Session FIVE – with Marshall Brown (Architecture)

[DGB with a few words up front; Minna and Foivos below…]

We had a slightly longer initial session together today – because our guest joined us at 3 pm.  And I thought we really used the time. Both Minna and Foivos have offered quite detailed synopses below, so I will not recapitulate their work here by way of introduction.  I’ll just put up this image (above) of our front chalkboard, and the one below (the board on the side).  Foivos says calls these  key archival texts “doodling” – but I ask you, is that fair?

🙂

A few thoughts on the readings from this week (our conversation got going and we never really circled back on our texts in any detail):  I felt pretty impatient with Klein & Frodeman.  “Interdisciplining Humanities: A Historical Overview” feels like such an example of the thing it sort-of documents.  It is a peer-reviewed piece of workmanlike scholarship.  It contains some absolute HOWLERS which really sort of make me feel a bit testy about the very idea of peer-review.  For instance, how did the claim that “the first use of the term ‘natural science’ did not occur until 1834” make it through peer review??  Try Google Books advanced search, and you will instantly discover that this is TOTALLY FALSE.  (The authors have garbled something true, namely that the term “scientist” is coined in 1834.). And the courtly concept of the humanistic honnête homme is rendered as bonnete homme, which is not merely missing the diacritical mark, it also seems to suggest people wearing funny hats.  Moments like this make me feel despair.  You get to this point, and this is what you get?  Is anybody paying any attention?

Grumpy.  Makes me feel grumpy.

But the stuff in chapter three of the Jacobs concerning the extraordinary recentness of multi-person “departments” in American universities made an impression on me.  The statistics were compelling, and I would have guessed wrong on that stuff.  He really demonstrates the explosive growth of the modern university in the postwar period.  And demonstrates how recent the world we are in really is (from a higher-education perspective).

I wanted to put in a few words too about concrete plans:  I am going to hold the 2nd of November as a “guestless” session, one in which I think we will assemble some readings around “ignorance” and “non-knowledge” (per our discussion). And reminding us all of some ideas for final project stuff that got tossed around:  perhaps “outlaw” posters (for disciplinary transgressors? this reminded me of this project, which I was involved in for the Sharjah Biennial some years back); what about some sort of “compact” or “contract” that we might all draft and sign, committing us (or the signers, anyway) to some sort of specific performative cast or intervention (perhaps that we would all agree to make, one time each semester, a gesture of “radical un-knowing” in a seminar setting? word of it being something to which we were all committed would potentially contribute to the sense of its being a certain kind of collective/critical act).  One more thought:  what if we stay after this idea of Agnotology, etc., and do a collaborative (fictional) departmental website for a “department of radical un-knowing”?  We could make up the courses, the faculty, etc.  Has some potential…

Onward!  Hope you all are able to do some final project thinking together this week…

-DGB

* * *

[Minna follows, and Foivos after….]

As we continued to grapple with the question of “knowledge”—its ontology and hermeneutics—we began our seminar by pushing this inquiry further by expanding the category of its antinomies. If thus far we have paired knowledge as the antinomy of “experience”—itself a polemical contention, as Graham reminded us, for such antithesis refutes the modern enterprise of transforming experience into knowledge—then, we added to this mix, “ignorance,” “non-knowledge,” and also, “forgetting.” Can we consider ignorance and forgetting as a kind of strategic “aporetics,” which is to say, does it have the capacity to maintain a certain kind of aporia towards some political purpose? The impromptu bibliography that emerged out of this question of tactical forms of non-knowing was both extensive and interdisciplinary—including, but not limited to, Robert N. Proctor and Londa Schiebinger, Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance (2008), Jacques Rancière’ The Ignorant Schoolmaster (1987), and Erik Conway and Naomi Oreskes’, Merchants of Doubt (2010). Indeed, as Graham pointed out, this mode of inquiry into the negative—what Ben has called the “dark side” of knowledge, or Lauren’s “grey matter”—harkens back to the Hegelian injunction to “tarry with the negative.”

