Theses
on Distributed Aesthetics. Or, What a Network is Not
Anna Munster & Geert Lovink
College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales and University
of Amsterdam, Netherlands
"Distributed aesthetics: form or forming?" We are moving
from living, analysing and imaging contemporary culture as an information
society technically underwritten by the computer,
to inhabiting and imagining relays of entwined and fragmented techno-social
networks. New media are increasingly distributed media and
they require a rethink of aesthetics beyond the twinned concepts
of form and medium that continue to shape analysis of the social
and the aesthetic.[1] They
require a distributed aesthetics. Distributed aesthetics must deal
simultaneously with the dispersed and the situated, with asynchronous
production and multi-user access to artifacts (both material and
immaterial) on the one hand, and the highly individuated and dispensed
allotment of information/media, on the other. The aesthetics of
distributed media, practices and experience cannot be located in
the formal principles of their dispersal. This provides us with
the conditions for serving information via a network to end-users
and renders the following reductive schematisation, recalling all
the problems of a communications systems transmission model:
SERVER –––––––––––––––––––– NETWORK –––––––––––––––––––– CLIENT
Nor can we simply derive a distributed aesthetics from the viewpoint
of use. There is no singular or "end use" of/for information
but rather the endless relaying of media, practices and experience
as successive dispersals. These loops of dispersal give us something
closer to the mechanics of formation than the analysis of form:

But in both these schematisations, "the network" looms,
either as the "black box" to be explained in the first
diagram or as something interstitially forming – loose, unpredictable
and unprincipled, as implied in the diagram above. A distributed
aesthetics, then, might be better characterised as a continuous
emergent project, situated somewhere between the drift away
from coherent form and the drift of aesthetics into relations
with new formations, including social (networked) formations.
At any rate, networks cannot be studied as mere tools or as schematisations
and diagrams. They need to be apprehended within the complex ecologies
in which they are forming. This can easily become an empty statement.
By complex we mean unpredictable, often poor, harsh, and not exactly
"rich" expressions of the social. To project positive
predictions, hopes and desires onto networks is deceptive as it
often distracts by focusing solely on the first, founding and euphoric
phase of networks. Consequently this positivism is ill-equipped
to deal with the conflict, boredom, confusion, stagnation and other
expressions of our playful nihilist culture that turn up in unmoderated
channels such as lists, blogs and chatrooms. If we call now for
a distributed aesthetics nonetheless, this needs to account for
these experiences of stagnation within network formations and
for coupling these networked experiences with a network’s potential
to transform and mutate into something not yet fully codified.
"The map is not the network." If we began first with
a question and now follow with a gesture of negation, this is precisely
because "the network"– so opaque, so ubiquitous and non-formal
– is, however, recruited to serve various strategies of representation.
Maps of networks abound: software for visualising criminal networks
such as 'PatternTracer', is easily available online; an entire discursive
field – social network analysis – has arisen around the mapping
of networks from corporate to terrorist; the noncartographic specialist
can now log on to an entire 'Map of the Internet' and drop in and
link his or her own computer address as a 3-D visualisation in the
network of all other addresses.[2]
Richard Rogers suggests that mapping networks,
especially as an intelligence task, carries with it more than just
an aesthetic outcome; we are in the midst of a techno-epistemological
impulse in which the form(at) of the map has a structuring effect
on how we understand the organisation (structure) and dynamics (movement)
of networks (2003).
Theorising networks (as opposed to these tasks of network visualisation)
must struggle with the abstraction of dispersed elements – elements
that cannot be captured into one image. The very notion of a network
is in conflict with the desire to gain an overview. Mapping software,
the technological answer to this problem, by its own nature reduces
complexity in order to produce a limited amount of general categories,
which then can be stuck onto the map and linked. The art of network
visualisation deals with limitations of the screen, algorithms and
the boundaries of human perception. We can only read – and understand
– that many linked elements. Maps make visible what we have already
"sensed" before. Maps provoke a sense of recognition.
