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"Text" and "Network", Reconsidered
Florian Cramer
29/6/2007
The close affiliation of networks and texts does not begin with
telegraphy or the Internet. It already lies in the very notion of text,
since the Latin word "textus" literally means "the web". And just like
perceptions of the web tend be paranoid, as we know from Hollywood,
"text" has triggered exuberant imagination. Written in 1941 and playing
in the First World War, Jorge Luis Borges' short story "The Garden of
the Forking Path" tells of a Chinese German spy who murders a British
sinologist named Stephen Albert for seemingly no good reason. His
hidden intention is to convey the location of a British artillery park,
a French city called Albert, to the German secret service reading
British newspapers, their crime section included. The murder, in other
words, solely serves the inscription of the word "Albert", as if it
were a combination of land art and body shock art, or a dark pun on
Saussure's theory of the arbitrariness of the linguistic sign.
As typically for Borges' fiction, the compact linearity - or pulp drive
- of the story is broken up by a fictitious text within the text. In
"The Garden of the Forking Paths", this fictitious text is a "chaotic
novel" likewise called "The Garden of the Forking Paths", but written
not by Borges, but by a ficitious Chinese writer T'sui Pen. Similar to
bifurcations in fractal geometry and quantum models of space and time,
T'sui Pen's novel tells all possible turns of its story at the same
time, creating "various futures, various times which start others that
will in their turn branch out and bifurcate in other times".
This story was not only a prototype of post-structuralist text theory
and later hypertext poetics, but its direct inspiration. In his 1963
essay "Le langage à l'infini", Michel Foucault refers to a narrative
loop in the tales of the 1001 Nights: In one night, Scheherezade begins
to tell the story of the 1001 Nights, thus getting caught in infinite
recursion. Yet unlike Foucault believes, that loop exists in no known
version of the One Thousand and One Nights, but only as a fake
reference in Borges' short story of the "Garden of the Forking Paths".
Foucault mistook Borges' philological fiction for face value, and that
fiction took up a life of its own when other scholars started quoting
Foucault.[1]{1} In 1991, Stuart Moulthrop adapted the "Garden of the
Forking Paths" in an attempt of actually writing T'sui Pen's branching
novel as hypertext fiction. Both appropriations, Foucault's and
Moulthrop's, miss to grasp Borges' ironical sophistication whom
novelist John Barth characterized in 1967 as a "Theseus in the Cretan
labyrinth": someone who reflects contingency and non-linearity - or, to
use Lyotard's later terminology, the postmodern sublime -, but
ultimately conquers it in the closure of his own writing.
The paradox between dissemination and closure cannot only be found in
Borges, but applies to all text. It is reflected in Saussure's and
Jakobson's model of language as something constructed both vertically
from a set of associative differences (paradigm) and horizontally as a
linear sequence (syntagm). The meaning of "textus" as "the web" implies
the same aporia of association and linearity.
[Borges reflects this in another short story, "The Library of Babel".
Although he referred to the Renaissance ars combinatoria of Lull and
Leibniz rather than to structuralist linguistics, it on the idea of
writing as a set of differences within a total set of possible
utterances. In the story, this system materializes as a library
generated, according to the speculation of the first-person, by an
exhaustive computational combinatorics of the alphabet. While the
resulting text is given various and sometimes paranoid meanings by the
humans who live inside the library, it is formally just data - data in
a web of differences analogous to a set of patch files created with the
Unix "diff" command. Links (a.k.a. cross-references) or meta tags
(a.k.a. paratexts) aren't required to create those relations, but
merely underline what is already related, given that any digital file
can be can be diffed or data-mined against any other. Again,
association and finality aren't contradictions, but paradoxical sides
of the same coin.]
In that light, "hypertext" boils down to a pleonasm, since text
contains "hyper"-structures by definition, or the World Wide Web can
simply be seen as an update, perhaps even clarification of the term
"text".
Conceptual clarity hasn't been the strong point of literary and
cultural theories of text. Structuralist semiology greatly expanded the
notion of text when Roland Barthes read all kinds of cultural phenomena
including cars, beefsteaks and striptease dances as texts in his
"Mythologies" and when Yury Lotman developed the concept of a text that
encompassed all semiotic systems. While those readings were inspiring,
they made the notion of "text" as fuzzy and undefined in the literal
sense of having no boundaries and thus ultimately no meaning as, for
example, the notion of "media". Traditional philology on the other hand
had, and still has, a hard time differentiating text from literature,
and thus the notion of text from paper, books and semantic
intentionality.
