Translocations

March 11-22, 2002, Steve Dietz (Minneapolis), Guna Nadarajan (Singapore), Raqs Media Collective (Delhi), and Yukiko Shikata (Tokyo) engaged in an online conversation that started from the idea of “translocations” and ranged widely across the terrain of global net art practice and philosophy. Here is an edited version of our conversation. Published in the catalog of "How Latitudes Become Forms", Walker Art Centre, Minneapolis, 2003.

From: Steve Dietz <steve.dietz@walkerart.org>
Date: Mon Mar 11, 2002 0:48am
Subject: Why "translocations"?
Dear Guna, Jeebesh, Monica, Shuddha (Raqs), and Yukiko,

I first came across the term "translocal" in the writings of Andreas Broeckmann. For me, one of the ways the term resonated most strongly was the flip from terms like transnational, transglobal, and glocal. If McDonalds and Starbucks are the poster children for such corporations—the near hegemonic presence of a single brand globally—then translocal foregrounds the aspect of "situatedness" (sometimes geographically local and sometimes psychographically?) while acknowledging that we live and practice in a (potentially) networked context.

Tetsuo Kogawa, who also uses the term translocal—and said in a conversation that he had coined/used the term independently—suggests a similar flip in "The Global Transformation of Books and Reading” when he suggests that the goal is not, in fact, to "think globally, act locally," as the popular refrain goes, but to "think locally, act globally." In other words, focus on the local but the networks can allow the action to be propagated globally.

Anyway, my interest is not the term per se, and I recognize that there is a complicated dynamic involved. Raqs, if I'm not off base, it is precisely the complicatedness of this dynamic—of not being "Indian" but nevertheless of what Sarai does being very rooted—which you refer to in your Rhizome interview.

My interest is also in exploring the network and specifically new media practices as a fruitful way to approach issues of "globalization,” especially the roles of the local and the trans in the global.

So my first question is how each of you think about both the term translocal and some of the issues embedded in what I have said and in Broeckmann's and Kogawa's texts, as well as in other references to the term and issues?

s

From: Shuddhabrata Sengupta <shuddha@sarai.net>
Date: Mon Mar 11, 2002 2:48am
Subject: Re: Why "translocations"?

Dear Steve and all the others on the list,

First of all, a big hello, from Jeebesh, Monica and me (Shuddha) in the Raqs Media Collective at Sarai in Delhi. We look forward to a stimulating few days of conversation on this list.

I think Broeckmann is quite close to what many of us feel when he talks (implicitly) about the tensions between the pulls of nomadism and the search for the feeling of home, in his Translocal.Net interview.

This tension, we feel describes the predicament of “translocality” quite accurately. The feeling of being transient where you are, no matter how long you have been there. The sense of “internal” exile, even from the context of mainstream art and media practice, that some of us have come to recognize as part of our everyday experience. And also the unexpected alliances that we find with our traveling companions—free software activists, hackers, coders on the fringes of code, and other free floating intellectual and cultural artisans.
In this sense, for us, the creation of a sarai was to create a “home for nomads” and a resting place for practices of new media nomadism. Traditionally, sarais were also nodes in the communications system (horse-mail!) and spaces where theatrical entertainments, music, dervish dancing and philosophical disputes could all be staged. They were hospitable to a wide variety of journeys, physical, cultural and intellectual. In medieval central and south Asia, sarais were the typical spaces for a concrete translocality, with their own culture of custodial care, conviviality, and refuge. They also contributed to syncretic languages and ways of being. We could do well to emulate even in part aspects of this tradition in the new media culture of today.

I was particularity struck once by what the Russian cyberfeminist Irina Aristarkhova had once said in a panel on cyberfeminist practices in the last Next 5 Minutes in Amsterdam. I am paraphrasing her, but she had spoken of the importance that all those who work in the new media must pay to the idea of “hospitality.” Of always being hosts and guests in each other’s practices.
This might make for oases of locatedness along the global trade routes of new media culture.

We would like to share here with you a fragment from an email interview that Rhizome did with Monica.
On “Locatedness.” Fragment of an Interview with Monica Narula (Raqs Media Collective) by Rhizome

Rhizome: Are there unique Indian qualities to the media projects at Sarai? Or do you consider yourself part of a more global aesthetic?

Raqs: For us, the idea of a "uniquely Indian quality" is not really meaningful, or expressive of anything at all. India is the name of a nation state, and "Indian" the term denoting nationality that happens to be entered in our passports, but it does not really suggest anything real or concrete in terms of culture to us; nor do the words French, or Italian or Australian or American, for that matter. Those who use the term "Indian Culture" usually mean a complex of values, attitudes, and tendencies that have been processed to mark out a space that is "uniquely" theirs, and which mirrors an obsession with territoriality. We are puzzled as to what (in cultural terms) can "uniquely" be the possession of any sets of people, in exclusivity. Culture is something that never respects borders and territories. It is infectious, nomadic, and volatile. We see culture, and cultural intervention as an agile constellation of people, practices, connections and objects that come into being when different disciplines, histories and attitudes encounter each other in a global cultural space. This does not mean that we subscribe to the view that there are no cultural differences, but that cultural affinities and differences are not reducible to the mere notations of current political cartography.
. . .
The work that we do reflects the very specific conditions of a large, chaotic, industrial, cosmopolitan city which is connected globally through flows of information, finance and industrial processes to the whole world. While we may hesitate to use the term "Indian" to describe our work, we are certain that our work speaks to the specific, simultaneously global and local realities of working and living in a city like Delhi, and of engaging with the diverse and complex histories of modernity in South Asia, as reflected in media cultures and practices.

It is because we are strongly located in a city like Delhi that we also know that we are part of, and contribute to, a global domain of aesthetic and cultural practice.
Looking forward to all our “translocal” conversations.

Cheers
Shuddha
for Raqs Media Collective


From: Steve Dietz <steve.dietz@walkerart.org>
Date: Mon Mar 11, 2002 11:39pm
Subject: RE: Why "translocations"?