And network maps may also organise our perception of a social in
formation without being forthright about the premises upon which
this organising impulse rests. What network mapping exposes is a
desire to be in the know: 'a way of coming to know and making particular
claims only with a technological apparatus that desires to grow
to satisfy its cravings for "really knowing" and, especially
"really knowing what our" intelligence also knows or should
know' (Rogers, 2003). Mapping information – the aesthetics of contemporary
visualisation – provides a sense of relief that the twisted and
unstructured info-bits that roam around in our cognitive unconscious
are finally laid-out to rest. A beast is tamed.
Network mapping itself underwent a significant shift in geometry
and visualisation around the late 1990s (Dodge and Kitchin, 2000:
107-128). As we moved from the superimposition of flows onto geo-political
space toward the abstraction of topology, similarly our understandings
of what comprised networks shifted. We became interested in relations,
dynamics and sociability as opposed to traffic, connections and
community. This change in network mapping visualisation has had
advantages and disadvantages – we are now aware that networks are
different kinds of formations that cannot be understood according
to the old distinctions between society (Gesellschaft) and
community (Gemeinschaft). But the increasing abstraction
of topological visualisation removes us from an analysis of the
ways in which networks engage and are engaged by current political,
economic and social relations.
Maps reveal the ways in which we perceive things to "be"
at a given historical time. The Mercator Map (circa 1569),
now analysed from a moment "post" its particular "portioning"
of perception along a colonial set of axes, reveals what was at
stake politically and economically in making the world run according
to a north-south cartography. Perhaps network mapping will similarly
reveal the logic of its own will to tame complexity, to make the
flows of a network society traceable. It could be more interesting,
then, not simply to look at the map but at what desires network
mapping is trying to satisfy. If cartography has in the past been
linked to imperial conquests of space, what space is there left
today to conquer; the space between the nodes or even the space
of all potential connections and links to be made? Just as network
formations are indications that an unstable reshuffle of the categories
for understanding socialities is playing itself out, mapping
this rearranging sociality indicates an aesthetics at work to
order more rampant and mutant forms of social relations from emerging.
It is not surprising that the impetus for network mapping arrives
today from the social sciences, on the one hand and from the analysis,
tracking and tracing of crime, on the other (see Granovetter, 1973:
1360-1380; Williams, 2001). We ought also to be suspicious about
the pervasive Will to Network Mapping.
"The Fou-Code". Over the past couple of decades aesthetics
has been extended, stretched and turned upside down from a discipline
that deals with the interpretation of the meaning and structure
of the object of beauty into a philosophical praxis that investigates
the very conditions of contemporary life. Aesthetics is not the
science of "eye-candy", in which taste is reduced to a
matter of mere statistics and samples of information. What we must
investigate here instead is the "aesthesia" of today’s
networked experience. How do we perceive the socially invisible,
yet all too real, relationships that are accumulating around us?
Distributed aesthetics, as a project, needs to be understood as
a participatory journey of network users, aiming to capture the
not yet described, the not yet visualised, beyond poles such as
real-virtual, new-old, offline-online and global-local. We should
forget about exposing the links that are already there, and, with
our capacity to engage a networked logic, forge links to what is
in the network but not yet of the network. By this
we mean to invoke a project more akin to social aesthetics or aesthesia
in which we engage in and with the collective experiences of being
embroiled in networks and being actively part of their making.
This we can contrast with the abstracted activity of simply mapping
quantities of data – such as social network maps – a form of production
already captured by the codes and conventions of connectivity.
We don’t need allegorical readings of networks. Networks are not
proposals, constructions, metaphors or even alternatives for existing
social formations such as the church and company, the school, the
NGO or the political party. Instead, we should analyse the rise
of networks as an all too human endeavor, as a tragic fall, and
not as post-human machines that automate connections for us. Networks
are not the answer to global problems nor are they a substitute
for forgotten religions or disintegrated communities. Networks are
not models to be transposed from one social or political situation
or conflagration to another. It is certainly the case that technology
provokes networking. But then this provocation is not the be all
and end all of the network. We should be wary of techno-contractions
like "social software" that suggest technology glues us
humans together (again).[3] Instead,
we should read – and enjoy – networks as info-clouds that cover
the sun. They disperse the bright light of broadcasting media.
