Derrida's shoes
http://www.asondheim.org/portal/.nikuko/shoes.jpg
Derrida's voice
http://www.asondheim.org/portal/.nikuko/voice.jpg
_
I got to see Derrida lecture in a large hall at UC Berkeley. By then, he was
a celebrity and was surrounded by hoards of followers. He spoke entirely in
French for a solid hour, and I'll bet most of the crowd of people there
didn't understand a word of it.
I also had a friend who's brother got his PhD under Derrida at Yale. He was
the only American student at the time (and since?) to be so blessed. Smart
guy, to be sure.
m
recent http://www.asondheim.org/
WVU 2004 projects http://www.as.wvu.edu/clcold/sondheim/files/
recent related to WVU http://www.as.wvu.edu:8000/clc/Members/sondheim
Trace projects http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/writers/sondheim/index.htm
partial mirror at http://www.anu.edu.au/english/internet_txt
Man, this country really sucks. And to think that back in 2000 I actually
believed that the world was finally turning a corner towards a new
enlightenment! It was a time when the baby-boom anti-Vietnam generation
finally had the chance to take hold of the reins of power, and wow, did the
future look deceptively bright. Nowadays, things are so bad that I even hear
artists claiming that modernism was part of a 20th century aberration and in
the 21st we need to go back to pre-modern values of realism and order. I am
appalled by the regression on all fronts that is settling in. It's like a
whole century is being swept under the rug so that ancient prejudices can
re-emerge and infect the world once again with their plagues.
m
on 10/12/04 11:53 AM, Talan Memmott at ta...@MEMMOTT.ORG wrote:
> The lighting of the cigarello was after we made our way toward JD. You
> did most of the pushing though... I just handed him my cd... maybe I
> handed it to you and you handed both to him... After, outside, in
> front of the library, when I was escaping the "deconstructionist
> bodyguards followers camp whores and venomous merchants", it seems
> Derrida was trying to do the same. His reprieve was shortlived... I
> then went to lunch with someone I'd never met before, didn't recognize
> my name until I mentioned Lexia to Perplexia, which they had just
> read...
> That whole conference is a blur... I do remember having to give my
> paper at 8:30 in the morning in some boombox of an atrium... I also
> remember Stelarc saying to me that he got my paper... and seem to
> remember Peggy Kamuf shaking her head while I gave my paper... I also
> remember you asking me after I gave my paper if I had read Levinas,
> and taking a picture of me in front of my doodle covered whiteboard. I
> do remember you yelling at Derrida... after the panel where the topic
> seemed to be "book worry"... perhaps, that wasn't the official subject
> but that was the digression.
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 14:39:49 -0400
> Alan Sondheim <sond...@PANIX.COM> wrote:
>> No, saying he's not around, meanwhile was it earlier I pushed my way
>> (not
>> unusual for me) through a group of deconstructionist bodyguards
>> followers
>> camp whores and venomous merchants to give JD a copy of my cd and I
>> think
>> Talan's. I didn't get to light his cigarette but inhaled the ashes! -
>> Alan
>>
>> On Tue, 12 Oct 2004, Talan Memmott wrote:
>>
>>> He asked me for a light, and I lit his cigarello... Talked for a few
>>> minutes, he asked my what I did... or what I was, I think he
>>> asked...
>>> Then a bunch of people came up, interrupted me and usehered him
>>> away...
>>>
>>> Alan, are you asking me if Rotman is around...?
mIEKAL
lq
- Alan
On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 16:57:48 -0400
Alan Sondheim <sond...@PANIX.COM> wrote:
>I was yelling at the absurd pronouncements of deconstructists in
>relation
>to computers and online - one paper totally missing the configuration
>of
>email headers for example, and then rambling on about his/her take.
>Except
>for Peggy Kamuf who couldn't get enough of him, stuttering through
>her
>questions to the point of incomprehension, probably after a night of
>fucking, he seemed to stay comfortably within the fold. Or so I
>thought at
>the time. Decon for me lost a sense of radicality at that point and
>became just another academic battlefield. I wonder if all those
>academics
>who read Glas really played with their ass? Or read Glas at all?
>
>The conference maddened me because of the subtext of mourning the
>book,
>mourning literary studies, mourning humanities. You get the same
>thing now
>on lists like Poetics where poets burble on about whether there's a
>lit
>avant-garde or not, at the same time sneering at work like ours which
>clearly runs amuck in their well-turned gardens.
>
>Weeds, I say, weeds; I'd rather be them!