Shuddha,

Thanks for this response about "sarai" and Raqs’ thinking about the interplay of nomadism and locatedness. I like very much the idea of a "home for nomads" and understand your issues with "Indian Culture," but I also want to press a bit more on this interplay.
Is there are difference between "a city like Delhi" and Delhi? In other words, of course there are experiences, attitudes, and possibilities common to Delhi and Tokyo and Rio and perhaps to a lesser extent Minneapolis. Are there also differences that matter?
Yukiko, I know you were involved in Knowbotic Research's io_dencies project, which mapped urban flows in Tokyo and Rio among other places. Perhaps you can comment on your experience with this important project in terms of the interplay between the transglobal flows and the local locatedness of the participants.

I guess what I am asking—and we don't have to stay fixated on this, I promise—is how does the "where" fit in? Is geography (physical) a difference that makes a difference, to reference Shannon's theory of information? Or is that a kind of essentialist argument, when, as Shuddha points out, all geographies are already hybrid?


From: Raqs <raqs@sarai.net>
Date: Tue Mar 12, 2002 6:48am
Subject: Re: Why "translocations"

The problem with a word like “difference,” like the word “roots,” is it's extreme ideologisation. To be able to talk about a space one needs to “dig” in different directions but where this digging will lead is somewhat unpredictable. Difference forecloses this unpredictability. A “city like Delhi” is a product of a very complex weave of movement and violence. This city has been destroyed, decimated many a times by various forms of power. New spaces and new rhythms have emerged within an imagination of power's imprint and around it's shadow. To be conscious of this history, with its complexity and contradiction, is to be aware of the processes by which spaces and identities are destroyed, created and sustained.

The problem is how can we sensibly talk about these, being conscious of one's locatedness but not valorizing location.


From: yukiko shikata <sica@dasein-design.com>
Date: Tue Mar 12, 2002 9:00am
Subject: translocations


hi all,

It is so funny and nice that we share different time zones (caused by the different latitudes) and social, cultural defenses ... but we are connected via Internet. This situation is already translocal!

I read over the past postings, and I will reply to some parts of them, but now, as a starter from me, I write down what I thought randomly:
I live in Tokyo, now economically weaker than before, but as Saskia Sassen wrote, Tokyo is (still) connected globally to other big cities such as New York and London ... so-called "global cities” that share the same kind of reality realized by global economy.
Manuel Castells wrote that the global economic flow is predominant compared with other kinds of flows. it is clear this global economic flow tends to foment a mono-political, social and cultural situation. It makes cultural diversity weaker.

Guy Debord wrote "spectacle" has "world time" and "world space.” Time and space are strongly connected, and Situationist attitude was the disturbance or resistance to those kinds of time and space.

How can we get beyond this initialization of time and space? I think "translocal" is a strategy, and ideas such as TAZ (temporary autonomous zone) raised by Hakim Bey, being nomadic, could be omnipresent depending on the situation.

Regarding the "io_dencies" project it was very important that no one could have an overview of what was happening, as the totality of the information flows was happening only invisibly at info-level—on the server. Each participant had different experiences. No one could share the same reality.

With the Tokyo version of “io_dencies,” what the user sees at the interface depends on the information “tendencies.” Each participant can visualize the flows as she wants and modify them in many ways. Also there is a kind "ghost” of other users remotely influencing the flows of the person's interface. You operate your own interface locally, as do others, but there comes some interaction or influences, which can happen randomly, unexpectedly.

Tendencies and density of flows operated by each user form a kind of “info-agency,” which creates an applet, which starts to seek similar tendencies, to get connected to make stronger tendencies. Info-flows are always in dynamic flux in these info-spaces. Over time, links between “local” data grow to influence the whole; in other words, global information.
I use "local" not limited to Tokyo people, or exhibition visitors, but any local participants accessing from any place of the world, which I think could be said to be "translocal.”

KR+cF (Knowbotic Research) raised the question of urbanity and urban planning to make the local participants face (invisible) reality and possibility--for them to start thinking of themselves as one of the flows of Tokyo.
that is for now.

greetings,
yukiko


From: Gunalan Nadarajan <gunalan@lasallesia.edu.sg>
Date: Tue Mar 12, 2002 0:11pm
Subject: Re: Why "translocations"?


Shuddha and the Raqs Collective, I am particularly impressed with the position (or refusal to position) that conceptually grounds the concept of Sarai. The etymological and historical references of Sarai upon which you have developed a form of strategic nomadism has interesting resonances, as you rightly noted, with notions of the translocal and translocation. I wonder however, if you had thought of the limits of nomadic strategies such as yours since there is a tendency for such strategies to not have a life after their initial interventions and effects. The strategic advantages of nomadism seem to issue exactly from their mobility and lack of institutional baggage. However, this also seems to limit the capacity for such nomadic strategies to have long-term effects and sustainable structures to maintain the dynamic of change they initially bring about or point to. Does Sarai see itself becoming more rooted or are roots always dangerous? Location may have become less important but the locatedness you suggest as being crucial for your work may need to develop some kinds of roots not for grounding but for sustained relationship to a location.

I am also a little puzzled by the notion of translocal being presented in these discussions as somewhat antithetical to operations of globalization. It seems to me that the “trans” in translocal is driven by what Okwui Enwezor called the "will to globality," which is a desire for connectivity and access to what is perceived to be “global.” If “translocation” is a movement and therefore a moment of globalization, despite being attentive to the local, then how does one really conceptualize and articulate its radicality vis a vis globalization? If the translocal is strategically driven by the desire to connect up to what turn out to be largely global operations (and I am willing to accord that not all non-local activities are necessarily global, for example, diasporic, religious and regional activities), then what possibilities does it represent for strategically articulating the local?

