[iDC] What is Left? / What Does a Distributed Politics Look-control in/through haptic spaces

Thomas Amundrud tamundrud at yahoo.com
Thu Sep 20 03:47:01 UTC 2007


Hi y'all,

Just joined as this topic may be of interest in my forthcoming PhD program, in addition to my personal longstanding interest in pursuing egalitarian solutions. I'm far too busy with other projects to adequately comment on this thread myself. However, I thought I might pass on this recent article from CTheory, for those of you not subscribed to it already, as it seems directly relevant. Apologies then for any repetition.

Thomas Amundrud


----



 The Coils of a Serpent
 Haptic Space and Control Societies
 ==================================


 ~William Bogard~


 A haptic dream
 --------------

 I am in a room. No... I am in a room, my front room, sitting in a
 chair, my chair. No... Yes, my chair. At my computer, working. I am
 not afraid. They said how real this would feel, that you feel like
 yourself, and you do, really... but no... I reach out, pick up my
 cup, it has weight, substance, it is hot from the coffee. Its surface
 is smooth and hard. I feel it in my hand, no, it's pressing against
 my hand. No...

 I stand, I mean, I feel I get up. Because I stand, I feel like I get
 up.... Yes... The suit I am wearing, feel I am wearing, pushes in/out
 on me. I can feel my back tighten, my feet flex, my forehead crease,
 my brain dull behind my eyes... yes...no, I am (am I?) feeling it
 tighten around me. It grips me... no... A wave of pressures on me,
 inside me. I feel I am being wrapped from the inside, a coil pushing
 out. No... no... It's just me. They said it would feel this real, the
 hardness of things, the textures. I am not afraid. I feel my weight
 and size shift as I move. Strange sense of being outside myself...
 the sense that I am elsewhere, or nowhere. In a room experiencing all
 this, tightly wrapped up. Yes, in a room, my room, wrapped under my
 skin.

 My computer blinks and I start. I touch its keys, and they feel my
 fingers and push back on them. I enter a number I have been given,
 no... my computer enters the number into my fingers. Suddenly
 everything changes. I am back in my room, at the computer, my
 computer, at work. Nothing has changed. Yes. I am not afraid. They
 said it would feel this real.


      "The coils of a serpent are more complex than the burrows of a
      molehill."

 Deleuze places this sentence at the very end of "Postscript on the
 Societies of Control" in a section contrasting the socio-technical
 "programs" of control and disciplinary societies.[1] He writes that
 we have learned a few things about the telos of the disciplines, but
 much remains to discover about the forces that control societies make
 us serve. What is clear is that a strategic shift in power relations
 is underway.

 This shift can be framed historically and economically as a problem
 of capitalist governance involving the limits of enclosure as a tool
 of capitalist accumulation. Disciplinary institutions, like the
 factory or the school, physically enclose diverse populations and
 force their unification. The confinement of labor within the factory
 and factory-city gave Capital much power over the accumulation
 process in the 18th and 19th centuries. It also encountered the
 resistance of bodies to concentrated containment and regimentation.
 In part, what Foucault calls the modern "crisis of the disciplines"
 reflects a move by Capital to modify disciplinary forms of enclosure,
 to counter the resistance they provoke and intensify the accumulation
 process.

 The disciplines reached their height early in the 20th century. After
 WWII, information technologies make it possible to release
 populations more into the open. Rather than pack them into closed
 spaces, Capital begins a new strategy to disperse them. Network
 controls, like remote surveillance and electronic passwords, allow it
 to keep its grip on bodies, in fact, to extend and tighten that grip.
 The new controls promise to counter the resistance of populations to
 confinement by instituting a kind of mobile and free form of
 enclosure. The forces of accumulation, exploiting the capacities of
 openness and accessibility in networks, begin to follow you on the
 road and, as we have learned in the last few decades, turn "on the
 road" into work, home into work, play into work, the whole planet
 into a flexible, controlled space of work.

 It is possible that all this means the end of enclosure as a
 capitalist program and the advent of post-disciplinary, even
 post-capitalist, society. More likely, as suggested by Deleuze's
 analysis, is that rigid mechanisms of enclosure are giving way to
 supple ones that have lost none of their power to constrict the body.
 The new mechanisms can position and fix the body independently of its
 location. They expand its territory but more tightly control the
 information parameters within which it functions. These controls
 range from the mundane (remote electronic surveillance -- are you
 where you're supposed to be?) to the extreme (genetic engineering --
 you're always there in advance). These are still forms of enclosure,
 but the walls of the factory give way to the permeating "spirit" of
 the corporation, the accumulation of things shifts to the
 accumulation of information, and networked bodies replace the spatial
 concentration of populations.

 One of these supple technologies of enclosure is called haptics, from
 the Greek for the ability to make contact with or to fasten. Unlike
 information control that requires a confined population (discipline),
 or a dispersed population under passive surveillance (such as CCTV),
 haptic technologies respond to the active body and supply it with
 tactile feedback. The program of haptics is simple: simulate the
 body's feelings of manipulating objects in the real world
 (data-gloves that react with vibratory stimuli to users' handling of
 simulated objects are a classic example of a haptic technology).
 Haptic control is one of many "coils of a serpent" forming on the
 horizon of control societies, intensive information networked in ways
 to manage and counter the body's most basic capacity to resist, its
 sensitivity to its own power.

 Because it is tactile control, haptics reminds us that "coils of a
 serpent" is not a metaphor for Deleuze. Control societies are not
 coils in name only, but literally. They are not analogues, but
 isomorphs of each other. They do not resemble each other, nor is one
 a model for the other. They are different concrete assemblages with
 different contents, but they are assembled and work in the same ways,
 specifically as tactile controls. Likewise, disciplinary societies do
 not resemble burrows of molehills, they are distinct assemblages
 organized by the same abstract machine, one that can be described as
 serial or optical control.

