Wound Culture
Wound Culture
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MARK SELTZER
She loved accidents: any mention of an animal run over, a man cut to pieces
a train, was bound to make her rush to the spot.
Hence the new millennium's passion for standing live witness to things. A wh
Serial killing has its place in a public culture in which addictive violence has
become not merely a collective spectacle but one of the crucial sites where private
desire and public space cross. The convening of the public around scenes of
violence-the rushing to the scene of the accident, the milling around the point
of impact-has come to make up a wound culture: the public fascination with torn
and opened bodies and torn and opened persons, a collective gathering around
I have been tracing, in a series of studies, some of the ways in which the mass
the individual and the mass, and between private and public registers. One
discovers again and again the excitations in the opening of private and bodily and
psychic interiors: the exhibition and witnessing, the endlessly reproducible display,
of wounded bodies and wounded minds in public. In wound culture, the very
OCTOBER 80, Spring 1997, pp. 3-26. ? 1997 October Magazine, Ltd. and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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OCTOBER
notion
of
s
torn
and
ex
It
may
not
persons
to
as
dffentlic
For
Haberm
alternative
police):
the
the
public
indicates
a
the
patholog
cate
in
the
one
detects
on
the
shar
The
uncer
culture
are
of
"the
tra
something
probing
th
The
contem
scenes
to
wounded
at
and
social
w
self-evident
in
fact
rem
want
in
trauma
or
public
regis
like
sphere
or
path
is
ev
privacy
exhibition,
as
a
sort
of
status
of
t
1.
See
my
"Se
Public
Sphere,
[forthcoming
2.
Jfirgen
Hab
Bourgeois
Socie
3.
Susan
Stewa
4.
Wendy
Bro
University
Pr
5.
I
set
out,
i
individual
and
trauma
in
"Se
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Wound
Culture
matter
of
repr
markers,
on
sev
thus
come
to
fu
psychic
orders;
individual
and
c
strange
attractio
erotics,
the
erot
space:
one
way
o
The
Su
One
popular
"ta
recent
best-selli
highly
in
New
of
the
popular,
York
at
age
of
a
t
unimaginativene
research
into
th
1890s.
But
part
giving
over
of
t
the
proto-psych
gives
to
the
new
criminal
is
"cont
refers
to
materia
replete
(its
reali
that
turn
out
to
novel's
child-kil
between
these
se
6. It has become routine to understand the difference between shock and trauma in terms of an
opposition of the physical to the psychical, and by extension, of the order of the social to the
subject. Hence it may be argued that "these shocks may exist in the world, but they occur in
Certainly they develop as traumas only in the subject" (see Hal Foster, "Death in America,
[Winter 1996], p. 45). The propping of the world/subject distinction on the shock/traum
is propped, in turn, on the notion of a decisive break between medical and psychoanaltyic
of the wound. And-pace Simmel, Freud, and Benjamin-it leads to the notion of a radical d
between a modernist culture of shock and a postmodern culture of trauma. These distin
periodizations have their place, and I will be taking them up in the pages that follow. But th
way in which the recognition of the conditions of wound culture have stalled in these opposi
oppositions tend to understate or to repress, for instance, how, on the Freudian acco
remains a borderland concept between the physical and the psychical. Along the same
periodizations tend to rewrite the tensions within notions of shock and trauma as a tensi
them. (In that shock, for example, refers both to the impact of the event and to its effect,
already encrypts the deferrals, or "afterwardness," of cause and effect that, in part, defines
Finally, the very notion of a "culture of shock" or a "culture of trauma" points to the f
breakdown between individual and collective orders that centrally concerns me here: the open
private and public orders (between "subject" and "world") that a wound culture holds steadily
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OCTOBER
among
violence is concerned.