While speculating on the notion of nomadism and on the translocal connections that Raqs celebrate through the net communities they plug into, I wondered about another translocal concept, that of the diaspora. The diasporic individual seems to have been the first translocal insofar as he/she has had to connect up to an imagined community in a manner that transcends geographical positioning.
I am wondering if Raqs need be as anxious to reject the label “Indian” to articulate a nomadic position, since they could draw some ideas of how such translocality can be managed by looking at the experiences of many diasporic Indians like myself. I am not suggesting by this that the diaspora is a successful translocal articulation that makes a seemingly impossible reference to some distant (both culturally and temporally) reference point but rather that the diasporic experience is itself one that flip-flops between connection and disjuncture; between mimicry and invention; between roots and routes. Coming from a third generation Indian migrant living in Singapore who has never visited India but has been consistently referred and related as “Indian,” though never quite identifying with that label, these connections I draw between the diasporic experience and that of translocation are meant to highlight the perpetual indecision that characterizes such positions or lack thereof.


From: yukiko shikata <sica@dasein-design.com>
Date: Wed Mar 13, 2002 3:19am
Subject: Subject: Re: Why "translocations"?


Dear Guna and the rest,
In my last mail I used "globalization" generally, from the aspect of financial flows, which is, in a way, done top-down driven by corporations or nation states, or by the mixture of them.

But can I say that there is another, alternative layer of globalization, which could be realized bottom-up by the people connected globally, or as Guna wrote "the will to globality" according to Okwui?

I think translocal is the condition that is away from the existing opposition, which is global vs. local, but always facing the contradiction between those two.

I locate translocal as a condition realized by the unlimited number of people, each of who is attentive locally and connected globally. The translocal emerges by a kind of ever-changing interaction process of these people and could be different depending on the reality of each participant. It is multi-layered and those layers are not always synthetic but rather with some contradictions. The reality of each location can be shared partly with other locations. At the same time not all are shared, and in this lack or difference "imagination" starts to work.
In 1996 I became involved in the exhibition "atopic site" held in Tokyo (atopic contains the meanings, "a-topos" and "a-topic"). Five curators including me brought site-specific projects by artists, each based on a local urban situation, such as from Sarajevo, Geneva, Okinawa, Indonesia, U.S. etc. to the exhibition site in Tokyo. The projects asked whether such local realities could be shared in Tokyo or not. I think it was both. Visitors discovered problems similar to those in Tokyo but at the same time realized different realities in social, political and cultural backgrounds. Here, by experiencing several projects at the same location, the visitors were expected to make many links between each projects, and to start imagining other possible localities that are not presented or visible there. I think imagination of the possible localities is a key factor for being translocal.

Greetings, yukiko


From: mediachef_translocations <steve.dietz@walkerart.org>
Date: Wed Mar 13, 2002 3:57am
Subject: Re: from Guna


Guna and Yukiko,

A lot to chew on here! And thanks, Yukiko, for introducing the notion of imagination. Shuddha has written a quite wonderful piece about his imagination as sparked by community telephones called "Long Distance Conversation.”

In my recent "global travels" I had a similar sense of wonder and imagination provoked by the airport destination board in the Kuala Lumpur airport. I think I could have sat there indefinitely. It also brings to mind one of my standard anecdotes that one of the ways Claude Shannon and others understood his very precise and profoundly transforming mathematical theory of information was as surprise. Information has more value the more surprising it is.

Guna, I think you are right to question whether latitudes—geography—introduces another instance of a kind of essentialism. Nevertheless, I remain interested in whether there is a kind of non- essentialist localism that can be recuperated by the notion of translocal in opposition to transglobal. Perhaps it is the notion of hospitality, which Raqs mentioned in relation to Irina Aristarkhova and which is embedded in her new work “Virtual Chora.”


From: Gunalan Nadarajan <gunalan@lasallesia.edu.sg>
Date: Tue Mar 12, 2002 9:09pm
Subject: RE: translocations


Dear Yukiko and the rest,

I am thankful for your reference to the notion of latitude-differentiated time zones as it again points to the ways in which cartographies are organizing the spatial-temporal realities of our lived experiences as different. I would like though to suggest that sometimes geographies have, with reference to the imagined topographies of the net and global networks of commerce, become promoted as the new signifiers of real spaces or in cyberculture circles, place. The fact that geographies are as much constructions of spatio-temporal experiences rather than re-presentations of real spaces as they are is carefully circumvented sometimes by the critique of net space as being not-real vis a vis that of geographical space. In some sense, then I am wondering if the reference to latitude being a geo-graphical construct standing in this exhibition as a trope of locatedness is not rather problematic.

I would like to raise another issue that has been bothering me for a while now, the phenomena of the global curator; and Steve, as I indicated to you during your visit here, you seem to be one example of a global curator both by intent, and since I know you will beg to differ, by default. By intent, insofar as you as does your institution, Walker Art Center, desire to “curate the world” in a sense. The desire to go beyond one's shores, to aspire to incorporate other perspectives and products into one's ambit (and thus reflecting global ambitions) is peculiar to the global curator, most concretely embodied in the biennale curators/artistic directors. One may quibble on whether it is really the globe that the global curator desires or whether it is far more humble insofar as they aspire to merely represent a variety of perspectives, not comprehensively but conscientiously. However one decides on these issues, “global curator', reflecting a “will to globality” in curating and organizing art exhibitions is an important mediator of the “global” in the art world. What is the role of the global curator in an age of translocations? Is the global curator sometimes embarking on the translocations by his/her own travels and stringing together geographically and culturally diverse artists in ways that circumvents the need for others like the artists and audiences to “translocate”? Or is the global curator a key agent in initiating and sustaining critically nuanced translocational strategies in the art world?


From: yukiko shikata <sica@dasein-design.com>
Date: Wed Mar 13, 2002 7:12am
Subject: RE: translocations
dear Guna and the rest,

"Latitude" includes attitude as already found out, and the "attitude" is from each person, so "latitudes" could be said to be the connected attitudes (perspectives and actions) by an unlimited number of people, each facing local realities and connected globally. "Forms" are generated by space and time, but nobody knows how they “become,” as each of us sees from our own perspective.

I think the forms coming out of latitudes should be called an "info-geography,” consisting of dynamic, changing numerical codes, to which we cannot apply the existing notion of physical space. Via the Internet, we face totally different kinds of geography, which is beyond global and local, private and public.