 Coils and burrows are apparatuses of capture; in burrows or coils,
 either way, you are caught. Burrows, however, are rigid, arborescent
 structures, assembled as series of confined spaces or interiors.
 Foucault has shown us how, in disciplinary societies, you move from
 one interior to the next, from home, to school, to work, back
 home.[2] These interiors are constructed as closed "optical" spaces
 and their occupants placed under passive observation. Each interior
 partitions space and orders time according to its own method -- the
 factory, the household, the classroom -- but you always move
 sequentially between them.

 Serpents' coils, on the other hand, are meshes rather than series.[3]
 A more flexible form of enclosure than burrows, they adjust to the
 body as it moves and wherever it moves. Serpent's coils are networks
 of modulating pressures. They contract and release in waves,
 substituting for control of the body's optical environment the
 regulation of its tactile milieu. Because they enclose the body at
 its surface, effectively reducing the interior to the body itself,
 coils form a kind of mobile confinement. Surrounding you as you go
 out the door and into the open, they go where you go, or stay where
 you stay. With coils, control is more intensive, enclosure more
 supple, and confinement to fixed interiors redundant.

 Control societies, Deleuze writes, are organized by codes. Codes are
 flexible systems of capture in ways that fixed enclosures are not.
 They can be quickly and easily reconfigured to regulate access to
 networks. He uses Guattari's example of a passcode that allows you
 into certain areas of a city at given times of day, but can just as
 easily be changed to lock you out. Embedded today in technologies
 like barcoded ID cards, and tomorrow in your genetically modified
 cells, codes eventually aim to control capitalist accumulation at the
 haptic or tactile level.

 In a sense, we could assert that this is still discipline, updated to
 new conditions of accumulation. In fact, control societies simulate
 disciplinary societies -- they have all their "feel" without their
 walls. Not just discipline by means of optical control, but by direct
 adjustments of the sensitivity of the body, its capacities to affect
 and be affected. It is hard to imagine control societies without the
 extensive preparations made for them by disciplinary societies. But,
 as Deleuze says, the coils of a serpent are more complex than
 burrows, and if we have learned something of the complexity of the
 disciplines, we are still struggling to understand and resist
 societies of control.


      Everything touches everything.

                -- Jorge Luis Borges

      Reach out and touch someone.

                -- Old AT&T advertising slogan

 If the body's optical space was a target of disciplinary
 societies[4], haptic control is about its tactile space. Unlike
 vision, which is concentrated in the head, tactility is distributed
 throughout the body (including the eyes), in sheets of varying
 intensities. It is not one of the five senses (touch), but a capacity
 of all of them, a quality of openness or sensitivity. Tactility
 involves not only so-called extero-perception (perception directed
 outward to the external environment), but also proprioception, the
 body's internal sense of itself and its required efforts to move or
 resist movement.[5] It belongs to the body's complex web of nerves
 and muscles and joints. Like Taussig said of the nervous system,
 tactility is that "which passes through us and makes us what we
 are."[6] It is, quite literally, an affect that opens or closes us to
 becoming.

 Haptic technologies are not new -- body armor and clothing control
 the tactile space between the body and its environment. Today, like
 everything else, these controls are being informated. In network
 society, Borges's haptic world in which "everything touches
 everything" becomes an engineering project to produce digital
 environments that have exactly the "right feel" and can command the
 body directly. McLuhan noted years ago that information media are
 tactile systems.[7] They demand not just the eyes and ears of the
 viewer, but the intensive involvement of the whole body. The medium
 is not just the message but the massage, a technology of the
 flesh.[8] Reach out and squeeze someone.

 The common view of haptic control is that it simulates the sense of
 touch, but the larger goal is to create "immersive" environments that
 synthesize visual, auditory, and olfactory messages with tactile or
 vibratory information, to create so-called "multi-media" interfaces
 that produce "complete" sensory experiences. The simulation of touch
 is simply one step in a project governed by an integrative model of
 sensitivity rather than a traditional, oppositional model of the
 senses. In the haptic model, the eye may have tactile as well as
 optical functions, as a surface of pressure or heat, for instance. It
 is very difficult, some say impossible, to construct complete and
 convincing tactile interfaces -- virtual reality systems simulate
 visual or sound information passably well, but the problems of
 engineering virtual objects to feel real are of another order of
 magnitude altogether. Object-images on computer screens can look
 real, but their texture and weight are hard to capture with existing
 technology. Incomparably more difficult is reproducing a complete
 haptic space, which includes the felt movements over time of a
 subject in relation to his or her manipulation of virtual objects.
 Research, however, is moving in this direction.

 Putting the difficulty in terms of the distinction between passive
 and active touch, inventor Kenneth Salisbury observes:

      Unlike our other sensory modalities, haptics relies on action to
      stimulate perception... to sense the shape of a cup we do not
      take a simple tactile snapshot and go away and think about what
      we felt. Rather, we grasp and manipulate the object, running our
      fingers across its shape and surfaces in order to build a mental
      image of a cup.[9]

 To get a convincing sense of touch in a virtual world through a
 haptic interface, the manipulation of the object must occur over
 time, in a synthetic world still with spatial and sensory continuity,
 so that tactile memory flows over time to build up a complex dynamic
 haptic image of the object under examination. To accomplish this, the
 haptic is collocated in virtual space with the visual, auditory,
 olfactory, etc., so that interactions confirm each other for the user
 and produce a realistic, embodied experience.[10]

