Menü Schließen
John Mowitt: Tracks from the Crypt
04.07.2018 • 11/5/18 18:00
Raum 7.214 des IG-Farben-Hauses

 

 

Am Mittwoch, den 4. Juli 2018, hielt unser Mercator Fellow John Mowitt  einen Vortrag mit dem Titel „Tracks from the Crypt“. Die öffentliche Veranstaltung begann um 18 Uhr (ct) im Raum 7.214 des IG-Farben-Hauses und war in englischer Sprache.

 

David Bowie’s 2015 Blackstar has been understood by critics and fans alike to have a certain valedictory status. For them, perhaps for us, it is a 39 minute and 13 second farewell.  A long goodbye.  My angle is different.  By situating the Bowie/Renck collaboration on „Lazarus“ in the context of a meditation on the question once asked by Georg Stanitzek, „Was ist Kommunikation?“ I consider the CD and the video as strategies of reconfiguration.  More specifically, by thinking about the distinctly cinematic iteration of the question of communication (citing here Captain’s „what we have here is . . . failure to communicate“ from Cool Hand Luke) I propose that mediated (maybe even mass) communication embodies the Ich/Esmodality of dialogue repudiated, even feared, by Buber.  What this invites us to consider is whether „Lazarus“ in particular isn’t the generation of an audiovisual tombeau from which or out of which communication strains to be heard.  Is it „saying“ farewell?  Is it „saying“ anything?  By drawing on Jacques Derrida’s appropriation of the crypt in the work of Abraham and Torok, I propose that „Lazarus“ manages (and the feat is neither small nor insignificant) to communicate nothing.  In effect, „Lazarus“ is the very sound, not of a failure to communicate, but of a saying emptied of what protects it from mediation.  Here, Bowie’s gnomic persona assumes a political valence not typically ascribed to it.

 

Fig.1:
Screenshot aus David Bowie: Lazarus, Videoclip, Youtube.

 

Kollegveranstaltungen