6.11.19

Putting the home and the self under the hammer Pt. II

A system can only see what it can see. It cannot see what it can't see. Nor can it see that it cannot see what it can't see.  Niklas Luhmann
Warehouse logistics topography
Travelling in different countries one encounters the ever-same standardized landscapes of shopping malls, car parks and highways, airports, golf courses, and exclusive eco-holiday resorts. These spaces of travel, consumption and exchange have become ‘non-places’, ruthlessly homogenised. (Marc Augé) Once it was thought that infrastructure existed to service human dwellings. By now cities and suburbs are like a byproduct of the global just-in-time-logistics warehouse. Human housing appears like a side effect of a world-wide logistics system. (Keller Easterling) The human being is the annex to this machine. The order of things seems to be upside down, disorientation is the result in an out-of-control system. Territorial policies of neoliberal restructuring are often made in elsewhere land and dictate the interaction between space and society. In the absence of spatial justice, people and biodiversity are being expelled from the landscape to squeeze the maximum out of a terrain. The highest bidder takes all and wins over spatial justice. (Edward Soya)

The right to the city
H. Lefebvre wanted "to reclaim the city as a co-created space—a place for life detached from the growing effects that commodification and capitalism have had over social interaction and the rise of spatial inequalities in worldwide cities throughout the last two centuries." (source) Till today social movements assert a right to their place. After the formal right to mobility was gained, the right to stay would have to be one of the rights of the 21st Century. Displacement by the highest bidder is taking place worldwide. "Your luxury is our  displacement" (source)
Bottom up-created shared spaces, especially with people-centred urban designs that measure up to the Human Scale (J. Gehl) are magnets for cosmopolitans and creatives globally. In many cities local people have to flee or are expelled by mass tourism, high rents and exorbitant prices. 'Gentrification' is the expulsion and replacement of one strata of resident by a more cashed up group for the sake of profit. Art, culture and beautification are fuelling this process of "urban colonialism." This valorisation process of the invisible hand of the market starts again on a higher level of the growth spiral.
The "insatiable appetite for Indigenous land and resources" is not confined to events of a colonial past. (source) Settler cultures with their mono-cultural baggage of domesticated species deprive bio-diversity of the right to existence. The multitude of live on spaceship Earth is squeezed out of their homes and finally kicked off the planet.



Overtourism
Overtourism sets in when tourists do not want to visit the site anymore because the place is ruined for both locals and visitors. When it has been consumed - it is time to move on to the next location. The Gold Coast for example derives its fame from its manufactured identity 'tall buildings by the sea'. 'Unattractive and overpopulated' the coast has 'lost its mojo'. (source) Many cities and natural sites are suffocating on their own attractiveness.
Intensification, speed and deregulation serve to colonise the night. The 24/7 parties are thumping away il/legally. Musical events are "vast walk-in advertising experiences...they only exists because of a branding imperative." (source) Fuelled by petrol, speed, bright lights, and pyrotechnics the event areas send neighborhood stakeholders packing.

The drive through ' tourist space'  - Scant in man-made wonders
In the absence of any wo/man-made wonders that tourists are drawn to, Bellingen offers 'the drives' through pastoral and natural landscapes. The remnants of 'pristine landscape have been cultured for eons by the first inhabitants. The cultural landscape of settlers is the technosphere. Cultural constructs like the Big Banana at Coffs Harbour, or more accurately The Big Blueberry and extractive industries of the Big Quarry (forestry, mining, water) are geographical high points. The planned Great Koala National Park is expected to boost biodiversity and tourism.

“Not TV or illegal drugs but the automobile has been the chief destroyer of American communities.” ― Jane Jacobs, Dark Age Ahead

Mobile sprawl
The drive is of course the main mode by which the landscape is experienced via the ac windscreen. If one has negotiated the small drive-through town with logging and gravel trucks rushing through and survived the diesel fumes whilst shopping or having a cup. Then it is the wide open roads that are yearning to be widened and become four lane highways. Road construction and congestion are an ongoing feature of private mobility. Roadkill of local wildlife and fast food garbage line the edges. Locals crying out for more parking and more roads and less potholes could easily be satisfied by allowing corporations to fill the holes with their logos.
SUVs plough their way through heritage-listed rainforest and along beaches. Lookouts and viewing platforms lure visitors out of their internal combustion engines and show them where to look. Driving routes to the Gleniffer Reserves picnic spots are leading to the water catchment area which are heavily frequented and have no toilets. Interpretive Signage directs motorists through the Gleniffer Valley elaborating on Gumbaynggirr Homeland and “settler common sense” history.

