Foreword
Anne-Julie Raccoursier
(p. 4-7)
(© JRP|Ringier, Les presses du réel, Anne-Julie Raccoursier)
Time Action Vision, the title of which
plays on a programmatic song
by the punk group Alternative TV,
(1)
brings together twelve conversations
held by Christian Höller between
1996 and 2006 with theoreticians
and activists critically engaged in
the cultural field. Not only do they
trace a substantial part of Christian
Höller's editorial practice and his
range of interests over a period of
ten years, but they have also been
an important source of material for
his teaching in the field of Cultural Studies and on issues related
to
globalization and popular culture
in the CCC Postgraduate Study
Program
(2) at the Geneva University
of Art and Design [Haute école
d'art et de design – Genève].
Since its creation in 1999, the CCC
Program has been committed to
developing a learning community
that gathers teachers and students
around critical studies (
études
critiques). The program encourages
the theoretical and critical study of practices, institutions and discourses that constitute the
field of culture. It is engaged in a continuous dialogue with
an international network of artists, curators and academics.
As one of the program's numerous resources, Cultural Studies
has become an extremely stimulating model, particularly
for the definition of culture, fields of study and inventive
methodologies as they have developed since their origin at
the CCCS (Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies) in
Birmingham. The CCCS's approach of maintaining a strong
relationship with the time and political context in which
theory is being written, discussed and developed makes it a
useful tool in addressing the relationship between theory
and practice, and looking at art in relation to its contemporary
surroundings.
As stated by Cary Nelson, Paula A. Treichler and Lawrence
Grossberg, Cultural Studies, “unlike traditional humanism,
rejects the exclusive equation of culture with high culture
and argues that all forms of cultural production need to be
studied in relation to other cultural practices and to social
and historical structures. Cultural Studies is thus committed
to the study of the entire range of a society's arts, beliefs,
institutions, and communicative practices.”
(3) In this perspective,
then, culture encompasses ideas, attitudes, languages,
practices, institutions and structures of power, as well as
artistic forms, texts, architecture, mass-produced commodities
and so forth.
A fundamental characteristic at the core of Cultural Studies
is its interdisciplinary mode, which is present both in its
objects of study and in the wide range of methodologies and
cognitive or investigational tools adopted: “Its methodology,
ambiguous from the beginning, could best be seen as
bricolage …”
(4) But the main contributors to the field have
also always stressed that Cultural Studies is not just anything:
it is defined around a commitment and an engagement.
And although Cultural Studies is open to an ever-widening
scope of study, and constantly developing and being reevaluated,
it “shares a commitment to examining cultural
practices from the point of view of their intrication with, and
within, relations of power.”
(5)
The extension of the definition of culture, questions of
critical engagement, and issues of power and identity, as well
as historical and political contextualization, are a fantastic
resource for a place of education trying to create awareness
and a critical positioning. Stuart Hall's description of
the Birmingham project is a vivid model: “At Birmingham,
a central goal was to enable people to understand what
was going on, and especially to provide ways of thinking,
strategies of survival and resources of resistance.”
(6)
The expansion of the subjects of study and the development
of Cultural Studies in the Anglo-Saxon academic world
have been phenomenal, whereas it took a long time before
interest in the field grew in the French-speaking realm. Among
the many reasons for the persistent resistance to Cultural Studies to be found in the French context, even though—
paradoxically—French intellectuals have largely contributed
to its development, one could cite the scientific approach
toward the validation of theory, as well as the strong republican
and universalist models which are not ready to be
questioned and challenged by multiple voices and heterogeneous
methodologies. Cultural Studies has had the merit
of politicizing theory by directly questioning the institutions
of knowledge and the scientific measurement associated
with disciplines, and by opening a discussion about the politics
at large embodied in culture.
Taking as its starting point some of the authors and main
characteristics of Cultural Studies, this publication is “a
collection of conversations” that expands way beyond what
is usually defined as Cultural Studies and explores many
realms around contemporary cultural practices and theory.
At no point when the interviews were conducted was there
the intention to publish them together. They have been
part of Christian Höller's contributions to the Austrian and
German art magazines
springerin and
Texte zur Kunst, as well
as following his ongoing interest in issues of globalization,
popular culture and activism. The result is a rather heterogeneous
range of positions, references, works and discussions
recorded
over a period of ten years, which in this publication
enter into a dialogue with one another.
(...)
[ 1 ] The actual title of Alternative TV is “Action Time Vision,”
on
The Image Has Cracked – The First Album by Alternative TV,
Deptford Fun City Records, 1978.
[ 2 ] Since Fall 2008, the name of the Program is Research-Based
Master Programme CCC—Critical Curatorial Cybermedia.
[ 3 ] “Cultural Studies: An Introduction, ” in Cary Nelson, Paula
A. Treichler, Lawrence Grossberg (eds.),
Cultural Studies.
New York/London: Routledge 1992, p. 4.
[ 4 ] Ibid., p. 2.
[ 5 ] Ibid., p. 3 (quotation of Tony Bennett).
[ 6 ] S tuart Hall, “The Emergence of Cultural Studies and the Crisis of the Humanities,” in
October 53 (1990), p. 22.