oth
as Zola's La Bite humaine (1890) to more recent ones such as Jim Thompson's The
Killer Inside Me (1952), Thomas Harris's Red Dragon (1981), or Dennis Cooper's Frisk
(1991)--repeatedly to flashback to the traumatic event that is taken, retroactively
to motivate addictive killing. (In the case of Zola's prototype serial-killer novel, La
Bite humaine, this amounts to a cartoon-like flashback to a sort of caveman antifemale violence.) But these motivating explanations routinely have a transparently
perfunctory character, as if the mere invocation and repetition of "trauma" fills in,
or counts as, cause. These invocations of trauma generally have the unconvincing
character of a sort of dime-store psychology. In the terms of Thompson's killer, for
example, the psychology of the trauma reduces to the cliche: "the boy is father of
the man." Or as the British serial killer Dennis Nilsen summarized the explanation
he gave for his acts: "I casually threw the police a psychiatrist's cliche."8 To the
extent that these explanations take the form of pop psychology and the clichethat is, to the very extent that they are experienced as unconvincing--they in effect
conserve the subject's secret singularity, even as that secret is renamed "the trauma."
The recourse to trauma as "cause" thus poses some basic problems, and not
least because of the general inflation of the categories of trauma and abuse in a
wide range of contemporary discourse (the "abnormal normality" and generality
of the category). The governing psychoanalytic assumption of the "essentially
traumatic nature of human sexuality" gives some indication of how trauma stands in
for rather than defines the causes of repetitive violence.9 For if "normal" disorders
in these cases?10
8. On Thompson and the popular psychology of the serial killer, see Serial Killers I II III; on Nilsen
see Brian Masters, Killingfor Company: The Story of a Man Addicted to Murder (New York: Random Hous
1993), p. 195.
9. Jean Laplanche, Life and Death in Psychoanalysis, trans. Jeffrey Mehlman (Baltimore: John
10. Slavoj Zifek, Looking Awry (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1991), p. 16; Jacqueline Rose, Why War
(Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1993), p. 53. Along these lines, the psychoanalyst Christopher Bollas,
the course of an account of the "structure of evil" in serial killing, speculates that serial killing "would
seem the outcome of a trauma of some kind." But, and not at all atypically, the psychoanalyst can merel
"postulate" some kind of trauma, albeit avowedly in the absence of specific evidence, and merely po
that the killer reenacts what he calls the "recurrent killing of the self throughout his childhood": "the
serial killer-a killed self-seems to go on 'living' by transforming other selves into similarly killed
ones." Such an account depends on a logic of transitivism reduced to simple circularity. And that log
depends in turn on a large metaphorics (what amounts to large metaphors of "killing" and "living
and to the punning into equivalence of killing persons and the "killed self"). The serial killer, Boll
concludes, is "the perfect executioner for a population that has come to feel increasingly serial an
meaningless"( Cracking Up [New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1995], pp. 180-220). Killed person
kill persons, and serial and meaningless crimes perfectly fit a serial and meaningless population: th
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?r,
accounts. This is scarcely surprising. On one level, the recourse to the trauma of
child abuse or sexual abuse as explanation simply follows from "twentieth-century
beliefs that childhood experience forms the adult" (that is, the basic premise of
Helen Morrison observes, the foundational status of trauma in serial killing is, at
the least, open to question: "A serial killer may complain that he was abused as
a child, either physically or sexually. Little or no evidence has demonstrated,
analogy here stands in for psychoanalytic explanation, as thin tautology stands in for sociological
explanation, and, at this level, the two explanations scarcely seem related. But the point again is not to
abandon this metaphorics or to bypass these impasses. The point is to turn their perspective, to specify
how such a metaphorics becomes operational in cases of serial violence: how such analogies are
transformed into causes and tautologies into explanation, both in accounts of these cases and within
the self-understanding of the killers themselves.
11. See Ian Hacking, Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory (Princeton, N.J.:
Princeton University Press, 1995), p. 60.
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OCTOBER
however,
t
real
founda
But
posing
on
another
of
trauma
is,
first,
th
in
effect
pointed
the
out
contra
phenomena
in
place
of
Such
a
que
trauma
to
leaks.
