Archive for June, 2009

The Real-Time Web and the Future of Democracy

HOC_session_e

Recent events – Iran and Michael Jackson’s passing, for example – have reiterated both the power and the limitations of the real-time web for disseminating information. But for my column in the upcoming July/August issue of THIS Magazine, I’ve tried to think about Twitter and the real-time web as a text of social discourse, a kind of living document of ‘what people are talking about’. Though it may be optimistic, I’ve suggested that, despite all the inanity, Twitter, Facebook and services like them facilitate and record social debate and discussion in a manner that wasn’t possible before. You can read the full piece here.

I should note that I wrote the article before the current situation in Iran began, so that didn’t factor into my thoughts then. Were I to write it now, it seems it’d be worth thinking about whether Twitter works against or with structures of authority – and whether there would be a profoundly different answer to that question depending on which country one were talking about.

Also, this may be a little crass, but right now Canadians can subscribe to both THIS Magazine and Geist for a year for the low, low price of $24.99. (Act now, offer not in stores!) While THIS is a more politically-oriented current affairs mag, Geist is more literary in nature (read this charming snippet), so I’m sure some of you will like it. Alright, I’ll stop whoring now.

, , , , , , ,

Leave a Comment

The Future of Getting Paid to Write?

Not good, people, not good. The general gist of things? Contrary to what language instructors everywhere say, there is so much good, smart writing available on the web, the idea of being a ‘professional writer’ may become like being a professional typist: i.e. it’s a valuable skill, but no-one is ever going to make a living doing just that; rather, it will form part of a broader set of skills that people who used to call themselves ‘writers’ will use to pay the rent or feed an insatiable addiction to Canadian microbrewery beer (seriously, Cameron’s, why don’t we just set up a direct link to my bank account?).

Though it’s worth pointing out that these links are focused on non-fiction writing, I’m still too depressed about this to put any coherent thoughts down on SiW. Still – there’s a good discussion going on here with my pals at Snarkmarket, which was started by mutual Scrawled-Market friend Rex all the way over… here.

, ,

Leave a Comment

Razing Green Spaces to Revitalise The Suburbs

281670179_n7X7T-LThat, apparently, is what’s going on in Amsterdam. Its Slotervaart neighbourhood  has been plagued by poverty, crime and ghettoisation for years now. But, as my fave columnist Doug Saunders explains, part of the problem is precisely the open design of the suburbs, that has made the area “a lonely expanse of bleak concrete buildings separated by big, frightening, empty spaces, and no connection to the wider world.” To fix it, they’re making the suburb more like downtown: getting rid of the open spaces, building high-density high-rises and giving tax breaks to young entrepreneurs to come set up businesses there. It’s an interesting re-think of the problem of the suburbs, one that reverses the trend of having big-box stores and other chains move into downtown cores and, instead, exports the indie spirit from downtown to the burbs.

And while my primary focus on this blog has always been technology and the web, over the past year or so it’s become increasingly apparent to me how important sub/urban spaces are to creativity, productivity and one’s quality of life. It’s easy sometimes to forget that, for all our rhetoric about the ethereal, diaphanous virtual, physical spaces still significantly impact our lives. And after moving back into downtown Toronto after a rather unpleasant 2 year stint in the suburbs, the things that quickly struck me about downtown living again were:

  1. Higher population density means it’s far easier to find niche interests that are more difficult to sustain in the suburbs, whether vegan restaurants, poetry readings or organic coffee shops.
  2. The proximity and frequent overlap of residential and business/entertainment areas means that people can engage in cultural activities far more easily. Put more plainly, when you just have to walk for five minutes to see a show or grab a pint, you do it more often.
  3. Multi-income neighbourhoods, where broke students, young immigrant families and wealthier, established individuals all live near to each other, facilitate mixing much more readily than large, more homogeneous neighbourhoods in the suburbs.