Of course there is a tendency of "territorialization"(or globalization) on the information sphere, applying the existing material-based regulations to an info-, digital-, network-based entity, and to make this info-geography under the control of the government and corporations. Artists could be "agents for change" (Konrad Becker) to resist such tendencies.

At the moment I work as a co-curator with Shu Lea Cheang and Armin Medosch on an online exhibition "Kingdom of Piracy" (KOP). Raqs Media Collective takes part with their "Global Village Health Manual v.1." Shuddha or Jeebesh or Monica, could someone talk about the project in relation to translocation or other related topics?

With KOP, we curators are working on the "piracy" issue, trying to promote artistic interventions, as the whole digital-based information “space” is in possible danger of future control by the global economy. Piracy also references issues of deterritorialization and omnipresence.

Regarding "info-geography,” I am also interested in the aspects of "memory" that can be collected and stocked as resources and used in the future. Raqs is also working on this issue with its OPUS project. this is a totally new way of production, and locates works as nodes in the process of, principally, an endless openness of possible future productions.

Henri Lefebvre wrote in "production of spaces" (1973), as follows (sorry for my bad translation from Japanese...!):
"In the near future, it would become important to seek the new possibility as much as possible and produce the human space as the collective works, by seeking the possibility as much as possible." here, works are not "created" by single author, but "produced" by collaborations regarded as the production of the space...and the space could be said as "public space".. I think this "space" could be possible by taking the way of "public domain" or "commons." where those "commons" exists...?

We might think of a new kind of translocal entity, which is an agent or agency to connect with us and others, and also to connect us with each other (this is also done, for example, by Knowbotic Research’s "io_dencies").


From: Steve Dietz <steve.dietz@walkerart.org>
Date: Wed Mar 13, 2002 9:31am
Subject: RE: translocations


Yukiko,

Thanks. I think the movement you make from translocal to information commons is important. There is a kind of parallelism between local/global, nomadic/fixed, public/private, which is very interesting.


From: Raqs Media Collective <raqs@sarai.net>
Date: Wed Mar 13, 2002 8:28am
Subject: nomadism and routes


Dear Steve, Yukiko and Guna,

It is great to see the list really warming up, and all our postings substantiate each other.
Guna has raised a very important point about the "limits of nomadic strategies" because, as he says, "there is a tendency for such strategies to not have a life after their initial interventions and effects."

While this is a very necessary caveat to keep in mind, it also presumes that nomadism is seen as being necessarily contingent on impermanence.

We think, however, that nomadism is not a one-off singular movement from one location to another. It requires regularities, and returns. This is the difference between the nomad and the migrant. The nomad walks the same paths between places, the migrant leaves one place for another.

The between-ness of the first movement and the finality of the second departure enclose between them a world of a difference. In fact, this difference may be what we are struggling to define as the distinction between translocality and the hegemonic form of globalization. This is not to say that translocality is antithetical to all forms of the global imaginary, but of that more later.

The paths that nomads walk on need to be maintained over time and across generations. While settlements have witnessed ebbs and flows, cities have been depopulated and repopulated, so have trade routes. The entire history of central Asia, and the languages that many of us speak, from turkey to Bangladesh, bear witness to the obstinate persistence of nomadism across generations. This permanence requires that there be stable institutions of hospitality for practices of nomadism. Hence, sarais. Hence, the settlements that grew with sarais as their nuclei. Nomadism and location have in this instance at least a symbiotic relationship. And the decline of many cities and seemingly permanent settlements in our geographies, have also to do with the inability of nomads to traverse well worn paths, because of borders that inhibit movement. The tragic destiny of a city like Kabul from the early twentieth century right though the Taliban years and the war in Afghanistan is, for instance, signatory of the fact of what happens to a location when borders close in and nomads, carrying ideas and images and songs and things from other spaces are no longer welcome. This is why we stress the importance of hospitality; of permanent refuges for transients as an essential factor in a new/old cultural ethic.

To delve into roots in such spaces is necessarily to discover an intricate matrix of intersecting chaotic “wills to globality.” This is true, we think, of all our genealogies. Our selfhood, the apex of the myriad identities that constitutes our coming into history today, is composed as much of many silences and acts of forgetting as it is of remembering and assertion. These omissions are especially those that are located at the point where tendrils of our roots touch the tendrils of the roots of others we may wish to deny inheritances from. The deeper we go into our genealogies, our cultures, our practices, and our languages, the more horizontally spread out they become. In this sense, the discovery of one's roots is also a discovery of each of our nomadic inheritances.

Each of these nomadic inheritances is an instance of a will to globality.

The will to globality need not be seen only in terms of the desire of the local to reach a pre-determined global space. To be “in” on what is provisionally constructed as the global space. We argue that it also resides in all our specific, located abilities to imagine ourselves as global subjects, as creating, global spaces. This means that we do not think it only the curator who is a global entity. In some senses, he/she is as much a global entity (or not) as practitioner(s) or artist(s).

Let us elaborate what we mean. On the Reader List, there was for instance a lot of discussion on what happened in New York, in Afghanistan and in the world in general, post 9/11. There was no hesitation on the part of those who live in say, New Delhi, to claim for themselves the global space of New York.

There is, at the moment, a serious and violent sectarian crisis engulfing parts of India. And the list is just as active. But curiously, although the constituency of the list is global, no one who is not from the subcontinent is writing about what is happening in India at the moment. We could surmise that this is because of a phenomenon that we have always maintained is an “asymmetry of ignorance.” We, on the fringes of the global space, know more about the global space, than those who are at its core know about us. This is the consequence of the relationship over the last two hundred years at least between centres and peripheries in the cultural universe. But this also, paradoxically means that, we at the “local” periphery, can claim the “global” center with far less hesitation. We can be global in a discursive sense, more than someone else at the centre can be. This is “our” will to globality. This is what ensures that our locatedness in New Delhi is also the crucial determinant of the nomadism of our concerns and practices.