Nor
etiologies
o
the
unrem
Henry
Lee
tortured
ch
his
own
ex
interiors
to
his
study
of
One
reason
and
quasi-o
logic
of
th
identificatio
in
the
chai
and
victim
other:
a
mi
Conversely
in
terms
of
for
public
that
gover
narrowing
trauma;
in
turned
arou
13.
Helen
Morr
14.
This
is
wh
Foundations
o
in
the
trauma
15.
Friedrich
Chapter
13:
"T
16.
Paul
Moor,
17.
See
Dissent
Laure
in
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Cult
Wound
Culture
The
relays
betwee
here.
A
sort
of
hy
of
the
trauma.
Tra
compulsion-a
pho
compulsion,
I
hav
mimetic
contagio
detects
the
mode
relation
to
others
matic
collapse
of
b
identification).
In
opens
the
possibili
subject
and
a
viole
The
opening
towar
bodies
and
person
public
sphere.
There
is
a
good
d
for the moment it will be seen that there are basic limits to the behaviorist or
reflex model of the trauma. This reflex model in effect substitutes ex post
description for explanation: it makes visible the basic intimacy between descr
and tautology in such accounts of trauma or abuse as cause. It conserves, b
that, a reductive shock model of the wound, by which the "impact" of ext
events turns the subject of trauma into a duplicating machine (the trauma victim
through a precise transition: the movement from the external to the internal. W
defines the psychical trauma is not any general quality of the psyche, but th
that the psychical trauma comes from within." The wound is thus reconcept
on the order of the subject. A good deal is at stake in this transition from
external to the internal. For at stake in this shifting within of the foundati
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10
OCTOBER
What
is
being
moment
for
the
field
of
h
recently
rest
blind
to
Freu
that
is
to
say
the
assault
on
the
status
of
But
what
ex
domain
amou
it
mean
to
f
integrity
of
t
itself,
within
in
the
auton
The psychical trauma "comes from within" but in the form of the break
of an outside in.22 There is, on the one side, a precise transition from a (med
22. Hence the notion of "the phenomenon of pain as an effraction of the boundary," the under-
standing that "pain is a breaking in." "Everything comes from without in Freudian theory, it might be
maintained, but at the same time every effect-in its efficacy-comes from within, from an isolated
and encysted interior"-and this encysting of the exterior within is a kind of "internal-external instance,"
a sort of "internal alien entity" (Laplanche, Life and Death, pp. 105, 82, 42-43).
23. Freud, General Psychological Theory: Papers on Metapsychology (New York: Collier, 1963), p. 87.
24. Stewart, Crimes of Writing, p. 277. As Laplanche and Pontalis explain it, "It may thus be seen how
psycho-analytic investigation throws the concept of traumatic neurosis into question . . . the notion of
traumatic neurosis appears as nothing more than an initial, purely descriptive approximation which
cannot survive any deeper analysis of the factors in question" (Jean Laplanche and J.-B. Pontalis,
"Traumatic Neurosis," The Language of Psychoanalysis, trans. Jeffrey Mehlman [Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1976], p. 472).
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Wound
Culture
11
pressures,
on
on
and
internal
dete
sort of internal communication between these rival determinations. It remains,
above all, as a tension within the psychoanalytic conception of trauma itself: "so
clear a separation between what is purely somatic and what is purely psychical in
the trauma has never been sustained within the Freudian tradition."25
very impurity within the concept indicates? How might this very breakdown betwe
the psychical and the bodily and between private and public registers define th
suggesting, is inseparable from the breakdown between psychic and social registers-
breakdown between inner and outer and "subject" and "world"-that defines t
pathological public sphere. What if the critique of the function of the concept
entity-wwere "turned"? What if it were turned toward what C. Wright Mills, writi
at the emergency point of psychology as public culture, called the strange "borderin
of the social on the psychiatric"?26
mimetic coalescence of self and other, self and representation, to the point o
reproduction. The problem that the trauma poses is a radical breakdown as to
the determination of the subject, from within or without: the self-determined
the event-determined subject; the subject as cause or as caused; the subject as t
producer of representations or their product. These breakdowns devolve o
basic uncertainty as to the subject's and the body's distance, or failure of distan
with respect to representation. The psychoanalytic understanding points to t
manner in which the interpretation, representation, or reduplication of the ev
(real or posited) is inseparable from the concept of trauma-the manner in whi
the insistence of the trauma depends on the sense, or non-sense, the sub
self-reference, transferring interest from the event (real or posited) to the subject'
(self-) representation.
