Tuesday, May 11, 2021
On certitude and doubt
Sunday, May 09, 2021
The Disciple by Chaitanya Tamhane
The Aesthetics of Mediocrity
What lies behind the appeal of the film is Tamhane's ability to produce empathy towards a deeply undesired human value: mediocrity. Artist Bharati Kapadia, with whom I was discussing the film said, "It hits us because we are able to see the mediocre in each one of us through the character of the Sharad." Whether you want or not, the film is able to bring doubt in their own abilities. This production of ambiguity is the hallmark of Tamhanhe's film-making in techniques well as story-telling. The sustained long distance shots in the film don't try to direct the eye too much, rather suspend the viewer in the ambiguity of space itself. The voice of the inner mind - in maai's recordings plugged into the Sharad's ears as he passes through the empty streets of the city at night; or his own confusions trying to come to terms with his perceived shortcomings or the seeming politics of his relationship with his guru - create the haunt of ambiguous space. The constructed silences amplify frustrations of a mind that is unable to articulate the means to reach the genius. To be sure, the story telling in 'The Disciple' has the exact opposite effect of what 'Taare Zameen Par' had on us. In contrast to how we all relate to the young dyslexic boy in TZP and imagine that we are special too, Sharad's character in 'The Disciple' is quite anti-climactic.
Tamhane pushes us to consider through the film whether the figure of the genius is reality or myth. I have been thinking very deeply if the failure of the disciple in the film was because of his shortcomings or because of the lack of opportunities that somehow didn't come his way. Opportunities like such are controlled by networks, connections, access to people...and so on...In my opinion, the disciple Sharad didnot seem so bad...he had technique, he had the skill, he was intelligent enough to understand his limitations, then why should he have suffered? To know what you don't know is a good thing...but I wonder if the idealism of his maai just pulled him back from believing in himself to even find an alternative space for his craft. Sharad ends up giving so much importance to the aura of the world that maai creates for him, that he stops acknowledging his own reality, the context in which he lives...I feel that the slippage that he suffers in his life is the burden of self expectation.
Sunday, April 25, 2021
Tidbits from Ranciere
Aesthetics is a shared experience.
Politics has aesthetics. People who can't politicize can't produce aesthetics / beauty
Art doesn't occur before aesthetic experience.
The objectification of the experience of aesthetics is art.
Social revolution is the daughter of aesthetic revolution
Education or production of knowledge is about emancipation
thinking about the capacity of performing politics. The capacity to politicize
aesthetics as contemplation (opposite of action)
---
Architecture is a way of defining life
Architecture is supposed to define new ways of inhabitation, of defining life.
Art produces a set of relations.
Friday, April 16, 2021
Institutions and Certainties
I have been thinking for some time now, if the idea of the "institution" is a heteronormative concept. I have spent a great deal of time thinking about the idea of institution and institutionalization. In simple words, institutionalization would mean to consolidate any task into a systemic process. In other words it is "the action of establishing something as a convention or norm in an organization or culture." Institutions are formed through improvising upon trials and errors within a group of people to aid fool proof decision making. These are formed over long time, studied as patterns and codified into rules in order for the smooth and efficient functioning within any organization. Identifying patterns and codifying them also means the freezing of cultural actions. Institutions are often critiqued for the solidification processes. They become stronger because they are able to deal with situations through their pre-ascertained decision making. In other words, institutions are about charting certainties. They operate within firm speculations, and expect people to behave within their identified parameters. Any one who falls outside of their pattern, may become un-institutional.
These people who lie on the margins of the institutions are often called deviants, and always at the risk of societal othering, for all of society is neatly divided into multiple overlapping institutional mechanisms. Ideas like family, school, nation, and so on - all expect a subject to behave in a particular way. These are concepts that are formulated and consolidated primarily through a heteronormalized morality - that which privileges and is rested on a the idea of a future that will validate its own productive forms and logics. The family is predicated upon the idea of security of progeny and property, and is held together in economic and social rules that will disallow any deviations to the idea. The entire financial industry is structured to support this dominant notion of a relationship unit - that consists of a man, a woman and their children. Other forms of relationships are not necessarily supported as readily by financial institutions. Non-productive relationships like homosexual partners, or sorority kinships and many such other relationships do not promise the future of the institution of the family, and hence do not avail several security benefits within the present scheme of things.
Schools as institutions are expected to prepare candidates for serving different jobs within the productive world. Thus, they largely have to frame a certain picture of future for their clients, i.e. students. That you "will" become an engineer, or an architect, or a doctor - all are promises that are made at the beginning of the course. A certificate of degree is handed over to you as a document of proof. There is no real value to these certificate or degrees, for there is a fair chance for everyone to make mistakes even in their professional delivery of learned knowledge during application in real instances. Yes, institutions create this guarantee-mechanism through their own validation mechanisms that gain societal approvals. The success of these mechanisms is approved through a process of majoritarian survey. At a certain point, industry and institution tie up to co-produce these figures. Thus the cycle of institutionalization becomes impenetrable and solidified. In other words, the formula for certainty is manufactured, in a way that any genuine question regarding ethical or moral anomalies could easily be dismissed on the ground that they do not fall within the system. The language of institutions can not be penetrated easily by deviants, because deviants do not find (or may not enjoy) place within the accepted rules of the institutions themselves.
