"Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby MacCruiskeen » Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:42 pm

Hello, Wayne. I'm really chuffed you made it over here. Thanks for that great blogpost, and I apologise belatedly for not having asked your permission before re-posting the entire thing. (I tend to regard anything on the web as public property.)

Wayne Kasper wrote:Recent government/media/police actions seem to confirm anxieties i had relating to that post.


Yes, and "anxieties" is a good word in this context. I think fear plays a big part in the phenomena you described. Come back from a job interview, or from a pointless or precarious job, and then update your Facebook profile. So many people appear to be auditioning non-stop for a role in their own lives, never mind other people's. "Fake it till you make it", even if you never make it, even it's never clear what "it" is, exactly (although it does certainly have something to do with money, and not for no reason in days like these).
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Pierre d'Achoppement » Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:43 pm

Chapter 2. Mike Hears Bad News


It seemed to Mike, when he got home, that there was a touch of gloom in the air. His sisters were as glad to see him as ever. There was a good deal of rejoicing going on among the female Jacksons because Joe had scored his first double century in first-class cricket. Double centuries are too common, nowadays, for the papers to take much notice of them; but, still, it is not everybody who can make them, and the occasion was one to be marked. Mike had read the news in the evening paper in the train, and had sent his brother a wire from the station, congratulating him. He had wondered whether he himself would ever achieve the feat in first-class cricket. He did not see why he should not. He looked forward through a long vista of years of county cricket. He had a birth qualification for the county in which Mr Smith had settled, and he had played for it once already at the beginning of the holidays. His _debut_ had not been sensational, but it had been promising. The fact that two members of the team had made centuries, and a third seventy odd, had rather eclipsed his own twenty-nine not out; but it had been a faultless innings, and nearly all the papers had said that here was yet another Jackson, evidently well up to the family standard, who was bound to do big things in the future.

The touch of gloom was contributed by his brother Bob to a certain extent, and by his father more noticeably. Bob looked slightly thoughtful. Mr Jackson seemed thoroughly worried.

Mike approached Bob on the subject in the billiard-room after dinner. Bob was practising cannons in rather a listless way.

'What's up, Bob?' asked Mike.

Bob laid down his cue.

'I'm hanged if I know,' said Bob. 'Something seems to be. Father's worried about something.'

'He looked as if he'd got the hump rather at dinner.'

'I only got here this afternoon, about three hours before you did. I had a bit of a talk with him before dinner. I can't make out what's up. He seemed awfully keen on my finding something to do now I've come down from Oxford. Wanted to know whether I couldn't get a tutoring job or a mastership at some school next term. I said I'd have a shot. I don't see what all the hurry's about, though. I was hoping he'd give me a bit of travelling on the Continent somewhere before I started in.'

'Rough luck,' said Mike. 'I wonder why it is. Jolly good about Joe, wasn't it? Let's have fifty up, shall we?'

Bob's remarks had given Mike no hint of impending disaster. It seemed strange, of course, that his father, who had always been so easy-going, should have developed a hustling Get On or Get Out spirit, and be urging Bob to Do It Now; but it never occurred to him that there could be any serious reason for it. After all, fellows had to start working some time or other. Probably his father had merely pointed this out to Bob, and Bob had made too much of it.

Half-way through the game Mr Jackson entered the room, and stood watching in silence.

'Want a game, father?' asked Mike.

'No, thanks, Mike. What is it? A hundred up?'

'Fifty.'

'Oh, then you'll be finished in a moment. When you are, I wish you'd just look into the study for a moment, Mike. I want to have a talk with you.'

'Rum,' said Mike, as the door closed. 'I wonder what's up?'

For a wonder his conscience was free. It was not as if a bad school-report might have arrived in his absence. His Sedleigh report had come at the beginning of the holidays, and had been, on the whole, fairly decent--nothing startling either way. Mr Downing, perhaps through remorse at having harried Mike to such an extent during the Sammy episode, had exercised a studied moderation in his remarks. He had let Mike down far more easily than he really deserved. So it could not be a report that was worrying Mr Jackson. And there was nothing else on his conscience.