Seen this way, the trauma is something like the compulsive return to th
scene of the crime-not merely in that the trauma is the product of its repetiti
but also in that it is the product, not of an event itself, but of how the subj
repeats or represents it to himself.27 One detects here what might be described
a binding of trauma to representation or scene: in order for this return to the scen
25. Laplanche, Life and Death, p. 131.
26. C. Wright Mills, White Collar (New York: Oxford University Press, 1951), p. 160. On the emerg
of "psychology as public culture" in the pathological public sphere, see Serial Killers IIIIII
27. The killer, we have seen, compulsively returns to the scene of the crime, the second time
witness and to experience as scene what he enacted, without experiencing, the first time.
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12
OCTOBER
the
crime
to
effect,
act
a
I
now
want
to
the
matte
torn
bodies
representatio
as
having
th
violence
mak
and
persons
amounts
to
materialities
"literal
techn
as
the
subjec
of
the
social
understandi
and
woundin
signs,
wound
Lett
The
popular
sentation
cle
novels,
traum
each
standin
in
the
highrepresents
it
Freudian.
W
screwed
by
t
make?
Figura
on
a
failure
o
and
the
realThe
popular
the
violent
i
to
the
repr
Newsweek
p
alamodality
Jurassic
Park
28.
On
the
scen
implications,
fo
the
binding
of
see
Mikkel
Borc
University
Pres
29.
Stephen
Gr
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Wound
Culture
13
literalization
distinguishing
of
betw
Typically
enough
representation
are
cause
acts
of
viole
the
violence
intri
imagine
that
repre
that
representation
danger
then
is
no
respect
to
represe
be
devoured
by
rep
In
the
recent
seri
of the serial killer comes to life and takes life. In the recent serial-killer movie
Copycat, there is no deeper motive to serial killing than turning oneself into a c
of someone else. In both, the copy or profile takes on the reality ceded by r
characters who have yielded their souls to a traumatic repetition. Compul
killing becomes indistinguishable from the mimetic compulsion, which, in
becomes indistinguishable from mass, machine-produced representations co
life and taking life. Along these lines, and across a range of recent popular c
virtual and the figurative look just like, and hurt just as much as, the literal and
real: perception and representation change places. Which is one way traum
understood, in these popular spectacles of the force of the mass spectacle.
opposes the Lacanian account to the deconstructive account: "the substantial hard kernel
Real" is irreducible to the effects of representation. But the Real remains bound to what he
fundamental ambiguity" as to the status of representation ( Tarrying with the Negative: Kant, H
the Critique ofldeology [Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1993], pp. 36-43). It is this pivotin
Real of the subject on the matter of representation that concerns me here.