I began to write out this thought, in fact, to find a place for uncertainty within the world we exist in. What is the place of uncertainty and doubt in the environment that we come to inhabit today? If the entire world is predominantly categorized into dominant institutional frameworks for every aspect of life (that eventually becomes an industry) - how and where do we locate and plant the seeds of uncertainty? The question of ambiguity is important for several groups who have not figured out their world, or are not able to fit into the given world. These include communities of different kinds of people who feel marginalized all the time - queer, racialized, handicapped, and other such bodies for whom an institutionalized idea of the world seems alien. There is a expectation that institutions impose on subjects - to behave in set ways, to perform in identified modes, to reciprocate in assumed manners. These are tropes of certainties that lay in the idea of institutions. Institutions expect you to project a world far ahead based on the patterns and assumptions they have codified in their books. Their dispositional engagement with future is predicated on learnt certainties, which leaves very little room for unexpected events to occur. The burden of the future is thus exacerbated by institutional thinking. I hope there are more interesting ways to exist without these institutional bindings.
Thursday, April 15, 2021
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
The Screen Classrooms
Under its 'Pan Scroll Zoom' series curated by Fabrizio Gallanti, the archive 'Drawing Matter' decided to publish some pedagogical reflections on online teaching during the COVID year.
The Screen Classrooms
Read full note here
OR
https://drawingmatter.org/pan-scroll-zoom-9-the-screen-classrooms/
Contemporary House Extension: Pune
We were strolling across the older neighbourhoods of Pune in around 2017 when we came across this wonderful contemporary extension of an old house. The owner was kind enough to allow us to visit the space and take photographs.
Wednesday, March 10, 2021
Friday, February 26, 2021
Friday, February 19, 2021
Notes on Phenomenology
Seeds of
phenomenology were laid in the 18th century
Typically
knowledge production is based on a Cartesian model, i.e. understanding world is
made up of signs and symbols – the world in a semiological space – that which
constructs meaning. (that the world is only constructed through the meanings we
associate along with any definite order it might have/not have)
However, our
understanding of the world is much more nuanced in the way we make associations
even before the semiological apparatus comes into play. These associations are
rendered through a very innate sense, through our cultural fragments.
The true meaning
of the outside world (whole) are only descriptions by our emotional senses.
This would be suggested by the Cartesian construct/apparatus. It assumes that
the world outside our mind as a definite meaning, which we interpret
imperfectly!
Phenomenology
on the other hand says that meaning comes only with existence when the mind
encounters the world. Thus, there is no meaning out there – it gets produced
only through the intersection and interaction between the mind and the world.
Immanuel Kant made a distinction between the noumenal
world of things in themselves and the phenomenal world of reality as experienced
through our senses. (in philosophy, noumenon is a posited object or event that exists
independently of human sense and/or perception.)
This was
picked up by Hegel
Then developed
by German philosopher Edmund Husserl – he was trying to develop
an objective study of the subjective study and use systematic reflection to
determine the essence of consciousness.
Understood as
the careful description of experiences in which they are experienced by the
subject to study, in Husserl’s words the whole of our ‘life of consciousness;
Although, Phenomenology
was really shaped by Martin Heidegger in his Being and Time
And
eventually that became the foundation of Sartre’s existential philosophy
and that of
School of
Phenomenology is dedicated to understanding consciousness in its raw form. It
is an experientialist philosophy rather than a rationalist philosophy (rationalist
meaning related to scientific understanding of things).
Analysis of structure
of self-experience
Husserl
talks about ‘natural attitude’ – that the word is out there, relative to
our experience, that it is just a belief
He asks what
is the structure of consciousness? Proposes a theory called INTENTIONALITY – ‘aboutness’
Articulates that consciousness cannot be an isolated thing. It is always ‘about’ something. Intentionality is the interaction between the CONTENT of consciousness and the STRUCTURES of consciousness. (Structures of consciousness include perception, memory, protention, retention, signification, amongst many others.)
How is
phenomenology mobilized> What is the methodology?
·
Bracketing: Remove all judgements, reduce all phenomena
to its rawest experience
·
Eidetic
reduction: Goal
being to find the essence of the phenomenon. Separation of the necessary part
of the phenomenon from its contingent part in order to truly understand the
essence. For Husserl, the essence is the universal scientific truth.
This is what shaped the idea of Transcendental Phenomenology.
Heidegger
was more interested in ontology, rather than universal essential structure.
He talks
about Dassein – or the Being – a situated consciousness. This affects our absorption
or interpretation of the world around us.
He believed
that experiences cannot be separated from the context in which they arise. He
proposed that phenomenology is not a science, but it is about understanding the
being itself.
This is what
is the foundation of Existential Phenomenology.