"Where the bloody hell are ya... Come live our Philausophy
'Philausophy' is the latest $38 million advertising campaign of Tourism Australia that relies entirely on ordinary Australians and the beauty of the landscape. The dreaming of an all year-round tourist season with plane loads of fly-in fly-out tourists from the Asia-Pacific zone coming to squeeze the last koala or shoot wombats might turn into a nightmare. Deep cruise ship ports, huge airports and self contained resorts run by o.s. interests.  Bakers, butchers and supermarkets would disappear and one could choose from the largest variety of souvenirs, proudly made in China. In a world playground populated by theme parks, disneyfication and hyperreality the tourist is mostly not able or willing to distinguish reality from a simulation of reality. They desire simulation as the created atmosphere can give them" more reality than nature can" (source).


The touristic gaze and imaginary shape and mediate our knowledge of and desires about the rest of the planet. (Franklin and Crang 2001 PDF )
Masses on the move
Tourism is “one of the greatest population movements of all time” (PDF) Once explorers 'discovered' far flung locations in the attempt of empire building for their masters. The wealthy landed gentry in Europe had their Grand Tour.  Then Thomas Cook commodified "mass travel" for Brits and the rest is history. Western tourists flying to 'sunny locations' or cultural heritage sites changed the entire fabric of societies. Under the new economic conditions of globalisation the masses on the move that are with or without resources are part of the imperialism then and now. "The seemingly innocent here-and-now of tourist–host interactions is rooted in broader historical trajectories of travel, colonization, global inequalities and privilege." (PDF)
"In this young, mostly white, ahistorical, neoliberal utopia of the imagination, anyone can go anywhere."( source
Words can be like tiny arsenic capsules; they are swallowed unnoticed, they seem to have no effect, and after some time the poison effect is there. (own translation)  Victor Klemperer, Lingua Tertii Imperii LTI
Framing semiotic landscapes of the self
Through a schemata of interpretation of events and themes we construct meaningful patterns. A system of 'pigeon holes' /slots ( M. Minsky) activates mental maps or neural networks of associations that make up one's knowledge and feeling towards the world. "Schemata of interpretation"  “The schema concept refers to cognitive structures of organized prior knowledge, abstracted from experience with specific instances; schema guide the processing of new information and the retrieval of stored information.”(source) Embodied cognitive structures and interpretation patterns make sense of the self and the world. "Words not only highlight individual concepts, but also specify a certain perspective from which the frame is viewed.' Individuals, groups, and societies engage in frame building. Mass media, politics, advertisement and voci populi. (V. Klemperer)
If we manage to persuade a Democrat every day to use a word we have given him, we can win. Michela Murgia

The frames, or semantic networks have a plasticity. The coherent structure of reasoning, language, memory can be re-framed within the cerebral localization. The recipient's internal structures of the mind can be changed. Agenda setting mainstream media, political campaigns, ubiquitous ads and think tanks flood our minds. Time poor and desperate to reduce complexity, we lack the resources to stop, filter and evaluate our resonance to the information and pictorial avalanche. 'Advertisers ' operating with the power of the narrative reduce complexity for us and bind the message to our emotions. The in- and exclusion mechanism of our filter (reframing) and the resulting actions are not always rational. (source)



Story-telling fiction 
The spaces of the landscape and mind travelled through here without CO2 mileage have aimed to demonstrate that language determines thought and that linguistic categories limit and determine cognitive categories and actions. (source) The grand narrative of (neoliberal) economic theory might just turn out to be another story-telling fiction giving legitimacy to the present governance regime.
The beautification of places and its representation on social media has become an integral part of driving the growth machine."The aestheticisation of the economy delivers the motivational fuel. We could say that homo aestheticus has become homo oeconomicus’s best friend." (source)

Incalculable risks
Instead of hastening into more business as usual, one could stop and examine the underlying presuppositions of life.  At the moment we are sawing off the branch we are sitting on in order to sell it. The happy few benefit from the destruction of our life support system the biosphere. There is a lot of unfinished business: Extinction, Hothouse Earth, confronting the silence of the colonial past, inequality, depriving future biota, the 'collateral damage' of mass mobility, the withering of rights and the nation state and a voiceless nature. At the moment we are steering head on into incalculable catastrophic risks on a global scale. (source)

Transformation
“To secure a sustainable future, we must change how we live. [This] entails major transformations in the ways our global society functions and interacts with natural ecosystems.”(source) The possibility of visualising a future at all, a will to care for the self and country. Naming a telos, free speech (parrhesia) and the refusal to react to pressures.