Among other virtues, computer technology, Shannon's information theory
and the Internet have one great benefit to the humanities: they have
helped to get a better understanding of what a text is, how to separate
text from meaning, and more generally what falls under the realm of
"form" and what doesn't. For example, structuralism still believed that
metaphors were formal, but everyone who is computer literate knows that
they are not. In other words: Since Leibniz, Lovelace, Turing and
Shannon, but ultimately through personal computing we have learned to
define syntax as what is fully computable and semantics as that which
is not - unless one models it as syntax, within the known drastic
limitations of so-called "artificial intelligence". Informatics
therfore provides no conclusive model of semantics, but a very clear
one of text as everyone knows who is familiar with ASCII files and text
streams over TCP/IP or Unix pipes. For computer-literates, it is
trivial to abstract text as storage of symbols from semantics of
writing. From this perspective, the question "what is text" is neither
difficult, nor academic, but easy to answer with a simple formal
definition: a an amount of discrete, in most cases alphanumeric
symbols. [2]{2}
[This means that the notion of text is not bound to meaningful writing.
Literary theory has struggled to grasp this although it's been
illustrated before, in Dadaist poetry for example like Man Ray's poem
out of blocked-out words. Nelson Goodman, an analytic philosopher,
pioneered an informatics model of text in the humanities when he used
the notion of analog and digital information in his book "The Languages
of Art", and formally defined writing as disjunct and discrete.] Since,
to refer to Levi-Strauss, Barthes and Lotman, neither a culture, nor a
striptease or a beefsteak is a file made up of unambiguously discrete
information elements, neither of them can be read as a text without
oversimplifying the matter. And - to jump at my own conclusion - just
as the paradigm of text has its limitations, "web" and network
conversely have their own.
Read as network theory, Borges' fiction juxtaposes network associations
in its speculative imagination to network topology in its narrative
closure. In other words, networks are characterized by the paradox of
text extrapolated in Borges' fiction: that network topologies are never
networks in themselves. Any network, whether a network in mathematic
graph theory or a communication network, can be mapped as and flattened
to a linear structure. The complexity of any web can be broken down, in
Borges' terms, to a number of letters that spell a stinking corpse.
(For the Internet, one might cite the five letters "ICANN".) "To break
down" is the literal meaning of analytics and deconstruction; so we're
not talking about reductionism, but critical theory. From such a
critical and analytical perspective, networks are no
counter-epistemology, but not that terribly different from hierarchical
structures.
But there seems a more important lesson to be learned from text theory,
its initial trouble to understand text syntactically, its later
excesses of applying text to anything and a computer-literate
understanding of text as data. The political issue is how terms become
magic bullets, getting mapped onto other phenomena, and out of hand in
that process. If the linguistic turn led into a trap - a "prisonhouse
of language", as Jameson calls it -, the same could be said about media
theory, especially where it follows cybernetic paradigms without being
aware of it.
The earliest modern theory of networks can be found in Ludwig von
Bertalanffy's General Systems Theory of the late 1940s. It was part of
his grand project of interfacing hard sciences, social sciences and
humanities, technology and art through a common set of descriptive
notions, such as system, network, metabolism, openness and closure.
Despite Bertalanffy's humanist agenda, his project had a dialectical
flip-side: mapping physics and biology onto culture, it conceived of
the human world as an organism, a questionable concept passed on to
Maturana's and Varela's radical constructivism and to chaos theory.
Just as cybernetics is closely related to General Systems Theory, so
are its issues. Focusing more specifically on human-machine interaction
than on systems as a whole, cybernetics applied engineering concepts to
humans and culture. That arts and humanities adopted McLuhan's concept
of media more enthusiastically than Wiener's cybernetics may be rooted
just in the latter's blatant behaviorism. However, with the assumption
that the medium is the message, that machines had their own agenda,
media theory was hardly less problematic, and by the early 1990s had
developed into a rehash of cybernetics.[3]{3}
For sure, the approaches to media studies discussed here at this
conference differ from older schools of media studies in that they are
more skeptical about classical two-way models of feedback, stimulus and
response and sender and receiver. Instead, they search for both more
complex and less dogmatic models of communication and interaction. But
they make the network their very emblem of that complexity and
undogmatism, this is just another rehash of 1940s general systems
theory which had defined networks as, quote, "organized complexity" - a
continuity that should raise some eyebrows.