Yet, beyond all these obvious, optimistic statements, the thing that has always troubled me about the sub/urban split is the manner in which moving from the fringes of a city to its centre has always carried some rather uncomfortable cultural metaphors. The closer you get to downtown, the more difficult it is to engage in things that don’t fit into a ‘mainstream lifestyle’, and often, ‘to move downtown’ is also to move into the cultural mainstream, a mentality that fits far too closely with a politics of assimilation. In one sense, assimilation is both necessary and good. But when it is underpinned by a hierarchy of cultures that assert the superiority of a host country’s values, that’s when it starts to get messy and rough on people who ‘don’t fit’. It’s that kind of exclusionary discourse that encourages people to say where there are more people like them.

What I’d like to see is an emphasis on not only making the suburbs more ‘downtown-y’ but also to preserve some of their cultural difference in the transition – i.e. that temples, outdoor markets and dance clubs (random examples) be included alongside plans for retails centres and generic arts facilities. We shouldn’t only strive to make the suburbs like downtown; we also need to export the delightful cultural hybrids we produce in the suburbs to all those hipsters living downtown.

, , ,

2 Comments

Why We Should All Write For Free (Sometimes)

First, a minor digression: in all the hubbub over the Gawker clusterfuck and that NYT piece, it was easy to forget just how damn well Emily Gould can put a sentence together. I mean, like, really, intimidatingly well. The same goes for Moe Tkacik. But writer-crushes are a conversation for another time. Probably while I’m lying backwards on a leather couch talking about my mother. Anyway.

In this lovely piece, Gould talks about why she writes for free, largely in response to this n+1 piece on online literacy and culture. It was an article we all bookmarked and really wanted to find a reason to agree with, but couldn’t because it  simply articulated the same formal and structural problems with the web we already knew. Thanks a lot. We need more pessimism these days.

But what Gould cleverly points out in this piece is:

  • ‘The Internet’ is not simply one thing. It is no more ludicrous to say ‘the culture of the internet’ than it is to say ‘the culture of the world’.
  • the internet is not a text. Gould argues that this is because you find what you`re looking for. I`d add that I think all texts ultimately act this way, but what’s different about the web is that it’s a network of texts and databases and cannot be understood solely through the view of textuality. You will find what you’re looking for long before you actually start looking,  because the web is not a passive medium.
  • writing for free sustains the really cool smart work you find on places like The Awl or, well, nplusonemagazine.
  • Writing for free and getting paid for it are symbiotic, not mutually exclusive ideas. Accept it. This is the new world.

To this, all I want to add is ideology. (Hear that sound? That’s the clicking sound of the Marxist brain implant they force you to get when you get into grad school.) There is a relationship between economic networks of distribution and the reception of ideas. No-one will pay you to say things that people don’t think they want to hear (but might after actually hearing them) or to say things that only a tiny number of people care about. Writing for free – coupled with: a) the web’s low barriers to entry; b) the difficulty in controlling flows of information on non-linear, asynchronous networks; -  allows you to say things that you otherwise wouldn’t be able to.

Of course, we all have bills to pay. I’m unabashed about the fact that this blog is partly meant to kickstart a writing career (and, in fact, is already responsible for starting it). But it isn’t just about creating a brand of oneself: it’s about writing for its own reward; of writing against the grain; and writing things and one’s self into being.

, , , ,

3 Comments

Spinning Wax, June 2009

Spinning Wax is a new, hopefully regular feature here where I’ll post videos and links to music I’m enjoying right now. (I should note that this was inspired by Matthew’s Musical Box posts.)

You know, I thought I was done with Emily Haines and her shtick of “I’m a ROCK STAR, you silly 9-to-5 schlub!”. While I’ve really liked Metric ever since I saw them open for Broken Social Scene in 2003, it’s hard not to get annoyed by famous artists who lecture you about the ills of mainstream life. Trouble is, Metric are as energetic and infectious as ever. “Help I’m Alive” is the first track off Fantasies and, besides being much better than the first single “Gimme Sympathy”, it’s catchy as… well, something really really catchy.

