages.&#8217; JG Ballard, &#8216;Airports: Going somewhere?&#8217;, The Observer, 14 September 1997.<br />
[9]<a name="#9"></a> Peter N Stearns, Consumerism in World History: The Global Transformation of Desire (2nd edition), Routledge (New York &#038; London), 2006, p 72.<br />
[10]<a name="#10"></a> Don Slater, Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity, Polity Press (Cambridge), 1997, p 27.<br />
[11]<a name="#11"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 101.<br />
[12]<a name="#12"></a> JG Ballard, Miracles of Life, Fourth Estate (London), 2008, pp 58-59.<br />
[13]<a name="#13"></a> Some of Ballard&#8217;s clearest comments on the fictionalization of the external world and the interiorization of reality as a consequence of increased prosperity are to be found in an unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, c1974, available at <a href="http://www.jgballard.ca/interviews/jgb_cbc_ideas_interview.html"></a> http://www.jgballard.ca/interviews/jgb_cbc_ideas_interview.html</a>, accessed 6 May 2010.<br />
[14]<a name="#14"></a> Unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, op cit.<br />
[15]<a name="#15"></a> Unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, op cit.<br />
[16]<a name="#16"></a> &#8216;The Strange Visions of J. G. Ballard&#8217;, interview in Rolling Stone, 19 November 1987.<br />
[17]<a name="#17"></a> &#8216;An Interview with J. G. Ballard&#8217;, Mississippi Review Vol. 20 #1-2, 1991, p 32.<br />
[18]<a name="#18"></a> &#8216;Interview by Graeme Revell&#8217;, Re/Search 8/9: J. G. Ballard, Re/Search Publishing (San Francisco), 1984, p. 46.<br />
[19]<a name="#19"></a> &#8216;Dangerous Driving&#8217;, interview in &#8216;Frieze&#8217; magazine #34, May 1997.<br />
[20]<a name="#20"></a> Peter N Stearns, Consumerism in World History: The Global Transformation of Desire (2nd edition), op cit, pp 1-14.<br />
[21]<a name="#21"></a> Peter N Stearns, Consumerism in World History: The Global Transformation of Desire (2nd edition), op cit, pp 32-34, 60-62.<br />
[22]<a name="#22"></a> Anthony Giddens, Beyond Left and Right: The Future of Radical Politics, Polity Press (Cambridge), 1994, p 224.<br />
[23]<a name="#23"></a> Don Slater, Consumer Culture &#038; Modernity, op cit, p 84-85.<br />
[24]<a name="#24"></a> Michael Marmot, Status Syndrome: How Your Social Standing Directly Affects Your Health, Bloomsbury (London), Chapter 6; Robert H Frank, Luxury Fever: Money and Happiness in an Era of Excess, Princeton University Press, 1999, pp 86-88.<br />
[25]<a name="#25"></a> Daniel Nettle, Happiness: The Science Behind Your Smile, Oxford University Press, 2005, p 180.<br />
[26]<a name="#26"></a> Zygmunt Bauman, Consuming Life, Polity Press (Cambridge), 2007, p 94.<br />
[27]<a name="#27"></a> Barry Schwartz, The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less,  Harper Perennial (New York), 2004, pp 210-211.<br />
[28]<a name="#28"></a> For example, when rats have their brains stimulated to eat food, they don&#8217;t show the typical &#8216;liking behavior&#8217; that normally accompanies pleasurable activities &#8211; indeed, if anything, they show &#8216;disliking behavior&#8217;. Conversely, the rats can be drugged so that they have no desire to eat, but show liking behavior when a sweet solution is put onto their tongue. See also Daniel Nettle, Happiness: The Science Behind Your Smile, op cit, Chapter 5.<br />
[29]<a name="#29"></a> Daniel Nettle, Happiness: The Science Behind Your Smile, op cit, pp 48-52, 70-75; Robert H Frank, Luxury Fever: Money and Happiness in an Era of Excess, op cit, pp 71-74.<br />
[30]<a name="#30"></a> Although the reference is to the generic term &#8216;fascism&#8217;, I shall limit my historical discussion to the Nazi Party and the German Third Reich &#8211; as does, by and large, Ballard..<br />
[31]<a name="#31"></a> Ian Kershaw, The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems &#038; Perspectives Of Interpretation (4th edition), Hodder Arnold (London), 2000, p 4.<br />
[32]<a name="#32"></a> Erich Fromm, The Fear of Freedom, Routledge (London), 1960, pp 106-116, 180-188 (originally published as Escape from Freedom, 1941).<br />
[33]<a name="#33"></a> See S J Woolf (ed), The Nature of Fascism, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1968, pp 107-108.<br />
[34]<a name="#34"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, Pan Books (London), 2001, p 122.<br />
[35]<a name="#35"></a> T W Mason, &#8216;The Primacy of Politics &#8211; Politics and Economics in National Socialist Germany&#8217;, in S J Woolf (ed), The Nature of Fascism, op cit, p. 171.<br />
[36]<a name="#36"></a> In a conversation with Mark Pauline c1987, published in J. G. Ballard: Conversations, RE/Search Publications, San Francisco, 2005, p 136.<br />
[37]<a name="#37"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, op cit, pp 210-211.<br />
[38]<a name="#38"></a> Quoted in Erich Fromm, The Fear of Freedom, op cit, p 193.<br />
[39]<a name="#39"></a> Roger Griffin (ed), Fascism, Oxford University Press, 1995, pp 3-4.<br />
[40]<a name="#40"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, op cit, pp 8-9.<br />
[41]<a name="#41"></a> JG Ballard, &#8216;Alphabets of Unreason&#8217; in New Worlds # 196, December 1969, p 26.<br />
[42]<a name="#42"></a> William L Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Arrow Books, [1960]/1998, p 265.<br />
[43]<a name="#43"></a> William L Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, op cit, p 258.<br />
[44]<a name="#44"></a> For the Nazi assimilation of intermediate-level organizations, see William L Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, op cit, pp 241-267.<br />
[45]<a name="#45"></a> Kevin Passmore, Fascism: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2002, p 128.<br />
[46]<a name="#46"></a> SL Andreski, &#8216;Some sociological considerations on fascism and class&#8217;, in S J Woolf (ed), The Nature of Fascism, op cit, pp 100-101.<br />
[47]<a name="#47"></a> Ian Kershaw, The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems &#038; Perspectives Of Interpretation (4th edition), op cit, pp 174, 179.<br />
[48]<a name="#48"></a> It is the psychological similarities that Ballard stressed in an interview with James Campbell: &#8216;&#8230; could consumerism turn into fascism? The underlying psychologies aren&#8217;t all that far removed from one another. If you go into a huge shopping mall and you&#8217;re looking down the parade, it&#8217;s the same theatrical aspect: these disciplined ranks of merchandise, all glittering like fascist uniforms. When you enter a mall, you are taking part in a ceremony of affirmation, which you endorse just by your presence.&#8217; The Guardian, 14 June 2008.<br />
[49]<a name="#49"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 85. It is interesting to note that Fromm uses the term &#8216;automaton conformity&#8217; to describe the form that the attempt to escape from freedom takes in modern democracies (as opposed to fascist dictatorships); see Erich Fromm, The Fear of Freedom, op cit, pp 159-178.<br />
[50]<a name="#50"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 189.<br />
[51]<a name="#51"></a> Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History, op cit, p 204.<br />
[52]<a name="#52"></a> &#8216;Kingdom Come: An Interview with J. G. Ballard&#8217;, in Jeannette Baxter, J. G. Ballard: Contemporary Critical Perspectives, Continuum (London &#038; New York), 2008, p 127.<br />
[53]<a name="#53"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 39.<br />
[54]<a name="#54"></a>  JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, pp 102, 168.<br />
[55]<a name="#55"></a> See, for example, Azar Gat, War in Civilization, Oxford University Press, 2006, Chapters 2, 6 and 9; also Steven LeBlanc, with Katherine Register, Constant Battles: The myth of the peaceful noble savage, St Martin&#8217;s Press (New York), 2003.<br />
[56]<a name="#56"></a> &#8216;Dangerous Driving&#8217;, interview in &#8216;Frieze&#8217; magazine #34, May 1997.<br />
[57]<a name="#57"></a> Unpublished interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, op cit.<br />
[58]<a name="#58"></a> &#8216;Age of Unreason&#8217;, interview published online by the The Guardian, 22 June 2004; available at <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2004/jun/22/sciencefictionfantasyandhorror.jgballard"></a>http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2004/jun/22/sciencefictionfantasyandhorror.jgballard</a> (accessed 13 May 2010).<br />
[59]<a name="#59"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 191.<br />
[60]<a name="#60"></a> JG Ballard, Kingdom Come, op cit, p 35.<br />
[61]<a name="#61"></a> After all that&#8217;s happened, Pearson still has positive feelings for the people of the Metro-Centre: &#8216;Leaving Sangster and his self-hating motives to one side, I admired Carradine and his mutineers, and the robustly physical world they had based on their consumerist dream. The motorway towns were built on the frontier between a tired past and a future without illusions and snobberies&#8217; (Kingdom Come, op cit, p. 266). And on the penultimate page, there&#8217;s the following, rather astonishing, meditation from Pearson: &#8216;The cable channels had reverted to an anaesthetic diet of household hints and book-group discussions. Once people began to talk earnestly about the novel any hope of freedom had died. The once real possibility of a fascist republic had vanished into the air &#8230;&#8217; (Kingdom Come, op cit, p. 279, my italics). This appears to mourn the failure of fascism, but I prefer to think of as reflecting Ballard&#8217;s oft-mentioned idea of &#8216;immersing oneself in the most dangerous elements and swimming&#8217;. Just to confuse matters further, on the following (and last) page of the book, Pearson turns pessimistic again and ruminates that &#8216;In time, unless the sane woke and rallied themselves, an even fiercer republic would open the doors and spin the turnstiles of its beckoning paradise&#8217; (Kingdom Come, op cit, p. 280).<br />
[62]<a name="#62"></a> See, for example, &#8216;An Interview with J. G. Ballard&#8217;, Mississippi Review op cit, p 33. And the following brief quote well-illustrates Ballard&#8217;s reasoning: &#8216;I certainly do believe that we should immerse ourselves in the destructive element. Far better to do so consciously than find ourselves tossed into the pool when we&#8217;re not looking&#8217;, interview in The Paris Review #94, 1984, p 143.<br />
[63]<a name="#63"></a> Daniel Woodley, Fascism and Political Theory: Critical Perspectives on Fascist Ideology, Routledge (London &#038; New York), 2010, pp 14-18.<br />
[64]<a name="#64"></a> c.f. Ballard on the distinction between manifest and latent content: &#8216;Freud pointed out that one has to distinguish between the manifest content of the inner world of the psyche and its latent content, and I think in exactly the same way today, when the fictional elements have overwhelmed reality, one has to distinguish between the manifest content of reality and its latent content&#8217;, from &#8216;The New Science Fiction: A conversation between J G Ballard and George MacBeth&#8217; in Langdon Jones (ed), The New SF, Hutchinson (London), 1969, p 50.</p>
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		<title>Strange Fiction</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/strange-fiction</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/strange-fiction#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Jun 2008 04:14:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[William Burroughs]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/strange-fiction</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[New interview with Ballard in the Guardian.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/ballard_mccabe_strange.jpg" alt="Ballardian" /></p>
<p><em>Photograph: Eamonn McCabe.</em></p>
<p>There&#8217;s <a href="http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,2285427,00.html">a new interview</a> with JGB in the Guardian, conducted by James Campbell. It&#8217;s short, it lazily rehashes the same old stuff about Ballard&#8217;s house and (perhaps as a result) it is filled out with asides from M. John Harrison, Iain Sinclair and others.</p>