As Florian Schneider, of the “No Borders Campaign” says, succinctly, "What use are borders, if we do not cross them?”
This has been a long posting, but we would like to leave you with a few fragments from a hypertext work in progress that we are developing—“The Concise Lexicon of/for the Digital Commons.”
These fragments are entries that define certain terms, as in a dictionary, we offer you three entries for the words--nodes, ubiquity and vector.

Nodes
Any structure that is composed of concentrated masses of materials which act as junction points for the branching out of extensible parts of the overall system may be described as nodal. The concentrations or junctions being the nodes. A nodal structure is a rhizomatic structure, it sets down roots (that branch out laterally) as it travels. Here, nodes may also be likened to the intersection points of fractal systems, the precise locations where new fractal iterations arises out of an existing pattern. A work that is internally composed of memes is inherently nodal. Each meme is a junction point or a node for the lateral branching out of the vector of an idea. In a work that is made up of interconnected nodes, the final structure that emerges is that of a web, in which every vector eventually passes through each node, at least once on its orbit through the structure of the work. In such a structure it becomes impossible to suppress or kill an idea, once it is set in motion, because its vectors will make it travel quickly through the nodes to other locations within the system, setting off chains of echoes and resonances at each node that trace a path back to the kernel of the idea.

These echoes and resonances are rescensions, and each node is ultimately a direct rescension of at least one other node in the system and an indirect rescension of each junction within a whole cluster of other nodes. Nodes, when written, perhaps erroneously, as “no-des” gives rise to an intriguing hybrid English/Eastern-Hindi neologism, a companion to the old words - “des', and “par-des'. “Des” (in some eastern dialects of Hindi, spoken by many migrants to Delhi) is simply homeland or native place; “par-des” suggests exile, and an alien land. “No-des” is that site or way of being, in “des” or in “par-des', where territory and anxieties about belonging, don't go hand in hand. Nodes in a digital domain are No-des.

Ubiquity
Everywhere-ness. The capacity to be in more than one site. The simple fact of heterogeneous situation, a feature of the way in which clusters of memes, packets of data, orbit and remain extant in several nodal points within a system. The propensity of a meme towards ubiquity increases with every iteration, for once spoken, it always already exists again and elsewhere. It begins to exist and be active (even if dormantly) in the person spoken to as well as in the speaker. Stories, and the kernels of ideas travel in this way. A rescension, when in orbit, crosses the paths of its variants. The zone where two orbits intersect is usually the site of an active transaction and transfer of meanings. Each rescension, carries into its own trajectory memes from its companion. In this way, through the encounters between rescensions, ideas spread, travel and tend towards ubiquity. That which is everywhere is difficult to censor, that which is everywhere has no lack of allies. To be ubiquitous is to be present and dispersed in “no-des'. Sometimes, ubiquity is the only effective answer to censorship and isolation.

Vector
The direction in which an object moves, factored by the velocity of its movement. An idea spins and speeds at the same time. The intensity of its movement is an attribute of the propensity it has to connect and touch other ideas. This gives rise to its vector functions. The vector of a meme is always towards other memes, in other words, the tendency of vectors of data is to be as ubiquitous as possible. This means that an image, code or an idea must attract others to enter into relationships that ensure its portability and rapid transfer through different sites and zones. The vectors of different memes, when taken together, form a spinning web of code.


From: Gunalan Nadarajan <gunalan@lasallesia.edu.sg>
Date: Wed Mar 13, 2002 9:31pm
Subject: RE: nomadism and routes


Dear Raqs and the rest,

Thank you very much for such a thought-provoking response to my point about the transience of nomadic strategies.
I do agree with you that my point about nomadic strategies does not adequately take into account the continuities and rhythmic nature nomadic movements in contradistinction, as you suggest, to those of the migrant. I agree that such “routinizations” do constitute some sort of temporal continuities that can serve well in keeping the effects of nomadic strategies in currency over long periods of time. I am doubtful however if such nomadic strategies can carry on operating for very long when they are so dependent on "the stable institutions of hospitality" you speak of, especially since such institutions are fast becoming difficult to sustain. Even web space, often touted as the most hospitable of spaces, is riddled with proprietary claims and regulations that make them almost hostile. How to develop more Sarais to provide more "permanent refuges for transients" seems to be of tantamount importance now more than ever.

I am not so convinced however of your argument that the "discovery of our roots is also a discovery of our nomadic inheritances." While it may well be the case that the tendrils of our roots may spread to touch the roots of others, these discoveries are seldom invited with recognition of commonalities but anxieties about differences. This anxiety to articulate one's difference from some other as soon you discover the common roots seems to result often not from an unwillingness to affirm our nomadic inheritances but from an anxiety to maintain legitimate claims over the inheritances that constitute our present state. Thus a recognition of one's nomadic inheritances does not necessarily lead on towards or reflect one's will to globality though I am willing to accept it sometimes does so.

I agree with and very often noted the "asymmetry of ignorance" you note with reference to the knowledges of the global reflected by the peripheries vis a vis centres. I am unsure however how one is to go about thinking of the core and periphery with reference to global space. If the global is a sense of one's being “in” on what has been "provisionally constructed as global space,” then how does one articulate within this imagined space cores and peripheries? What does it mean to be at the core; to be more into and inflected by the global? What is periphery when one participates in the global, as you suggest, by "our abilities to imagine ourselves as global subjects"?

I especially enjoyed the way you recolonised the semantics of nodes by etymologically renovating its possibilities for articulating nomadic (dis)positions, as nodes. I do think that the notion of nodes especially in its resonances with ubiquity are extremely useful in thinking about the translocal as well as in understanding the operations of the global.


From: Raqs Media Collective <raqs@sarai.net>
Date: Thu Mar 14, 2002 1:08am
Subject: RE: nomadism and routes


Dear translocators,

Taking on from Yukiko's point about Info Geography—we must think, as she has urged us to, as to whether it is at all necessary to collapse "territoriality" of physical cartography onto the making of the map of new cultural practices. This also ties in with Guna's very salient criticism of our deployment of the metaphors of "centre" and "periphery" when conceptualizing a “global” space.
We have been struck, ever since Guna's last posting, as to how inadequate the terms of the "centre" and "periphery" as tools to think translocality through are.