Not in our name!
In various cities (Barcelona, Hamburg, Venice, etc) people resist "turning the whole city into a brand for the benefit of wealthy residents, business elites and tourists."  Not in our name! is jamming the gentrification machine. (source)



Putting the home and the self under the hammer Pt.I 

Links:
Pierre Bourdieu and Loic Wacquant, NewLiberalSpeak, 2001 Radical Philosophy

Adrian Franklin and Mike Crang, The trouble with tourism and travel theory? 2001 PDF

Victor Klemperer, Language of the Third Reich, LTI: Lingua Tertii Imperii. Continuum Impacts. ( A Philologist's Notebook")

Andreas Reckwitz: “Creativity has become a kind of performance pressure”, The Goethe-Institut interview 2013

Spratt, David; Dunlop, Ian. (2019). 'The Third Degree: Evidence and implications for Australia of existential climate-related security risk (PDF) (Report). Breakthrough - National Centre for Climate Restoration.

Thurlow, C., and Jaworski, A. (2011). Tourism discourse: Languages and banal globalization.

Vogl, J. (2019). (History of) Economic Knowledge Freed from Determinism. Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics, 12(1), 73-92. https://doi.org/10.23941/ejpe.v12i1.409 (PDF)

Rich Things: How Tourism, Sneakers, and Museums Make the Economy of Enrichment, Interview with Luc Boltanski and Arnaud Esquerre, 2019, 032c

The fall of Prague: ‘Drunk tourists are acting like they’ve conquered our city’ The Guardian, 2019

Gold Coast has 'lost its mojo' as development and population boom throws character into question, The Guardian 2019

Climate crisis: 11,000 scientists warn of ‘untold suffering’, The Guardian 2019


Flooded Venice had tourists taking selfies and residents in tear, The Washington Post, 2019


Images:
Fibre structure over water, EU
Make Art not War, public mural, EU
Car poster, AU
Tourist gaze, EU
Pixel man, street art,  Berlin
Homo sapiens skeleton, church installation, Adel Abdessemed, Berlin
Thylacine hide, EU

Update Nov. 2020:

Ecotourism fans may be in it for the social posts

Justin M. Beall, B. Bynum Boley, Adam C. Landon, Kyle M. Woosnam. What drives ecotourism: environmental values or symbolic conspicuous consumption? Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 2020; 1 DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2020.1825458

Update Feb. 2021
Bellingen Shire branding strategy seeks to capture the spirit of our place. Gumbaynggirr people: ""Truth-telling is what will define our spirit," Bernard said, citing the need for acknowledgement of the old wrongs, like the massacre in Fernmount, the destruction of songlines, the felling of ancient trees.There's also the fact that we have a plaque dedicated to the first white child born in Bellingen, but nothing commemorating the strength of the Indigenous women who have birthed children in the valley for millennia." Bellingen Courier, 6.2.2021

Bellingen Shire Branding Project

1.10.19

Putting the home and the self under the hammer. Pt. I


Good fiction’s job is to comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable. - David Foster Wallace

Feel real good stories
There is a big market for things that 'Make You Feel Real Good'. From early on a release of happiness hormones: Endorphins, dopamine and serotonin allows one to experience a rush of comfort. In a media environment of daily bad news, 'Happy News Stories' and feel good narratives give one a warm heart or an Orwellian  'bellyfeel'. Even the official Australian Bureau of Statistics is "putting on a big pair of rose tinted glasses" about inequality in Australia and "is crafting  a 'good story'".

Bellingen is a small town presented as a "bohemian town that is heaven on earth". Nestled near the Promised Land in pristine rainforest, it "is so abundantly verdant and fruitful; it literally drips with milk and honey. It's a place so special the fortunate locals...call it home." A vibrant community of artisans, artists and farmers live in "the prettiest town of New South Wales." (source)
Graffiti as advertisement?
Growth: The 'Sky's the limit'
Every place is aiming to get a slice of the fastest growing economic sector in the world, the tourist market. (pdf) N.Y., Paris, Venice, Bali, big or small, all engage in place marketing in a very competitive world market to attract more visitors. The growth imperative is the driving force. Despite knowing about  'The Limits to Growth' for many decades, the all-powerful paradigm of economic growth at all costs has become a 'mental infrastructure' by now. Habitual 'business as usual' and territorial expansion set the tracks for seemingly unending revenue streams.

