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The orgy of revolutions
THE sexual revolution of the past three decades has given rise to
a number of interesting debates. It has championed the cause of
the oppressed while challenging the establishment. But like any
revolution, it is being achieved at a heavy cost of creating an
emotional chasm between men and women as they struggle to come to
grips with a new set of power relationships, based on equality
and a radical approach to intimacy.
Within the cultural matrix of Europe, Baudrillard has radically
redefined the way society views sex, sexuality and gender.
Questioning the descriptions of sexual preference or cries of
political protest within the lesgay subcultures, he challenges
the current theories of sexual difference, employing a variety of
theoretical approaches (psychoanalysis, deconstruction, semiotics
and discourse theories) to investigate representation of sex and
sexual difference in literature, film, video, music, art,
photography.
Contemplating on the revolutions of the 1960s, Baudrillard in his
recent book The Transparency of Evil feels that though it is
often held that the sexual revolution in the last three decades
has resulted in liberation, there is only a confused sense of the
distinctions between the masculine and the feminine. The
"androgynous and Frankensteinian appeal of a Michael Jackson"
disturbs all classes of sexuality. He sees no reality other than
the one thrown up by the system as its ideal reference. Disputing
many of the dominant interpretations of the role of sexuality in
modern culture, he sees the emergence of "plastic sexuality" -
sexuality freed from its intrinsic relation to reproduction - and
analyses it in terms of the long-term development of the modern
social order and social influences of the last few decades.
To pick out the main argument of the book is not to do justice to
it as a whole, and will not be attempted here. A stripped-down
analysis of its general scheme cannot bring out its sheer
imaginative sweep and the force of its intelligence. One of the
leading and the most controversial thinkers writing today, his
original and brilliant views on almost all aspects of life,
matched by his stylistic virtuosity, destroy preconceived notions
of approaching the question of reality. As in his other works
such as In the Shadows of the Silent Majorities, Simulations and
Simulacra, Fatal Strategies, Cool Memories, Baudrillard follows a
certain active and methodical disorientation that reaffirms the
necessity for a rigorous and generative review of the
contemporary scene.
So respected is he in elite colleges both on the Continent and in
the United States, that contemporary criticism has often applied
his thinking to "the self-referential world of postmodernist
art", in spite of his acknowledgement that there is no credible
aesthetic analysis in his work and that art is dead. The
revolution in art has engendered a "transaesthetic realm of
indifference". Though art has proliferated in the modern world,
it has disappeared as a symbolic pact, "as something thus clearly
distinct from that pure and simple production of aesthetic
values, that proliferation of signs ad infinitum, that recycling
of past and present forms which we call culture." With
fundamental rules of art missing, it becomes "a currency which
may not be exchanged: it can only float its only reference
itself, impossible to convert into real value or wealth".
Paradoxically, behind the disordered compulsive movement of
modern art lies a paralysis in which there are only repetitions
at a faster pace, endless variations on forms gone by, a kind of
anarchy within the cultureless West that is indicative of the
collapse of the secret code of aesthetics.
The utopian aspect of art stands ignored as everyone turns into a
creator, thanks to the media, computer science and video
technology which flood the world with self-generating images,
totally eclectic and superficial. We live in an age of general
aestheticisation when all forms of culture and anti-culture are
encouraged and promoted. The world's "insignificance has been
transfigured by the aestheticising process" and with the
"materialisation" of aesthetics, art is slowly disappearing,
giving place to advertising, bringing us to a juncture when it is
pointless to give art any aesthetic consistency. With a dizzying
eclecticism of forms comes a dizzying desire for pleasure. More
and more images are created but in this profusion of images there
is nothing to see. The aesthetic syntax disappears in the
negative intensity of images that are inconsequential and have no
form. Are we, therefore, returning to the anthropological without
any reference to the aesthetic standards? In one of his very cool
and apoclyptic statements, Baudrillard gives the sensational
message that "we have returned to the cultural stage of primitive
societies". Similarly Nietzsche argues in Beyond Good and Evil
that it is not a question of halting the wheel of History; but if
History is really a "wheel and if modern nihilism can be compared
to Christianity, if the modern world is a repetition of the Roman
world, then... after the triumph of the 'new Christianity' there
will be a return to the Middle Ages".
Within this culture of the hyperreal, lives are constituted by
images and symbols which have no reference to any concrete object
or individual identity. Having a country breakfast on Oxford
Street is the distant imitation of a lost and often already
counterfeit reality, which Baudrillard calls "gigantic
simulacrum" or an "age of simulacra and simulation, in which
there is no longer any god to recognise his own, nor any last
judgement to separate truth from false, the real from its
artificial resurrection, since everything is already dead and
risen in advance". Where there is no depth of meaning, there can
be no reality. "More-real-than-real simulations", a kind of a
Disneyland - such is the present beguiling world even as it
exercises a surreptitious repression:
Disneyland is presented as imaginary in order to make us believe
that the rest is real, when in fact all of Los Angeles and the
America surrounding it are no longer real... It is no longer a
question of a false representation of reality (ideology), but of
concealing the fact that the real is no longer real, and thus of
saving the reality principle.
"All the great humanist criteria of value", Baudrillard
reiterates, "all the values of a civilisation of moral,
aesthetic, and practical judgement, vanish in our system of
images and signs". Within any interrogation and rethinking of
contemporary critical sense it must be kept in mind that the
external symbols of our world cannot be held responsible for
evolving the way they have. If they are weak or trivial or
absurd, they speak less for themselves and more about our inner
lives. As Angela Carter in The Passion of New Eve rightly says,
"A critique of these symbols is a critique of our lives".
Disordered details and vertiginous experience of the baroque are
the symptoms of a dying rationalism, a fundamental break from the
recent past, "once presented as the unique, progressive and
symmetrical appropriation of reality". This confusion of
connections, this disjunction is apparent in the opaque languages
of critical writing. The problematisation of reality within the
debate over postmodernism involves a look at the Marxist critique
of reality, at Nietzsche's critique of analytical enquiry and the
Freudian interrogations of immediate appearances and the reality
behind them. But behind the mask is there a transcendental
reality? Our symbols, our fictional stories, our language, our
differences, our dialogue become what Derrida defines the factor
of truth.
SHELLEY WALIA
The Transparency of Evil: Essays on Extreme Phenomena, Jean
Baudrillard, London: Verso, p.174, £34.95 (hardcover).
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