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From one point of view, the techno-thriller simply dispenses with psychology,
landscapes and public spaces. This is not to say that these landscapes are simply
"metaphors" of interiors. They are what private interiors look like-spectacles of
public violence, wound landscapes. There is, again and again in such thrill-kill
technoir films, the ostensible opposition between humanity and technology (tor
bodies and killing machines), the driving apart of private interiors and public
spaces. (In Copycat, for example, privacy is reduced to the locked space, the patho
logical privation, of agoraphobia: being inside and having an inside becoming two
ways of saying the same thing.) But these interiors-whether bounded by the wal
of the home or bounded by the wall of the skin-are governed by a deepening
intimacy with machines. That locked private interior (in films such as Copycat
Virtuosity, or Strange Days) is directly "wired" to the virtual public sphere of th
32. The phrase "the switchboard of the soul" is spoken by one of the characters in Kathryn
Bigelow's film about violence and mass-mediated intimacies, Strange Days, one of a range of recent
films that test out the double logic of technology as prosthesis in what I have described (extending
Kittler) as the discourse network of 2000. Such popular representations of digital culture and "virtual
reality" test out the ways in which the materialities of communication can by no means be understood
simply as external to the order of the subject, as mechanical (rather than human), as symbolic (rather
than bodily). At the same time, this double logic of prosthesis seems ultimately insupportable: the
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Wound
Culture
15
One
can
no
longe
tion,
or
realization
machine)
or
the
i
ture
(self-)
(machinic
representati
as
to
the
cause
of
the
body-machine
the
body-machine
The boundaries have come down between inside and outside. Or, more
exactly, there is an endless switching between them, along the lines of this bindin
expresses it: there is a "deep fault line running from my psyche through my brai
out my door ... straight to Melrose Avenue and the feet of Justine ... Justine is
billboard."34 These are the terms of the everyday, traumatic "fault line," or relay
binding private desire and mass public dream spaces.
The switch point, or crash point, between inside and outside is, above all, the
wound. This is nowhere more incisively set out than in the work of J. G. Ballard
one of the compulsive cartographers of wound culture. Thus, in Ballard's novel
Crash, the shock of contact between bodies and machines (eroticized accidents:
real, planned, simulated) is also the traumatic reversal between private fantasy an
the public sphere: "In the past we have always assumed that the external world
around us has represented reality, and that the inner worlds of our minds, its dreams
hopes, ambitions, represented the realm of fantasy and imagination. These roles,
thrill of self-suspension in the body-machine complex ultimately gives way to an equation of prosthesis
and trauma, virtuality and violence. Hence, in these representations (Terminator 2 and the Alien films;
the serial-killer films Virtuosity and Copycat might be instanced here as well) mechanical reproducibilit
is countered by a return of the natural body (the more deeply embodied racialized and female body
and a return of natural (maternal) reproducibility. The final and paradoxical turn in these returns, o
course, is the way in which it is the utter identification with the machinic medium (the "life-likeness"
of the cinema) that manages this rescue plot. My sense of these matters has been catalyzed by the compelling short film Volatile Memory (1986), directed by Sandy Tait and Gretchen Bender. The film (Cindy
Sherman is the central actor) makes visible the prosthetic technologies and noir landscapes of selfconstruction; but it redirects attention from the technophilic effects that dominate blockbuste
technoir films to the abjection of persons and bodies, centrally the female body, in construction (th
accounts but the governing psychoanalytic account as well. On the psychoanalytic account, Borch-
Jacobsen argues, "the 'content' of the unconscious is defined essentially as representation" (The Freudian
Subject, p. 9). The logic of representation and the logic of "the Freudian subject" are inseparable: the
priority or "correct distance" of the subject with respect to identification and representation posits the
priority of the subject. Trauma in the pathological public sphere registers not merely the failure of thi
correct distance, with respect to the symbolic order. The generalization of the category of trauma, such
that it becomes coterminous with the category of the subject tout court, registers on one level th
failure, the incoherence or wearing out, of this model of the subject. But the wearing out of this model
of the subject has become the alamodality of the subject: trauma is nothing if not in fashion today.
34. Steve Erickson, Amnesiascope (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1996), pp. 15-16.
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XA:
j"M ::
:::iA
::-::Is,
L.