>
>- Alan
>> On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 14:39:49 -0400
>> Alan Sondheim <sond...@PANIX.COM> wrote:
>>> No, saying he's not around, meanwhile was it earlier I pushed my way
>>> (not
>>> unusual for me) through a group of deconstructionist bodyguards
>>> followers
>>> camp whores and venomous merchants to give JD a copy of my cd and I
>>> think
>>> Talan's. I didn't get to light his cigarette but inhaled the ashes!
>>>-
>>> Alan
>>>
the great man wasn't there.
maybe Peggy Kamuf did him in. I wouldn't want to, but I wouldn't want to
go there either - alan
On Tue, 12 Oct 2004, Talan Memmott wrote:
> Oh yes... the telephone participant... ridiculous... Trying to hold a
> microphone upto the speaker phone... That panel was in the same
> super-boomy atrium where I gave my paper... Iggggg. just silly. I
> also remember catching Derrida on more than a few occasions dozing off
> during papers.
>
>
>
> On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 19:17:29 -0400
> Alan Sondheim <sond...@PANIX.COM> wrote:
>> Yes, I'm adorable!
>>
>> And D's shoes _were_ loafers...
>> There was also a call to a theorist from PARIS who couldn't make it,
>> I
>> think it was this conf., maybe not, Talan? Anyway, the connection was
>> so
>> bad at Albany we just basically heard a roar... Alan
But Derrida was imprisoned by the Derrideans - there's no other way of
putting it - resonating inside himself because it was all reflected that
way, wolf notes in an overly-echoic chamber.
It was there that I realized I didn't need to read all the theory there
is, and that I better write some more.
- Alan
On Tue, 12 Oct 2004, Talan Memmott wrote:
> They had the artists separated from the 'theorist' by a whole river,
> in a different town none-the-less... I wasn't even invited as an
> artist, I was there as a 'theorist', I didn't get to show any work...
> which was wierd...
> then, what, there was only one 'promoted' artist talk w/ Stelarc, Toni
> Dove and Elizabeth Diller...
> For some reason I don't even remember the art there... And, up until
> this moment I had blocked out that whole day. maybe I had a
> hangover... I did do some drinking with Brian Rotman and Carey Wolfe,
> I think, the night before.
>
>
>
> On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 20:51:51 -0400
On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 21:05:08 -0400
you say you like this senseless pop we play
you might not know the differAnce anyway
this insincerity
is nothing new to me
then you tell me what you want to hear
we're sending letters to derrida
misunderstood, unreadable
On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 23:51:17 -0400
and my own relation was nonexistent at least until the mid-70s; I was
preoccupied with Wittgenstein, taking his Tractatus as punctum. even now I
haven't gotten through Grammatology, and tend to read _in_ Derrida rather
than full through a work - unlike Barthes or Sartre for example, but like
Lacan (who is helped along with a drink or two, so since I hardly ever
touch alcohol) or Baudrillard -
I think it was my Structure of Reality book that first showed the evidence
- along with and interpenetrated with a cybernetic theory using what
little I knew of threshold logic -
so we've come in and out of this in certain ways, and this discussion has
the habitas of bringing a bit of daylight to it -
ala
And D's shoes _were_ loafers...
There was also a call to a theorist from PARIS who couldn't make it, I
think it was this conf., maybe not, Talan? Anyway, the connection was so
bad at Albany we just basically heard a roar... Alan
On Tue, 12 Oct 2004, Lanny Quarles wrote:
It's strange how much this sack of 'becoming' can hold...
On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 00:26:35 -0400
Well, I'm not surpised no one reads what I write or would remember it, but I did send out an email
about Dojo not too long ago,, here it is:
In Tokyo, in the year 1901, the wife of an officer of
the imperial army was about to give birth. Shortly before
her baby was born, the mother had a revelatory dream in
which a rat from the Grand Shrine of Izumo, a magnificent
creature with gold and white fur, bit the big toe of her
left foot. The was the origin and nativity of the Kingdom
of God Civilization of the Holy Twenty First Century,
The True-Light Supra-Religious Organization (Sukyo Mahikari).
Dojos throughout the world know this.
Dojos for the chanting of names.
Dojos for the purification and training of the body.
Dojos for whom no purpose can be found.
Dojos throughout the world know about physical dreaming.
The Place of the Way. The Way of the Place.
Dojo: Magic and Excorcisms in Modern Japan by Winston Davis
> anyone reading Wark? - still looking.