Place marketing
'Putting the place on the map', or visibility in the attention economy is achieved by advertising campaigns. Branding, e.g. ' I ❤ NY', or copycat  'I love Bellingen Shire' should give the site a unique stamp. Merchants and designers are hawking the 'spirit of the place' in noisy PR campaigns. Iconography helps the designers to 'burn' 'iconic images' of locations into our minds.  This reputation management is aims to grab our attention, shape perceptions and win the 'hearts and minds' of prospective visitors and investors.

Hear the good news about the shire
In a setting of rural ghost towns and cheap flights small towns have to 'spin a lot of yarn' in order to be heard in the global cacophony. With the devolution of government and the free fall of regional and local news outlets, some councils resort to taking things into their own hands with the help of ratepayer fees. Bundaberg Council for example has a free 'good news' website to showcase their shire. Mainstream local media sees its market share withering even further and call it "propaganda masquerading as news". (source)

We are open for business
Various stakeholders curate contemporary conscious sense making tools to relay their message.  Economic chambers and councils release their corporate communication slogans, mission and vision statements.  In a nutshell: "We are open for business". Corporate and local storytelling usually entails founder stories, local heroes and impeccable goods and services. The added value of emotional bonds and mind shares appears participatory: 'we are all in the same boat'.

The good news conversation
Attempts are made to facilitate a mutual dialogue on social media and other means with ‘homo narrans’ to boost popularity. Both corporate bodies and local government aim to tightly control the 'conversation'  to strengthen the corporate brand and the public–private partnership. The stories, brand, image, culture and identity are tightly orchestrated in the hands of these agents. The “who we are and what we stand for” engages feelings and appeals to emotional bonds. Negative stories are a no-go zone, unless of course they could assist in gaining more funding. Real estate, the service industry the culture and leisure industry as well as the primary sector are fully behind an expanding market. This 'business ontology' is a global phenomenon. (Mark Fisher, 2009)

Locals as ambassadors for the Bellingen or Byron Bay brand
Locals also express their identity and pride of place via public storytelling on multimedia. 'I Love Bello Shire' pledges abound with beautiful jolly people in a "Happy Place". Dream locations of the mum-and-dad-type investors offer short-term rentals that are circumventing regulated hotel accommodation. Happy selfies with sunsets of residents and visitors alike are selling the dream. All join in the choir of hippie-surfer-wellness alternative-lifestyle destinations song.  Pampered bodies and psyches are cocooning themselves in the comfort zone of the 'Bellingen Bubble'. Enterprising mumpreneurs sell an idealised instagrammable lifestyle. The home and family life becomes a cash cow. Dollhouses with housekeepers demonstrate that the slow-living, laid-back magazine lifestyle of white affluenza is possible for all. As a Byron Bay resident puts it: "I know I live in this absurd white privileged bubble".
Other trendsetters, such as influencers also endorse the dolce vita lifestyle, locations and cultural identity via the Dark Social. It is the labour of a staged cultural authenticity, of an imagined community which is to be consumed by tourists and locals alike. Credibility is also achieved by citing celebrities or noteworthy people who live or have lived in the area.


Experience: One wants what one wants
City refugees seek to escape the rat race and congestion of city life and immerse themselves in the "willing suspension of disbelief“ (S.T. Coleridge). Getting away from it all promises to be free of care, taking a vacation from responsibilities.  The offer of family amusements funnel the groups, declared to be consumers, to offers of consumption. The hunger for new sensations, preferably curated experiences, is insatiable. They are pampered by a precariat that is un(der)paid in an unregulated service industry.  Entertainment is performed by 'authentic' song and dance events. The self enhancement in  'joycamps' often constitutes a prolongation of work.

Hominid and their best best friend on holiday

Mimicry
The imagination and practices of the tourist or recreational consumer are always in-formed and pre-figured by what others do, say or post as text or media.  The must see, must do, must do a selfie there is established in a structure of social expectations. A hunger is cultured for holiday locations that are 'hot' on social media, company brochures or TV programmes - the actual location is secondary.  The shared images trigger a reaction to travel to that specific location.  "Based on their photos I'm really willing to come here." They are snap-happy on semi-automatic. Travellers are eager to complete must-do lists of must-see locations before 'kicking the bucket'.  The Earth becomes a mere passe-partout for yet another selfie in mass society.  In the end everyone demonstrates their belonging, their habitus of consumption. The 'I wuz here' - pictorial graffiti literally leaves one's mark on the world and on the other minds. The gaze of the Other sets off a new mimetic chain reaction in language, thoughts and actions in the world.