<blockquote><p>James Graham Ballard is a large man with mischief in his eye and the social manner of a retired civil servant. At 77, he is portly, with grey hair curling on to his shirt collar. He has a full-on way with a good chablis &#8211; &#8220;More! More!&#8221; &#8211; but is considerate enough to inquire of his guest: &#8220;Do you have a motor car out there? We don&#8217;t want you to be killed.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>Ballard encountered Burroughs, whom he greatly admires as a writer, on a number of occasions. &#8220;A very strange chap.&#8221; Sinclair feels that &#8220;the two men, respectful and appreciative, never quite understood each other when they met. Both were set so deep in their visions. Other figures are aliens or rivals.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>He explains that his most recent novel, Kingdom Come (2006), &#8220;posed the question: could consumerism turn into fascism? The underlying psychologies aren&#8217;t all that far removed from one another. If you go into a huge shopping mall and you&#8217;re looking down the parade, it&#8217;s the same theatrical aspect: these disciplined ranks of merchandise, all glittering like fascist uniforms. When you enter a mall, you are taking part in a ceremony of affirmation, which you endorse just by your presence.&#8221; Consumerism &#8220;has to a large extent replaced art and culture in this country. The principal entertainment industry nowadays is soccer which, with its marching supporters&#8217; groups, is not that far removed from fascism.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>&#039;The Crashman&#039;: An Experiment in Applied Internet Ballardianism</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/the-crashman-an-experiment-in-applied-internet-ballardianism</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/the-crashman-an-experiment-in-applied-internet-ballardianism#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Apr 2008 22:45:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Crashman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[censorship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Cronenberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[death of affect]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[flying]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freud]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[humour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lead Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media landscape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Moorcock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychopathology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speed & violence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[war]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WWII]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[YouTube]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Drawing inspiration from J.G. Ballard's exhibition of crashed cars in 1970, the Crashman presents his own festival of Atrocity films: aviation disasters set to musical soundtracks.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>&#8220;The Crashman&#8221;: An Experiment in Applied Internet Ballardianism.</strong></p>
<p><em>by the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=Crashman2">Crashman</a>.</em></p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/QtxXApO5rCA&#038;hl=en"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/QtxXApO5rCA&#038;hl=en" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;White Bird&#8217; by the Crashman. &#8216;XB-70, Tu-144: White Bird Must Fly, or she will crash&#8217;.</em></p>
<blockquote><p>From the moment Blake crashes his stolen aircraft into the Thames, the unlimited dream company takes over and the town of Shepperton is transformed into an apocalyptic kingdom of desire and stunning imagination ruled over by Blake’s messianic figure. Tropical flora and fauna appear; pan-sexual celebrations occur regularly; and in a final climax of liberation, the townspeople learn to fly.</p>
<p><em>From the cover blurb to </em><em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-unlimited-dream-company">The Unlimited Dream Company</a></em>, J.G. Ballard, 1979 (Triad/Panther edition, 1985).</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><strong>Perreau:</strong> You once said “Nothing has any sense except in terms of ephemeral airplane culture”. Motorways, airplanes, shopping centres… What is the link between these things? What do humans do?</p>
<p><strong>Ballard:</strong> They take planes and fly around, like the great soaring birds who endlessly cross and recross the ocean. Like the albatross, we are looking for our soul. Tourism is a rehearsal for death.</p>
<p><em>From Yann Perreau&#8217;s <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/ballards-in-fashion">interview with J.G. Ballard</a>.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>As a stripling, I had the immense good fortune to stumble across the short stories of J.G. Ballard in the pulp science fiction magazines of the day: <em></em><em>IF</em>, <em></em><em>F&#038;SF</em>, <em></em><em>Analog</em>. These prompted me to get hold of his early novels: <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-wind-from-nowhere">The Wind From Nowhere</a></em>, <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">The Drowned World</a></em>, <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-crystal-world">The Crystal World</a></em>. I was seduced by the subtle brilliance of Ballard&#8217;s work, by the total absence of worked-to-death SF themes, by the air of detached sophistication, overwhelming to a callow adolescent like me.</p>
<p>When Mr Ballard turned his back on &#8220;conventional SF&#8221; and pioneered the British New Wave with <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/angry-old-men-michael-moorcock-on-jg-ballard">Michael Moorcock</a>, I was as excited as anyone. His work opened up a relentless, terrifyingly limitless voyage into the libido, the id, the savage psychopathology that lies hidden in every ordinary man and woman, the possibility of any strange thing. Reading Ballard as an adolescent changed my entire view of the world, certainly of what was called &#8220;Science Fiction&#8221;.</strong></p>
<p>In the early 70s a fellow fan handed me a copy of <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a></em>. It was an utterly stunning experience. <em>Crash</em> ruined my taste for anything but the finest SF, and I was haunted for years by visions of Vaughan&#8217;s peculiar hobbies, those bizarrely twisted, almost unheard-of modes of human sexuality spelled out inexorably by the book. Now nothing could satisfy me as fully as Mr Ballard’s experiments with what the human psyche was really capable of, laying out unthinkable sexual and psychological grotesqueries in his trademark elegant, gentlemanly, spare and penetrating prose. His writing remade my intellectual world.</p>
<p>I gulped down his later novels, each more thought-provoking than the last, reveling in the astounding but visibly true events reported in the daily news as much as in his work. I found little to criticize, least of all his unflinching view of the profound yet subtle changes imposed by modern civilization on a thinking organism many millions of years old, an organism evolved under very different conditions than prevail today.</p>
<p>I searched for similar oracles, those who could further light the shattered-glass-strewn, arc-lit motorways we would soon be endlessly traveling. The <a href="<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&#038;location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FCrash-James-Spader%2Fdp%2F6305161968%3Fie%3DUTF8%26s%3Ddvd%26qid%3D1207608566%26sr%3D8-1&#038;tag=ballardian-21&#038;linkCode=ur2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=6738">Cronenberg movie</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=ballardian-21&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=2" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> was devastatingly, beautifully faithful to Ballard and after I saw it I realized that all of Ballard&#8217;s work could be read as a screenplay, a script for a movie about the storms of change enveloping the world.</p>
<div><embed src="http://www.livevideo.com/flvplayer/embed/2E5AACA4A21E4223A9FC5E1BA5BC1358" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" quality="high" WIDTH="445" HEIGHT="369" wmode="transparent"></embed></div>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Helicopter Opera&#8217; by the Crashman. &#8216;Helicopters crash to soaring opera by Kimera&#8217;.</em></p>
<p>I developed a desire to put forth my own tribute to Ballard&#8217;s work and somehow to carry forward the concepts that had so fascinated and changed me. I am no writer of any skill, and the idea of writing something &#8220;derivative of&#8221; or &#8220;inspired by&#8221; the genius of the Oracle of Shepperton was repellent to me. It could not fail to be anything but the crudest of imitations. So, to contribute to the Ballardian universe and its inhabitants, I latched onto the themes expressed in <em>Crash</em>, and since Mr Ballard&#8217;s novels acknowledged little or no boundaries, neither would I. I felt I could somehow take the themes of <em>Crash</em> even further, in different media if necessary. I thought about the event that had more or less inspired <em>Crash</em>: Mr Ballard&#8217;s <a href="http://www.slashseconds.org/issues/001/001/articles/13_sford/index.php">exhibition of crashed cars as art</a>, with the death and destruction latent in these twisted, crashed vehicles unleashing something that had always been hidden in the minds of their viewers. I wanted to do that.</p>
<p>In my teens I acquired a pilot&#8217;s licence, for sport and for the opportunity to master dangerous technology. But I was also drawn to plane crashes, to air crashes of <em>any type</em>, crashes at air exhibitions, transport accidents, airliners, sport planes, military fighters. They attracted me in the same way as Vaughan, who could not pass a motor accident without slowing to view and, if possible, photograph the result. From childhood I collected every book, press clipping and photograph I could find that dealt with aviation accidents and their strange and often grotesque aftermaths. To this day I have valises bulging with old magazine and newspaper clippings of long-forgotten air crashes.</p>
<p>Famous air tragedies have become iconic for me: so much human anguish dealt out by a crack in a pressurized Comet window joint, by the decision of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenerife_disaster">KLM captain at Tenerife</a> to advance the throttles of his huge 747 while another loaded 747 on the same runway ahead of him lay hidden in the fog. By the peculiarly unforgiving nature of mechanical flight, midair collisions against all odds, the inexplicable crash deaths of highly experienced pilots from unexpected causes, of men and women who had spent thousands of hours at the controls. As Ballard’s work implies, we are at the mercy of our own technology.</p>
<p>I began to understand what it was that never fails to fascinate the public about aviation: the CRASH. A massive, newsworthy and completely public display of flying vehicular violence always raises the psychological stakes on the table, and is faithful to the essential Ballardian spirit. In the film <em>The Great Waldo Pepper</em> the barnstorming protagonist asks, &#8220;Why do people come to airshows?&#8221; The answer he is given is: &#8220;People don&#8217;t come to airshows to watch planes fly. They come to watch a man die.&#8221; Few psychoanalysts would disagree.</p>
<p>But I have also never met a pilot who can resist reading a crash report or viewing a film of one. We learn from them, &#8220;there but for the grace of God go I&#8221; &#8212; but like a car accident on the motorways that now define our civilization, no one can look away. We are all spectators at this destructive end-stage of our grotesquely dehumanizing civilization. Eventually it will become boring, as Mr Ballard has predicted our future as a civilization to be.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/zTCsSlGDcLA&#038;hl=en"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/zTCsSlGDcLA&#038;hl=en" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Kraftwerk Crashes&#8217; by the Crashman. &#8216;Topnotch crashing, all technical styles&#8217;.</em></p>
