- if:book talks about how we will handle and publish literary correspondence in the age of e-mail My favourite part of this article is the conversation about how you’d create an annotatable, taggable and explorable resource around Dave Eggers’ Inbox. Not sure I’d be enormously keen to have my e-mail on display in the same way of course…
- Catherine Saillant of the LA Times writes about the negotiations she’s had with her daughter around MySpace A fascinating glimpse into the kind of things that teenagers are doing on MySpace and how confusing it can be for a parent working out how to handle, respond to and harness this activity…
- The KOMPAKT record label has a site where you can buy high bit-rate unencrypted MP3s of their output I can particularly recommend Hundred Million Light Years by KaitO – it’s a wonderful seven minutes of twinkling explorations in noise. It’s nice to find a new source of music to get on with…
- ‘The essence of rabbit’ is a shrine to the Illustrators love of bunnies It includes some work by the lovely Denise Wilton and a mandala featuring hundreds of different rabbits
- Doctor Who dog K9 is to get his own spin-off TV series The only important part of this story is that there’s a picture of a revised K9 that I haven’t seen anywhere else on the web. Has anyone seen a larger version?
- ABC.com’s full episode streaming allows you to watch TV shows online for free Obviously the model is advertising funded. It’s a pretty sweet angle because they can stop people skipping adverts. I don’t think it’s the model that ‘wins’, but it should sit nicely as one of the two or three along with season pass downloads…
- Think Secret posts notes from Apple shareholders’ meeting Most notable for the last line in my opinion and the (albeit tiny) response to questions about Microsoft’s Media Centre – a territory I’ve said repeatedly that Apple should just be invading right about now…
- The BBC’s review of Mission: Impossible III contains this completely classic line… “The only real problem is Tom himself, who manifestly fails to convince as a human being. With his plasticised musculature and ten kilowatt grin, he’s less of an action hero and more of an action figure”
Author: Tom Coates
On Cyclops and the male gaze…
Okay. So here’s a quick theory that cropped up in my head a few years ago and I’ve never really got around to writing it down. It is, frankly, based on some pretty vague memories of some fast-and-loose reading of Laura Mulvey, Jacques Lacan and Sigmund Freud. It is also supposed to not be taken seriously, for those of you with no sense of humour about Psychoanalysis.
Cyclops is a super-hero and a member of the X-Men. His real name is Scott Summers. He’s been in and out of the team since the very beginning, when he was put in charge of the nascent group by the rather intimidating Charles Xavier. His power is to shoot massive red beams of force from his eyes, but this is a power he can’t control – apparently because of a knock to the head he suffered as a child. He wears a visor made of ‘ruby quartz’ that keeps these powers under control. He is obsessed with control, is repressed and constrained and probably has no sense of humour about Psychoanalysis either. Incidentally his father was abducted by aliens and became Corsair of the Starjammers, which is one of those things that could only happen in comics and has absolutely no bearing on the matter of discussion today. Before we get any further – here is a picture of Cyclops:
In the latest issues of one or other of the X-Men comic books there’s this whole bit about Emma Frost (telepath, professional sex-therapist and ex-bad-guy) doing some rather clumsy analysis of Scott and coming to the conclusion that his obsession with control and his problems with his abilities are all functionally built around a sense of inadequacy. The issue is entertaining, but not enormously convincing. I think I’ve got a better dumb theory for what the fictional character is about and why he is the way he is. And I’m going to tell it to you. In a minute.
The Death Star is an orbiting space station the size of a small moon. It has huge beams of light that come out of its front which are capable of destroying worlds. Here is a picture of the Death Star:
Now, what may or may not be obvious to some of you is that the Death Star resembles an enormous eyeball – a huge destructive eyeball in space – an eyeball with power very much like of Cyclops. Cyclops is – if you will – a humanised Death Star. But why do these images of destructive eyes recur? What’s the common foundation between the Death Star and the Super Hero and what can it tell us about teenagers, people and the act of looking?
Later psychoanalysts spends a fair amount of time talking about looking and the power relationships involved in looking. Laura Mulvey is the most obvious exponent of the idea of the Male Gaze in Film Theory, but it’s also more generally associated with Scopophilia and Voyeurism. Basically it comes down to a fairly simple set of concepts – that the act of looking is an act of power, or at least can be conceived of as such – that it objectifies the thing it looks at. And that’s objectification in its most literal sense – Lacanian Psychoanalysis argued that the Mirror stage at which a child could look at itself in a mirror and understand the relationship between the image and reality was in fact the first time it would have a sense of having a self at all – although having recognising it, this self would always be slightly distant and abstracted. The child created itself as an object in the mirror. It’s quite fun stuff.
Anyway, the act of looking can thus be conceived of as an act of imposing power upon someone, and – if you’re in the mood to – can be thought about as a phallic and penetrative act. It’s an act that has an effect on the thing it’s examining, and potentially a violent and invasive one.