Not only can the supposed openness of networks be questioned if one
breaks them down, like Borges' fiction does, to its very linear bones.
The network is just another cybernetic metaphor that seduces to
conflate phenomena that any critical theory should rather
differentiate: telecommunication switches from social networking,
machine feedback from human interaction, computation from cognition,
storage from memory, data from knowledge, syntax from semantics, and so
on. The seemingly more critical, "rhizomatic" paradigm of the network
does not change this logic, but merely its costume. (All the more,
since the "rhizome" is a blatant biologism and vitalist figure of
thought in itself.)
There's no doubt that machine logic and human practices do intersect,
and that the Internet is a rich zone of their ambiguity; an ambiguity
that continues to be highly productive for the fantastic imagination of
Science Fiction novels, David Cronenberg movies, chat bots, net.art and
codeworks, to name a few examples. But why is it a problematic figure
of thought for critical theory? C.P. Snow's claim of the two cultures,
humanities versus sciences, should be given a second thought as a
sensible tool of differentiation; and indeed I would like to argue in
favor of a network theory that clearly locates itself in the humanities
and cultural studies rather than faking scientific formalisms,
simulating scientific interdisciplinarity and ultimately ending up as
history of science and technology.[4]{4} If semantic interpretation
remains out of reach for computation and formal logic, it means the
humanities are needed just as what Wilhelm Dilthey defined them in
1883: hermeneutic disciplines. Such humanities theory fashions as
structuralism, analytic philosophy, cybernetic aesthetics and technical
media theory never produced more than pretensions of hard scientific
methods, adapting the latter's rhetoric without actually adopting their
methods of formal proofs and quod erat demonstranda. So they ultimately
produced what they had been opposed to, hermeneutic interpretations.
Failing to acknowledge crucial methodological differences to hard
sciences, and suffering from a lingering inferiority complex or just
buying into the hipness of technology, cultural studies often enough
given up resistence to techno-positivist figures of thought. For
example, a media studies scholar and cultural critic might consider it
intellectually inspiring and provocative to reason about the
"signal-noise ratio" of a mailing list. But for information theory and
cybernetics, this terminology is neither a provocation, nor a
metaphorical word play at all, but a no-nonsense superimposition of
statistical formalisms onto cultural semantics. In the design of
content filters for example, with all their problematic implications,
this formalism is applied every day. If the role of critical humanities
should be to critically take apart mappings of technological formalisms
onto culture rather than indulge in them, then most media theory and
criticism has been a blatant failure. Whatever media theory one takes,
it continues to buy into all kinds of hypes and problematic cybernetic
identifications; no matter whether they're more questionably called
"artificial life" or go under cozier terms like "networking".
Literary studies tended to glorify the notion of text once they had
turned into text theory. Art history tends to worship the image now
that it has turned into visual studies. Both defend texts, respectively
pictures, as inherently "good" and try to make each of them the master
trope of all cultural theory. As a simultaneous outgrowth of media
theory and Internet culture, Network studies runs similar inherent
risks. A new network theory therefore needs to be a critical network
theory, be built on the insight that networks - and the Internet - are
neither good or bad per se, nor universal models and descriptors of
culture.
Feedback is not interaction, computation is not cognition, storage is
not memory, data is not knowledge, telecommunication switches are not
social networking. The cybernetic mapping is not the cultural
territory. But this mapping is blatantly political and ideological in
itself. We need a new network theory indeed: one that takes apart those
identifications. Rather than taking all phenomena that get marketed as
"networks" for face value, it would have to analyze and criticize the
terminological webs and networks that are spun in between them.
__________________________________________________________________
Footnotes:
[5]{1} hart-nibbrig:spiegelschrift
[6]{2} Nothing more, nothing less, with no defined or implied
materiality of paper or books. An example of a non-alphanumeric text
would be a classical musical score, while performed music would not be
a text when it is not performed as symbols, but as sound waves.
[7]{3} As Claus Pias' recent research has shown.
[8]{4} A problem of the contemporary German and continental European
humanities and media studies in particular.
References
1. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFtNtAAB
2. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFtNtAAC
3. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFtNtAAD
4. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFtNtAAE
5. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFrefAAB
6. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFrefAAC
7. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFrefAAD
8. file://localhost/tmp/text_and_network_reconsidered3941.html#tthFrefAAE