 Current haptic interfaces generate vibratory and force feedback to
 the user, and convey sense information about objects and their
 surfaces in virtual space. They must be designed to react to users'
 actions that are themselves prompted by haptic cues in the user's
 virtual environment, in order to reproduce, for instance, the feeling
 of grasping and working with real objects. In a word, they are
 feedback systems -- users react to tactilely induced sensations with
 further manipulations of virtual objects, in a continuous, controlled
 loop. A research paper on cognitive computing notes:

      These sensations can be programmed to communicate information
      about the occurrence of certain events. Such systems are known
      as haptic cueing systems. Haptic cueing is analogous to the
      audio-visual messaging system used in conventional graphical
      user interfaces where the user's attention is diverted to a
      certain event or region of the display through audio-visual
      cues. It presents a simple yet effective messaging approach.
      .... Results [of experiments with haptic devices] have shown
      that tactile cueing based systems for conveying spatial features
      are an effective tool in communicating spatial information to
      individuals who are blind.[11]

 Haptic interfaces simulate the feel of objects, their texture,
 surface resistance, bulk, edges and gaps. Current applications
 include locomotion devices for navigating virtual worlds (updated
 treadmills), orthopedic equipment, touch-screen technologies,
 tele-operators (remotely controlled robots), diagnostic tools for
 measuring or producing pressure and resistance, density, heat, and
 other intensive parameters, and, of course, computer games that
 provide gamers with various kinds of vibrational or positional
 feedback.[12] Some of the first modern haptic technologies were
 developed in avionics to simulate the vibrations on aircraft wings,
 conveyed as information to the pilot's hand on the joystick. These
 early tools were in many ways the precursors of modern telesurgical
 instruments, which assist remote doctors to feel, as well as see and
 hear, the images of distant bodies.[13] Today there are uses of
 haptics for sex, which would augment visual and aural with tactile
 forms of erotic stimulation. Pornography, not surprisingly, is a
 force of innovation in haptic control. If the use of cyber-gloves to
 simulate the feel of objects in virtual space offers us a glimpse of
 the future of tactile control, the vibrator does the same in the
 electronic evolution of sex toys, where convincing tactility is the
 Holy Grail. There is even an old research and marketing designation
 for this branch of haptics -- teledildonics.[14]

 There is a complex relation between haptic control and what Deleuze
 calls "dividuation," the logic of control societies.[15]
 Individuation, the logic of disciplinary societies, is external
 division of a mass into distinct, numbered (or signed) entities.
 Dividuation, on the other hand, is the internal division of entities
 into measurable and adjustable parameters, in the way, for instance,
 a digital sound sample is divided into separate parameters of tone,
 pitch, or velocity.[16] For audio engineers, these parameters, or
 "modules," can be independently adjusted (some fixed while others are
 varied) and modified in real time to flow within certain limits
 (e.g., if the velocity setting is too high or low, the sound breaks
 up or becomes inaudible, etc.). Each sound, in turn, can be divided
 into smaller samples that are also subject to parametric control, and
 so on. Think of your body composed of samples of vibrational
 information like these sounds, whose parameters can be measured and
 used to generate tactile feedback (e.g., the pressure you exert in
 grasping a virtual object fed back to you as the felt hardness of the
 object). Haptic controls adjust this information to vary within
 pre-set thresholds.

 Deleuze writes that dividuals in control societies are not shaped by
 molds, which produce distinct individuals, but consist of modulations
 of coded information. That is, dividuation involves something like a
 "moving form" of coding (continuous decoding and recoding). A mold,
 Deleuze writes, is a distinct casting, whereas a modulation is like a
 "self-deforming cast that will continuously change from one moment to
 the other, or like a sieve whose mesh will transmute from point to
 point."[17] If individuation produces units that have a distinct
 casting, dividuation produces the flexible modules of control (the
 parameters) through which they pass. As an economic process,
 dividuation serves the demands of postmodern global Capital for
 flexible modes of production and consumption [18]. When Amazon.com
 recommends books for customers to buy based on information stored in
 its database, or when global corporations abandon Taylorist forms of
 control based on the individuation of confined bodies in favor of
 outsourcing and informated production strategies, they use the tools
 of dividuation, i.e., parametric controls, internal adjustments of
 sampled information, continuous modulation.

 Capital is a decoding machine.[19] A code is simply the form of
 repetition of some process (e.g., the translation of words in a
 language, the conversion of money into goods, the sorting of statuses
 into ranks, bodies into categories, etc.). Decoding unlocks the
 economic value of repetitive processes, and it is the basis of
 capitalist control of accumulation. Baudrillard writes, for example,
 how the code of fashion in capitalist societies is simply the
 repetition of the newest model.[20] As soon as one model emerges on
 the market, it is decoded and replaced by a newer one. Foucault
 describes prisons as assemblages that decode delinquency, and
 biopower as a system that decodes life.[21] We are all familiar today
 with genetic science as a decoding machine linked to global
 capitalism that promises to accomplish for the body what advertising
 does for fashion. Here we have one of the best examples of the
 abandonment of strategies of individuation in favor of continuous
 modulation. Having broken the molecular code of human individuation,
 genetic science proceeds to experiment on its parameters. Dividuals
 are like the newest fashions, the "latest" individuals, recycled
 hybrid forms with recombinable parts, easily reconfigured, hot items
 today, obsolete tomorrow.