Bob made a break of sixteen, and ran out. Mike replaced his cue, and walked to the study.

His father was sitting at the table. Except for the very important fact that this time he felt that he could plead Not Guilty on every possible charge, Mike was struck by the resemblance in the general arrangement of the scene to that painful ten minutes at the end of the previous holidays, when his father had announced his intention of taking him away from Wrykyn and sending him to Sedleigh. The resemblance was increased by the fact that, as Mike entered, Mr Jackson was kicking at the waste-paper basket--a thing which with him was an infallible sign of mental unrest.

'Sit down, Mike,' said Mr Jackson. 'How did you get on during the week?'

'Topping. Only once out under double figures. And then I was run out. Got a century against the Green Jackets, seventy-one against the Incogs, and today I made ninety-eight on a beast of a wicket, and only got out because some silly goat of a chap--'

He broke off. Mr Jackson did not seem to be attending. There was a silence. Then Mr Jackson spoke with an obvious effort.

'Look here, Mike, we've always understood one another, haven't we?'

'Of course we have.'

'You know I wouldn't do anything to prevent you having a good time, if I could help it. I took you away from Wrykyn, I know, but that was a special case. It was necessary. But I understand perfectly how keen you are to go to Cambridge, and I wouldn't stand in the way for a minute, if I could help it.'

Mike looked at him blankly. This could only mean one thing. He was not to go to the 'Varsity. But why? What had happened? When he had left for the Smith's cricket week, his name had been down for King's, and the whole thing settled. What could have happened since then?

'But I can't help it,' continued Mr Jackson.

'Aren't I going up to Cambridge, father?' stammered Mike.

'I'm afraid not, Mike. I'd manage it if I possibly could. I'm just as anxious to see you get your Blue as you are to get it. But it's kinder to be quite frank. I can't afford to send you to Cambridge. I won't go into details which you would not understand; but I've lost a very large sum of money since I saw you last. So large that we shall have to economize in every way. I shall let this house and take a much smaller one. And you and Bob, I'm afraid, will have to start earning your living. I know it's a terrible disappointment to you, old chap.'

'Oh, that's all right,' said Mike thickly. There seemed to be something sticking in his throat, preventing him from speaking.

'If there was any possible way--'

'No, it's all right, father, really. I don't mind a bit. It's awfully rough luck on you losing all that.'

There was another silence. The clock ticked away energetically on the mantelpiece, as if glad to make itself heard at last. Outside, a plaintive snuffle made itself heard. John, the bull-dog, Mike's inseparable companion, who had followed him to the study, was getting tired of waiting on the mat. Mike got up and opened the door. John lumbered in.

The movement broke the tension.

'Thanks, Mike,' said Mr Jackson, as Mike started to leave the room, 'you're a sportsman.'


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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Simulist » Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:46 pm

barracuda wrote:Television functions behaviorally at least partly by offering models of appropriate responses to situations. In that sense it's the waking life's analogue to the dream state. The dream state of television allows for and promotes the visualisation of groups of persons as the crowd rather than the classes - it tends to subsume class structures within the attitudes of plot and character and dress and language in order to further the picture of the undifferentiated masses of citizens, all the better to secretly appeal to the vanity of the individual as potentially better than, more beautiful than or more able than their fellows. The hypnotic suggestion, given during the subject's sleep, to counter the incipient ennui of homogeneity.

When everyone is lying to each other, the conversation become banal, and that's the state of the situation as it stands. You've got to walk and talk a lie in order to assume the posture of normalcy nowadays. No one wants to admit that they're part of the problem, part of the group.