Keeping with the Canadian music, Gentlemeg Reg are a ‘fey pop’ duo out of Toronto. The sound is recognisably Arts&Crafts and the track, “To Some it Comes Easy”, has that breezy, ragged vibe that not only makes it perfect for drunken summer evenings – it may just be my song of the season. (h/t to my pal Roxanne for this one)

The following video, simply called “Alice”, is a remix that uses clips and sounds from Disney’s Alice in Wonderland . It’s by a YouTube user called ‘Fagottron’. Um, yeah.[Update: it's actually by Australian electronica artist Pogo - see comments]  But trust me: you’ll be addicted to it. It’s like aural-visual crack. Less addictive, but equally fun is the same user’s take on Harry Potter.

And finally, the one song that cannot fail to make me happy when I listen to it. By renowned Punjabi singer Malkit Singh, it’s a reworking of old Punjabi folk song “Jind Mahi” that exhorts listeners to ‘hold on to their culture’ and, by extension, themselves. (Yeah yeah, I know.) If you’re not used to this sorta’ thing, it might sound ridiculous and weird and impossibly cheesy – but it’s not half as weird the fact that this YouTube user chose to pair it with pictures of phat cars. (Fun fact: the back-and-forth of culture between Vancouver and Punjab has resulted in souped-up cars with bhangrha booming out of them being a common sight in both areas. See – being an annoying, macho asshole isn’t just limited to one culture). Nonetheless: enjoy!

Have suggestions for ‘Spinning Wax’? Leave a comment or send me an email. You’ll find the address on my about page.

, , , , ,

3 Comments

I’m Done Hating Toronto

And I’m not alone, either. Witness new Tumblr “Fuck Yeah Toronto” [via] that, among other bits and bobs, showcases some great photography like the example below (I hope it’s okay I’m putting a small version of it here). More importantly, the caption under the blog title reads “Because if you don’t love Toronto, you probably have no soul”. In this instance, the exclamation “Fuck yeah” seems perfectly appropriate.

hubbqSsihowxg0dvCvBhEgD9o1_1280

I say this because: a) I’m bored with everyone hating Toronto, especially those who live here; b) Toronto is pretty fucking great, despite the glaring fact that it is not and never will be ‘like New York’. Get over it already; c) over the last 6-12 months, Toronto has seen a resurgence of both civic participation and a sense of pride, urgency and excitement about the city. A good chunk of that, I’d argue, stems from the sense of community that has emerged in the Toronto ‘Twitter-sphere’ and has also been nurtured and encouraged by award-winning magazine Spacing, and the two main Toronto blogs, Torontoist and blogTO.

That is, I admit, a little problematic given the demographics (largely young-ish, urban and uni-educated). But the dismal cloud of hopelessness that has always pervaded this city has, in uneasy fits and starts, started to lift and clear. People are feeling hopeful again, sometimes because of seemingly insignificant things. Some of us have stopped assuming that, despite all we have here, we were just going to give up at some point and move to NYC, San Francisco or London.

So, sure, such straightforward boosterism is sometimes a little crass. But, amidst a swirl of change and growth, there are times an exuberant, irrational yell is the truly optimistic response. To wit: Fuck Yeah Toronto! Now this is something I can get behind.

, , , ,

9 Comments

Weeds: A New Kind of Modern Fantasy Pt. 2

weeds-seasonSpoilers for all seasons ahead. Like, big ones.

How a show about a white (sorta’ Jewish) middle-class family messes around with race.

Previous post on Nancy as a self-destructive hero (comments are more interesting than the post).

Whenever you discuss race in North America, it’s impossible to get very far without someone talking about “America as a melting pot” (Canada, by the way, is a ‘tossed salad’, which is funny on more levels than I can count). And it’s true that most American narratives of race are, on the surface anyway, about integration or assimilation, of overcoming difference to melt into the idea of ‘being an American’.

