User:Andre Castro/research/1.2/essay-archive

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Online archives: remix the power

Introduction

In this essay I will center my discussion on the relation of online folkloric archives to power and the role of artistic intervention within the archive as strategy of injecting with more human and disruptive logics.

The essay will begin by tracing the archive's historical ties to power and demonstrate how this relations is still present in seemingly democratic folkloric online archives. It will be followed by the presentation of the users intervention as a strategy that can challenge the archive's authority. Lastly it look at some examples of artistic project that aim at bringing the archive to a human scale, and which can result in strategies for evading the ideologies that come attached to any archive.


Archive and Power

In Archive Fever Derrida traces back the meaning of the term "archive" to the Greek "arkheion" 'the residence of the superior magistrates, the archons, those who commanded'. It is in this location where official documents are written and safeguarded. The archons are not only entitled to secure the official documents, but also to interpret them in order to validate them. From such interpretations the law was called and applied (pp: 9-10).

Foucault's critic of the archive in The Archeology of Knowledge follows similar lines. Foucault describes it as a validating system, which determines what constitutes a statement. It is not a repository of remainings from a culture or civilization, but a institution that validates the interpretation of the contained documents; It is 'the reason why so many things, said by so many men, for so long, have not emerged in accordance with the same law of thought, or the same circumstances' (p.145).

The role of the archive as a power institution becomes even more prominent if we consider Foucault's introductory remark stating that the document has gained a similar status, in contemporary history, to that of monuments in traditional history. Contemporary history takes the documents of the past and studies and organizes them, inserts them into a lineage and a context, and turns them relevant (pp:7-8). Such a process will inevitably bring an authority and an unquestionable statues to the document. Those who are allowed access to the documents, who are given permission to interpret them, the contemporary archons, are entrusted the powers of the document.

From the readings of both Foucault and Derrida we can clearly see the close relation of archive to power, giving to those who are allowed to interpret its documents the permission to impose their vision on those who are not granted such privilege. 'No matter how open or repressed, the official archive was the last word ... It was a secular cognate of the divine word: its matter-of-fact was equivalent to the word of God' (Klein) .




Online Folkloric Archive

Although acknowledging the role archive as a tool for enforcing law and validating knowledge, Appadurai takes also into consideration the everyday life archive, the archive that belong to the individual, to the family, to the community. In his view, this mutant online folkloric archive, which allows for the users' active role, 'is gradually freed from the orbit of the state and its official networks'(p.16).

Norman Klein however adopts a more skeptical position, and sees the hidden agendas covered by the democratic possibilities offered by the online folkloric archives. Although allowing, or are even being mostly constituted through the users' intervention, online archives are often scripted spaces, with an underlying ideology. By looking at what is excluded from an archive the ideology ruling it becomes apparent. Take the example of Facebook where pictures smashed heads are acceptable while nudity or "photoshoped" images are censored (Gawker). In short, the limits of what can and cannot be stated constitutes the ideologies governing online archives. Such a predetermined space will consequently restrict the range of possible discourses, thus turning the online folkloric archive into highly ideological space. As a consequence, as Klein notes, 'in the US, archiving has turned into collective schizophrenia; into ten thousand unofficial lies and racist innuendos, guided by wealthy right-wing investors ... a blizzard of factoids that poisoned what remained of our national politics'. It can then be said that while creating the illusion of an empowering and liberating space where citizens can openly express their views, the online folkloric archive has the capacity to mislead and control their political effort. We can easily classify this process as soft-control, a modulation typical of a society of control as depicted by Deleuze. The individual is not deprived from the right to express her view, but her view will be modulated by the channel used to make it public. If her view fits within the ideology it can stay, otherwise it disappears surreptitiously and painlessly as if it has never existed before.


Remixing the Archive

Although most online archives are, like most physical archives, are not neutral and do play monitoring and validating role, there is a fundamental difference: they exist online. This simple fact can completely change the rules of the game, since it allows access to anyone with an Internet connection. Another difference comes from the fact that the contained documents are digital entities, which makes them infinitely reproducible, allowing for their storage in any hard-drive, while remain present in the archive.

The online archive also puts in motion a process by which once a document is put online it ceases to belong to its owner, and begins its own online life. As Domenico Quaranta puts it: 'Archives, libraries and museums came into being expressly for this reason: to preserve our collective externalized memory for future generations. However, the Internet does more than refine this process and make it more inclusive. Everything we put on the Web ceases to belong to us' (p.13). If we add to this concoction the endless possibilities made possible by digital manipulation, we are in the presence of an open invitation for the appropriation and manipulation of the (digital) documents present in the archive. Such possibility results in the materialization of different versions of a document, as in the image(s) of missiles being fired by coalition forces, portrayed in Olivier Laric's piece Versions.

Laric-missile-01.png Laric-missile-02.png Laric-missile-03.png Laric-missile-04.png


Although the possibility for such an appropriative process marks a clear distinction from the physical archives Quaranta adverts for dangers of letting the majority of online archives be managed solely by databases and algorithms (p.14). Quaranta argues for the necessity of 'professional surfers ... that vast community of people who collect, re-organize, vote, tag, remix, manipulate, and redistribute Internet content'. Quaranta sees them as the human element necessary to the database, which can 'redirect it, discipline it, and make it less mathematical, and more aleatory. In a word, they need to adapt it to human memory'(p.16). One could say that through an incessant activity of appropriation, indexation, and transition, users transform online database or repositories into living archives.