The dawn of awareness of the disingenuousness of our social structures, our governments, our churches and schools, and our position relative to those lies has forced a squirming mood of complicity upon society. You can respond to that realisation through any of several defensive modes: dissociation, submission, bland acceptance, hearty embrace, denial, or whatever. But the television presents its viewers with formats for feigning equanimity within this collision between what we know to be so and what we can successfully project without cracking.

It's as if the requisite water cooler conversations regarding last night's programming, or short lived cultural phrases and gestures appropriated from television shows bind the underlying lie of classlessness implied by advertised products (that anyone can look at and can buy with enough money - universal availability) to the image of the consumer, and then to the status of the viewer and his social group. Once class has been overlayed with products, once everyone is watching the One Big Show that the television presents, you don't have to even pretend class distinctions don't exist anymore. The viewer has already fallen into one of the defensive postures laid out by the conditioning, and covered his position vis-a-vis his class with the shadow of what might be, with the conviction of the sleepwalker.

In a similar way, the actions of our military and government have become so heinous that to acknowledge as real even the events that are allowed us by the media (blame journalism) is far too brutal for polite conversation, and so this deception is bound to the society across class boundaries, limiting or eliminating a certain kind of social discourse which was once much more common. The falsehoods presented as ideals by television can help mediate this painful silence with cliché, but in doing so create a social space devoid of openness and sincerity.

On the interpersonal level, this empty quality can dissipate and a real person stands before you in all their dirt and glory and it's possible to make contact sometimes. Of course this pervasive emptiness is mental damage on a grand scale. Suffering trauma, rejecting reality, adopting a flat affect - it's not healthy. But it just might be healthier for most people than coming to terms with what's really going on by themselves. You can really get hurt doing that alone. And the tenor of the times are at this point decidedly one-sided. When you close your eyes to the inhospitality and suffering of the age, something else is surely there to take the place of your sight - the afterimage, or the optical misama.

Once the masses can no longer have what they have been trained to desire, what will come to fill that waiting receptacle? Whatever does, you can bet it will include a politic of the very, very shiny.

Yes, we need to organise, agitate, educate, and tell the truth to whoever will listen, execute the long, slow overthrow. But me, I'm withdrawing, even though I know that strategy is not long for this world in terms of practicality. I'm just gonna be impractical while the getting is good.

Thanks for the post Mac, and welcome Wayne.

That's one hell of a fine analysis, Barracuda.

And to your question: "Once the masses can no longer have what they have been trained to desire, what will come to fill that waiting receptacle?" I'm afraid the answer might be simple vengeance — against whichever group they have been programmed to blame for their predicament.
"The most strongly enforced of all known taboos is the taboo against knowing who or what you really are behind the mask of your apparently separate, independent, and isolated ego."
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Aug 17, 2011 2:59 pm

I've been fascinated by post-reality since I first started seeing it and realizing what it was. Initially I thought it was something new, something created by the confluence of technology and social fragmentation, but since then I've come to a different conclusion. As absurd as our situation is, here on the other side of the looking glass, it's really just a more naked & amplified version of how human beings have always parsed reality: socially.

I highly recommend the documentary Videocracy for a funhouse mirror look at our own media pathology. The cartoonish over-statement of Italy's situation is a potent teaching tool for any US viewers...worth digging up.
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Canadian_watcher » Wed Aug 17, 2011 3:37 pm

Wombaticus Rex wrote:As absurd as our situation is, here on the other side of the looking glass, it's really just a more naked & amplified version of how human beings have always parsed reality: socially.


I agree. As much as I singled out current programming in my first reply in this thread I didn't mean to imply that the overall social/reality disconnect was anything unique to our particular generation, century or age. I'm sure even cavemen had some type of don't ask don't tell pressure on them.
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him. -- Jonathan Swift
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby W.Kasper » Wed Aug 17, 2011 4:14 pm

As time goes on, the more I believe Reich was mainly right (esp. compared to Freud or Jung). 'Character armour' seems to extend to everything: from the property market to the media. It's a chronic condition, and not just in the UK. From what I hear from the US, it's even more oppressively hegemonic, especially as economic conditions get worse. I'd even argue that western politicians are deliberately appealing to this - far more than 'aspiration', 'freedom' or 'community'. Huge sectors of the public seem to have this need for the powerful to tell them that their armour is actually good for them - making them more sexy and 'marketable'. As in protecting them from poverty or declining status (Tea Party? EDL? Or any other far-right movement?). Our biggest pop stars all give this message.