The reality, of course, is far more complex. The Cosby Show worked hard to say “here, white America, we can do like you do but not necessarily be like you”. There was an air of assimilation about the show, but it was an uneasy sort, one that was largely political and economic, but not cultural.

In one sense, the story is very often about a movement from, if you’ll excuse the terms, a ‘coloured’ margin to a ‘white’ centre. Stories very often ‘resolve’, and that resolution frequently takes homelessness or lack of belonging and then puts it right by finding a space for those characters in the mainstream (white) world.

Weeds sorta’ fucks around with this, in a way that I think is very interesting. Think about this:

  • The show begins with Judah’ death, and the family’s means of material support suddenly gone. The lynchpin that held their ideal suburban life together disappears, and Nancy, devoid of much education or skill, turns to crime to maintain the lifestyle that she is both accustomed to and her community considers normal.
  • To support her lifestyle, Nancy, the affable, affluent suburbanite, suddenly has to function away from the eyes of her community, carrying out her business ‘hidden in plain sight’.
  • After Nancy’s botched marriage to Peter, there is no-one in a position of authority she can trust. The system that once protected her lifestyle is now opposed to it.
  • Nancy continues to justify her lifestyle by assuming it hurts no-one.
  • Her lifestyle starts to hurt people, but she is already way too deep in to simply walk away without fear or reprisal.
  • After Agrestic burns down, Nancy must leave and start out again with nothing. It seems worth pointing out here that the focus on the side characters in the show switches from Heylia and Conrad to Guillermo and the Mexican cartel.
  • Nancy is suddenly forced into work she does not want to do but desperately wants to succeed at (drug trafficking). When she fails at it, she is put to work at the maternity store, which she finds interminably boring and unfulfilling after the excitement and lucre of being a drug dealer.
  • After a crisis of conscience of sorts, Nancy is nearly destroyed.

So Nancy’s narrative is the inversion of the usual American narrative of race. It’s about de-assimilation and de-integration (in addition to dis-integration). In inverting the traditional narrative of racial integration, it lays it bare as a construction and also asks us to question our easy, uncritical acceptance of it as normal or desirable.

The thing that I like about this fact is that it makes neat, conservative condemnations of criminality (and their consistent links to race and class) that much more difficult to maintain because it shows the psychological and social build-up to a life of crime. To wit, it’s true that people could just get ‘real jobs’; but Weeds makes it far more apparent to a mainstream audience why people don’t, and also why once you’re in, it’s nearly impossible to get out.

Granted, I’m being overly simplisitic here, and the show probably deserves a more nuanced reading – linking criminality and race is weird and uncomfortable -  but I think Weeds is more important and smarter than people give it credit for. It is still in many ways a comedy. But as the last episode (and its rape scene) showed, the show can also be brutally graphic and excruciatinly difficult to watch. That difficulty, however, seems like it’s worth working through, as Weeds seems to not simply an attack on suburbia, but on the narratives of identity and culture that have underpinned it.

, , , ,

Leave a Comment

Weeds: A New Kind of Modern Fantasy, Pt. 1

WEEDS (season 4)Note: This post contains spoilers for Seasons 4 and 5. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

If TV is fantasy, what if the vision offered weren’t one of escape, but self-destruction?

I love Weeds. A while back, I wrote on how I felt it was part of a trend on modern TV that has seen shows trade stock narratives and characters for much more ambiguous, unsettling ones (Sopranos, The Wire, Lost etc.) . I used my standard argument – that in the face of the postmodern collapse of fixed values, the only option left was to wallow in the non-judgemental ambiguity of it all and let the viewers pick their poison – an argument I’m now sick of, largely because I think it’s a simplistic cop-out response to, well, anything.

But having watched the first couple of shows from this season, I’ve been thinking about the Botwins again, specifically in how unlikeable Nancy has become (hello smoking, drinking, sushi-eating pregnant woman!) and also how she so soundly unsettles the relationship between the viewer and the subject on TV. To wit, how do you get behind someone who’s such an asshole and is so seemingly bent on self-destruction?