 The program of dividuation is flexibility. Dividuals are not the
 products of fixed training in closed environments, but artifacts of
 data mining searches and computer profiles. They are the continuously
 morphing targets of advertising schemes, insurance scams, and opinion
 polls. A dividual is a data double passed through a moving screen,
 stripped down to whatever modular information is required for a
 particular intervention, task or transaction. Increasingly,
 postmodern subjectivity is defined by interaction with information
 meshes and the modular dividuals they produce. When you use an ATM
 machine, you are interacting with your dividuated self, or when you
 access your work environment via your home computer. Likewise, when a
 database is mined for information on your buying habits, leisure
 habits, reading habits, communication habits, etc., you are
 transformed into a dividual.

 This brings us back to haptics. Imagine an ATM machine whose
 interface is not just textual or visual, but simulates the feel of a
 real transaction with a real bank teller. Or the haptic workplace at
 home, a haptic road trip, a haptic surgical procedure performed by a
 haptic doctor. In these examples, the body is connected to data that
 feeds back feelings, emotions and capacities for judgment to it as so
 many parametric modulations. Such a body would have as many modular
 forms as networks to which it potentially can be connected -- simply
 decode the interface, reconfigure its parameters and save to the file
 dubbed "New You."


 Nomad Art
 ---------

 Typically, Deleuze and Guattari do not focus on haptics from the
 viewpoint of control, but as a capacity to resist control. They
 describe haptics as a kind of "nomad art."[22] They define nomad art,
 first, in terms of "close range" vision, as distinguished from
 long-range or "distance" vision; and second, as tactile, or haptic
 space, as distinguished from optical space. "Haptic," they write, is
 a better word than "tactile" since it does not suggest an opposition
 between vision and touch, but rather invites the assumption that the
 eye itself may fulfill this non-optical function.

 For Deleuze and Guattari, haptic space is smooth space, i.e., it is
 fluid and intensive. Smooth space is deterritorialized and must be
 navigated by constant reference to the immediate concrete
 environment, not to abstractions like maps or compasses, but by
 perception that attends to the particularities of the materials that
 must be traversed, as when a person walks through sand or snow
 (Deleuze and Guattari use examples of nomadic peoples, Bedouins or
 Inuit, to illustrate this).

 Optical space, in contrast, is striated space, extensive, fixed and
 territorialized. Optical visuality sees objects as distinct, at a
 distance, identifiable, and existing in three-dimensional space. It
 maintains a clear and precise relationship between figure and ground.
 Laura Marks writes:

      Optical visuality is necessary for distance perception: for
      surveying a landscape, for making fine distinctions between
      things at a distance. That's how the object of vision is
      constituted in optical visuality. The subject of vision -- the
      beholder -- is also conceived as discrete, as having solid
      borders that demarcate the beholder from the thing beheld. So
      you can see why optical visuality is needed, for example, for
      firing a missile. It conceives of the other, the object of
      vision, as distant and unconnected to the subject of vision.
      Optical visuality is necessary. But it's only half of
      vision.[23]

 In the other half, haptic visuality, the subject is not detached from
 the object and sees the world as if it were touching it: close,
 intensive, on the surface of the body. Deleuze and Guattari cite
 Alois Riegl (along with Wilhelm Worringer and Henri Maldiney) as the
 artists who gave fundamental aesthetic status to the relation between
 close range vision and haptic spaces.[24] Reigl, a historian of
 textiles who studied the complex visual textures of Persian rugs,
 borrowed the term from psychology, haptein, signifying a kind of
 vision that "grabs" the thing it looks at.[25] Drawing examples from
 Imperial Egyptian art, Riegl defined haptic space as the "presence of
 a horizon-background" in which space is reduced to a plane, from
 which an optical space was later differentiated in Greek and Roman
 art. The latter space formalized the relation of objects to their
 background, organized perspective and represented volumes.

 For Deleuze and Guattari, the space of nomad art is flat and
 immanent. There is no transcendent operator, and the experience of
 space is intimate and immersive. "Cezanne," they write, "spoke of the
 need to no longer see the wheat field, but to be too close to it, to
 lose oneself without landmarks in smooth space."[26] The same can be
 said of a musical improviser who loses herself in the sound of her
 and others' playing. Any artist who becomes immersed in her work is a
 nomad. In the notion of "too" close, Cezanne captures the submersion
 of the artist in the particularity of her materials. It has nothing
 to do with vision or hearing or touch in their isolated, separated
 forms, but with enveloping sheets of intensity and perception as
 affect, not merely affection.[27]

 Deleuze and Guattari's distinction between smooth and striated is an
 ethico-aesthetic distinction between two ways of occupying space.
 Smooth space is lived in immediately, there is no subject-object
 separation, and the body is not conceived as a physical property so
 much as a provisional assemblage of connections between flows of
 affects and ideas. To inhabit striated space, on the other hand, is
 to be caught up in hierarchical forms of observation and control. It
 is to travel on pre-set paths to predetermined destinations, laid out
 according to fixed maps that distance the traveler from the milieu in
 which he moves.

 In their corporate and state configurations, electronic networks are
 striated systems. Baudrillard sees in McLuhan's insight about the
 tactility of the media a formula for society where "contacts" have
 replaced the sensuousness of touch, and testing becomes a continuous
 "palpitation."