Responding to Graham’s comment that the wager of both Rancière and Proctor and Schiebinger is to dialectically pivot the claim that knowledge has to be constructed, Ben pushed the discussion further by alerting us to the onto-epistemological difference between ignorance and non-knowledge. To crudely sum up Ben’s point, whereas ignorance is a kind of “un-knowing” or “not-yet-knowing” (absent presence), non-knowing cannot be produced because it exists in total absence. (Sorry, Ben, if I have totally misrepresented your point). This comment was truly generative and allowed us to dwell with not only the epistemological question of the “non” in “non-knowledge” (from the lack in Lacanian psychoanalysis to the hermeneutics of the Buddhist Koan to the occult in Islam and Hinduism), but also the question of form, the physicality of non-knowledge and ignorance. The latter was also a helpful transition for us to meditate on our collaborative final project: Who are the ignorant schoolmasters in today’s academia? Are they the critics or amateurs, or simply outlaws? What is the critical import of “transgression” in the enterprise of humanistic inquiry? Does it still have the aporetic capacity for “rupture,” for emergent knowledge, in today’s academic fora?

In many ways these questions continued into our conversation with Prof. Marshall Brown, who described the ways in which his artistic and professional practices are held in productive tension with his scholarship. Indeed, his theorization of “seamfulness” seemed more than an apt analogy for his interdisciplinary method and positionality—or rather multiple positionalities within and beyond academia. At the same time, we returned to the question of “employment cartels” that continue to govern and police the citizenship in/of academia, and mulled over the transgressive potential of “collaboration” therein. This conversation left me wanting to dwell with the notion of collaboration. Does collaboration happen in the invariable gap between the seams, the interstices between disciplines? Is this the outside of the law of cartels, an out-law territory? Moreover, to borrow Lauren’s object “torrit grey” as a metaphor, is collaboration the praxis of producing non-knowledge out of both lack and excess?

– Minna

* * *

[And Foivos…]

Dark Kiss, tarrying with the Negative.
We start the seminar revisiting one of our earliest discussions, thinking that when asking what is the opposite of knowledge, all of us very casually overlooked what would be a rather obvious answer: to not know. And for now, we’re staying with the trouble of thinking of what is non-knowledge, ignorance and/or agnotology, and how this could be useful for us in this seminar.
— Graham starts doodling diagrams on the board, catching and drawing connections between ideas flying in the room. I bring up Robert Proctor and Londa Schiebinger’s book Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance that is discussing the different types of non-knowledge, unknowledge, ignorance, unlearning or forgetting, and their deliberate cultural production. Proctor in his introduction distinguishes three types of ignorance: Ignorance as native stateIgnorance as Lost Realm or Selective choice (or passive construct); and Ignorance as Strategic Ploy or Active Construct, that maybe it would be useful to look more closely in a follow-up seminar.
— Minna brings up Jacques Rancière’s The Ignorant Schoolmaster: Five Lessons in Intellectual Emancipation, as an alternative way to think of ignorance in productive terms. Rancière’s antiparadigmatic schoolmaster successfully teaches subjects he has no knowledge on through a method of critical enquiry. Rarely thought in those terms and methodologies (through complete ignorance), that very method of critical enquiry is at the epicenter of the humanities as Butler argues in her critique of AAUP statement we read a couple of weeks ago.
In both Proctor and Rancière, ignorance is understood in productive terms — exploring its negative capabilities. Discussing the question of ignorance/ non knowledge, a specter of the past -emerging from Graham’s family memories- brings up Hegel’s injunction in the Phenomenology of Spirit: in order to study philosophy one must tarry with the negative.
Emilio reads a passage from Kant’s first critique [of pure reason] on how nothing operates on thinking, something that has been under-addressed in the reading of Kantian philosophy and even Hegel’s readings of Kant, and Graham points out that this opens up an interesting but huge potential discussion that the class couldn’t possibly follow up on.
Tarrying with the negative then, for a bit. Dialectics come up. The notion of a negative anthropology is thrown onto the table, negative dialectics, Bruno Latour, Lewis Mumford, media studies, Kant’s Anthropology — Minna offers to suggest further readings on this. Chandler, as well, on an extensive literature on utilizing ignorance as an alternative form of knowledge-production. We discuss dedicating a seminar on these questions and constructing collectively our own reading list for discussion in one of the coming sessions.
Denise brings up another approach to that constructive/productive process of ignorance, the idea of ‘recessive disclosure’ and ‘open secrets’ and the revelatory character that such disclosure might have — Anne-Lise François Open Secrets, The Literature of Uncounted Experience and Eve Sedwick’s Epistemology of the Closet open up a discussion on post-humanism and the work of Cary Wolfe, and on environmental humanities and Rob Nixon.
Ben resists the idea and polemically pushes back thinking of the initial conditions and character of knowledge, punctuating the differences between non-disclosure, unknowledge, non-knowledge (total absence of knowledge), and ignorance, and talks about ignorance-production as an oxymoron and paradoxical and/or nonsensical quest: what we don’t know doesn’t need to be produced since it is already there. Thinking of potential media for our collaborative project, he tries to imagine what would a book that claimed that it didn’t produce knowledge look like? It would be a massive work of irony or an eloquent form of protest. We keep that connection between ignorance and irony, going as far back to the history of -western- philosophy and knowledge production as to Socrates dictum, “The only thing I know is that I know nothing”.