Putting the home and the self under the hammer Pt. II 




Links:
The Coast of Utopia, Carina Chocano,Vanity Fair 2.7.2019 (Byron Bay)
Mental Infrastructures: How Growth Entered the World and Our Souls , Harald Welzer, 2011
Imagined Communities, Benedict Anderson, 1983

Updates:
Been to Dubai lately? It’s a city where top-down placemaking serves its political masters, Julian Bolleter, The Conversation, 6.3.2020

Street art or graffiti: The erasure of a glossy tourist trap via the obliteration of made-for-social-media murals is an inherently radical reclamation of public space. Particularly in a city that has actively commodified this environment and uses it as a means to promote the cultural identity of Melbourne as a tourist destination for those wanting to experience “creative ambience”. The Guardian, 12022020


Bellingen Shire Branding Project 2020 - 2021 

'Bellingen Shire branding strategy' in action, Bellingen Courier, 6.2.2021


Images:
1 Graffiti, EU
2 'Graffiti', Bellingen, NSW
3 One Market Place, Manly, Sydney
4 Buy things - poster, Berlin, de
5 Hominid and their best best friend, street art, Berlin, de
6 Poster, EU

 

1.9.19

Gleniffer quilts - a cover for the bed and a landscape cover

Sandy Corry quilt
Another Gleniffer Quilt and Craft Fair took place in Gleniffer Hall. A large array of quilts was on display. The star of the show was the 'quilting queen' wearing her diamond tiara and demonstrating her 'doodling' on the sewing machine. Sandy Corry's work has a very haptic quality. Here are some of her pieces:
Click to enlarge pictures

Meat on the BBQ and the car park was full. Years ago the non-quilting crafts had a greater representation. A gang of unregistered trail-bikes demanded attention and disrupted the peace, as it is common in this area.

S.Corry quilt

The landscape cover setting
The Never Never Creek flows behind the Gleniffer Hall and a very small church. The gardens of the buildings 'reject the local environment' like most Australian gardens do. Lichen covered fences frame foreign grasses, known as lawns. A patchwork of Chinese camellia plants were planted in all colours from pink to red. The Japanese azaleas keep to this popular colour scheme too, a comforter landscape. An agave from central Mexico is tended to in a flower pot.


Outside the 'cage', trees drip with epiphytes. Tongue orchids (Dockrillia linguiformis) crawl along branches and pencil orchids (Dendrobium schoeninum) fall like stiff sticks from the tree. Shade!

Nearby stands a very large and lonely red cedar (Toona ciliata). A host for aerophytes and fauna. Did the cedar industry overlook this 'red gold'? Soon after European arrival the cedar forests lining all major rivers were eliminated by an extractive colonial industry. Cedar getter gangs stripped their way from Sydney through all rivers, right up to Queensland.
"An entire species of tree was just about wiped out on the NSW coast during the first 100 years of settlement." (source
The cutters would float the 'filet' pieces down the rivers to go to merchants in Sydney or England. The indiscriminate removal of the timber made way for the settlers/ pastoralists.


Most texts (pdf) of the 'In Search of Red Gold' stress the pioneering spirit of the frontier mentality in a people-free El Dorado. The First Nation Peoples, in this case the Gumbaynggirr of the Billengen River are invisible in the narratives.

15.2.19

The Bellinger River Snapping Turtles déjà vu


The Bellinger River Snapping Turtles were almost wiped out in 2015. What is the state of health of their home catchment today ?

"Water quality testing on the Bellinger, Kalang and Never Never Rivers earlier in January found elevated phosphate and low levels of dissolved oxygen at 9 out of 15 sites.

A combination of low rainfall, hot weather and nutrient run-off from fertilizers and animal waste (including humans).

The Australian standard is for available phosphate levels to be under 0.06mg/L but water testing near Gleniffer Hall on Tuesday revealed current levels are 0.37mg/L, which is six times higher." (Post-holiday season 'tourist drive' without toilets?)

Riverwatch testing finds high phosphate levels, The Bellingen Shire Courier-Sun, 14.02.2019
Bellinger Landcare Inc

Image:
Adolf Von Hildebrand, Boy drinking, 1870/1873