      And you understand why McLuhan saw in the era of the great
      electronic media an era of tactile communication. We are closer
      here in effect to the tactile than to the visual universe, where
      the distancing is greater and reflection is always possible. At
      the same time as touch loses its sensorial, sensual value for us
      ("touching is an interaction of the senses rather than a simple
      contact of an object with the skin"), it is possible that it
      returns as the strategy of a universe of communication - but as
      the field of tactile and tactical simulation, where the message
      becomes "massage," tentacular solicitation, test. Everywhere
      you're tested, palpated, the method is "tactical," the sphere of
      communication is "tactile." Without even speaking of the
      ideology of "contact," that is being pushed in all its forms as
      a substitute for social rapport, there is an entire social
      configuration that orbits around the test (the question/answer
      cell) as around the commandments of the molecular code.[28]

 Tactile media, of course, do open new possibilities for expression,
 performance, and so on:

      The haptic device allows the artist to have a direct contact
      with a virtual instrument, which is able to produce real-time
      sound or images. We can quote the physical modeling synthesis,
      which is an efficient modeling theory to implement cross-play
      interaction between sound, image and physical objects. For
      instance, the simulation of a violin string produces real-time
      vibrations of this string under the pressure and expressivity of
      the bow (haptic device) held by the artist.[29]

 Can technical control also be nomad art, haptic and smooth? Can the
 feel of playing a virtual violin be the same as playing a violin? Can
 haptic space be informated? The technical control of tactility does
 produce affections (see note 27). The virtual violin has a different
 expressiveness than a real one, and produces new sensations in
 playing and performance. But though tactile control is affective, it
 is not an affect itself. McLuhan's "tactility" of the media refers to
 its capacity to affect us, to stimulate our nervous system, but the
 media itself is not an affect, has no independent power to exist or
 act. Haptic space is resistant to haptic control by the media, to
 measurement, to modulation, ultimately to informationalization.
 Capital's efforts to dominate haptic space, however, are real. To
 find its most affective forms, we only have to look to the
 technologies of cloning, haptic control on our immediate horizon.
 What is a clone if not an effort to simulate haptic space, a figure
 of the complete parametric control of affect in the name of
 accumulation? But is a clone a nomad artist? I don't think so.


      Men fear most what they cannot see.

                -- Raz, in ~Batman Begins~

 Raz's formula is not quite right. According to Elias Canetti, men
 fear most the touch of what they cannot see. He opens _Crowds and
 Power_ with these words: "There is nothing that man fears more than
 the touch of the unknown. He wants to see what is reaching towards
 him, and to be able to recognize or at least classify it."[30]

 Presumably, if man could see what touches him, it would ease his fear
 of it. Canetti, like Foucault, sees visibility, optical space, as a
 trap; what is observed can be known and thus controlled. But he notes
 another way that man loses his fear of being touched, and that is
 simply through being touched itself. Canetti goes on to say that men
 lose their fear of being touched in crowds. The fear of being touched
 is what distances human beings from each other and keeps them
 isolated individuals. In a crowd that presses in on itself and
 becomes denser, however, physical contact among individuals is
 unavoidable and produces the opposite of fear, a feeling of power or
 even daring. Crowds are compressed populations that are dangerous in
 different ways than bodies. They do not always respond to the
 disciplinary forces that keep bodies docile and in line. In crowds,
 it is not simply a question of seeing the unknown, but often of
 rushing headlong into it. The body becomes capable of what the crowd
 is capable, for better or worse. It is incorporated tactilely, by
 physical proximity and by being carried on the crowd's undulations
 and vibrations.

 Canetti has a better sense than Raz of the real machines at work
 here. They are not just vision-machines, but desiring machines in the
 most basic sense, as waves of affect that course through
 multiplicities.[31] This is haptic space, where everything is "too
 close." In a compressed population, which paradoxically discipline
 creates, tactile connections replace visual ones, and immersion
 suppresses differences. One way to view haptic space is as the
 suppression of a code, the code that organizes optical space, which
 disciplinary society and capitalist accumulation used to such great
 advantage. There is an evolution of complexity of social control
 here. Man needs to see the unknown, and so he keeps watch over it,
 places everything under surveillance. But beyond simply watching the
 unknown, the real problem is grasping it, fastening to it, walking
 through it, running with it. This is not a problem of surveillance,
 but of immersion. We said earlier that haptic control is a problem of
 controlling released populations. Now we can be more specific. It is
 a problem of crowd control, i.e., control of turbulent
 multiplicities.[32] It is not exercised on individuals from a
 distance, nor does it operate internally to individuals (in the sense
 that individuals internalize norms of behavior). Rather, it is
 designed to be a reflexive and self-organizing property of the crowd
 itself, as the transmission of a multiplicity of contacts is
 articulated in waves that intensify and diminish like waves of the
 ocean. Or in collective vibrations that respond to the force of
 strange attractors.

 Generally, the problem for the police is how to exercise control over
 crowds, over dense and moving populations, how to confine them or
 otherwise keep them orderly.[33] Foucault, of course, famously writes
 about the roles of hierarchical observation and examination in this
 process. But control within the crowd, as a function of its own
 self-organization, is of another nature altogether. The affects that
 govern the internal organizations of crowds are haptic, tactile and
 immersive. Police technologies for controlling crowd affects are
 evolving in network societies. No longer content with passive
 surveillance (cameras, listening devices), the new technologies seek
 to control crowd affect directly, by informating tactile qualities of
 crowds -- texture, concentration, pressure, attraction and repulsion
 -- generating those qualities through technical means.

 Tactile networks are the technical horizon of crowd control. This I
 take to be the whole logic of haptics understood as an information
 control technology and means of capitalist accumulation. The dream of
 police technologies is to harness the tactility of crowds and place
 it at the disposal of the new information economy. This demands not
 just control of visible space, but parametric control using tactile
 feedback.