Networks are fragmentors. They break up strong signs and experiences
into countless threads. These info-bits might in themselves be meaningless
but the overall sum of them provides enough distraction to topple
the attention monopoly of newspapers and television. This is not
done through the classic activist strategy of building up parallel
counter worlds. Lists, blogs, chatrooms and other "social networks"
are the "long tail" of the media landscape (Anderson,
2004). Networks do not therefore burn-off the media, taking centre
stage and continuing to provide the background noise of the chattering
classes. It doesn’t matter how big they grow. Instead of anticipating
a "takeover" by the corporate sphere and attempting to
protect networked and locative media from demise, it is more than
likely that business interests will integrate selected parts of
the blogosphere. The rest of this online "noise" will
probably fade away into digital oblivion. In the meantime blogs,
wiki, podcasting and whatever comes next will continue to run under
the rubric of media diversification. Nothing is as fluid, fragile
– and unsustainable – as today’s network landscape.
In the meantime, we could treat the info-bits that flow our way
as short-term solutions to the environmental crises brought about
by the breakdown of both massified media outlets and dedicated high-end
digital aesthetics. Data are flowing from peer to peer, in networks
hardly noticed by authorities. But before the law moves in – and
with it, the academics – the crowds will already have moved on to
cooler pastures. Let’s not invest some salvation in all of this
distribution. Distributed media are both too loose and too large
to build a new utopia upon. Their fragmentary nature will have effects
but we cannot link them to a "cause". We may be unable
to house the endless link lists, unanswered calls and emails, cute
blogs and stagnant conversations under the banner of complete social
and media transformation. But we will nonetheless have to find a
mode of comprehending their everyday perceptual accretions; the
ways in which they make small changes to our social relations with
others and with broader groupings such as the media.
"Dead shoots and roots." What network theory, and with
it distributed aesthetics, first and foremost need to tackle is
the myth of seamless and perpetual growth. Once upon a time, during
the golden dotcom days, it was an insight to present networks as
dynamic, ever-growing entities. These days, we have moved to obsessively
focussing upon the micro politics of networks within networks (see
Krebs, 2003; Muir, 2003) It’s impressive but useless to know that
your social network puts you in connection with 371,558 "friends".
1 + friends is simply an effect of a network, not its constituent
relations.[4] The
social scientists almost reveal the desires that shape their own
trajectories around "social and organisational network analysis"
with their talk of "ego-centric" networks. The micro has
become awash with the atomised individual and we waste our capacity
to comprehend the shapes or shaping of networks by plotting out
the link lines of one node to another. In actuality, these lines
that appear so connected, seamless and smooth on the network maps,
can never account for the human labour required to create the link,
to maintain it or the sudden death and change of direction for a
network in which strong lines give way and the network changes,
even dies. Rhizomes, in fact, have odd shapes and are actually small
roots that die off at some point in their lifeline. The problem
with a naïve cloning of Deleuze and Guattari’s botany in the networked
context lies with a commitment to "growth". This involves
a blinding by the potentialities that the network-as-dream-machine
would seem to offer. Here the network and info-capital converge
rather than produce friction, complications or even poisonings.
Instead, we could say that growing could mean not simply expansion
but growing up. There is plenty of quantity in the mediascape
and so to simply grow without changing or even dying only multiplies
or clones more networks of connected atomised units. What networks
need are ideas and aesthetic projects for how they might mature
and transform.
Let’s
draw a difference between growth and persistence. Growth feeds the
lifecycle of capital and capital loves any kind of growth – upwards,
downwards or outwards. Persistence, on the other hand, apprehends
that something doggedly survives but that its growth or decay depends
on other forces, conditions and upon effort. Bits of the network
break off and wither and maybe something can endure elsewhere because
of this little death. But maybe the whole damn patch of grass just
ups and dies one day, and then there is no longer a network in your
backyard. Online social formations are more like these small tendrils
of growth that shoot and die – the list, for example, lives for
a while as its members try to feed it. They work to shape and develop
it, providing it with new impetus while the overall form just lumbers
along. But then its energy burns out and there is no more growing
left to do. Something endures between some of its participants or
another effort starts up elsewhere but then that something, that
network, has changed too. These processes are not all part of the
same growing "organism" or self-organising system. Attempts
to homogenise or sustain processes as a singular drive towards growth
are endemic to capital. The processes are, instead, lateral, cumulative
and de-energised modes of laboring, also endemic to capital but,
for the most part, the unpaid arc of its cycles.