Hm, if this is what you mean, I read through some of it cursorily --
http://subsol.c3.hu/subsol_2/contributors0/warktext.html
-- and found myself disagreeing more or less violently with nearly every
statement he makes. I gave up reading the full text after a few random dips,
as this kind of writing strikes me as being grounded on naive assumptions
and is too cute by half.
m
Barthes is a good companion for travel... I've read/re-read The
Pleasure of Text, Mythologies, A Lover's Discourse en route to here
and there on many occasions. His book on Michelet is incredible,
though rarely referenced. Probably because of its specificity.
I got in trouble with my grads on monday... I was, in the name of
provocation, coming down on VR... Trying to get them to look beyond
surface coolness... Some took it rather personally. But, the snippets
from the Derrida document had some effect... A couple of people asked
me what they should read first...
On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 12:49:41 -0400
Alan Sondheim <sond...@PANIX.COM> wrote:
>Kathy might be a bit write? I find myself still worn by D/G -
>although I
>can't profess to understand the work fully. Barthes for me was always
>clear - the battles he fought were clearly _there_ and the
>negotiation
>with the reader seemed far more open. Lacan talked within closed
>shop. I
>read a fair amount of Lyotard, and still do on occasion.
>
>But then Kathy might be a bit wrong; after all, these are all
>professional
>philosophers, fully engaged. It reminds me of someone reading say
>Kristeva
>for the first time, without working through Revolution in Poetic
>Language,
>or doing the latter without working through the full Fr. version, or
>without reading Mallarme, Lautremont - the list is endless, but
>usually in
>artschool it stops at the first level.
>
>Not that it doesn't elsewhere! I remember asking a theorist about
>Lacan's
>essay on Poe, and what he thought of The Purloined Letter. He never
>read
>it - said it wasn't necessary.
>
>Ah well, there aren't just Snow's two cultures - there are several
>hundreds.
>
>Anyone (other than me) reading Wark's The Hacker Manifesto? Seems odd
>in
>light of Derrida - Alan
Take a look at Glas really or the book on painting, brilliant!
Dojo? - Alan
On Wed, 13 Oct 2004, Lanny Quarles wrote:
> I've been pecking at Barthes' Sade, Fourier, and Loyola, and have most of the
> D&G stuff,
> but never really read much of Derrida except I think maybe some essay or two
> in some journal or other.
> I think I actually read most of Derrida for Dummies one time at a cafe'..
> Mostly reading japanese stuff:
> The death poems, a new book on Shisendo, the hall of poetry immortals,
> kodojin, sad toys, a book called
> Dojo on one of japan's weird new religions, and various other things, some
> ancient indian poetry for example
> and always Cabinet magazine.. at this point in my life, the high theory stuff
> seems too remote from my experience..
> I like things with rocks and trees etc, life experiences, places, lyricism,
> anti-lyricism.. the ornate logical
> constructionism
> of theory is beautiful and palpable but the culture seems a little bit over
> the top pretense wise, i'm not
> anti-intellectual,
> but I get very tired reading this material.. I did enjoy Irigaray's book on
> Heidegger very much, and Barthes
> writing degree zero, and Kristeva's Desire in Language and Black sun were
> very readable and especially Avital Ronell's
> Stupidity struck a chord especially the chapters on De Man.. That Stupidity
> is a great book! Just don't seem to
> be able to read as much as I could once upon a time.. Not sure I was ever
> really a fantastic reader, maybe an earnest
> lazy reader. I like taking in small sections of many texts over a period of
> time.. I guess I need to pick up some
> derrida,
> but the stream of japanese texts is endless, or japanese culture texts.. Just
> picked up the complete Hearn, and a
> biography
> of Turner and one of John Ruskin.. Really looking forward to reading the book
> on Shisendo as Kodojin mentions
> going there.. OH, and reading Basho quite a bit.. Basho with Bebop is extra
> cooool!! Far out.. A horse pissing by
> my pillow, playing with children wearing a fake white rabbit-fur beard..
> Basho is absolutely transcendent.. miracles
> there.. small daily openings to bliss.. In Favor of Deceit is also good.. A
> book on Amazonian Trickster myths..
>
> seems like we're sharing reading habits
> lq
M
on 10/14/04 11:52 AM, Alan Sondheim at sond...@PANIX.COM wrote:
> Didn't find it cute, but definitely immersed in classical marxism. But the
> concept is important - glad he's out there writing. Just wish I could
> agree with him - Alan