 In the 1973 sci-fi story "Flash Crowd," Larry Niven envisages a
 society that has invented teleportation. An argument in a mall
 covered by a TV crew becomes the impetus for an instantaneous riot,
 as people from everywhere teleport to the scene. The modern
 incarnation of this is the "flash mob." Flash mobs are populations
 that suddenly assemble in a public place, do something interesting,
 then disperse. They are mostly self-organizing, taking advantage of
 the potentials in digital networks and instant messaging, and are
 often unpredictable and disruptive. We can imagine contemporary
 social control as a problem in the anticipation and policing of flash
 mobs. This is what occupies the authorities today. (In Niven's story,
 a policeman dryly says of flash crowds, "we watch for them").[34]

 Imagine a society where instead of teleporting to an event, you are
 plugged into an interface that is a node in a highly policed haptic
 network. In such a society, the police (or authorities of other
 kinds) are able to control the generation of flash crowds, mobilize
 them in advance and assemble them at the necessary times and places,
 in ways that invest the full tactile participation of their members.
 This is the logic of televised "pay-per-view" events, where the goal
 is to provide paying customers with realistic spectacles of remote
 happenings (e.g., sporting and entertainment events, political and
 educational events, sex and violence). Or Capital's dream of an
 automated and mobile labor force, capable of being outsourced over
 computer networks to wherever it needs. The remote workplace is
 already a reality for many "affective" laborers in the professional
 administrative and service sectors of the economy. The once enclosed
 site of the industrial workplace is becoming a relic of the past as
 the corporate tactile model spreads through information networks
 across the planet. The new networked worker, as Hardt and Negri
 observe, is already the common figure of the postmodern economy.[35]
 Finally, it is the dream of completely liquid consumption, the
 instantaneous mobilization of crowds of dividualized consumers
 online, buying everything in site, flash crowd shopping. Artificially
 induced tactility.

 Virilio writes that crowd control is a problem in controlling speed,
 an issue of channeling and otherwise regulating "traffic."[36]
 Information providers describe this in terms of bandwidth. But speed
 in turn is a function of the variable thickness of flows, that is,
 their texture. Control of crowd speeds is the effort to control crowd
 textures, pressures, densities, vibrational intensities. This, not
 simply bandwidth, is the control horizon of the electronic media --
 information textures stored in interconnected mega-capacity
 databases. The new haptic controls will transform our relation to
 remote crowds from spectator to programmed participant. Haptic
 interfaces, networks generally, are our contemporary forms of
 teleportation. Perhaps in the future these interfaces will be
 implanted directly into our brains to generate the body's sense of
 presence in a population of other bodies similarly connected --
 shopping, working, gaming, traveling, learning, fighting, fucking,
 each body a dividualized member of an informated crowd (the
 database). It doesn't matter that futuristic teleport stations like
 the ones imagined by Niven or in Doctor Who may never exist. This
 does not negate the interest of Capital and its police forces in
 haptic technologies to generate crowds.

 Haptic control increasingly organizes labor (also a kind of crowd) as
 an "affective" entity. Hardt and Negri note the new forms of labor
 concerned with generating mood, feeling, and so on. Deleuze talks
 about students who seek the "motivation" to work. The new controls
 are tactile and require only connection to a network. If you have the
 right code you can join whatever crowd you must, become affected the
 way it is. Beyond the coercive power of visual surveillance, what
 distinguishes network control is ability to convert the human subject
 into a mobile node in a population of mobile nodes that can be sorted
 and compressed together instantaneously. To this end, the
 monadological designation once given to the visual space of control
 can be applied to the person wherever he or she goes. The visually
 tracked body is now its own network node, thoroughly
 deterritorialized -- it becomes a mobile attachment to a database, an
 informated crowd, a networked population. Each population is run
 through a unique set of parameters -- your banking crowd (accessed
 with this password, with its own programmed affections), your
 shopping crowd, your work crowd, your pleasure crowd (the online
 chatroom). Each crowd is a monad, but not like a space in a burrow.
 Here you are out in the open and the crowd is dispersed. Its members
 are a roaming population controlled by a variable yet common set of
 parameters.

 Against standard critiques of postmodern culture as a "culture of
 fear" (fear of being watched, fear of terrorism, of losing one's
 identity, control of one's body, whatever), haptic control raises
 another possibility, viz., the disappearance of fear (and perhaps
 caution) surrounding the body and identity in postmodern society.
 Every machinic assemblage produces a subject alongside it that
 parallels it and provides it with a target -- the assembly line
 produces the industrial laborer, the prison creates the modern
 delinquent. What subjects do haptic assemblages produce? What these
 systems may produce are fearless subjects. In the 1980's, a number of
 writers on the "cyborgization" of the postmodern soldier described
 not only the use of surveillance technology to monitor military
 forces in the field, but also the development of integrated
 information control systems that would operate directly on the
 proprioceptive side of battle -- combat simulators, panic-suppressing
 and nausea-controlling drugs, symbiotic body-weapon interfaces,
 digitalized performance enhancement systems of all kinds. Generally,
 even in a culture such as the U.S., obsessed with terrorist threats,
 bird flu, or aging and dying, it is not the affect of fear but
 fearlessness that predominates today, the same fearlessness that
 enables video gamers to die in combat or crash cars off cliffs or
 into walls without any hesitation. This is not a kind of fatalism,
 but more a manipulation of feeling supported by media's incredible
 force of distraction.[36] Multi-player online video gaming is only a
 simulation of crowd experience. Life and death intensities are not at
 stake here. Bodies are only attached to dividuals, and contact is
 pseudo-tactile. Whatever the game provides in tactile realism, what
 matters more are the distractive and euphoric qualities the game
 produces. Flash wars, flash competitions, flash sacrifices, all
 attempts to capture and enclose crowd experience. When police forces
 and military entities are the players, online war is the most
 dangerous game of all, threatening to break out anywhere, conducted
 in a complete and utter state of distraction. Can we view online
 shopping in the same way, as the incarnation of the fearless,
 distracted consumer, or online sex as the creation of the fearless,
 distracted pleasure seeker? The bodies are dispersed, but they
 reassemble in an artificial haptic space, in dense, textured crowds
 of information.