"Against biologism."
Networks do not simply emerge. They are cybernetic constructs that,
once founded and installed, erupt then slumber and decline, go on
and on, fall asleep and wake up again before they die a sudden death
or entropically decline. Networks do not follow the simplistic models
of linear-mechanics or of evolutionary growth. A critical theory
of scalability and sustainability has to go beyond the biological
metaphors that speak of contagion, copy-paste epidemics and memes.
We have to make a distinction between real, existing patterns and
behaviors within technical networks and the wet dreams (or nightmares)
of marketing departments trying to give a positive spin on the unpredictable
moves of their blogging customers.
Complexity – of data,
of connectivity – has been rolled out an excuse for technical and
cultural phenomena being too hard to comprehend. Subsequently, it
figures that we have to feed all this complexity back into the machine
to be analysed. Numbers are too hard so we get a picture instead.
Complexity should not be an excuse for deferring the work of human
thought and human creation – theoretical and aesthetic – to network
software. Complexity is difficult and arduous but not aesthetically
unmanageable. Let’s not cede the complexity of networked life to
proceduralism. If we want suggestions as to how this complex networked
aesthetics might be rendered, then let’s look less to maps and more
to sketches and rough that infer a category of "the relational"
comprised of potentialities. This would be somewhat different from
framing relations within reductive models of utility or connectivity.
Let’s look instead to work such as Harwood’s current software research
NetMonster (http://www.scotoma.org/notes/index.cgi?NetMonster).
Here variable keywords related to a user’s current image interests
or obsessions are used to initialise a crawl for sites that contain
text or images related to these keywords. The crawl returns these
sites as stripped text and pictures, rearranging these around an
image mask based upon the user’s current image obsession, collaging
and redrawing the information so that it butts up in convoluted
lines of connection against itself.
The links that connect
the text and image together in NetMonster’s re-collaged information
arise out of a differential between what is pre-linked online –
the image’s 'mediated causes of its own existence' – and the variables
a user introduces into these connections via the mask and the keywords
(Harwood, 2005a). There are other aspects to this software in which
the crawler automatically attempts to spam the phone numbers and
emails from the garnered sites, alerting people to ways in which
their information has participated in a link or connection against
'common sense'. There is an anti-navigational and irresolvable aesthetic
oscillation that results from this work. Its informatic rendering
is monstrous, rampant and pathological rather than friendly or sociable.
As Harwood suggests, the image functions in the unimaginable spaces
and indeterminate relations of distributed information: 'The picture
acts as a proposition – frustrated – oscillating between a picture’s
ability to say and show' (Harwood, 2005b).
We need a more complex
conception of the network sociality than the concept of "social
software" that is currently attached to descriptions of networks
of friends or lovers in an online dating database. We need a more
complex understanding of the visual plane of information than the
pictorial map of the network. Networks are not glued together by
software and software does not make us social. Networks are not
resolvable into zoomable details of landscapes that must fit the
window of a browser. But equally we cannot take the social out of
software; in fact, what we need is to be more specific about how
the social and its myriad aesthetics are operating through and in
software. How is a network really being sustained – computationally
and through creative labour? How is the network experience to be
thought as felt? Whose labour – creative, manual, skilled,
disorganised, etc – keeps it moving along? What intrusions of rhetoric
from other images of the social – neo-liberal democratic theory
and its dreams of customised participation, for example – break
into and intrude upon the fragile links that tentatively form within
networked experience?
"Absent links".
Networks should not be defined by the visible links they place on
display. Getting "linked in" a network is not materialised
through (digital) information. This is what makes it so fake to
"ask" a computer to visualise a network or to "believe"
in link lists. "Putting" a link in is work, a tedious
activity, which requires precision and dedication. Only very few
of us develop a routine that leads us to the "felt experience"
of linking in the network; an experience that is mixed – one of
curiosity coupled with distraction and a drift, off in other directions.
Today’s networked existence hops from one medium to the next and
then demands that we return back to our links in order to put in
the work of connecting again and again.