One might say that Nancy is an anti-hero/ine – but I think that misses what makes her so intriguing. A more interesting take is the idea that, after a spate of mainstream critiques of normalcy and suburbia, sympathising with the anti-hero/heroine doesn’t simply offer a fantasy of escape from the mundane and homogeneous maze we live in now. Instead, we get a fantasy of self-destruction and self-negation – the catharsis here is not temporarily letting your hair down; rather, it’s jumping off a cliff and throwing the whole pointless mess away.

Regular, flawed people (like Nancy) are just like us and lead boring unfulfilling lives until they/you shake them up, and when they/you do, they/you’ll be in drug deals (and get hurt), be in car chases and drive-bys (and get hurt), have romances (and get hurt) and, just before you die, you get to have sex with Mary-Louise Parker (and then get hurt). Woah. I have no idea how that last one got in there.

But my point is that instead of just focusing on a hero (whom we empathise with) or an anti-hero (through whom we live out the fantasies of things we can’t actually do), Weeds makes it impossible to separate the two sides, forcing us as viewers to empathise with someone we ultimately don’t like. And what’s more ‘postmodern’ or whatever than hating the things inside yourself that you have no control over? What could be more emblematic of contemporary North America than doing things you know are wrong (smoking, drinking heavily, buying sweathshop goods, driving ’cause it’s easier) but then doing them anyway because they’re easier and feel better? What does Zizek always say about late capitalism? It beckons us to enjoy, enjoy, enjoy.

Which is why, despite the cries of of “Weeds sucks now”, I still love the show.

I think the other fascinating thing about Weeds is what it does with American narratives of race. But I’m trying to keep the blog tight and easier to read, so I’ll put that in a separate post later.

, , , , , ,

2 Comments

Is There Any Hope in Literary Darwinism?

_45331479_darwin_royalmailRecently, much to my chagrin, I have come to the uncomfortable realisation that I am somewhat of a dogmatist. As much as I might talk about the impossibility of an objective scale by which to judge the worth of things, show me an idea that doesn’t fit within my urban, post-colonial, post-structuralist perspective and I will quickly and dismissively push it aside. Not cool, man, not cool.

So when I came upon this article in The Nation about Literary Darwinism – a school of thought that tries to understand: a) the evolutionary role of literature; b) how an evolutionary perspective might help us read literature – I wanted to keep an open mind. And, in the opening, William Deresiewicz takes pains not to assume Darwinian criticism is flawed or useless – though, it must be said, he does so largely because he wants something (anything!) to replace contemporary literary theory which, he argues, is mired in an ‘institutional cul-de-sac’ (great phrase):

In literary studies in particular, the last several decades have witnessed the baleful reign of “Theory,” a mash-up of Derridean deconstruction, Foucauldian social theory, Lacanian psychoanalysis and other assorted abstrusiosities, the overall tendency of which has been to cut the field off from society at large and from the main currents of academic thought, not to mention the common reader and common sense. Theory, which tends toward dogmatism, hermeticism, hero worship and the suppression of doctrinal deviation–not exactly the highest of mental virtues–rejects the possibility of objective knowledge and, in its commitment to the absolute nature of cultural “difference,” is dead set against the notion of human universals.

Fair enough. I’m not going to defend ‘Theory’ here because it would take too long and I’m starting to have doubts myself. But Deresiewicz does take pains to point out the good in Darwinian literary approaches:

Boyd, a clearer and more careful thinker than most of these other writers, rebuts the sexual-selection hypothesis by noting that animals mainly sing for purposes of cooperation, not sexual display. His highly intelligent, impressively learned and patiently elaborated theory of the origin of fiction and the other arts begins with the idea that art is cognitive play. Humans and other intelligent species engage in prolonged periods of physical play as children–mock combat, feats of balance and coordination–in order to train themselves to deal with situations they will face as adults. Art, beginning with the songs of mothers and infants, trains our minds. Cognition is, first and foremost, pattern recognition, and art is concentrated pattern. But humans are also intensely social animals–the source of our evolutionary success–and the life of small human groups, as primate studies suggest (and everyday experience confirms), requires a constant effort of social cognition: eye contact, shared attention, awareness of status hierarchies, sensitivity to what others may be feeling, intending, discovering, believing. That’s where storytelling comes in. For what are our stories about if not the interpersonal dynamics of small human groups, whether the warriors at Troy or the courtiers at Elsinore? Fiction, Boyd claims, is the way we train our minds for the vital business of social existence.