7.::
__-_:do
seems to me, have been reversed."35 This reversal of the real, along the axis
sentation, is, we have seen, one way of describing the switching between ins
outside that is called the trauma: the subject in a state of shock who appears,
same time, as the subject shot through by the social. The subject of wound c
traumatic "failure of his psyche to accept the fact of his own consciousness"
In the preceding parts of this study, I have traced some of the forms these
transfers take: the inseparability of materialities of communication and forms of
violence in machine culture; the becoming-visible of the materialities of writing
and representation; the radicalization of the technology of writing in general; the
generalization of the literal technologies (une langue inconnue of the body-machine-
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Wound
Culture
17
and of the machine impinge upon one another." The traffic between pers
bodies and machines thus becomes visible as "two types of communicati
"continuity of process." And this effectively collapses the distinctions
production and processing, between bodies and machines, and between m
and information. The erosion of the difference between "living beings and ina
psychic killer and the psycho killer means this: the psychotic is one who takes
37. Niklas Luhmann, "Modes of Communication and Society," Essays in Self-Reference (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1990), pp. 99-106.
38. Norbert Wiener, The Human Use of Human Beings: Cybernetics and Society (Garden City, N.J.:
Doubleday, 1954), pp. 98, 136.
39. Mary Ann Doane, "Temporality, Storage, Legibility: Freud, Marey, and the Cinema," Critical
40. Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920), in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works
of Sigmund Freud, vol. 18, trans. and ed. James Strachey (London: Hogarth, 1955), p. 27.
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18
OCTOBER
things
litera
between
repr
But
what
ex
of
the
things
the
"info
literal
literal
te
communicat
traumatic:
t
convergence
the
letter
rary
in
accounts
To
the
exte
inseparable
f
understood
u
parrying
th
trauma
appea
what
is
insid
point-hesita
(projection:
endless
switc
one
way
of
m
It
may
also
trauma.
Stat
of
the
letter,
register
of
"All of Freud's case histories," Friedrich Kittler observes, "demonstrate that the
romanticism of the soul has yielded to a materialism of written signs."41
But to the extent that the materialism of signs registers as a yielding of the
soul, the spread of the literal technologies throughout the social body registers
as soul murder ("the word kills the thing"). This is modernity as verboballistics
(letter bombs). The social order is imagined in terms of shock or assault or intervention-that is, it is imagined as "the intervention of the external, mechanical,
symbolic order" and the Real of the subject as the point where the social-symbolic
order fails.42 To what extent, then, does such an account hold in place a "romantic" anti-modernism? To what extent is the primary mediation of the subject itself
parried as pathology? (Parried as the wounding of the subject's proud autonomy
and singularity? Disavowed in the notion of the symbolic simply as "mechanical"
and the mechanical simply as "external"?) To what extent, finally, does such a
notion of the intervention of an external, mechanical, symbolic order devolve on
41. Friedrich A. Kittler, Discourse Networks: 1800/1900, trans. Michael Metteer with Chris Cullens
(Palo Alto, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1990), p. 283.
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Wound
Culture
paranoia
to
19
provi
model
of
"the
sym
These
large
quest
the
notions
of
sho
1900,
about
the
way
literal
technologie
for
example,
trace
systems
context
chotic
of
of
the
an
ext
Schreber-
system,"
"the
tran
psychoanalysis
dir
represses
them.
There is, on one level, Schreber's war with the discourse network of 1900: his
It is not merely that all of Freud's case histories demonstrate how the
romanticism of the soul has given way to the materialities of the media. They
demonstrate also the repression of what they demonstrate: "movies and the
gramophone remain the unconscious of the unconscious. Psychoanalysis, the science born with them, confronts sequences of images with a primal repression and
sequences of sound with their distortion into chains of signifiers." The notion of
modernity as the bombarding of the soul of the subject appears as the repression
of this repression.44
In this way the romanticism of the soul (not least the romances of the
psycho and of the criminal as hero) is conserved, under the sign of pathology:
shock and trauma; states of injury and victim status; the wound, the disease, the
virus, and epidemics of violence; disaster, accident, catastrophe, and mass death;
the abnormal normality of paranoia and psychosis; the pornography of massmediated desires and other forms of addiction and artificial life. The subject, on
this model, can experience the social only as an intervention or invasion from
without: the unremitting invasion, the letter bombing, that is both soul murder
43. Kittler, Discourse Networks, p. 288. It is articulated and sublimated, that is, in the rearticulation of
writing and identity--in "writing proper" as the property, and proper name, of a subject, in Freud's
sublimation of white noise into the narrative form of case histories: psychophysics into novels.