Graham suggests to stay to with the paradox for a minute and think of i. the socratic irony — and the activation of all different technics of getting people radically and utterly confused [Is confusion another word we might be interested in?]— and ii.  the Buddhist Kōans —a set of paradoxical impossible exercises that a Buddhist monk student has to think with/through on his way to wisdom — the experience of a ruminative inquiry, working out and around a paradox.

Navjit draws on Islamic and Hindu traditions to talk about the always already segmented and incomplete character of knowledge and the ethical questions of agency that emerge when thinking of knowledge as something that is produced rather than something that is revealed — that idea of revelation came up also in one of our first seminars by both Navjit and Emilio in rather interesting ways. Navjit continues —drawing on Bronisław Malinowski’s distinction of different types of practices of knowledge production: magic, science and religion— to talk about the occult or dark knowledge, as this process of knowledge production that occurs in the shadows and in open secrecy. Proctor in his Agnatology also makes a similar observation, talking about the transformation of alchemy into chemistry when it moves from the shadows into the light — thinking of the Age of the Enlightenment as the era of the sciences, academies, disciplines and open circulation of ideas…..

Meanwhile Jeremy puts his object on the table — a non-representational self-portrait -including script- in the form of a book that he created in his first years of architecture book and that has accompanied him throughout the years. He shyly refers to it as ‘bad’ art, which raises reactions and opens up a discussion on amateurism as an important category of relations to knowledge production, and amateurism as something that transgresses the traditional boundaries of the disciplines. Denise, pulling from Rebecca Walkowitz’s Bad Modernism, asks everyone to think who are the ‘bad’ people of their discipline — what is a bad historian, for example — and what types of transgressions, disruptions of knowledge (or emergent knowledge, niches of interdisciplinary, eccentricities of the scholar, amateur-bad thinkers) can we think with?

———

Can an object subsume all text? Ben brought a commemorative paperweight in lieu of a typical university diploma, from Skopje University from the period of Yugoslavia.
‘If you took all the pigments in the color spectrum and mixed them together, what color would you make?’ Lauren brought us two identical tubes of Gamblin’s Torrit Grey, produced through pigment recycling leading to each tube having a unique shade of grey. There is something almost alchemical here that could be unpacked.
———
On the second part of the seminar Marshall Brown, from Princeton’s School of Architecture, joined via Zoom. We engage in an interesting discussion centering around his work and his spectacular collages. We talk a lot about seams, as the three-dimensional space that brings together two different worlds, having in our minds Sylvia Lavin’s Kissing Architecture, exhibitions, spaces and the colorful moving images of Pipilotti Rist. Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters). And the cuts and splits of Gordon Matta-Clark. I ask a question on audience, and how the works become accessible to the non-architects. And then thinking of Architecture as kissing other disciplines —such a polyamorous animal— I wonder if the kiss is ever reciprocal, or forced and one-sided, and what the other disciplines, ever get out of it.
-Foivos

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