<p>Added to that, I was also fascinated by Ballard&#8217;s stint in the RAF and the flying symbolism in his books. Again and again he has teased us with aviation and its dangers, so akin to the dangers of the motorway. There&#8217;s the protagonist aviator in <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a></em> with his crash-injured knee and his banner-towing girlfriend. There are the accounts in <em><a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-kindness-of-women">The Kindness of Women</a></em> of military training in powerful RAF Harvards in Saskatchewan; of the ceaseless activity at the huge airports that always seem to be at the nexus of those fascinating and deadly motorways; of the forever-lost Turkish aviator trainee and his crashed Harvard, inverted for eternity in an unnamed Canadian lake, its form just visible, slowly disappearing under green algae as Ballard flew over it. And of the bold and virile American Mustang over Shanghai, herald of liberation and of a change in Ballard&#8217;s life as profound as that triggered by the Japanese occupation, itself announced by graceful formations of Zeros and Mitsubishi bombers over the soon-to-be-destroyed Shanghai of the 1930s.</p>
<p>So here was my chance to sit at the Ballardian table and place my own dish on its menu. Given my aviation background, and my desire to evoke the spirit of <em>Crash</em>, what could be more appropriate than the sight of a sudden and unexpected crash, preferably of a large airliner, its great silver phallus shattering in an ultra-high-speed orgasm of violent, spasmodic disintegration, uncontrollably spewing the shocked, wandering gametes of its ambulatory survivors and the ragged chunks of human flesh still full of their own unique DNA? This is epistemology, the very question of identity itself: &#8220;Who are we?&#8221; &#8220;Who were you?&#8221;. And what could be more Ballardian? No one ever emerges from an air crash unchanged at the deepest levels, even if they do survive.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/JH084iwcwgI&#038;hl=en"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/JH084iwcwgI&#038;hl=en" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Crash Right In&#8217; by the Crashman. &#8216;Baby let your hair hang down&#8230;&#8217;</em></p>
<p>The raw materials for the experiment were already available. I found numerous websites devoted solely to air accidents, those rare films where a motion-picture camera has recorded the unfolding of the crash, the cries and shouts of the survivors and onlookers, the stunned silence of the injured and the unending silent rage of the dead, lives with a whole trajectory changed forever in the intersection with violent arcs of shatteringly powerful, aluminium turbine-powered technology. Right away these suggested TV commercials of traveling death and terrifying impacts rather than beaches and sun, films of agonizingly public yet intensely personal disasters of which the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1G_Zxup7esU">Zapruder Kennedy motorcade film</a> was an early harbinger.</p>
<p>I collected these films, poring over dread experiences frozen forever in time. Again, I recalled Ballard&#8217;s exhibition, where the mere presence of the crashed vehicles in a public art-space had touched and unleashed the id of the viewers, to the point where the audience began to interact unpredictably and destructively with these static displays of demolished technology. Somehow, Ballard&#8217;s work had touched something that was always there, but rarely expressed in public.</p>
<p>I began to edit the films to music, making my own choices and juxtapositions, the goal being to emerge with a collection of short videos that had been extracted from reality, yet would evoke in the viewer the same types of emotions and insights unleashed in Mr Ballard&#8217;s work. I used a neo-Ballardian pastiche technique to edit them: no plot, no dialogue with the viewer, nothing but crash after crash, and the result emerged as a video collage of horror, dismay, and death, Ballardianism expressed in an entirely new set of technological media.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/j2hy6IvD_Qw&#038;hl=en"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/j2hy6IvD_Qw&#038;hl=en" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></p>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Turning Japanese&#8217; by the Crashman. &#8216;I think I&#8217;m turning Japanese&#8230;&#8217;</em></p>
<p>The films in their original state were often silent, sometimes monochromatic and flickering with age, and sometimes modern color video, the soundtrack replete with the noise of impact and the cries of onlookers. But music dictated an important &#8220;feel&#8221; to the videos, echoing and amplifying the visual crash itself, lending it layers of additional meaning (although I often left in the cries of spectators and survivors, the better to immerse the viewer in the event). I found that the visual material of crashing aircraft lent itself readily to many kinds of musical background. Repeated slow-motion test crashes of old airliners called for music evoking the eventual futility of life. Exciting airshow passes and flaming collisions called for equally exciting, pounding rock &#8216;n&#8217; roll. Surviving, parachuting pilots had their luck accompanied with notes of musical grace. Antique crashes evoked songs from their own black-and-white era. Uniquely elegant aircraft crashes called for matching beauty in the music.</p>
<p>At first I kept these short videos to myself. I felt the general public would see them as merely morbid, while the aviation community, of which I remained a part, would probably react even more negatively. Then I began to post them on websites devoted to bizarre and unpleasant events. After I had made a few of the videos public, a collective audience began to slowly emerge. I began to receive feedback and criticism, sometimes constructive, often laudatory, and sometimes merely abusive. But these people were accustomed to horrible sights and events already, like a doctor or air crash investigator. How would a random, general audience feel and what would they say? I took the next step: in 2006 I <a href="ttp://www.youtube.com/profile?user=Crashman2">uploaded most of the videos</a> to YouTube.</p>
<p>I expected to be excoriated by this wider, larger general public as a ghoul, an exploiter of the suffering of others, and as it happened the word &#8216;sick&#8217; was freely applied to the videos as well as to myself. I considered this a compliment, as it mirrored the initial response to <em>Crash</em> (&#8216;This author is beyond psychiatric help: do not publish&#8217;, according to the publisher&#8217;s reader). But, and I had expected this too, neo-Ballardians began to show themselves, finding subtle excitements and even strange beauty in the videos, that uneasy, disquieting splendour inherent in the slow-motion breakup of a speeding aircraft. Negative commenters, meanwhile, would often complain that the music was not to their taste, ignorant of the maxim “de gustibus non est disputandum”.</p>
<p>While I got my share of abuse as a psychopathic air crash ghoul and poor chooser of soundtrack music, I noticed an interesting phenomenon: not one of the persons commenting who had an authentic aviation background found them less than fascinating, and the vast majority of them found the videos praiseworthy. They admitted they were fascinated and horrified at the same time, feelings made familiar by the very real possibility of such crashes happening to them. They had been fatally intrigued. As one of my sharpest critics admitted, even he couldn&#8217;t look away from the screen. The material was simply too visually powerful. I had touched something, and I hoped it was close to what Mr Ballard had touched in the readers of his novels and in the viewers of his crashed-car art installation.</p>
<p>I continued to expose my unpromoted, unadvertised work, with all its unfettered techno-pornography of aviation violence. Within a little more than a year my videos had been seen by well over a million people on YouTube alone. The experiment was working on a large stage now.</p>
<div><embed src="http://www.livevideo.com/flvplayer/embed/C6ECB5005B8F48EC81F6404E01BF4454" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" quality="high" WIDTH="445" HEIGHT="369" wmode="transparent"></embed></div>
<p><em>ABOVE: &#8216;Proud and Glorious&#8217; by the Crashman. &#8216;Death and glory in the air&#8230;&#8217;</em></p>
<p>The viewers seemed to get the intended spirit of these odd video creations right away. Others had already begun making fascinating crash-collage videos of auto accidents, and my work was seen as kicking the violence stakes up a notch, because, I suppose, of the relative rarity of plane crash films and the indisputably brutal violence inherent in their nature. Famous airliner crashes, the air conflicts of WWII, the pathetic mishaps of general aviation and the unintended accidents at public airshows and aerial exhibitions interested the vast majority of viewers.</p>
<p>I found that nationalism played a large part in most of the negative reactions. Russians, for example, would complain about videos devoted to their own airshow crashes. My video of the incomparably horrible Lviv airshow accident in 2002 showed shredded bodies on the runways, yet how could a video faithfully recording the original event ever be justifiably censored? No one can even see these videos unless they seek them out&#8230;</p>
<p>Once a contingent of Britons forced YouTube to take my collage of helicopter crash films offline, by bombarding them with complaints that it showed a completely non-explicit but fatal crash of one of their own country&#8217;s helicopters. Again I adopted a Ballardian stance: here it is, make of it what you will. View the videos or not, as you choose. To the extent I needed one, I pleaded the aesthetic defense of reality, of psychological and factual truth-telling &#8212; and a strong one it is.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s interesting to note that since I began posting in 2005, quite a few others have begun to do the same, editing various aviation-accident and plane crash videos to music and posting the result. The experiment has gone “viral” &#8212; a novel subgenre is emerging on YouTube and many other sites devoted to odd videos.</p>
<p>On a personal level, I consider this experiment an enormous success, comparable to the feelings of an author or filmmaker who knows that literally millions of people have chosen to view their work. On the Ballardian level, as a public psychological experiment in Applied Ballardianism, it merely proves what we already knew: that Mr Ballard’s unique visions are as powerful when translated into other media as they are in his work itself.</p>
<p>We know that Mr Ballard does not use the internet, but his partner, Claire, does. If by chance she runs across this project someday and shows it to him, I can only hope he will accept this experiment as it was intended: as a sincere tribute to the man and his work.</p>
<blockquote><p>I feel that the balance between fiction and reality has changed significantly in the past decades. Increasingly their roles are reversed. We live in a world ruled by fictions of every kind &#8211; mass-merchandizing, advertising, politics conducted as a branch of advertising, the pre-empting of any original response to experience by the television screen. We live inside an enormous novel. It is now less and less necessary for the writer to invent the fictional content of his novel. The fiction is already there. The writer&#8217;s task is to invent the reality.</p>
<p><em>J.G. Ballard, introduction to Crash, 1973.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><em>The Crashman. Copyright 2008, Crashman Productions.</em></p>
<div class="hr">
<hr /></div>
<p><strong>..:: MORE CRASHMAN</strong><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=Crashman2">Crashman: YouTube</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.livevideo.com/Crashman">Crashman: LiveVideo</a></p>