It could actually reach crisis level at some point. As we all know, the most advanced societies aren't immune to national madness. You can only keep the lid on all this for so long.

Recommended: Klaus Theweleit's book 'Male Fantasies'. Or Hanecke's film 'The White Ribbon'. Extreme cases, but relevant to how a shared 'emotional' state ends up in wanton cruelty. After all, armour is a preparation for war, no?
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby wintler2 » Wed Aug 17, 2011 8:11 pm

Yo Wayne, nice of you to appear, this internet thing might catch on :)

'Character armour' is a great reference in explaining what superficiality looks like, what i think that armour is made of is stories - the stories we tell ourselves about what we're doing, usually stories that we've been parented-into or otherwise handed down from on high, and that we adopt as our own as we 'grow up'. We quickly learn the bargain of conforming to popular ones (tough, cool, helpful, hardworking..) and to reinforce/support more powerful peoples stories (dad's 'cheerful' not alcoholic, the boss/Sargent is a bastard with a heart of gold not a systematic brutalist, if i accept other hipsters pretensions they will accept mine).

Hard times + increasing coercion of the public mind = lots of stories under increasing pressure, lots more cognitive dissonance and doubt. The more rigidly someone has been policing their thoughts the more explosive will be the whisperings from their marginalised parts, and the tighter they need to clutch their thoughts to keep hold of their 'sanity' (mainstream stories). Hence, superficiality, as theres too many things that trigger barely suppressed emotions. The 'invisible people' you met doing census, they've been flushed to the bottom of the heirarchy and they know it, there is no point in them putting alot of effort into running (and competing in) the popular mainstream stories, they can let themselves go and think their own thoughts much more.

And i'd agree that superficiality is a marker on the road to insanity, closer to the destination than is good for us. We/they need to be aware that there are better stories to choose from, and that dropping stories that don't work (careerism, fashion, respectability..) is scary but natural and essential and the very opposite of the annihilation which we, or really our ego, fears.
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Saurian Tail » Wed Aug 17, 2011 8:43 pm

How many people actually know how to communicate and make a logical argument? Precious few. Most people are walking around in deductive reality bubbles with shields raised. Contradictory information is met with defensiveness rather than curiosity. If you are not interested in gathering new information and you don't have the tools to hold an intelligent conversation ... all you are left with is banality.
"Taking it in its deepest sense, the shadow is the invisible saurian tail that man still drags behind him." -Carl Jung
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Canadian_watcher » Wed Aug 17, 2011 9:16 pm

Saurian Tail wrote: Contradictory information is met with defensiveness rather than curiosity.


not only contradictory info, but also unfamiliar words or concepts. There are people I'm a little afraid to engage with because inevitably I end up feeling as if I've offended them even though it's more or less the other way around

ie: "They are phasing out incandescent bulbs."
(the lip sneers, the eyebrows go up. she doesn't understand.) What's incandescent?
"Just regular lightbulb-type lightbulbs. You know, like in the comic strips when someone gets an idea."
Oh. Aren't you a smarty pants.
(Cue laugh track)

People just aren't curious really - they don't want to waste their time. They're busy keeping their bodies and their homes and their habits looking normal, and that's a full time job.
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him. -- Jonathan Swift
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Thu Aug 18, 2011 9:43 am

Saurian Tail wrote:How many people actually know how to communicate and make a logical argument? Precious few. Most people are walking around in deductive reality bubbles with shields raised. Contradictory information is met with defensiveness rather than curiosity. If you are not interested in gathering new information and you don't have the tools to hold an intelligent conversation ... all you are left with is banality.