So here’s my theory about Cyclops. His power is a metaphor for the kind of looking that appears in adolescence. It’s the kind of looking associated with sexual desire, and in the furrowing and explorative way that the male (and potentially female – I’m not a woman, I couldn’t say this for sure) eye roams and explores the body. It’s a kind of looking that – while perhaps not a form of violence in itself – could certainly be conceived of as a form of violence from the perspective of a teenage boy trying to deal with a whole range of apparently dirty feelings. Ashamed and uncomfortable with the thoughts racing through his head, and with the way his eyes catch and stick to other people’s bodies, Cyclops cannot deal with this newfound power and freaks out. The visor is an attempt to deal with and control the way he looks at people, and is a symbol of the profound and overwhelming repression of the sexual component of his id. His phallic looking has to be contained and restrained at all odds.
From the perspective of the teenage reader, of course, the character is nothing but a vehicle for exploring hero narratives – but the super-power is also surruptitiously providing a nicely mediated way for the reader to explore issues around their anxieties over emerging sexuality and physical power. Which is why it’s interesting to me that over the years, as the demographic for comic books has flattened and readers have become older, that Cyclops is continually a subject for re-examination and re-exploration. The problem is, for Cyclops to loosen up and become a more adult figure he’d have to sacrifice the wonderfully powerful premise of his character and somehow regain control of his abilities – probably in the most banal way possible, by somehow being able to look at the female figure with his visor off, subsequently leaving him ‘fixed’. But without this premise, he’s just one of a million other super-heroes with dumb powers that no one really cares about.
Anwyay, that’s my theory around Cyclops. I’d be fascinated to hear what you guys think. And not only about him, but about other super-heroes too. Clearly there’s an element of simple hero-fantasy wish-fulfilment going on in all of them. But are any of the other ones exploring teenagey issues in an abstracted, metaphorical way? To arms, both of my readers! Share your thoughts…
Links for 2006-05-03
- “TouchGraph of BBC TV/Radio Collaborators” A nice bit of work that someone’s already built on top of the BBC Programme Information dataset showing relatedness based on whether people have been on the same TV or radio show…
There’s a command in World of Warcraft that tells you exactly how long you’ve played with your active character and how long you’ve been playing at your current level. All you have to do is type /played into your chat prompt to find this information out. If you’re a regular player of the game, I think you should go and do that now. Don’t worry. We’ll wait. It’s sort of important.
I’ve had World of Warcraft for almost exactly six months now, which – coincidentally – is pretty much exactly how long I’ve been working at Yahoo. I bought the game in my week between jobs, while I was supposed to be recovering from the BBC and thinking around my personal projects. Buying WoW pretty much killed off that idea straight away. I think on one day I played from around nine am until three the following morning. The week evaporated in moments.
So I typed in /played over the weekend and I got back the figure of fifteen days and four hours for my main character – another nine hours for my second. Fifteen days solidly. That’s three hundred and seventy three hours of immersion in Nordrassil when I could have been doing something else, something more useful.
Let me give you some context there. Imagine playing WoW was my second job, which is how it has felt at times. Thinking in terms of eight hour days and five day work weeks, I’ve played the game for roughly two and a half months. And that’s on top of the day job. It’s no wonder that the weblog has slipped. More alarming still is that even though I’ve played it for that length of time, I’m still only level 51.
The question then, is how to stop. And not how to stop in the simple, “I’ve got a problem” kind of way. Let’s be clear – my day job has not suffered, my relationships are just as screwed up as they normally are, but no worse. But I’m starting to resent playing as much as I’m keen to get up to level sixty. I regularly get this sense of time passing just a little too fast, and even though I know that the time I spend playing WoW is not time that would immediately translatable into rebuilding Barbelith or learning how to develop in Rails, I’m increasingly aware that I want to stop wanting to play, even if I am prepared to let that process of detachment be a gradual one associated with some sense of completion.
Let’s pretend for a moment that the option to ‘just stop’ isn’t interesting or practical. I have this idea for a way to bring in some kind of honest scrutiny from outside about the time I spend playing WoW. It’s pretty simple, and also pretty cool. World of Warcraft has a set of APIs and can have mods developed for it using a language called Lua. There are a great many of these mods – mostly concerned with giving people better access to spells or dealing with the Auction Houses, but the ones I’m most interested in are the ones that fuel sites like Thottbot that capture information about what you’re doing in game and dump them to a central server – almost like a gaming version of last.fm – creating aggregate value out of the smallest of engagements. The aspect I’m most interested in is the fact that they can communicate outside the game to servers in the real world. Which makes me wonder why there doesn’t appear to be much in the way of weblog integration or posting mods.