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		<title>&#039;Vomit, violence, tabloid architecture&#8230;&#039;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/vomit-violence-tabloid-architecture</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/vomit-violence-tabloid-architecture#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2008 12:07:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[celebrity culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fascism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[media landscape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[micronations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[television]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban revolt]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[MelbPsy gets all Atrocity Exhibition on the House that Sam Newman built, the 'tabloid architecture' sheathing yet another backyard Aussie micronation.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/pammy.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sam Newman" /></p>
<p><em>The house that Sam built &#8230; from Pam.</em></p>
<p>MelbPsy <a href="http://mappingmelbourne.blogspot.com">gets all Atrocity Exhibition</a> on Sam Newman&#8217;s <del datetime="2008-03-12T11:13:32+00:00">ass </del> house:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;As he stood beneath the fractured, glacial stare of Pamela Anderson, her linear geometry echoed a television howl. Vomit, violence, tabloid architecture. Was this, he wondered, the denouement of the French Revolution?&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>For those outside of Australia, Newman is a local type, an ex-footballer who built a new career out of being an all-purpose media boor. So the script goes, nothing is beyond him, whether it&#8217;s <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/10/31/1067566083084.html">allegedly monstering pregnant women in supermarkets</a> or, yes, <strong>erecting</strong> a <a href="http://www.skhs.org.au/SKHSbuildings/22.htm">larger-than-life facade</a> of Pamela Anderson (&#8220;we&#8217;re just good friends,&#8221; says Sam) to <strong>breast</strong> his inner-city property.</p>
<p>MelbPsy&#8217;s ironic appropriation of the <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-atrocity-exhibition">Atrocity</a> aesthetic is completely appropriate, then, given that book&#8217;s concern with irradiated images of celebrity culture beamed aloft on 400ft-high billboards:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;He recognized the woman from the billboards he had seen near the hospital &#8212; the screen actress, <del datetime="2008-03-11T10:02:25+00:00">Elizabeth Taylor</del> Pammy Anderson. Yet these designs were more than enormous replicas. They were equations that embodied the relationship between the identity of the film actress and the audiences who were distant reflections of her. The planes of their lives interlocked at oblique angles, fragments of personal myths fusing with the commercial cosmologies. The presiding deity of their lives, the film actress provided a set of operating formulae for their passage through consciousness.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>JGB, Atrocity, 1970.</em></p></blockquote>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/sammy3.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Sam Newman" class="picleft" /></p>
<p><em>Sam Newman: &#8220;Most people are wankers&#8230;&#8221;</em></p>
<p>In Atrocity, when the main character erects mindscapes and celebrity billboards, he&#8217;s using the radiation of the media landscape against itself in order to clear autonomous zones &#8212; &#8220;neural intervals&#8221; &#8212; ready for inscription by brand-new auratic powers&#8230;</p>
<p>&#8230;while Newman has been run over by his girlfriend in her car (giving him a broken leg and ankle) and has been beaten up by an ex-girlfriend&#8217;s new boyfriend (giving him a broken nose). Yet Sam <em>has</em> used these highly publicised sexual pecadilloes to create <em>his own</em> independent nation, the United State of Sam, seceding from Australia on the back of its strident Constitution, customised and retooled from all that negative publicity and now <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/10/31/1067566083084.html">reoccupying and re-broadcasting across all media</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Most people you meet are wankers, pure and simple. Women are schemers, men are liars. That is all you have to remember &#8230; I&#8217;m just about the only heterosexual left in my street. I&#8217;m thinking of leaving the country before being gay becomes compulsory. I like women. Just remember they are schemers.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>Sammy, 2003.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>He has been punched out not once but twice by separate footballers live on air, and is renowned for his trademark phrase, &#8220;You idiot,&#8221; hurled indiscriminately at the public &#8212; at mental defectives, immigrants, grannies, junkies, any old trash &#8212; while doing his roving <a href="http://video.msn.com/req.aspx?mkt=en-au&#038;brand=ninemsn&#038;rc=1">&#8220;Street Talk&#8221;</a> segments for <a href="http://wwos.ninemsn.com.au/afl/footyshow/">The Footy Show</a>, the sport-hooligan fest that made his TV name and on which he appeared in blackface after Aboriginal footballer Nicky Winmar failed to make his scheduled slot. He has more enemies than Max Gogarty, yet remains a wildly popular and highly paid celebrity.</p>
<p>According to <a href="http://www.onlymelbourne.com.au/melbourne_details.php?id=2269">this puffpiece</a>, he serves an all-purpose role, functioning equally as virtual gigolo and cathartic release for the pent-up violence of ordinary lives:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;No small part of Newman&#8217;s attractiveness to women (and make no mistake about it, Sam Newman has a good deal to do with &#8220;The Footy Show&#8221;&#8216;s enormous popularity with women, who watch it in greater numbers than do men), is the impression he conveys of being a man who does not lose his temper. This is a man you can thump in the chest, reprimand, tease &#8212; without risking being hit. And this is a man you can flirt with, show your legs to (as did one elderly woman in a notable &#8220;Street Talk&#8221; segment), without fear that he will &#8220;lose control.&#8221;<br />
&#8230;<br />
Sam does not &#8220;control&#8221; himself. Sam calls idiots idiots. It does not really matter (to most of the audience) whether or not they are idiots, whether or not Sam has quoted them or represented them fairly. It matters that someone says what he bloody well reckons. Those without Sam&#8217;s license (women, for instance) can enjoy this vicariously.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>If you&#8217;ve read <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>, which of course charts The Rise and Fall of TV hack David Cruise and his Minders from Staines, Sam might be sounding familiar by now:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;It was tuned to the Metro-Centre cable channel, and showed an afternoon discussion programme transmitted from the mezzanine studio. The suntanned face of David Cruise dominated everything, and covered the proceedings like a cheap but over-bright lacquer. He was smiling and affable, but faintly hostile, like a bullying valet. Perhaps people in the motorway towns liked to be shouted at.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;‘So David Cruise is the führer? He’s fairly benign.’</p>
<p>‘He’s a nothing. He’s a “virtual” man without a real thought in his head. Consumer fascism provides its own ideology, no one needs to sit down and dictate Mein Kampf. Evil and psychopathy have been reconfigured into lifestyle statements. It’s a fearful prospect, but consumer fascism may be the only way to hold a society together. To control all that aggression, and channel all those fears and hates.&#8217;&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Cruise’s obsessions and sexual hang-ups were the compass-dance of a demented king bee, guiding the hive to a destination it had already chosen. His chat-show act, based on scripts I tailored around him, might be a performance, but it validated the hunger and restlessness of his audience. The housewives mailing their photographs to him were performing rituals of assent, expressing their longing for a faith beyond politics.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;David Cruise casually referred to the ‘enemy’, a term kept deliberately vague that embraced Asians and east Europeans, blacks, Turks, non-consumers and anyone not interested in sport.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;&#8216;One thing David Cruise had was an unlimited supply of enemies. That was part of his strategy. You know that, Richard. You planned it that way.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p><em>All quotes, Ballard, Kingdom Come, 2006</em>.</p></blockquote>
<p>Oh yes. Now I remember how Kingdom Come ends&#8230;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/mad_bad_bad_good.jpg" alt="Ballardian; Sam Newman" /></p>
<p><em>Our man David Cruise in his latest campaign&#8230; Photo courtesy <a href="http://metrocentre.wordpress.com/page/2">Metro-Centre</a>.</em></p>
<p><em><strong>..:: Previously on Ballardian:</strong></em><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/melborea-moronica-depraved-electric-flora">Melborea Moronica: New ‘Depraved Species of Electric Flora’ Found Growing in Melbourne, Australia</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-rats-that-ate-mill-park">The Rats that Ate Mill Park</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-drought-water-vigilantes">The Drought: Water Vigilantes</a><br />
<strong>+</strong> <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/john-howard-the-conspiracy-of-grey-men">John Howard: The Conspiracy of Grey Men</a></p>
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		<title>More on Liddle and Ballard</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/more-on-liddle-and-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/more-on-liddle-and-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Feb 2007 01:05:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Moorcock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/more-on-liddle-and-ballard/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[REMINDER: The &#8216;call for papers&#8217; deadline for &#8216;Shanghai to Shepperton: An International Conference on J.G. Ballard&#8217; is three days away. See here for details, and here for more on the conference. J. Carter Wood, over at Obscene Desserts, has posted a long and thoughtful rebuttal of Rob Liddle&#8217;s recent dismissal of Kingdom Come. I posted [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>REMINDER: The &#8216;call for papers&#8217; deadline for &#8216;Shanghai to Shepperton: An International Conference on J.G. Ballard&#8217; is three days away. See <a href="http://www.uea.ac.uk/eas/events/ballard/ballardcfp.html">here for details</a>, and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jeannette-baxter-from-shanghai-to-norwich">here for more</a> on the conference.</em></p>
<p>J. Carter Wood, over at Obscene Desserts, has posted <a href="http://obscenedesserts.blogspot.com/2007/02/middle-class-hero.html">a long and thoughtful rebuttal</a> of Rob Liddle&#8217;s recent dismissal of <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>. I posted about Liddle&#8217;s piece <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/kc-deeply-silly-patronising">earlier</a>, but J. Carter&#8217;s articulate response cuts far quicker and deeper to the heart of the matter:</p>
<blockquote><p>First and foremost, anyone who thinks Ballard&#8217;s fiction fits comfortably with a New Labour mindset has either absolutely no idea about literature or has to provide proof that Blairism is a far more kinky and interesting ideology than is generally acknowledged.</p>
<p>More to the point though, in Kingdom Come, many of the ‘plebs’ who run riot in the book are of the ‘professional classes’ themselves, and the dividing lines between good and bad are hardly drawn by income alone. Moreover, in books such as <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/high-rise">High-Rise</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-millennium-people">Millennium People</a> (and others) Ballard has long made clear that the darker aspects of humanity (i.e., those upon which he tends to dwell) are something to which the cappuccino swilling middle-classes have at least as much access to as anyone else.</p>