 Networks of resistance?
 -----------------------

 Power, Foucault says, is resistance. There are counter-forces
 emerging to tactile enclosures just as there were, and are, to the
 optical enclosures invented by disciplinary societies. Some of these
 we are familiar with. Hacking, cracking, reverse coding and
 engineering, viruses, spam, tools for resisting network domination.
 Cyber-body art. Flash happenings. Populations resist controlled
 distribution, whether it is dispersed on the net or behind closed
 walls. Haptic networks are a means of control, and control can only
 be an affection, not an affect; a tactile s(t)imulation, a modulation
 of tactility, but not tactility itself for which there are no
 modules, no parameters. If there is a political message in the image
 of the coils of a serpent, it is to resist modulation, at least in
 its electronic, parametric form. There are no controlled "parameters"
 of affect, no digitalized thresholds of tactility. Of course, this
 does not stop Capital's effort to control tactility by analyzing it
 into bits of information and feeding that back as electronic impulses
 into our nerves and muscles, or by modulating the affects of
 populations, by maneuvering bodies within a net of tactile portals
 all interconnected with each other. For all these efforts, however,
 Capital does not control haptic space or tactility, because control,
 in a word, is not an affect.

 Despite the hype about openness and flat communications, digital
 networks are mainly hierarchical spaces. Some nodes, called hubs,
 dominate connections and block access to information with passwords.
 Other connections are broken or decrypted. Networks do have a kind of
 paradoxical opennness -- they can temporarily block their own
 controls -- passwords are broken with the same tools used to create
 them, closed connections get re-routed or filled in, hubs collapse
 with tiny changes in their code, viruses. In these sudden,
 self-induced collapses of hierarchical networks, haptic space reopens
 to reclaim too-closeness and tactility for itself.

 Resistance to haptic control is not about retaking control of haptic
 space, which would only be another strategy of enclosure and mirror
 Capital's strategy to release the energy of haptic space and put it
 to work. Resistance means pushing tactility beyond its parameters,
 reclaiming too-closeness and immersion and fearlessness, and most of
 all, feelings of power, the body's sensitivity to itself and its
 capacities to affect and to be affected (the capacities haptic
 control destroys). For populations it means resistance to dispersal
 over networks and rediscovery of the political efficacy of
 concentration and crowding. These projects are not pure, as flash
 crowds demonstrate, and present their own problems. Immersion and
 closeness in crowds can be suffocating. Fearlessness in crowds also
 makes them close in on the body, which in turn can offer little
 resistance to the crowd's line of flight. There is always the danger
 that resistance to haptic control will end up enclosing the body even
 tighter, and even reinstating older modes of confinement (discipline,
 Deleuze writes, may stage a comeback).

 We end with Deleuze's concept of dividuation and its relation to
 haptic space. Dividuation is tied to control and parametric
 modulation. It is the logic of capitalist accumulation that breaks
 down life into measures of information, and populations into
 databases. We distinguish dividuation from internal differenciation,
 which, according to Deleuze, is not a process of modulation but a
 becoming different. We should understand information networks and
 haptic controls as dividuating technologies that block the number of
 connections a body can make and decrease its capacity to be affected.
 The new flexible forms of labor and consumption demanded by global
 Capital are ample evidence that dividuation serves to further
 artificialize life and impoverish the social connections that matter
 to us. Haptic space, on the other hand, is internal becoming. Each
 move through haptic space is a change of nature, not a controlled
 modulation. Reach out and touch someone in control societies is an
 imperative to connect, an order to accumulate information, to
 multi-task, to stay accessible and in the grip of a haptic control.
 In haptic space, however, it is an invitation for intimacy and the
 exhilaration of becoming too close.


 Acknowledgments:
 ----------------

 I would like to thank the anonymous _CTheory_ reviewer and the
 editors of _CTheory_ for the helpful comments and suggestions they
 provided.


 Notes:
 ------

 [1] Gilles Deleuze, "Postscript on the societies of control," _October_
 59 (Winter), 1992, p. 7.

 [2] Michel Foucault, _Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison_,
 New York: Pantheon Books, 1977, pp. 141-177.

 [3] On the concept of a meshwork and its relation to digital control,
 see Manuel De Landa,_ Real Virtuality: Meshworks and Hierarchies in
 the Digital Domain_, Netherlands Architecture Institute, 2006.

 [4] Foucault, 1977, pp. 200ff.

 [5] S. Gallagher, "Bodily self-awareness and object perception,"
 _Theoria et Historia Scientiarum: International Journal for
 Interdisciplinary Studies_ 7, 2003; J.J. Gibson, _The Ecological
 Approach to Visual Perception_, London: Houghton Mifflin, 1979; Mark
 Paterson, _The Senses of Touch: Haptics, Affects and Technologies_,
 Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.

 [6] Michael Taussig, _The Nervous System_, New York: Routledge, 1992,
 p. 10.

 [7] Marshall McLuhan, _Understanding Media; the Extensions of Man_, New
 York: McGraw-Hill, 1964.

 [8] Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore, _The Medium is the Massage_,
 New York: Random House, 1967.

 [9] K. Salisbury, "Haptics: The Technology of Touch," ~HPCwire
 Special~, Nov. 10, 1995.

 [10] M. Hodges, "It Just Feels Right," _Computer Graphics World 21_,
 1998.

 [11] K. Kahol and S. Panchanathan, "Haptic Cueing," Center for
 Cognitive Ubiquitous Computing, 2006. Available online at:
 http://cubic.asu.edu/research/haptic_interfaces/tactile_cueing.html.