Let's not fool ourselves and think that the democratization of the archive can be achieved by the mentioned users' activity. The archive administrators are still the ones who decide what stays and what is discarded. Nonetheless storage, transmission, and manipulation are decisively empowering features offered by the online archive.

Digital storage and online transmission makes possible for a document, which has once taken part of an archive, to quickly spreads to other archives, blogs, emails, tweets, hard-drive, etc. The document ceases not only to belong to its author but also to the archive where it first appeared.

And digital manipulation allows for the materialization of a multitude of version of an image, that range from the subtle to the explicit, or even the absurd. These versions have the effect of not only bringing us to ask whether the official "original" document might have also been a product of manipulation, but they question the archive's authority. In presenting more than one variation of a document the official version might begin to be questioned, and once started the questioning the process will spread to the figure of the archive as "the last word". By allowing fictitious documents to enter its space the archive begins to adjust to human collective memory, it starts to become a space of dialogue between facts and fiction, a site of emergence of discourses, rather than a figure that legitimates power and knowledge. According to Klein:

'Archive is often collective memory. It is material culture; which is quite different from a divine instrument of that state. Collective memory is displacement, erasure, evasion and distortion. To some degree, in archives, fact and fiction coexist strangely, in what historians used to call collective psyche'


Radio Liberté, Equalité, Beyoncé

My recent project Liberté, Equalité, Beyoncé (LEB) constitutes a prototype of online radio station, created from audio material continuously retrieved from archive.org, arranged in a semi-random stream of hourly programs. Radio LEB.png My decision to employ the resources and content offered by archive.org to create LEB, was based on the fact that this archive offers a great diversity of easily accessible of audio-visual material, mainly collected and maintained by an active community of users; and so far it has appeared as fairly neutral and non restricted (although religious content thrive and one comes hardly across nudity).

While developing LEB I began to ask myself whether could archive.org be considered an archive, or it was mainly an online repository of audio-visual material? If we follow Quaranta's previously mentioned statement that the online database can only become an archive if it adapts to human memory, through a process of appropriation, manipulations, indexation and transmission, archive.org as well as many other online projects such as Wikipedia, Open Street Map, or even Youtube, can be considered an archive. The community is determines the what the database is, a repository or an archive.

Nonetheless I see LEB fitting within a different type archive intervention. LEB tries to approach the archive in a large scale, taking as material the whole audio collection. It tries to do so not simply picking random items from the entire audio collection, but trying to form groups of coherent document, which are turned into programs. This is one among many projects current artistic which deal with online archives, by approaching vast areas from databases and opening cracks within the mathematical logic and overwhelming dimension that characterize these structures and mold them into humanly comprehensible forms. In other words they are creating other types of interfaces to the database. Examples of these artistic approaches to the archive's database can be found in the project such as Booktwo by James Bridle, which compiled into several books the change log of the Wikipedia article on the Iraq war. Or Search by Image by Sebastian Schmieg where Google Image Search service is used to create algorithmic videos, based on Google's "understanding" of the fed image.

It is nonetheless curious that these works employ algorithms to deal with the database, in order to re-arrange it under a more human logic. And it is even more ironic the inherently narrative structure that these projects adopt - a radio station, a book collection, and a video. As pointed out by Lev Manovich 'the world appears to us as an endless and unstructured collection of images, texts, and other data records, it is only appropriate that we will be moved to model it as database - but it is also appropriate the we would want to develop the poetics, aesthetics, and ethics of this database'(p.40). It seems that in order to approach the database in a meaningful away, to make sense, to question it, we are still recurring twentieth century media. Nonetheless these approaches seem to be answers to the question posed by Manovich of how can the new possibilities for storage and organization offered by digital databases lead into kinds of narratives (p.54).

Probably in near future we will see the artistic exploration of databases breaking away from the narrative formats, and finding other shapes to critically and sensitively approach these colossal data collections.




Bibliography

Appadurai, A. (2003) 'Archive and Aspiration'. In: Brouwer, J. And Mulder, A: 'Information is Alive'. Rotterdam: V2_Publishing/NAI, 14-25. Bridle, J. (2010) 'On Wikipedia, Cultural Patrimony, and Historiography' [online ] available from <http://www.urlesque.com/2010/09/08/books-wikipedia-iraq-war/> [10 April 2012]

Derrida, J. (1995) 'Archive Fever. A Freudian Impression'. Diacritics, 25 (2), 6-63.

Deleuze, G. (1990) 'Postscript on Control Societies'

Foucault, Michel. (1969) 'The Archaeology of Knowledge'. London: Routledge.

Gawker (2012). 'Inside Facebook's Outsourced Anti-Porn and Gore Brigade, Where “Camel Toes” are More Offensive Than “Crushed Heads”' [online] available from <http://gawker.com/amine-derkaoui/> [10 April 2012]

Klein, N. (2011) 'Imaginary Futures and the Archive'. Pages, 8

Laric, O. (2009) 'Versions' <http://www.oliverlaric.com/versions.htm> [10 April 2012]

Manovich, L. (1998). 'Database as a Symbolic Form'. <http://manovich.net/articles/> [10 April 2012]

Schmieg, S. (2011) 'Search by Image' <http://sebastianschmieg.com/searchbyimage> [10 April 2012]

Quaranta, D. (2011) 'The Artists as Archivist in the Internet Age'. In: D. Quaranta, ed. 2011. Collect the WWWorld.