<p>Indeed, if I had to name any single class which comes off badly in Ballard’s books, it would be the pretentious middle classes. The silly, Guardian-reading, Habitat-shopping revolutionists of the ‘upholstered apocalypse’ depicted in Millennium People are a prime example.<br />
&#8230;<br />
A closer reading &#8230; might have pointed out to [Liddle] that what binds the members of the riotous mob in Kingdom Come more than anything else is not that they are working class but rather that they are largely a consuming class to whom few of the traditional social ties which used to bind people together are available.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>It&#8217;s an excellent point. Football is pure commodity. Ballard reports this fairly and accurately, including cataloguing his own weaknesses as a so-called &#8220;middle-class&#8221; writer observing Liddle&#8217;s so-called &#8220;working-class pleasures&#8221;. Maybe there&#8217;s more invested in supporting a club (or nation) by, say, someone who grew up during the Depression era where sport was something to really believe in, but to many present-day observers, it looks far more ominous.</p>
<p>Liddle takes exception with KC&#8217;s depiction of sporting mobs &#8220;dressed in identical St George’s shirts and interested only in consumerism and sport.&#8221; But football is a supply line that leads directly to the <a href="http://www.thebentallcentre-shopping.com">Bentall Centre</a> (or Kingdom Come&#8217;s sinister equivalent &#8212; the Metro-Centre), if a club (or nation) can sell enough strips by conning supporters that they are part of a Liddle-style &#8220;noble tribe&#8221; rather than supporters of a corporate brand.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/articles/2005/08/10/1123353384555.html">It&#8217;s not just an English thing</a>, either, and it&#8217;s not confined to sport &#8212; the &#8220;religion of consumerism&#8221; does not discriminate. At the recent Big Day Out music fest, the organisers called on attendees to leave Australian flags at home for fear of riots and racial tension, after various mass-flag-waving violent incidents over the past year or so.</p>
<p>This from the<a href="http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200701/s1831574.htm"> ABC website</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>The Australian Democrats say political leaders should face up to the fact that the Australian flag has been misused by racists and ultra-nationalists. &#8230; Prime Minister John Howard has called the move stupid and offensive&#8230; But Democrats Senator Andrew Bartlett says the Big Day Out organisers have made a sensible decision because some people misuse the flag in a racist way.<br />
&#8230;.<br />
Jeremy Smith says he was the victim of an attack by a man carrying an Australian flag at last year&#8217;s Big Day Out&#8230; &#8220;Looking back, it was definitely prevalent during the day and from the other Big Day Outs I&#8217;d gone to,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It &#8230; turned into more of a sporting hooligan event more than anything.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Music as sport; violence as patriotism &#8212; on the face of it, is it really drawing that long a bow to suggest that consumerism can lead to fascism? I&#8217;m taking Ballard&#8217;s stripped-down perception over Liddle&#8217;s reactionary romanticism any day.</p>
<p>Final words&#8230; On the matter of Ballard&#8217;s politics, Iain Sinclair, in Tim&#8217;s interview <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iain-sinclair-when-in-doubt-quote-ballard">for Ballardian</a>, manages to hit the nail right on the head:</p>
<blockquote><p>Ballard&#8217;s politics are quite curious. I don&#8217;t know whether you could call him conservative, with a small &#8216;c&#8217;, because he celebrates the nature of the bourgeois in its exile: the people that &#8230; are anonymous and separated from the mob. Whereas his early partner, Michael Moorcock, said he was a man of the urban mob, who celebrates the crowds and smells of cafes and markets and all of that stuff, which is totally alien to Ballard. He&#8217;d like to chuck away all the old buildings, pull them down, get rid of all that heavy 19th-century furniture and have everything straight out of an Ikea catalogue.</p>
<p>In that sense, I think there&#8217;s something conservative, but in other senses there&#8217;s something incredibly anarchic and furious about what he does, which doesn&#8217;t fit with any contemporary sense of politics. He doesn&#8217;t belong, he&#8217;s completely an outsider, although when you meet him he appears to be quite an Establishment person. He&#8217;s got a very fruity voice and genial persona, and would fit into the colonial society in which he grew up.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>KC: &#039;deeply silly, patronising&#039;</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/kc-deeply-silly-patronising</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/kc-deeply-silly-patronising#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 28 Jan 2007 13:39:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brian Eno]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consumerism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[In a Sunday Times piece on the &#8216;curtailment of working-class pleasures&#8217;, Rod Liddle writes: &#8230;what truly annoys me is &#8230; the way in which this government &#8212; and previous governments &#8212; view football supporters. If you’re unsure what this attitude is, read JG Ballard’s new novel, Kingdom Come. This is, as usual, a dystopian fantasy [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In a <a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/rod_liddle/article1267260.ece">Sunday Times piece</a> on the &#8216;curtailment of working-class pleasures&#8217;, Rod Liddle writes:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;what truly annoys me is &#8230; the way in which this government &#8212; and previous governments &#8212; view football supporters. If you’re unsure what this attitude is, read JG Ballard’s new novel, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>.</p>
<p>This is, as usual, a dystopian fantasy set in a fictitious chavtown, just off the M25, called Brooklands. The local population &#8212; save for a few concerned members of the professional classes &#8212; are a brutal and brutalised morass of plebs, dressed in identical St George’s shirts and interested only in consumerism and sport. Sport is what happens to a society mired in boredom and existing in a moral vacuum; it necessarily leads to a kind of fascism, or is a symptom of it, Ballard avers. After football matches, the workers go on rampages, attacking Asians and chanting nasty things. They are viewed as dumb animals, to be led, manipulated and exploited.</p>
<p>Kingdom Come is a deeply silly and patronising novel, but it does at least encapsulate the contempt and lack of understanding with which working-class pastimes are viewed by our political leaders and, in Ballard’s case, our intelligentsia. And, as a corollary, why successive administrations have sought to make football more middle-class by stripping it of all those things that once made it vital and compelling.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>I never felt that in KC Ballard was writing anything approaching realism (surrealism, yes)&#8230;just like I don&#8217;t think the director of Wolf Creek really believes that women should be nailed to posts and tortured with hunting knives. My first impression on reading KC was to laugh out loud at the sheer number of references to sporting supporters in St George&#8217;s shirts, almost on every page&#8230;it seemed absurd, a joke&#8230;maybe it actually is.</p>
<p>These scenes reminded me of the old Monty Python cartoon depicting waves of &#8220;Red Chinese; three deep&#8221; flooding over the continents and into Europe. The book is satirising a primal, irrational, classist fear, isn&#8217;t it? (&#8220;the square root of J. G. Ballard divided by Monty Python&#8221; = Kingdom Come, to retool a line from a <a href="http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/barrym/company.htm">Max Barry review</a>). Or am I being incredibly naive? Is Ballard? I don&#8217;t think Ballard really understands sport &#8212; or sports fandom &#8212; that well, but I think he is dead on in identifying the ways in which it&#8217;s all become just another floating signifier.</p>
<p>Allow me to make a connection from where I&#8217;m standing &#8212; Australia &#8212; because Ballard&#8217;s vision makes total sense round these parts. Here, in the state of Victoria, the Aussies Rules football teams have absolutely no connection to their suburbs or their original grounds anymore; nine teams share two grounds on the fringes of the Central Business District under the league&#8217;s cloning policy (officially known as the &#8220;<a href="http://www.realfooty.theage.com.au/articles/2005/08/10/1123353384555.html">ground rationalisation policy</a>&#8220;). Of course, this is completely driven by money and big business. There&#8217;s no connection to any &#8220;working class&#8221;; corporate sponsors stick like shit to pigs, though. These days, you may as well support &#8220;McDonalds&#8221; or &#8220;Microsoft&#8221; rather than &#8220;Collingwood&#8221; or &#8220;Carlton&#8221;, to name the two most-famous Aussie Rules clubs. To an outsider, someone from the &#8220;middle class&#8221;, say, or a &#8220;member of the intelligentsia&#8221;, with limited sporting or supporting background, it may seem like waves of cloned oiks belting crap out of each other out of boredom (while swearing allegiance to consumer-driven &#8220;soft fascism&#8221;) and it may seem like they were next.</p>
<p>Someone like Brian Eno, perhaps, who <a href="http://music.hyperreal.org/artists/brian_eno/interviews/q178jul01.htm">once said</a>, &#8220;I’m becoming increasingly anti-sport. I think sport is encouraged by governments to channel what would be male revolutionary energy into totally pointless activities. Sport is a great technique of social control. I always watch the Olympics, mind you.&#8221;</p>
<p>(Is Eno being totally serious here? I suppose there could be an element of pisstake.)</p>
<p>Ballard escalates these thought processes to their absurdist conclusion. In KC, it&#8217;s all a background blur. A simulation. And more self aware than Liddle imagines: Pearson, the muddled protagonist is clearly a Ballard proxy, described by the author as being &#8220;beyond psychiatric help&#8221;; he dresses like the &#8220;public&#8221; Ballard does and there are all the in-jokes Ballard makes about his own public image via Pearson. Pearson lives and breathes the media landscape; he&#8217;s an ad man, and his perception is shaped by tubes and lenses. The St George&#8217;s hordes are mise en scene, maybe a bit like old Road Runner cartoons, where the same rocky outcrops whizz by over and over again.</p>
<p>For Liddle to imply that Ballard is so blinkered as to be unaware of the contradictions inherent in a member of the &#8216;intelligentsia&#8221; commenting on so-called &#8216;working class&#8217; pursuits is &#8216;deeply silly and patronising&#8217; in itself. It&#8217;s the same pointless argument that cyberfeminists used to make against <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-crash">Crash</a>, that it&#8217;s a &#8216;deeply misogynist work&#8217; or some such, or that early critics made against <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-the-drowned-world">Drowned World</a>, that it&#8217;s &#8216;bourgeois decadence&#8217;. Ballard writes honestly and unflinchingly from his vantage point, stripping perception down to its base metals &#8212; including cataloguing his own foibles and failures &#8212; and is no less relevant for that.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s often suggested that Ballard doesn&#8217;t sell in America because &#8216;irony doesn&#8217;t travel&#8217;&#8230;by the sounds of things, it hasn&#8217;t even made it to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Times">Wapping</a>.</p>