 [12] Lake Porter and Jutta Treviranus, "Haptic Applications to
 Virtual Worlds," University of Toronto Adaptive Technology Resource
 Centre, 2006. Available online at:
 http://www.utoronto.ca/atrc/rd/vrml/haptics.html.

 [13] Griffin Weber, "Using Tactile Images to Differentiate Breast
 Tissue Types," 2006. Available online at:
 http://www.griffinweber.com/thesis/.

 [14] A great term from the 1980's referring to the integration of
 telepresence and remote sex.

 [15] Deleuze, 1992, p. 5.

 [16] Individuation and dividuation are not opposed operations. Both
 are control mechanisms, the first producing unified entities, the
 second modular, or internally divided, units. When societies move
 from disciplinary to control societies, they adopt a new model and
 practice of division.

 [17] Deleuze, 1992, p. 4.

 [18] Cf. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, _Multitude: War and
 Democracy in the Age of Empire_, New York: The Penguin Press, 2004.

 [19] Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, _Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and
 Schizophrenia_, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1983, pp.
 139ff.

 [20] Jean Baudrillard, _The System of Objects_, London and New York:
 Verso, 1996, pp. 164ff.

 [21] Michel Foucault, _The History of Sexuality_, New York: Pantheon
 Books, 1978.

 [22] Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, _A Thousand Plateaus:
 Capitalism and Schizophrenia_, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
 Press, 1987, pp. 492-9.

 [23] Laura U. Marks, "Haptic Visuality: Touching with the Eyes," in
 _Frameworks_ 2:1, 2004. Available online at:
 http://www.framework.fi/2_2004/visitor/artikkelit/marks.html.

 [24] Deleuze and Guattari, _A Thousand Plateaus_, p. 493.

 [25] Marks, 2004.

 [26] Deleuze and Guattari, _A Thousand Plateaus_, p. 493.

 [27] The distinction between affect and affection is complex, but
 important in this context. Control, for Deleuze, can only be an
 affection. An affect is the variation of the power of existing and
 acting. Affection is the state of a body as subject to another body.
 It is the "modified" or affected body, as opposed to the active body.
 The feelings produced by haptic technologies are not affects, but
 affections. Cf. Gilles Deleuze, _Spinoza: Practical Philosophy_, San
 Francisco: City Light Books, 1988; also Gilles Deleuze, "Course on
 Spinoza," 1978. Available online at:
 http://www.webdeleuze.com/php/sommaire.html.

 [28] Jean Baudrillard, _Simulations_, New York: Semiotext(e) Inc.,
 1983.

 [29] With regard to sound, the physical modeling synthesis comprises
 a set of equations and algorithms to simulate a physical source of
 sound. "Sound is then generated using parameters that describe the
 physical materials used in the instrument and the user's interaction
 with it, for example, by plucking a string, or covering tone holes,
 and so on. For example, to model the sound of a drum, there would be
 a formula for how striking the drumhead injects energy into a two
 dimensional membrane. Thereafter the properties of the membrane (mass
 density, stiffness, etc.), its coupling with the resonance of the
 cylindrical body of the drum, and the conditions at its boundaries (a
 rigid termination to the drum's body) would describe its movement
 over time and thus its generation of sound. Similar stages to be
 modeled can be found in instruments such as a violin mentioned
 above..." Wikipedia, "Haptic Technologies," 2007. Available online
 at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haptic#Haptic_technology.

 [30] Elias Canetti,  _Crowds and Power_, New York: Farrar Straus
 Giroux, 1984, p.1.

 [31] Deleuze and Guattari view the crowd as a molar formation and
 prefer to focus on the "pack" as a molecular formation closer to the
 problem of desire. Still, Canetti's work on crowds is exceptionally
 important for its examples of haptic phenomena and their relation to
 feelings of power, immersion, and tactility. Cf. Deleuze and Guattari
 1983, 1987.

 [32] See DeLanda's explanation of turbulence, which extends ideas of
 Deleuze and Guattari, as a way of understanding control in
 self-organizing dynamic systems. Manuel De Landa, _Intensive Science
 and Virtual Philosophy_, London; New York: Continuum, 2002.

 [33] This includes all kinds of crowds, including clusters of
 objects, signs, and of course human beings. Cf. Paul Virilio, _Pure
 War_, New York: Semiotext(e), 1997.

 [34] Another interesting example is the "TARDIS," "a fictional
 time-space machine in the television show Doctor Who. A TARDIS is
 capable of transporting its occupants to any point in space and time.
 Its interior exists in multidimensional space, making it
 significantly larger on the inside than it appears from outside.
 Externally, the TARDIS resembles the shape of a 1950s British police
 box. The show has become so much a part of British popular culture
 that the shape of the police box is now more immediately associated
 with the TARDIS than its original real-world function. The word has
 also entered popular usage and is used to describe anything that
 seems bigger on the inside than on the outside." Larry Niven, "Flash
 Crowd," in _The Flight of the Horse_, 1973, pp. 99-164. Cf. also
 Wikipedia, "Haptic Technologies," 2007. Available online at:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haptic#Haptic_technology.

 [35] Hardt and Negri, 2004.

 [36] Virilio, 1997.

 [37] William Bogard. "Distraction and Digital Culture," in _Life in
 the Wires: The CTheory Reader_, Arthur Kroker and Marilouise Kroker,
 eds. Victoria: CTheory Books, 2005, pp. 443-460.


 --------------------

 William Bogard is Deburgh Professor in Social Sciences at Whitman
 College. His latest research concerns the development of tactile
 networks and their relation to smooth spaces of control.


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