44. Ibid., pp. 280-304. See also Kittler, "Gramophone, Film, Typewriter," October 41 (Summer 1987),
p. 115: "Methodological distinctions of modern psychoanalysis and technical distinctions of the modern media landscape coalesce very clearly."
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20
OCTOBER
and
socializat
change
place
"Systems"
Bateson
call
yielded,
or
never
quite
as
the
a
a
model
addiction
an
addiction
to
remarkably
l
nerve-langua
form
of
neu
the
yielding
depends.
Thi
of
postmode
is,
by
a
sort
absolutized-o
the
more
capt
The
materia
elaborated
in
"a
new
mode
and
body
and
45.
In
this
way,
models
of
the
hi
of
the
social.
Th
in
a
state
of
sho
gies-to
and
46.
47.
of
the
social
the
Here
again
I
On
the
cult
writing
48.
lette
to
The
at
th
unders
novels
such
as
W
soul
and
the
nos
(in
which
compu
Stephenson
ident
(New
York:
Bant
back
to
the
Victorianism
for
is
the
intimacies
b
sphere.
The
rece
and
its
sequel
Po
turns
and
retur
technologies;
o
violence
49.
as
Linda
the
Willi
Vision,"'
in
University
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Fugi
Pres
Wound
Culture
21
body's
new
relatio
mind/body
and
im
images
are
experie
This
tradition
of
model
of
the
disem
or
in
the
understa
soul
to
mass
mac
machines,
and
ima
one
side,
there
is
t
the
most
visible,
fo
book
to
the
hand-h
of
pornography,
fo
body
moved,
and
s
does
not
always
ha
of
the
representat
the
one
side,
that
world,
body
and
pathologization:
t
outer,
observer
subject's
proper
symbolic"),
wounding
50.
See
of
Linda
an
dis
col
bodie
William
density
of
vision,"
the
h
Observer
(Cambridge:
M
Manet
and
the
Attentiv
century
was
a
critical
h
a
biosphere
and
a
mech
the
body
was
a
precond
new
machinic
arrangem
exterior
became
a
cond
Invention
of
Press,
1995],
Modern
Lif
p.
47).
But
and
machine,
interior
century
on-continues
on
the
"instrumentaliz
resistance:
it
borders
o
the
colonizing
of
(as
Crary
traces)
natura
the
re
looks
like
its
opposite:
science
of
psychophysi
field-made
possible
the
tifiable,
as
general
and
the
vaporization
or
vol
is
the
panic-thrill
of
th
distinctions
continues
to
tinction
between
inside
of
accounts
such
as
Kit
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22
OCTOBER
One
sign
of
is
the
compu
a
range
of
c
signs,
the
en
visible
acros
and
"the
retu
Real
To
is
that
what
ext
image/act
di
toggling
betw
Conserved
by
To
the
very
the
matter
resemble
the
back,
again,
popular
way
sphere.
For
the
rhythms
indicate
thei
not
be
more
bioeconomic
machine-im
something
o
look
of
the
f
beauty
so
emotion,
at
o
evacuated;
th
to
or
stalling
as
if
its
belated
in
memor
recogni
trauma.
There
is
gramophone
(the
of
private
inter
distinction
bet
interiors
to
ma
There
could
be
than
in
this
51.
Zifek,
American
dire
Meta
Thou
provides
an
ind
mean,
across
a
(Cambridge:
MI
52.
I
have
in
m
abstraction
and
Opposed
as
on
par
switchpoints
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, ; - : ; iii
...
There
reprod
photog
skinni
detects
a
distu
of
pub
Benjam
the
w
inorga
the
ino
appeal
ion
vic
both
o
casual
53.
The
photogr
of
paper
of
traum
54.
Walt
55.
See,
York:
Du
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24
OCTOBER
"pale,
like
gh
They
don't
a
in
the
profo
trunk
of
yo
another
plac
ganic;
betw
wounding
c
of violence.
