On immediacy, representation, and anti-politics.
Anna Kornbluh, professor of English and author of Immediacy, or The Style of Too Late Capitalism talks to Alex about the cultural, political, and economic changes she refers to as 'immediacy'. We discuss:
Is 'immediacy' just a vibe, or is vibe itself non-mediated?
How does anti-representation in film, TV and books relate to anti-representation in politics?
And can we relate culture immediacy to the 'material base'?
How do Fleabag, Uncut Gems, and the turn to memoirs and autofiction exemplify immediacy?
Why does self-disclosure fit so well with the data economy?
In what way is contemporary anti-theory nihilistic and apologetic?
How does the style of immediacy relate to Frederic Jameson's understanding of postmodernism?
Is the desire to put everything private on show a response to alienation?
And is the professionalisation of 'theory' a problem or solution?
Links:
Immediacy, or The Style of Too Late Capitalism, Anna Kornbluh, Verso
Has culture become pure vibe?, Anna Kornbluh, Spike Art Magazine
The Theory of Immediacy or the Immediacy of Theory?, Jensen Suther, Nonsite
Embracing Alienation: Why We Shouldn't Try to Find Ourselves, Todd McGowan, Repeater