In fact the notion of a "centre" assumes that there is one "globality,” while we ourselves have been arguing for alternate global imaginaries. The moment one desires, or admits to, disparate, intersecting, chaotic wills to globality, the notion of a centre, and with it of peripheries, lose any meaning. So, we stand humbly corrected on that score.
We would take this on further to say, that it is also time to resurrect, critically examine, and where necessary, celebrate every form of global or translocal cultural practice from all our histories.

A model of globality need not be in any one direction. Japan or Korea are as far as England or France from Northern India and there are high mountains, deserts, and seas in between—yet ideas and codes did persist in traveling—the world of global culture seems at the moment to be skewed in one direction only, and this bias needs to be corrected for us to understand what it might mean to embrace local wills to globality.

And further, to consider that we need an archaeology of translocality, to construct and complicate stories of rootedness that make it difficult to narrativize the other in terms of hostility alone. That make it possible to integrate in any image of the self and its practices, all its inheritances, sedentary as well as nomadic. We agree that this is by no means easy, but we think that it is necessary if we are to map an info-geography that does not recapitulate the borders of the physical world today. Such an info-geography might interact with the boundedness of the physical world in unforeseen ways.

Here we would like to come back to what Guna has said about the institutions of hospitality that can permit forms of nomadism to flourish. Of course the web is a highly contested space, and the fragile commons of the digital domain are now in a constant source of siege, because of the way in which regimes of intellectual property (patents, copyright, trademark etc) construct enclosures on the field of code, signs and knowledge.

This goes so far as to impose on the maps of our fluid info-geographies the barbed wires of physical borders—of re-territorializing (as Yukiko might say) that which has been at its foundation—de-territorialized—this is what happens when for instance the regional encryption systems construct territorial limitations on the usage of DVDs.

This is a situation that we can either accept or work around and against. The attempt to ensure that a digital commons remains a digital commons is precisely the effort to ensure that spaces remain hospitable to the flows of cultural nomadism, among many other things. The commons remains such because people continue to travel through it. This is what ensures that they do not become proprietary.
This means that there can be no naive belief in the inherent freedom or openness of digital culture, or an innocence as regards what is necessary to be done (repeatedly and constantly) in order to keep the commons, common.


From: Steve Dietz <steve.dietz@walkerart.org>
Date: Thu Mar 14, 2002 5:52am
Subject: RE: nomadism and routes


translocations,
I am interested in the "asymmetry of ignorance" and how it maps "a model of globality [that] need not be in any one direction." When Raqs first raised this asymmetry, it was, of course, very recognizable.

The point I would like to raise more explicitly, however, is that of the network. Not only, as has been pointed out, are the nodes of a network non-directional, which provide, potentially, for a different way of mapping relationships that does not rely on notions of center and periphery. The network is also an amplifier that can invert the asymmetry of power (and ignorance?) and allow for the conventionally unempowered to act with great effect. For the localized (wherever they are geographically) to have global impact.
This network can be used to try and close down borders or to hack them; to encrypt or to decrypt; to be an "old boys network" or something else. It, like technology, is not good or bad, but I do think it models a way to affect practice.

Finally, I think Yukiko made a very important point about the “io_dencies” project that no one person had or could have the overall view of the various flows. There could be no master narrative. This is a commonplace observation by now, but nevertheless there remains this “drive to understand," and it is always difficult to retain a sense of this understanding as contingent and incomplete yet adequate and compelling.


From: yukiko shikata <sica@dasein-design.com>
Date: Tue Mar 19, 2002 3:40am
Subject: RE: nomadism and routes


dear translocators,

Actually the difference of center and peripheral; the "asymmetry of ignorance" is everywhere.
From a distance, it looks possible that we see the world based on geography (including latitude and longitude), and see centers and peripheries depending on that, but actually when we go closer to them, we get to know that it is not so simple. At each city (so-called global cities especially), small centers and peripheries are intermingled, and "asymmetry of ignorance" is everywhere.
The locations that seem peripheral cannot always be vulnerable. Rather, those locations could be connected translocally and might show alternative directions, not depending on the existing scale of center and periphery and for this strategy, the network (in rather broader meaning, not only Internet), would be the key point. It means each area or node will show the other aspects, even getting stronger or showing new possibilities.

One short comment on "info-geography.” Information has intentionality, so when we call it "information,” it automatically shows to whom, how, in which meaning this "information" is for the survival of the one (or group) in the world. I refer to this notion to Jakob Ohann von Uexkull.

I am also impressed by what Raqs wrote in their last mail, raising the important issue, "archaeology of translocality.” It is necessary to insert the time-aspect, and we will see how dynamic information, people, and culture influence each other.
As dynamic exchanges of information and changing tendencies, and by exchange of codes, or in the process of translation (and sometimes misunderstanding, misuse), those kinds of differences of understanding would bring a new phase of emergence for a new expression or culture.

Translation of translocation, or translocation of translation. Maybe I am playing with words. It makes nonsense but sometimes might make some sense, and at least nonsense has some sense.
and translatitude.
"Sense" means meaning; also feeling (in a way, interrelated and mixed in phenomenology..). How to feel the world; how to feel the other, and oneself.

I agree with Raqs’ notion of nomadism requiring regularities and returns, repeating but always with slight differences.
Translocality is always in motion, and inserting some "otherness" every time and being renewed/reterritorialized, it is like an autopoietic process, defining the border by moving itself. There is no substantial, or fixed border, but an ever-changing process generates borders at every second of movement. Then here comes the location.
Translocality is in the process of chaos and order, or in other ways, info-nodes and dispersion, appearance and disappearance, and globality and locality.

to Guna:
On "global curator,” I work also as so-called curator, but I believe that the people working with/in new media think & act rather borderless, artists, engineers, curators, etc. collaborate to make a discursive public space for the participants, not for one-way expressions. That's why I always call myself "mediator" ( rather than curator), which is a kind of interface for the new connective nodes.

