Geert Lovink...Switching-- Zapping...MM 8#1...Review
- G E E R T   L O V I N K
H A R T M U T   W I N K L E R
Switching -- Zapping
- Verlag Jürgen Häusser Frankfurter Straße 64, 6100
Darmstadt, 1991, ISBN-3-927902-55-1, German text, 166 pp.
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- Zapping is either looked
down upon or disapproved of outright. The bourgeoisie sees it as a danger to
the public health, a consumer illness to which children are especially
vulnerable. Manifold switching is thought to ruin concentration, causing
children to be impatient and want to `zap away' their teachers, according to
recent research. Columnists, on the other hand, tend to dismiss the slumped
pose in a single clause as a cynical, ironic gesture towards the over-abundance
of inferior programmes, a category that includes their own bite-sized, modish
blooms. Zap. Caught between the departments `lifestyle' and `media criticism',
channel hopping remains a happily non-committal, incomprehensible and
uncomprehended phenomenon.
-
A paradigmatic twist is often given to the rise of remote control, supposing
it to be the transition between the passive and the interactive viewer. And
yet, switching is terra incognita for media theory as it leaves the
study of the subjective fallout to the humanities. In its turn, the research
factory Mass Communication, Inc. (as extension of the advertising world and
media concerns) can only view zapping as a challenge to make spots and trailers
more subtle, in the vain hope that it grabs the viewers before they grab the
remote control. Actually, zapping is an ideal subject for Anglo-Saxon
cultural studies.
-
But the first brilliant zap text I have run across comes from West Germany.
You might regard Hartmut Winkler as a well-read Frankfurt film theorist who
studied architecture and Germanic culture and has taken up a place within the
academic tradition of critical theory. Remarkably, he is at odds with Adorno
and Horkheimer's criticism of the culture industry, which has lately landed in
the pessimistic-culture straits where leftist and right-wing intellectuals can
agree on their revulsion at everything that smells of (American) mass culture.
Winkler observes what goes on inside the zapper without taking a negative view
or shouting `hurrah' for the victory of the viewer over the program makers and
what they offer. With an outsider's gaze and a certain sympathy for
trivial culture, he tries to come conceptually closer to the experience of
zapping. The result is a critical study that knocks down clichés and
tests the solidity of concepts, without offering alternatives, as behoves good
negativity.
-
Winkler distinguishes between purposefully turning the channel to another
program and dreamy, playful, hectic, rhythmic or nervous zapping. Switching
emerged, according to him, from a misuse of technology, that the
inventors of the remote control had not taken into account at all. From this
unlikely use emerged a new way of receiving. Using newspaper reports,
sparse research results and his own interviews, he summarizes some motivations
and explanations: the zapper wants to see what else is on,
variety, watch multiple shows, fast forward television
programs and most of all avoid commercials. One wants to keep one's
overview and control what's going on. In search of small and large sensations,
viewers avoid things that get on their nerves or bore them. As Montaigne said:
When a book doesn't please me, I pick up another. Then I leaf through one
book after another, with no plan, incoherently.
-
But Winkler does not find zapping to be a superior way of acquiring knowledge,
producing more information and greater insight. Zapping, like television
itself, is a source of distraction. Zapping is a program itself, that can be
followed with a minimal dose of concentration, like any other channel. While
Neil Postman and Jerry Mander reject distraction as a sign of decay, Siegfried
Krakauer regards it as a compensation for the daily pressures of work: in the
footsteps of Walter Benjamin, one can see the zapper as an `examiner', kept
pleasantly occupied.
-
Winkler frequently draws on the debates about the new medium film from the
beginning of this century. Switching produces something of the amazement and
estrangement felt by film-goers well into the Twenties, when the film theatre
still resembled a continuous revue that provoked a wealth of reactions among
the spectators. Film's `clock' still wasn't synchronized with the `inner clock'
of the viewer. The element of one's own film as anti-pole returns in switching.
Revenge is taken on the continuity of passive reception. You drop out,
disregarding the unity of the story. A technical expression of the disinterest
in greater significance. This `parasitic use of signs' aims to cultivate
conscious `mistakenness' technically, a process that reminds Winkler of the
collage and Wellershoff's description of the open work of art.
-
The telecommander has given the TV recipient a means of leaving the program
and striking back, without giving up the medium or its reception. And yet, the
zapper chooses an alternative that s/he is unfamiliar with, but continues
because there is a kick in zapping itself. Winkler relates the amazement evoked
to the shock caused by various editing techniques. The fright-seconds
and raw, hard montage of the avant-garde recur in sudden switching. An
experience comes about at the moment that shock defences lower
(Benjamin). The hermetically experienced world falls apart and the loose parts
again acquire a material character. Thus emerges the awareness that
another order is possible.
-
Winkler treats his sources from literature and film theory with exaggerated
caution. At the end of the day, none of the concepts turn out to be able to
adequately describe zapping. While the zapper closes up gaps (film is life
with the dull bits cut out -- Hitchcock), no new film is produced. Winkler
rejects the idea that zapping has a productive side. No author is creating a
new piece of work. Switching is at most a subjective processing of
meanings, inspired by boredom and playing with coincidence. Fantasies of
omnipresence are interpreted by Winkler as fear of missing something and
compensation for one's own impotence. In the concluding part about film and
daydream, using Hans Sachs' Gemeinsame Tagträume (Common Daydreams,
1924), switching is defined as the balance between the progressive stream of
real perception and the regressive stream of fantasy products. Switching is
self-influence.
-
While drawing on early debates about film produces a lot, it is unclear why
Winkler doesn't refer to game theory, used at present for describing computer
games, MUDs and MOOs. He does not deal with the interactivity discourse of the
computer world. Net surfing has much in common with zapping through TV
channels; mouse and remote control are brother and sister. You might expect to
see arbitrary zapping pushed aside by searching, navigating and scanning. But
we find the same kind of productivity delusions and totality fantasies in the
Net. Remote control today dominates not only TV channels, but potentially the
entire communications spectrum. That makes Winkler's attempts, stripped of
their caution, useful for the description of the comings and goings of
plugged-in wetware.
-
translation JIM BOEKBINDER
..
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