I reckon the internet has actually made me worse at doing that (or getting old...)
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Thu Aug 18, 2011 10:28 am

Wombaticus Rex wrote:I've been fascinated by post-reality since I first started seeing it and realizing what it was. Initially I thought it was something new, something created by the confluence of technology and social fragmentation, but since then I've come to a different conclusion. As absurd as our situation is, here on the other side of the looking glass, it's really just a more naked & amplified version of how human beings have always parsed reality: socially.


Cept now we do it anti socially.
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Thu Aug 18, 2011 10:30 am

The phenomenon I'm noticing most recently is the technological Balkanization of society.

I live in a large (40 storey) apartment building, and despite seeing "my neighbors" quite often, I've never spoken to, or even made eye contact with a good 70% of them, due to their self-sequestered existence inside iBubbles™.

I understand that people are busy, but holy shit, I've seen some of these fuckers 400 times over the past three years, and they still won't look up from their goddamned phone when they enter an elevator to even acknowledge, for a millisecond, the existence of others of their same species.

And I often have an adorable dog with me as well. The kind of adorable dog that most of these people would probably moon over if she was featured in a Youtube video.

Just look at me and smile. Or don't even smile, but dammit, share a moment with a fellow human being traveling within your orbit.

It's really disconcerting, and this type of self-enforced isolation plays right into the hands of the people at the top of the pyramid, whose domination depends so much on our inability to organize a resistance.
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby Canadian_watcher » Thu Aug 18, 2011 8:18 pm

Bruce Dazzling wrote:I understand that people are busy, but holy shit, I've seen some of these fuckers 400 times over the past three years, and they still won't look up from their goddamned phone when they enter an elevator to even acknowledge, for a millisecond, the existence of others of their same species.


SO word. I cannot stand this entrée into our milieu. WTF is it with texting that is so all encompassing? Can't people just stop for a second with the pretending like everything important is happening somewhere else??

The more I reflect on it the more I believe that the teaching of being 'in the moment' is one of our most critical lessons to learn and absorb. It took me a long time to even begin to wrap my head around what that truly means. It's tricky, but I'm pursuing the idea with energy!
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.-- Jonathan Swift

When a true genius appears, you can know him by this sign: that all the dunces are in a confederacy against him. -- Jonathan Swift
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby FourthBase » Sun Apr 14, 2013 5:33 pm

Never been happier to bump a thread.

BUMP.
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Re: "Full-Spectrum Surface" (on rampant unreality)

Postby blankly » Mon Apr 15, 2013 4:04 am

I recently had an experience of rampant unreality. Novel alert.
Someone I try to support emotionally, who has had a desperately awful time, had another awful time in a temp. employment in a large corporation. Organised bullying, stepping into the arena of criminal action. Presumably, they spotted a victim. The only upside of this ghastly experience, was making a friend from a different department. The friend's birthplace was outside the UK. Most of this friend's friends, it turns out, are from a similar background, ethnic group, and wealth group. Friend invited her to a party, celebrating a festival or religious calender date, lets interpret religion loosely here, and when they learnt I was also in the UK and staying with her, threw in an invitation for me too. I'm getting to the unreality part. This group of kids (twenties to early thirties, so kids to me), all had family backgrounds which could support them stepping effortlessly into the middle class UK lifestyle, without the usual years of scrimping. Nice house, chic furniture etc. They were lovely, friendly kids, intelligent, but somehow completely clueless that anyone could not be like them. The evening was spent in mutual incomprehension. It was as if they had been given a red book of what it means to be British, language, customs, intentions, and were trying to put it into practice. Since I left, other, equally discomforting invitations have come the way of my pal, for formulaic events, with ritual gift exchanges utterly unrelated to her real situation, difficult, bordering on desperate.
Its just occurred to me that they must believe what they see on tv. We are all prisoners of our experience.
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