These are some of the everyday scenes of a wound culture. Public spectacles
such as these are models of a convening of the crowd around displays of expose
and violated bodies and persons. The notion of the public sphere has becom
the turn of the last century, so too did a more general wound culture. T
56. David Sedaris, "Fashion Victim," in the "Humor" section of Mirabella (March 1994), p. 40.
The deer-in-the-headlights look of the model on the runway was literalized in the Donna Kar
Spring 1994 tent show, in New York: the one thousand viewers were given flashlights to wear
their heads, as the spotlights aimed at the models. The crowd's absorption in celebrity spotting i
the crowd itself led, however, to the scattershot spotlighting of points of the crowd, as the mode
stumbled across a darkened runway. (My thanks to Ani for this example, and for pointing me to i
implications.)
57. In Thomas Harris's novel of serial killing, Red Dragon (New York: Dell, 1981), the serial killer
Hannibal Lecter reproduces on the bodies of his victims the battle injuries represented in "Wound
Man-an illustration they used in a lot of the early medical books" (p. 55). The representation of
the effects of violence serves as the cause of violence. In pulp fiction, the intimacies between violence
and representation-between "pulp" (torn bodies) and "pulp" (the materiality of representation)-
is exorbitantly explicit. (Quentin Tarantino, it will be recalled, opens Pulp Fiction, mock-schoolboy
fashion, with these two dictionary definitions of "pulp.") On the logic of pulp fiction, see my Serial
Killers I II III
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Wound
of
Culture
fallen
25
persons
an
is
a
story
about
th
tear
on
the
surfac
something
else.
It
into
the
sign
of
in
badge).
The
wound
the
individual
an
collective
body
of
explicit.
It
is
expl
and
machines
and
at the same time the occasion for contact: "In the lane was a blood-stained crowd
streaming to the rear. ... The youth joined this crowd and marched along wit
The torn bodies expressed the awful machinery in which the men were entang
Torn bodies express also the promise of this awful entanglement, the socialit
the wound: "At times he regarded the wounded soldiers in an envious way.
conceived persons with torn bodies to be peculiarly happy. He wished that he,
had a wound, a red badge of courage."58
That Crane's story about war and regimentation is also a story about a m
general process of socialization ("making men") and about the advent of the ev
fictions of the 1890s. The name of that very brief story might serve as the signat
of that culture: "When a Man Falls, A Crowd Gathers." The crowd that gath
around the fallen man, in Crane's story, is the fleeting coalescence of psycho
and collectivity: the emergence, by way of the wound, of the collective-subjec
the mass in person.59
election made this explicit enough. This was an election about trauma an
wounds: the shattered and already posthumous war veteran-dead man talkin
and the make-love-not-warrior, whose tag line is "I feel your pain."
In the early days of television, there was a program called Queen for a D
The premise was a simple one. Three unfortunate, overly embodied, and und
58. Stephen Crane, The Red Badge of Courage (1895; New York: Norton, 1976), pp. 103, 44-45, 4
59. This opening of a sociality in the wound is taken up by Jean-Luc Nancy, The Inope
Community, trans. Peter Connor, Lisa Garbus, Michael Holland, and Simona Sawhney (Minneap
University of Minnesota Press, 1991), and Maurice Blanchot, The Unavowable Community, trans. Pie
Joris (Barrytown, N.Y.: Station Hill Press, 1988); both draw on Bataille, Callois, and the "sacred socio
of the Surrealists in setting out a notion of a social bond irreducible to identity and premised
wounded but therefore opened singularity.
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26
OCTOBER
stories
of
th
competition.
as
I
rememb
generalized,
the
only
priz
witness wounds.
The most popular current television series, ER, is pure wound culture-th
world, half meat and half machinery, in a perpetual state of emergency. ER is
endless series of torn and opened bodies and an endless series of emotion
torn and exposed bio-technicians. There are the endless hook-ups of bodies an
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