In my understanding, latitude is based on the earth’s surface, but it is also used in the air, such as for airplanes, (and there are national borders and time zones applied on the sky). How about applying latitudes deep into the earth? Is there a point at which the latitudes disappear, become one?

Do we have any scale for the deep into the earth...?
Reflexive + flexible = "reflexible." I coin the term "reflexible" for all translocators, also for the digital commons.
all the best, yukiko


From: Steve Dietz <steve.dietz@walkerart.org>
Date: Tue Mar 19, 2002 8:29pm
Subject: RE: race and the translocal


Dear reflexors
I like this term "reflexible" It also reminds me of the term "recension." Raqs, perhaps you could share that definition from your cyber glossary?

The urge for new terminologies—translocal, reflexible, recension—and the reinvestment of old terminologies—sarai, commons—must reflect a certain inadequacy of current terminology—current understanding?—in regard to what we know to be the contemporary context. I would argue that to some extent the terminologies are not important. What import "new media" vs. "cyberart" or "information works"? On the one hand, they are just labels. On the other hand, I think they can open up new territories for our thinking; in a sense, to help create new old spaces like the digital commons.


From: Raqs Media Collective <raqs@sarai.net>
Date: Tue Mar 19, 2002 6:36am
Subject: Re: race and the translocal


Dear Translocators,
We think that Yukiko's evocation of the network (and a network can always be a network of networks) as conscious re-mapping strategy is an interesting way of destabilizing the notion of both centre and margin.

A form of cultural practice that is located at the intersection of many networks finds itself placed simultaneously in different maps of the world. We think that this should be considered the general condition of the information arts and new media practices. By being made of data, and by being immaterial, and by being transportable, and by not being the kind of works that need necessarily to stand alone, information art works, and new media works can take to networks, and networked exhibition contexts in the same way as archaeological artifacts gravitate towards museums of antiquity. This (the network) the de-centered profusion of maps is the natural habitus of the new media work. Perhaps, we are witnessing for the first time, a culture that is global, not only in its dispersal, but also in its production, as practitioners form networks to make work happen.

For instance, the possibility of our work (the Global Village Health Manual) being in the Kingdom of Piracy show, and being accessed through its decidedly Sino-Japanese interface, places our work in a different “(syn)aesthetic” map from it being seen in a curatorial context that frames new media work in terms that are, lets say “deep” central European, or “far” north American, or even “thick” south Asian.

This leads to shows of shows, networked iterations of works in which flexible and fluid curatorial contexts are themselves up for consideration along with the works that they present. Thus, the figure of the “global curator” whom Guna had evoked earlier becomes the norm, rather than the exception.

What does this mean, just that no matter where you place your work, it will be read differently, depending on the context and on the works that are its neighbors. That’s obvious, and not very profound, but lets complicate this picture a bit. Lets speak of neighbors both in spatial and temporal terms. What is the neighborhood of a work?

This questions a canonical sense of what is ones territory, where lies ones neighborhood, and which cultural materials one can be intimately self reflective playful with. We think that it is high time that those of us in the so called non-west (which latitude is that ?) lay claim to all that is called “western” just as naturally as we lay claim to more proximate forms of cultural material. Because, what may be close in spatial terms, may be far away temporally, and there may be many permutations of this tension between space and time in between. This means that aspects of what may be called "Indian Art" by art historians may be quite far away from us in time, even if it is close to us in space. And of course the larger corpus of what is called "western art" is far away both in time and space. This means that one can begin to think of ones location and neighborhood in quite unexpected ways.

Of course, another consequence of the “asymmetry of ignorance” is that even if a non western practitioner were to be reflective of his/her own antecedents , a "western" viewer, who takes his/her own vantage point as "universal" without recognizing that “euro-American” culture or “euro-American modernity” is no more and no less provincial than any other spatial configuration of culture and or modernity, may not even recognize that which the practitioner is reflective about.

What then is the strategy that a (for the purpose of argument) non-western practitioner can adopt if he/she adopt.
To enter and create networks which do not ask (like in immigration controls or bouncers in certain discotheques) about one's cultural antecedents.
To refuse to answer any question in the terms of yes or no as to whether one does or does not belong to the west or the east. one can say that one belongs to above or below (?) rather than to east or west.
To make work that belongs to networks and that is uncomfortable about standing alone.

Rescension
A re-telling, a word taken to signify the simultaneous existence of different versions of a narrative within oral, and from now onwards, digital cultures. Thus one can speak of a “southern” or a “northern” rescension of a myth, or of a “female” or “male” rescension of a story, or the possibility (to begin with) of Delhi/Berlin/Tehran “rescensions” of a digital work. The concept of rescension is contraindicative of the notion of hierarchy. A rescension cannot be an improvement, nor can it connote a diminishing of value. A rescension is that version which does not act as a replacement for any other configuration of its constitutive materials. The existence of multiple rescensions is a guarantor of an idea or a work's ubiquity. This ensures that the constellation of narrative, signs and images that a work embodies is present, and waiting for iteration at more than one site at any given time. Rescensions are portable and are carried within orbiting kernels within a space. Rescensions, taken together constitute ensembles that may form an interconnected web of ideas, images and signs.
http://www.sarai.net/compositions/texts/works/lexicon.htm


From: Steve Dietz <steve.dietz@walkerart.org>
Date: Tue Mar 19, 2002 8:05pm
Subject: RE: race and the translocal


"To make work that belongs to networks and that is uncomfortable about standing alone."
This is a fine phrase, and it seems to lead, as Raqs suggests in regard to the global curator, to the notion of "shows of shows, networked iterations of works in which flexible and fluid curatorial contexts are themselves up for consideration along with the works that they present."

How, practically, does one create curatorial contexts, which are themselves up for consideration? For instance, I'm a little confused by the statement:
"information art works, and new media works can take to networks, and networked exhibition contexts in the same way as archaeological artifacts gravitate towards museums of antiquity."
One of the critiques of the museum is precisely the case of the Elgin Marbles, which "gravitated" from their incorporation in a temple of worship to a museum of antiquity for a different kind of veneration, or as Valery says, when art and sculpture lost their mother architecture.