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		<title>Fascist Guide</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardosphere-wrap-up</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/ballardosphere-wrap-up#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Sep 2006 04:36:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Australia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[In Diary: A Fascist&#8217;s Guide to the Premiership, published in New Statesman, JG Ballard previews the themes he unpacks in Kingdom Come. In this piece, JGB asks if the &#8220;English working class [is] re-tribalising itself&#8221; as a result of &#8220;football crowds rocking stadiums and bellowing anthems &#8230; taking part in political rallies without realising it, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/st_george.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Ballardosphere" align="left" /> In <a href="http://www.newstatesman.com/200609040013">Diary: A Fascist&#8217;s Guide to the Premiership</a>, published in <em>New Statesman</em>, JG Ballard previews the themes he unpacks in <em>Kingdom Come</em>. In this piece, JGB asks if the &#8220;English working class [is] re-tribalising itself&#8221; as a result of &#8220;football crowds rocking stadiums and bellowing anthems &#8230; taking part in political rallies without realising it, as would-be fascist leaders will have noted&#8221;.</p>
<p>Indeed. I&#8217;m about a third of the way through <em>Kingdom Come</em> and I&#8217;m finding it far more localised and inward looking than previous Ballard. I&#8217;m wondering how the theme of football fascism will translate to other territories&#8230; Probably really well. Racist attacks sprung on immigrant communities by clockwork sporting mobs happen here in Australia, too. The difference being that it&#8217;s more likely to be surfers than football fans who are the reactionary nationalists (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_Cronulla_riots">as happened</a> on Sydney&#8217;s Cronulla beach last December).</p>
<p>And we have <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chadstone_Shopping_Centre">identikit Bentall Centres</a> (the Centre being the inspiration for the foreboding Metro-Centre in <em>Kingdom Come</em>).</p>
<p>As usual, JGB has his finger on the pulse, but as far as the football fascism goes, isn&#8217;t he some way behind John King who was identfying nationalist, mobile-phone-linked mobs in his &#8216;Football Factory&#8217; trilogy? Of course, <em>Kingdom Come</em> rapidly springs off into other directions, so perhaps this is a minor point.</p>
<p>In any case, I hope that with this book we see more reviews of JGB from outside England&#8230;having said that, here&#8217;s an <a href="http://tls.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,25339-2345463,00.html">absorbing review</a> from M. John Harrison, published in the <em>Times</em>, which raises some very interesting points about the &#8216;Ballardian template&#8217;: &#8220;we &#8230; understand with a shock that it is the author who feels bored and trapped, not the characters&#8221;.</p>
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		<title>Cocaine Nights (1996)</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-cocaine-nights#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Sep 2006 15:28:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[bibliography]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[OPENING LINE: &#8220;Crossing frontiers is my profession.&#8221; From the 1996 Flamingo edition: &#8220;To an outsider, the retired British residents of the Spanish coastal resort of Estrella de Mar belong to an idyllic community, enjoying a lifestyle of constant cultural and sporting activity &#8212; based around the thriving Club Nautico. But the image is shattered when [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cocaine_cover.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Cocaine Nights" /></p>
<p><strong>OPENING LINE:<br />
&#8220;Crossing frontiers is my profession.&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>From the 1996 Flamingo edition:</p>
<p>&#8220;To an outsider, the retired British residents of the Spanish coastal resort of Estrella de Mar belong to an idyllic community, enjoying a lifestyle of constant cultural and sporting activity &#8212; based around the thriving Club Nautico. But the image is shattered when five people die in a mysterious housefire during a party attended by members of the club, and the club&#8217;s manager, Frank Prentice, is arrested for murder.</p>
<p>Arriving on the scene, his brother Charles is shocked to find that, though not even the police believe him capable of the crime, Frank is determined to plead guilty. If he is to understand his brother&#8217;s attitude, Charles senses that he must first unravel the mysteries of Estrella de Mar. For beneath the civilised surface lies a secret world of crime, drugs and illicit sex, orchestrated by a charismatic Pied Piper figure, whose dark influence is spreading with alarming speed.&#8221;</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;A writer capable of the most amazing narrative feats &#8212; but not quite house-broken.&#8221;<br />
John Sutherland, <em>Sunday Times</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Many saw Cocaine Nights as a return to form after <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-rushing-to-paradise">Rushing to Paradise</a>, and it is a smart book. It marked a new, streamlined phase in Ballard&#8217;s career, the start of a supposed quadrology (followed by <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-super-cannes">Super-Cannes</a>, <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-millennium-people">Millennium People</a> and <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come">Kingdom Come</a>) that took the format of the detective story, and &#8212; in <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/iain-sinclair-when-in-doubt-quote-ballard">Iain Sinclair&#8217;s words</a> &#8212; &#8220;sits and pretends to be a mainstream literary novel. It comes out looking like a literary novel — Cocaine Nights has almost the form of an Agatha Christie novel, it’s comfortable — except that they’re doing stranger things. There’s a much darker kick in it.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>..:: LINKS</strong><br />
+ <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-live-in-london-part-1">J.G. Ballard Live In London</a> (features a discussion of Cocaine Nights)</p>
<p><strong>..:: J.G. BALLARD</strong><br />
• <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-bibliography">Bibliography</a><br />
• Filmography (coming soon)<br />
• Artography (coming soon)</p>
<p><strong>..:: BUY THE BOOK</strong></p>
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		<title>Kingdom Come (2006)</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/biblio-kingdom-come#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Aug 2006 15:56:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[advertising]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[OPENING LINE: &#8220;The suburbs dream of violence.&#8221; From the 2006 Fourth Estate edition: Richard Pearson, unemployed advertising executive and life-long rebel, is driving out to Brooklands, a motorway town on the A25. A few weeks earlier his father was fatally wounded at the Metro-Centre, a vast shopping mall in the middle of this apparently peaceful [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/kingdom_cover.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Kingdom Come" /></p>
<p><strong>OPENING LINE:<br />
&#8220;The suburbs dream of violence.&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>From the 2006 Fourth Estate edition:</p>
<blockquote><p>Richard Pearson, unemployed advertising executive and life-long rebel, is driving out to Brooklands, a motorway town on the A25. A few weeks earlier his father was fatally wounded at the Metro-Centre, a vast shopping mall in the middle of this apparently peaceful town, when a deranged mental patient opened fire on a crowd of shoppers. When the main suspect is released without charge thanks to the dubious testimony of self-styled pillars of the community &#8212; including Julia Goodwin, the doctor who treated his father on his deathbed &#8212; Richard suspects that there is more to his father&#8217;s death than meets the eye, a more sinister element lurking behind the pristine facades of the labyrinthine mall.</p>
<p>Determined to unravel the mystery, Richard soon realises that the Metro-Centre, with its round-the-clock cable channel and sports clubs, lies at the very heart of his father&#8217;s death. Consumerism rules the lives of everyone in the motorway towns and feeds the cravings of this bored community with its desperate need for something new, whatever the costs. Riots frequently terrorise the streets, immigrant communities are set upon by roving bands of hooligans and sports events mushroom into jingoistic political rallies. Gradually, Richard finds himself drawn into this world, caught up in the workings of the mall, exposed to the insides of the consumer dream, and starts upon dismantling this wayward vision his advertising career helped to found&#8230;</p>
<p>In this gripping, dystopian tour de force, J.G. Ballard holds up a mirror to middle England, reflecting an unsettling image of suburbia and revealing the darker forces at work beneath the gloss of consumerism and flag-waving patriotism.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>The negative notices this remarkable vision have received don’t make a whole lot of sense to me. Ballard’s a man who admits he doesn’t read novels, instead devouring ‘invisible literature’: marginalia, copywriting, medical journals, psychiatric reports, Ikea catalogues, cereal boxes. He’s influenced by Freud, film noir, science fiction and Surrealist paintings; film, more than anything. To compare him with some literary type who practices the art of ‘tight plotting’ and ‘well-rounded protagonists’ is woefully inadequate. Reviewing KC in the Telegraph, David Robson wrote: ‘The plotting is clumsy … and the violence, integral to the whole design, belongs to the world of comic-strips’. Well, yes. Precisely. Honestly, do we still live in an age where popular culture is considered second-rate to the almighty ‘novel’? Funnily enough, I’m put in mind of my 78-year-old father, who refuses to watch The Simpsons because ‘cartoons are for kids’.</p>
<p><span id="more-224"></span><br />
At least we have theorist Steven Shaviro, who has written <a href="http://www.shaviro.com/Blog/?p=516">the most insightful review </a>of Kingdom Come to date, refreshingly free of the restraints of commercial media:</p>
<blockquote><p>Kingdom Come has so far only been published in the UK, not the US. And it has gotten mostly negative reviews — even from speculative writers like Ursula LeGuin and M. John Harrison, who ought to know better. The book has been criticized for the fact that its plot and characters aren’t slick, catchy, and ‘well-constructed’ enough. But of course these are the wrong standards by which to judge Ballard. He writes genre fiction as social theory — and he remains, at age 76, one of the most acute social theorists that we have. His insights could not be communicated in the form of the artfully structured literary novel. His seeming repetitiveness, his clumsy prosaicness, and his insistence on a kind of pop-culture (so-called) ‘kitsch’ are necessary tools of insight. In a thoroughly Modernist way, his form coincides with his themes; though, as an anatomist of our “postmodern” condition, his forms/themes are such as the classic Modernists could never have imagined.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>Steven Shaviro. &#8216;Kingdom Come&#8217;.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Rick McGrath has also written <a href="http://www.rickmcgrath.com/jgballard/jgb_kingdom_come.html">a provocative review</a>, from his own perspective as an ex-ad-man:</p>
<blockquote><p>But what form does a non-message take? For Pearson, that’s easy: “Madness is the key to everything. Small doses, applied when no-one is really looking.”</p>