We are in search,
instead, of an aesthetics that comes to terms with conflict, boredom,
confusion and stagnation – one that includes social complexity (as
opposed to bio-complexity). At the same time, we are dealing with
a non-visual aesthetics with respect to networks or at least a visual
that is not pictorial, that cannot be depicted as such. What kind
of aesthetics, then, does the network herald? We should not forget
that our debates are not entirely out of the blue and respond to
certain software configurations – which can be changed. A future
generation of blogs may not have the option to externally respond
to postings anymore. Due to spam, wikis could lose their capacity
to alter texts. At the same time, we could see impressive new incorporations
of data flows now circling around inside mobile space. These configurations
are not merely technical innovations or developments. Software-wise
they are easy to write and to implement. Their innovative power
does not lie in the complexity of code but in the simplicity of
their techno-social implementations. This "simplicity"
comes from many directions and forces at once – efficiency, standardisation,
commercial viability, but also from user circumvention and invention.
We’re not merely reflecting, imaging or imagining when we engage
a distributed aesthetics. We are configuring and remaking.
Authors' Biographies
Geert Lovink is a Professor in Media at the University of Amsterdam
and during 2005-6 is a Research Fellow at the WissenschaftKolleg
zu Berlin. He is the author of My First Recession (V_2
Publishers, Amsterdam, 2003) and Dark Fiber (MIT Press,
2002). He is the co-founder of the fibreculture and nettime discussion
lists and networks. He is also the director of the Institute of
Network Cultures. http://www.networkcultures.org <http://www.networkcultures.org/>
Anna Munster is a new media artist and critic, Senior Lecturer
in the School of Art History and Theory, College of Fine Arts, University
of New South Wales, Sydney Australia. She is the author of Materializing
New Media (University Press of New England, 2006). She is a
facilitator of the online discussion list fibreculture and a member
of the editorial committee of the fibreculture journal. She was
the recipient from 2003-2005 of an Australian Research Council Discovery
Grant. <http://staff.cofa.unsw.edu.au/~annamunster/people/>
Notes
[1] The most complete contribution of a formalist
analysis of new media is made by the work of Lev Manovich. This
is evident in his book The Language of New Media (Cambridge,
Mass.: MIT Press, 2001), where he proposes a set of formal principles
for the analysis of new media but also in more recent texts, such
as 'The Shape of Information' (http://www.manovich.net, 2005). Although
Manovich does not maintain that new media can be analysed through
a universal form or aesthetics, the question of emerging forms of
culture driven by information as process and flow drive the theoretical
trajectory of his work. The medium specificity approach is best
exemplified in a text such as Janet Murray’s 'Inventing the Medium',
her introduction to The New Media Reader, eds Noah Wardruip-Fruin
and Nick Montfort (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2003), 3-29.
[back]
[2] 'PatternTracer' is a software package for professional
crime investigators that analyses and maps to, 'quickly and automatically
uncover clusters and underlying patterns', 'Product Overview –i2:
Investigative Analysis Software' (http://www.i2inc.com/Products/Pattern_Tracer/default.asp).
Valdis Krebs’ (2001; 2003) is the most obvious example of recent
work being conducted in the field of social network analysis and
was responsible for "mapping" the network of pilots and
hijackers involved in the World Trade Tower attacks on September
11. The Web site for the 'Map of the Internet' is at http://mapoftheinternet.com/.
[back]
[3] There is no standardised usage or understanding
of the term "social software". It is deployed by marketing
executives and radical software analysts to categorise two polarised
vectors in networks – the social and collective understanding and
production of distributed software and the deployment of
software to produce social ties between individualised subjects.
Our concern with a use and elaboration of the socio-technical lies
with this latter deployment. See, for example, the article by Stowe
Boyd 'Are You Ready for Social Software?' in Darwin: Information
for Executives, May 2003, http://www.darwinmag.com/read/050103/social.html.
[back]
[4] See particularly the 'Friendster' network,
which aims to 'make the world a smaller place by bringing the power
of social networking to every aspect of life, one friend at a time'
('About Friendster', http://www.friendster.com/info/index.php?statpos=footer).
[back]
References
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Kwiki located athttp://www.scotoma.org/notes/index.cgi?HowItWorks.
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