What I want is a badge of some kind I can put on my site that exposes to the world how long I’ve been playing, and how long recently. I think maybe by putting this in public I can start to adjust my own perceptions of what is an appropriate amount of time to waste in this manner. Just a little badge – a strip or a button that I can deposit on the page that means I get occasional raised eyebrows and comments on IM or when I’m down the pub. Anything really that exposes me to the judgement of the masses. Does anyone know of such a plug-in? If I (grudgingly and a long time after the fad died) invoked the Lazyweb – could anyone write one?
(The thing that this whole experience has driven home to me is the difference between illusory value – fighting for artificial scarcity – and actual utility. I wouldn’t be feeling in the slightest bit ashamed of the way I played in game if I knew that one of the reasons I was doing it was the repopulation of the Amazon rainforests, or to help improve – or even perform – cancer screenings. It’s the sense of enjoyable work and creativity with no intellectual or physical byproduct either than a slight headache. There’s something fascinatingly wrong with that.)
Links for 2006-05-02
- poissons-cravates – a photoset featuring men and women wearing nothing but fish ties I don’t know what to say or think about this, except that it’s strange and interesting and entirely unsexual. Also the fish are cool. I wonder what it smelled like.
Links for 2006-05-01
- Colbert Lampoons Bush at White House Correspondents Dinner Stephen Colbert is increasingly obviously the most important man in America at the moment. “Colbert urged the Bush to ignore his low approval ratings, saying they were based on reality, ‘and reality has a well-known liberal bias’.”
- Mininova has the torrent of the Colbert White House Correspondents Dinner Found this courtesy of the Boingers, and looking forward to downloading it later in the day.
- A tiny video of some of the best bits of the Colbert speech I know I’m harping on this a bit, but it really is extraordinary.
Links for 2006-04-30
- I’m particularly loving this particular World of Warcraft simulator right about now You’ll need sound, and don’t expect too much, it’s really a one-note joke, although pretty funny if you’re on a popular server…
I’m in a filthy mood because Doctor Who sucked the big one, I missed the last two minutes of the episode (and hence the revision of a major classic character) and subsequently my laptop ran out of batteries and I lost a substantial post on revisions to some principles on social media. On the plus side, I’ve discovered a whole bunch of music that I love from Mr Biddulph that you can see being carefully collated over on last.fm, I’ve gone and bought myself some new clothes from Cult on Kingly Court and installed another gig of RAM in my lovely iMac. Also I’m knackered. I choose this moment to display this lovely picture of me as taken by Mr B to try and make me feel a bit better about life.
It's all about K9 on Doctor Who…
It’s really difficult to pretend that today is really about anything else than K9‘s reappearance on Doctor Who this evening. I’m a bit nervous about leaving the house at all, just in case the tube goes down or something and I don’t get back in time. I’m particularly worried that the kids won’t understand how cool and important the little box is, and that they’ll laugh at him. Something inside me would find that incredibly upsetting, I think.
Links for 2006-04-29
- Battlestar Galactica is to have a spin-off series named ‘Caprica’ set fifty years earlier and delving into the creation of the Cylons Frankly any new BSG is good BSG as far as I’m concerned, and I’ll be watching the series eagerly should it turn up anywhere British television…
- Why Content Publishers shouldn’t host weblogs… In light of some of the media organisation fuss about the possibility of giving users a self-expression space on their websites, I thought maybe it would be worth pointing people towards this thing I wrote in February 2003, which I still agree with…
- Last.fm isn’t just for humans Mr Biddulph talks about work he did when we were at the BBC, piping now-playing lists from 6music into last.fm to make a profile of their music listening preferences. Pretty cool, really. Very interesting.
- It’s nice to see plasticbag.org up in the top fifty of people’s ‘favourited’ weblogs on Technorati… The favourites feature is actually a surprisingly nice and clean little service that gets out of your way and just sort of works. Being able to filter posts by weblogs tagged with a word is a particularly nice way to attenuate your inbox…
- Wikipedia’s article on the Pirah√£ people has the most references to back it up, so I’m linking to it instead of all the other sites The Pirah√£ apparently have almost no way of counting whatsoever and appear to be unteachable in that regard. They also have incredibly limited kinship concerns, limited sense of colour, ridiculously simple pronouns and whistle their language
- Jon Rowett has a comprehensive write-up of last night’s “Beers and innovation” event I thought my colleague Mr Willison did pretty well in explaining the web. It was lovely to see Mr Loosemore, although I thought he struggled a bit in context. God knows what the chair was on… I think I misbehaved a fair amount…
- A powerpoint presentation I gave to the BBC in 2002 before I worked for them explaining why they shouldn’t host weblogs and how they could operate better with the ecosystem Best thing about these debates is that they’re so circular, you don’t even need to write anything new. I could give up thinking completely and still have a position I mostly believed in on most large organisational interactions with social media.