<p>Regardless of all the novel’s ranting about consumerism and violence and fascism, I find this marketing insight perhaps the most chilling prediction of Kingdom Come. Instinctive advertising – a direct message to the irrational, the purely emotional. It’s about using psychopathology, after all. It’s a chilling thought not because it could be a campaign as Ballard imagines it, but because it is a campaign which is currently being successfully employed by, oh, advertising for the fashion industry, Hollywood, political parties.</p>
<p><em>Rick McGrath. &#8216;Thy Kingdom Come, Thy Ads Be Run…&#8217;</em></p></blockquote>
<p>And Ballardian contributor <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/the-dna-of-the-present-jg-ballards-cold-war">Pippa Tandy</a> offers the following thoughts:</p>
<blockquote><p>JGB is not Alan Sillitoe. There is little point in reading KC for direct equivalences to social conditions. Although he writes of the effects of consumerism, shopping malls and the obsession with sport, Ballard is not a realist writer. Although he makes reference to the notorious DuPont as the benefactor of a research wing of a mental asylum, (97) and uses as a chapter heading the expression &#8216;Exit Strategies&#8217;, has his protagonist speak of himself as only being good at &#8216;warming the slippers of late capitalism&#8217;, (9) and make other references to political and social realities of the past and present, this is not a direct socially realistic account of society. KC reiterates images that appear from his earliest work, images that are coded references to his earlier writing but which have another function. As in his other writing, they are a register of the psychic state of his society. It is not a question of whether his characters behave as &#8216;real&#8217; people behave; KC is rather another myth of the near future, except that the near future is now on top of us. (And has been for a while, hardly Ballard&#8217;s fault!) Remember Ballard never felt like he needed to check the realist accuracy of his descriptions. You will recall that The Rockford Files and Kojak informed his understanding of America, a Thames Valley gravel pit supplies the lineaments of Cape Canaveral, and so on.</p>
<p>KC begins in the typical liminal setting of the Heathrow motorways, with a protagonist narrator who finds himself drawn into a maze of concrete and paranoia, who backs away from the reflected attenuation in his own mirrored face, who limps through the broken mallscape on a bandaged foot, a black comedy in which motorways and runways intersect, fugitives hide themselves as shop mannequins, the beach of a shopping mall echoes the beach of a nuclear test site, and a deracinated psychiatrist and mock Lemmy Caution move among the crowd. Ballard would probably not like to admit it, but he is doing something similar to Godard in Alphaville. He is using the materials of his time (shopping malls, sporting crowds, consumerism) as latent conditions. That is why it all seems a bit wrong when we try to match it all up. Like his other writing, this novel is Ballard&#8217;s attempt to bring vision to the present, to create, like the detonation in the Metro-Centre, a space in which a section of space-time had been erased, exposing a deep flaw in our collective dream.� (113-4)</p>
<p>And, just another point, for fun. Is not the description of the dead Cruise being wheeled around as a kind of totem figure, surrounded by grieving worshippers, very reminiscent of Mr Kurtz on his stretcher in Heart of Darkness?&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>..:: J.G. BALLARD</strong><br />
• <a href="http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-bibliography">Bibliography</a><br />
• Filmography (coming soon)<br />
• Artography (coming soon)</p>
<p><strong>..:: BUY THE BOOK</strong></p>
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		<title>Cocaine Days: The world&#039;s highest tennis court</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/cocaine-days-the-worlds-highest-tennis-court</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/cocaine-days-the-worlds-highest-tennis-court#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Dec 2005 17:55:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Johnny Strike</dc:creator>
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		<title>Chariot of Fire: Preliminary Analysis &amp; Damage Reconstruction of the Death of Diana, Princess of Wales</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/chariot-of-fire-death-diana-princess-of-wales</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/chariot-of-fire-death-diana-princess-of-wales#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2005 00:20:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Annik Hovac</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[by Annik Hovac GRAVITY&#8217;S PEAK IS SURVIVABLE &#8220;About midnight, Diana walks out, all green eyes and friendly breast velocity. Dodi, her Prince, is there to sweep her away from the insatiable paparazzi.&#8221; The following extract is presented by the JG BALLARD INSTITUTE for the Study of Eroto-Responsive Kinetics, Canberra. &#8220;On August 31, 1997, Princess Diana [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by <strong>Annik Hovac</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/cam.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Death of Diana, Princess of Wales" /><br />
<strong>GRAVITY&#8217;S PEAK IS SURVIVABLE<br />
&#8220;About midnight, Diana walks out, all green eyes and friendly breast velocity. Dodi, her Prince, is there to sweep her away from the insatiable paparazzi.&#8221;</strong></p>
<p><em>The following extract is presented by the JG BALLARD INSTITUTE for the Study of Eroto-Responsive Kinetics, Canberra.</em></p>
<p>&#8220;On August 31, 1997, Princess Diana and her lover Dodi Fayed died in a horrific car crash. At the exact moment of impact, the conspiracy nuts sprang into action. Was she murdered by the British government – or overseas interests? Did she in fact commit suicide? Indeed, the public seems unwilling to accept the official version of events, culminating in the claims this year that Prince Charles was somehow behind a sinister plot to murder his ex-wife.</p>
<p>For the last 5 years, the JG Ballard Institute for the Study of Eroto-Responsive Kinetics has been studying this most Ballardian of celebrity deaths and is finally in a position to make its findings official. Under the guidance of the Institute&#8217;s Dr Annick Hovac, the following report – a worldwide exclusive – is sure to blow all previous theories surrounding the incident out of the water.</p>
<p>Now, finally, the truth can be told&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p><em>An extract from a forthcoming paper by Dr Annik Hovak, of the JG Ballard Institute for the Study of Eroto-Responsive Kinetics.</em></p>
<p><span id="more-113"></span><br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<br />
<strong>DIFFERENT INJURY OUTCOMES</strong><br />
Dinner at the Ritz seemed the perfect dreamy Paris interlude. Diana, Princess of Wales, and Dodi Fayed, heir to the House of Harrods, spent their last day enjoying each other&#8217;s company. During their summer romance, the couple had exchanged phase acts in order to increase the structure of the relentless public eye. She was snapped on the deck swathed in a towel while Fayed smoothed her hair, in full view of the tourists on shore. But after nearly three weeks, the equivalent velocity of the relationship endured a string of disappointing love, and the media reported that the couple had interpretation errors.</p>
<p>Over fatal seafood dinner, Fayed presented a stunning $205,400 diamond solitaire glistening like warm oil sun on a distant beach. Known as the Playboy from the Maximum Deformation, it was noted that in his business and social life, Fayed only addressed women to the point of five Ferraris. The boy grew up in a world of privilege in Egypt and France. Later, he worked briefly as a fixture on beautiful London women. However, it had appeared that from Reference 26 the negligible fairy-tale marriage fell apart amid others (e.g. tests 415, 425 and 448) and that Diana was mentally unstable. The data for the dynamic model, combined with the proposed abandonment of A, B and G variables, prompted speculation that the Princess forced (note that no mention of Charles) the erratic nature of the plots.</p>
<p><strong>POEM TO HER INHERENT ERROR</strong><br />
Flashback to a week before (time is a voyeuristic membrane in the tragic life of the beloved): Dodi wrote a poem for her and had it inscribed on public flesh. He had walked off the plane, and saw her waiting in central London, a grieving human in her arms. Calculations of Delta-V ranged from her skirt too short to be examined.</p>
<p>FORCE VS DISPLACEMENT THEMES! rhapsodised the airport daily headlines.</p>
<p>That afternoon, on the Mediterranean beach, Fayed had presented his oil-covered fingers, circular motion glistening in the warm sunlight. Princess Di dropped one hand to his pants, soft on his deep and passionate Mediterranean journey. Later, in the hot tub with him giggling, sailing up and down the French and Italian Rivieras of the mind. (Or at least so claim the doubles who never leave Diana&#8217;s side).</p>
<p>Nothing life threatening. Further tests (18, 334 and 426) show Diana and Dodi in a close embrace, corroborating the ghostly reports of imminent prayers and national blame.</p>
<p><strong>GRAVITY&#8217;S PEAK IS SURVIVABLE, WITH FUTURE</strong><br />
When the doors close, the two people in love push the stop button. The elevator doors open and everyone is the result of dynamic collisions, of residual control. She is aware of what is going on, the waiting photographers. However, from the news media, linear relationships are gifts. They had decided to use Fayed&#8217;s driver as a decoy in another car. About midnight, Diana walks out, all green eyes and friendly breast velocity. Dodi, her Prince, is there to sweep her away from the insatiable paparazzi. The appointed personnel are also there: the lucky (and belted) bodyguard and the drunk Frenchman. Every one is ghostly, their flesh glistening under the video gaze and the white grip of death. The eyes of the cameras zoom in and out chronicling grainy stills, gray glare and flash of blonde.</p>
<p>They climb in a Mercedes S280 soon owned by speed across accurate westbound lanes of a four-lane coefficient. Candles and chilled champagne wait in Fayed&#8217;s apartment near the Arc de Triomphe.They make their getaway through a linear fit, drunk through central Paris at fatal conceptual speeds. The couple&#8217;s blue Mercedes signals a speed-change river to escape the paparazzi- who insisted in referring to it as the period of deforce. With romantic track animation and angle view from ominous advise, the duration of central Paris at an average of 90&#8242;/sec narrows to a limited number of staged collisions (e.g., References 34, 50-52).Then, in the bridge, not far from the Eiffel tower, Diana gives him a pair of pictures of the wide contact collision with her son Prince Harry. This is one of many simulations, rehearsals. Dodi laughs. In her clear headlight gaze glow Egyptian joy and the midnight algorithm of her white slacks and heeled sandals. Twin stars of whirlwind love that will never see the tunnel&#8217;s end.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crashed.jpg" alt="Ballardian: The Death of Diana, Princess of Wales" /><br />
<strong>OUR THOUGHTS &#038; PRAYERS</strong><br />
&#8220;At the time of the crash the couple hugged at 60 mph (90 ft/sec), divorced from the average deceleration and contemplating a new peak value of about twice the psychic medium.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Hollywood Psychologist calls self-examination of Tabloid Voyeurism</strong><br />
Diana reaches in. Dodi outlines the main anatomical regions. They explore each other&#8217;s tongues. The Romeo and Juliet of the Twentieth Century reciprocate coefficients in the back seat of the hellbound S-280. The lovebirds&#8217; every move lingers in the spirit of the underground road tunnel. But the Mercedes is now the object of a chase. Pursued by five or so photographers, running into the obstruction crumpled and out of control. From the unidentified sideways, the impact will occur close to where the couple has missed an angle of a few degrees still being pried from the eyewitness reports screeching for the British newspapers before impact. Even if Paul floors the brakes, rages and then backs his car where little steering left, he only has half the vehicle&#8217;s width at the limits of traction to position on the road somewhat.Left side damage, the car spinning around.</p>