The idea that information artworks can "take to networks" seems to me absolutely correct, but my question is whether there is a fruitful relation between the network and the museum that is not, merely, the expression of an asymmetry of power or the museum as mausoleum, sav(or)ing things by killing them. How to exhibit translocally, where the context is both the global network and the physical setting?


From: Raqs Media Collective <raqs@sarai.net>
Date: Wed Mar 20, 2002 4:09am
Subject: on networks and museums

There was a certain deliberation with which we put the network and the museum close to each other in the same sentence, and we are glad that Steve has immediately zeroed onto it.

It was wicked :) on our part to slide these two spaces that seem so far apart from each other to a space in thought where they seem close, but the intention was to provoke a reflection on conceptuality, and on what belongs where .
Of course, we are not arguing that new media networks, as exhibition contexts are analogous to archaeological galleries, in museums. The museum, as Steve has pointed out, could be a dead space, and the network is by definition, alive.
But there is a point about the loss of context that we want to stress, and that is while the artifact in a museum loses context when it "gravitates" or is pulled into a museum, the data object has little or no context to lose. The immateriality of a data object does suggest the possibilities of a certain aloofness from immediate cultural geographies and contexts, "above or below—rather than to the east or west of given latitudes"

If anything, a data object has much to gain, by being positioned in an interlocked way, and by being embedded or at least co incident with other data objects. Contextlessness is the context of the data object.

There can be two ways of thinking about belonging, one is to say "I belong to this culture" and another to say "these cultures belong to me." In the second sense one is privileging a notion of taking things, using them, abandoning them, fashioning other things with them, as one is on the move, our belongings then can be said to travel with us as we course through culture. This need not be seen in a foraging or acquisitive sense alone, but can be seen in terms of circulation and sharing of belongings that never stick to their momentary custodians, but travel between their custodians just as much as their custodians travel through the network. We are talking of agile practices, mobile curators and floating works, which construct complex matrices of belonging and claims on each other none of which are based on the principles of mutual exclusivity. This presupposes an art circuit that has something in common with the pattern of conversation and give and take that might otherwise be the defining feature of an affinity group. This is a form of practice that presupposes the existence of a networks, and thus means that the building of the network is as much a part of the practice as the fashioning of the objects that inhabit it. Because the way the objects are positioned and oriented has everything to do with the architecture of the network - of the living as opposed to the dead collection.


From: Gunalan Nadarajan <gunalan@lasallesia.edu.sg>
Date: Thu Mar 21, 2002 9:22pm
Subject: RE: on networks and museums


Dear Raqs and others,
I find the idea of the data object's immateriality and contextlessness a little problematic. The fact that something circulates within a network does not mean that it is without or free from context. It may simply mean that the contexts are shifting as are the meanings associated with them. I see interesting parallels between the shifting contexts of the data object and Derrida's notion of difference.
As to Raqs” desire for "agile practices, mobile curators, and floating works, which construct complex matrices of belonging and claims on each other none of which are based on the principles of mutual exclusivity".... I remain hopeful.

--------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes

1. The full version of the conversaton is available online at http://translocations.netartcommons.org/conversation.html
2. ANDREAS BROECKAMN
Networked Agencies
http://www.v2.nl/~andreas/texts/1998/networkedagency-en.html
Sociable Machinists of Culture
http://www.v2.nl/~andreas/texts/2000/networkers.html
Minor Media – Heterogenic Art
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:RMDv3MalsJAC:
www.nettime.org/nettime.w3archive/199811/msg00029.html+broeckmann+translocal&hl=entranslocation_new media/art

http://www.translocation.at/d/broeckmann.htm
3. http://www.honco.net/archive/980801.html
4. Raqs Media Collective interview with Mike Caloud about the Sarai New Media Initiative, posted on Rhizome April 18,2002, Part 1 http://rhizome.org/object.rhiz?3460, Part 2 http://rhizome.org/object.rhiz?3465
5. Construction of dialogic spaces
http://www.translocal.net/ground/gsauna/andreas.html
6. “First, a bit about my work on welcoming differences and hospitality as a cyberfeminist strategy. Thus far communities seem to welcome differences at the moment of self formation, while after being formed, they often operate to level out differences and strive toward homogeneity. A desire for heterogeneous on-line communities, specifically among diverse women interested in the impact of technologies and their proliferation - is the motivation behind me joining. In this case by differences I mean especially geographical and cultural differences of our members, as notions like race and color are pretty much defined by where you are from.”
From: Irina Aristarkhova <uspia@nus.edu.sg>
To: undercurrents@bbs.thing.net
Subject: RE: [undercurrents] moods and such
Date: Tue, 2 Apr 2002 23:40:34 +0800
7. Op cit.
8. See http://www.krcf.org
9. [citation to Sassen]
10. [Castells citation]
11. [Debord citation]
12. Hakim Bey. T.A.Z. The Temporary Autonomous Zone, Ontological Anarchy, Poeic Terrorism. Autonomedia, 1985, 1991. http://www.hermetic.com/bey/taz_cont.html
13. [Okwui citation]
14. [atopic citation]
15. Shuddhabrata Sengupta. LONG DISTANCE CONVERSATIONS.
http://www.sarai.net/compositions/texts/works/longdistance.htm
16. Steve Dietz. Signal or Noise? The Network Museum. February 16, 2000. http://www.walkerart.org/gallery9/webwalker/ww_032300.html
17. Irina Aristarkhova. Virtual Chora. http://www.virtualchora.com/
18. [citation http://kop.adac.com.tw (work-in-progress and the works would be completed by the end of April, sponsored by Acer digital art center, Taiwan),]
19. [global village health citation]
20. Link to OPUS project
21. [Lefebvre citation]
22. You can look at the work in its current, simply text form at -
http://www.sarai.net/compositions/texts/works/lexicon.htm
23. [citation Jakob Ohann von Uexkull]

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