The optimism doesn’t last too long though. Ultimately, Deresiewicz argues that Darwinian literary criticism fails for the same reason Freudian criticism does: they simply reproduce the same idea over and over again. In the former, we always find that interacting in small social groups is vital for evolutionary success; in the latter, that all human relationships are just varied repetitions of the Oedipal and Electra complexes.

But Freudian criticism is still occasionally useful when, instead of trying to use it to explain everything, you use it on the texts where it opens up something that might otherwise have remained hidden or obscured. And Deresiewicz holds out that hope for Darwinian theory and, even if I don’t really agree, I like that hopefulness.

The other day, when I sat with a group discussing Deleuze and Guattari’s book Anti-Oedipus, my friend voiced his frustration with the book (which, yes, we ‘got’) by saying “this is what I like about Lacan: he can actually say shit about stuff“. There is a growing sense among my peers that, after having become familiar with Derrida and Foucault, Bhabha and Spivak, Kristeva and Butler et al, we are trying to figure out what comes next. Yes, there are no universals. Sure, there is no common humanity. We get it: there is no purity. But now what? A way out of our cul-de-sac is yet to appear and, trust me, I don’t want to remain a deconstructionist forever.

I don’t think Darwinian theory is the answer. It’s too constrained, it’s too literal and, even if you detest ‘Theory’, it’s still very hard to run away from this reliance upon a very contingent, culturally specific idea of ‘truth’. Still – I like the idea that people are working on what comes next. If nothing else, at least there’s a bit of hope in that.

, , , , ,

7 Comments

Free Running… FREE YOUR MIND!

Okay, not really. But it occurs to me that I wrote my recent posts on beatboxing and a ‘language of play’ because re-purposing and re-contextualising things – to take an object or activity and reframe it so it feels or does something different – really interests me. So, when I stumbled on this recent very impressive video of free runner Damien Walters [via], it got me thinking:

  1. Generally speaking, urban spaces are spaces of and for work. Free running turns them into places where people  play. I like that.
  2. Free running is enabled precisely by the kinds of things of otherwise constitute barriers: fences, walls etc. The things that make a city orderly are also the things that enable a playful disorder. That’s obvious, I know, but it’s still neat.
  3. Unlike its cousin parkour, this sort of ‘disorder’ is done primarily for aesthetic, rather than practical reasons (in parkour, any beauty produced is a by-product of a relentless focus on efficient movement).
  4. This means that free running also is a public form of art, a temporary type of grafitti that uses bodies rather than paint.
  5. Even when urban areas are not explicitly for work – entertainment districts, popular streets with bars and restaurants ets., they follow rather strict rules: line up here to get into the cinema, this is the bar’s patio, this is the street etc. These demarcations are challenged in a fun way by free running, particular because it’s so public. The entire city becomes a playground and, in the most optimistic of circumstances, a person watching a free runner might look at his/her urban space differently.
  6. If you were to somehow trace the movement of a free runner, it’d all be arcs, curves and circles. These movements are used to generally jump over rectangular walls, straight edges, barriers, boundaries etc. I just kinda’ think that’s neat.
  7. While Mirror’s Edge was a cool concept, a game or movie that could embrace the idea that free running repurposes urban spaces in order to reconceive those spaces themselves would be really interesting.

Anyway, I’m sure I’m the millionth person to say something like this but, like I said, it piqued my interest.

, , ,

Leave a Comment

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.