<p>Shocking, the vehicle can&#8217;t be spinning! The car hits a pillar of related data points. At the time of the crash the couple hugged at 60 mph (90 ft/sec), divorced from the average deceleration and contemplating a new peak value of about twice the psychic medium. Paul can&#8217;t induce much of a steer centerline even if it&#8217;s grilled at original formulation of the crash. Besides, he does not steer to avoid the problematic recognition, since it is obvious that he should still not exist simultaneously over a few demurely plastic concussions to avoid the impact. The vehicle does not roll over, probably cut from the roof by avoidability. The windshield and the roof collapse. The grill of the Mercedes is pushed back into the front seat. The Princess of Wales reaches in to feel the peak of dynamic crush caressing it, sunning herself in the initial impact to the point of maximum time. Acceleration that would have been experienced by the chest is about 70 times the force of gravity (70 g&#8217;s), or about seven times what a fighter pilot experiences. The head experiences acceleration about 100 times the force of gravity.</p>
<p>Diana is happier than she had been in a dynamic state. She is delighted as the automobile structures dissolve in acrimony, as the vehicle undergoes godmother impulse for the last several inches of static crush, coupled with photographers in motorcycles and buzzing police. Her hardened nipples glisten as she accepts the paparazzi into her. Speed is anywhere. Dodi Fayed gently takes the maximum collision force and her suit straps, ignoring the restitution phase, the residual crush, the amount of severity. Princess of Wales dies 4 a.m. Paris time. Maybe she is asleep, or mortally injured in the land of public tragedy. There is smoke. People are standing around the car. The Delta-V intercept at zero with photographers crowding within bloodied victims to snap their positions at a forked distance.</p>
<p>This can hardly be the couple that had eaten dinner. The body of a woman sticks out 60&#8242;/sec turns to the awful lapse under 0.1 sec. Her head wanly linear, her favorite chest acceleration. During this period, additional cardiac arrest and more damage to the left side.</p>
<p>Crews arrived and worked for more than itself. Emergency residua would need an hour to free Diana from the smashed resistance force. The occupants are freed from their bodies. The bodyguard has survived, but Fayed and Paul die instantly, the latter expiring in continuity with some prior consciousness, a stream of cognition going back to tonight&#8217;s top speed.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.ballardian.com/images/crashed2.jpg" alt="Ballardian: Death of Pincess Diana" /><br />
<strong>TABLOID VOYEURISM</strong><br />
<em>Last dialogue between Dodi and Diana:</em><br />
Dodi: &#8220;We have the pattern, not the substance; but in your eyes I pour us each a living being.&#8221;<br />
Diana: &#8220;True. We can&#8217;t live forever.&#8221;</p>
<p>Flustered bystander: &#8220;We heard the noise of the accident, intended to be humorous. In the tunnel, it was a real massacre. In a state of shock, I pushed on the biological problems of aging. I did not offer assistance. And then I left.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another witness says he saw smoke, ran to the wreck. &#8220;I was taking pictures of it.&#8221; Then he said he turned to the woman: &#8220;I freed her breathing and opened her irregular mass. By way of explaining the physical, she was moaning and gesticulating. I put an oxygen mask on her.&#8221;</p>
<p>He wanted to testify, because notions of reality are ridiculous when those are signs of choking faster than about 30 degrees.Was she belted? Diana herself later squelched rumors. Thus, trauma is generated, the most erotic strip ever.</p>
<p><em>Last dialogue between Dodi and Diana:</em><br />
Dodi: &#8220;We have the pattern, not the substance; but in your eyes I pour us each a living being.&#8221;<br />
Diana: &#8220;True. We can&#8217;t live forever.&#8221;<br />
Dodi: &#8220;Whenever there is a cognition, I must lean across and kiss your lips with the passion I feel for beginningless time.&#8221;<br />
Diana: &#8220;Oh, my Prince! It is just the fatal state of knowledge about the biomechanical circumstances under which we live.&#8221;</p>
<p>The opulent ring, still in its box, is recovered from the floor of the crushed windstorm romance. Hundred photos are no longer distant and grainy.</p>
<p><strong>References</strong><br />
25. Early reports described Diana&#8217;s original algorithm, the neglected mirror of the accident scene. While her arm and leg injuries were demonstrated in Reference 26, Princess Diana&#8217;s unidentified posture was formulated later, as the pale phase and hardened<br />
forces increased in the total speed change.<br />
26. The impact coefficient for a number of Diana&#8217;s measurements and damage determines the amount of additional Fayed after going into severity by prolonging the accelerating conference of residual damage.<br />
27. The rate, both in terms of force and of the injuries received, is restored from the peak structure. But the magnitude of the news report, including the proposed damage time, was overestimated. The angle view from front passenger window shows that both head and chest experienced acceleration a hundred times the force of gravity.<br />
28. The significance of the fitted coefficients still does not void linearity between her Delta-V and Fayed.<br />
29. Any reconstruction which utilises a CRASH3 based damage analysis procedure should add to the predicted speed change a variable of approximately +10% at 30 inches of residual crush to +25% at 10 inches for the predicted total speed change.<br />
30. What&#8217;s more, a careful inspection of the site implies a linear relationship between conceptual complication and the smashed windshield.<br />
31. Despite media reports that Dodi and Diana did not hit head on, the crash technique rarely, if ever, has been known to produce uniform crush, or centralised collisions that might have otherwise been lived. At the time of the crash formulation, the restitution effects of the vehicle structures intercepted pulmonary trajectory with the judicious engineering approach to offer the curve damage profile. Thus, injuries in an accident are always assumed to be unnamed.</p>
<p><strong>Addendum</strong><br />
1. Reports of ninety-degree skid marks: ABS systems tend not to leave pronounced skid marks, these are probably scrub marks. Even if they represent locked wheel skid marks they only bring a 75/mph speed down to 55 at impact.<br />
2. Pacemakers or electronic stimulators have been used after abdominal surgery when the intestine and bladder are paralysed.<br />
3. Reports of the driver&#8217;s impairment clear up a lot of things.</p>
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		<title>JG Ballard: Delightfully Vulgar</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-delightfully-vulgar</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/jg-ballard-delightfully-vulgar#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 31 Jul 2005 01:37:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Cronenberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sexual politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/2005/07/31/47/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From Metro, July 25-Aug 2 2005. Silicon Alleys: Machine Love by Gary Singh &#8220;THERE&#8217;S NO BETTER way to celebrate the inaugural San Jose Grand Prix Champ Car race than to quote legendary British author J.G. Ballard. You see, his 1973 novel Crash is so delightfully vulgar that David Cronenberg just had to finally make a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From <a href="http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/07.27.05/alleys-0530.html">Metro, July 25-Aug 2 2005</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Silicon Alleys: Machine Love<br />
by Gary Singh</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;THERE&#8217;S NO BETTER way to celebrate the inaugural San Jose Grand Prix Champ Car race than to quote legendary British author J.G. Ballard. You see, his 1973 novel Crash is so delightfully vulgar that David Cronenberg just had to finally make a film out of it a few years back. (Don&#8217;t get it confused with the current movie with the same title.) One of Ballard&#8217;s most famous works, Crash explores the concept of the car crash as sexual fantasy. Only Ballard would compare semen to engine coolant, and he did it over 30 years ago. The book, obviously, is not for little Johnny, as it&#8217;s chock-filled with graphic scenes of illicit sex and automobile wreckage.&#8221;</p>
<p>More at <a href="http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/07.27.05/alleys-0530.html">Metro, July 25-Aug 2 2005</a>.</p>
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		<title>Olympic Ballard</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/olympic-ballard</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/olympic-ballard#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jul 2005 07:14:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/index.php/2005/07/16/on-your-marks-for-the-2012-exodus-olympic-ballard/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Alan Taylor&#8217;s Diary &#34;BY the time 2012 comes around I should be in tip-top shape for whatever challenge arises. One must be there &#8211; I keep telling myself &#8211; or be elsewhere. Certainly, one should not underestimate the importance of the games coming to London. &#8230; For a true sense of proportion, though, let us [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.sundayherald.com/50721" target="_self">Alan Taylor&rsquo;s Diary</a></p>
<p> &quot;BY the time 2012 comes around I should be in tip-top shape for whatever challenge arises. One must be there &ndash; I keep telling myself &ndash; or be elsewhere. Certainly, one should not underestimate the importance of the games coming to London. &#8230; For a true sense of proportion, though, let us turn to JG Ballard. &ldquo;Running the 100 metres or rowing a boat are fun to watch but they are not the greatest test of mankind since D-Day,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If I&rsquo;m still here, I shall emigrate.&quot;</p>
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		<title>Theatre of the City</title>
		<link>http://www.ballardian.com/theatre-of-the-city</link>
		<comments>http://www.ballardian.com/theatre-of-the-city#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jul 2005 06:37:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Simon Sellars</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ballardosphere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sport]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ballardian.com/index.php/2005/07/16/theatre-of-the-city-2/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This article in the Guardian references JG Ballard in the following fashion: &#34;The future, JG Ballard reckons, is a cocktail of those elements: the ennui of edge-land architecture, airport roads the same everywhere, and highly-visible tanks patrolling the perimeter fence. If an English cricket team ventures to Pakistan it will be accorded, so the relevant [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This <a target="_self" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/attackonlondon/comment/story/0,16141,1528117,00.ht">article</a> in the Guardian references JG Ballard in the following fashion: </p>
<p>&quot;The future, JG Ballard reckons, is a cocktail of those elements: the ennui of edge-land architecture, airport roads the same everywhere, and highly-visible tanks patrolling the perimeter fence. If an English cricket team ventures to Pakistan it will be accorded, so the relevant diplomat assures us, the highest level of security: &quot;head of state.&quot;That is to say, public roads in Karachi will be entirely cleared between five-star hotel and stadium. The city of the spectacle is deserted, crowds under curfew, so that the sport of the people can be performed, at a time suitable to the television networks, in a massively guarded redoubt.&quot;</p>
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