Review of:
John Johnston, Information Multiplicity: American Fiction in the
Age of Media Saturation. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1998.
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The discovery of electronic means to code and transfer information. An
increasingly machinic understanding of consciousness, brought about by
advances in neurobiology and genetics. The creation of a media system so
extensive and effective that it can actually shape events as it
reports--not to mention the audience to whom it reports. These
developments have ramifications so profound that we are only beginning to
understand how they may change us.
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Information Multiplicity, a Deleuzian study of contemporary
American fiction, maps the mutating forms of human subjectivity as it
simultaneously effects and is affected by these developments,
particularly in the field of the media. The book identifies a category
of fiction that John Johnston, a professor of English at Emory
University, has dubbed the "novel of information multiplicity."
Beginning with Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 (1966)
and ending with Pat Cadigan's Synners (1991), the study
traces a trajectory that began when TV and computers became household
items, and ends as the Net wraps the globe.
- Johnston is by no means the first to analyze the
relationship of information technology and fiction. Joseph Tabbi's
Postmodern Sublime: Technology and American Writing from Mailer to
Cyberpunk looks at literary treatments of the machine, taking into
account several of the same authors that Johnston chooses to discuss. As
early as 1985, Charles Newman described the postmodern novel as in part
an attempt to undercut the complacency of a reading audience "saturated"
by electronic information. "The overwhelming sense not merely of the
relativity of ideas, but of the sheer quantity and incoherence of
information, a culture of inextricable cross-currents and energies--such
is the primary sensation of our time," he wrote in the preface
to The Post-Modern Aura (9). But Johnston shows us what
happens when not only the audience, but the fiction itself, is
media-saturated. He documents with precision the link between media
proliferation and the dissolution of intellectual authority at the heart
of postmodernism. And he is perhaps the first to take advantage of how
well-suited Deleuzian terms are to a discussion of the effects of
technology on literature.
*
- Information, which, according to Johnston, is neither a language
nor a medium, is above all heterogeneous. It refers to multiple orders
of events and it is not hierarchical. Instead, it is viral, proliferating
beyond specified goals and uses. (For instance, Johnston's book and this
review are viral responses to the novels that bred them.) Finally,
information is corrosive, corrupting and/or destroying older cultural
forms even as it creates new ones.
- This description is entirely compatible with a Deleuzian
universe, where everything can be understood either as partial object or
desire-fueled flow. "In a book, as in all things, there are lines of
articulation or segmentarity, strata and territories; but also lines of
flight, movements of deterritorialization and destratification.
Comparative rates of flow on these lines produce phenomena of relative
slowness and viscosity, or on the contrary, of acceleration and rupture.
All this, lines and measurable speeds, constitutes an assemblage,"
Deleuze and Guattari write in the opening pages of A Thousand
Plateaus (4-5).
- They further define the literary assemblage in
Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature, explaining how it
overturns the novel's traditional tripartite structure of
world-representation-subjectivity to propose a new kind of response: not
a book produced by an author, but rather a conglomeration of texts put
together by a (desiring) writing machine. A literary assemblage is what
results when a desiring body hooks up with different aspects of
contemporary reality in configurations that allow desire to flow. This
in turn produces additional configurations and extended opportunities for
flow (and breakdown).
- Unlike an "author," the writing machine is cognizant of
its cog-like role within a larger assemblage, and conscious of the fact
that writing is merely one desiring-flow among a host of others: "A
writer isn't a writer-man, he is a machine-man, an experimental man"
(7). Instead of depicting human beings who face challenges and make
choices, the writing machine maps its characters as constituents of
various machines (in Kafka, the trial machine, the castle machine, and so
on) composed of heterogeneous human and non-human parts.
- Johnston realizes that the concept of the machinic
assemblage is particularly useful in our media-saturated culture, where
the line between "fact" and "fiction" grows increasingly blurred, and the
question of what is machine (that is, programmed) and what is human
(possessing agency) becomes increasingly problematic. Like information,
the literary assemblage is corrosive, working both within and against the
apparatus of control that typifies late-capitalist American culture. As
Deleuze noted, writing has a double function--it can't translate what it
uses into assemblages without in some sense dismantling the assemblages
upon which it feeds.
- The Deleuzian concept of "lines of flight" also helps
Johnston to describe the ambiguous creative/destructive effects of
proliferating information. Lines of flight occur when desire exceeds its
coded channeling and extends out through cracks and fissures in a
structure, tending to dismantle it in the process. Desire that spills
beyond (or is taken out of) its context is "deterritorialized" or
"decoded," much like data transcribed into a series of ones and zeros for
processing in a computer. Literary assemblages reveal how lines of force
are coded and connected by decoding them into asignifying particles.
- The novels Johnston examines are all literary
assemblages, concerned with multiplicity and heterogeneity, composed of
diverse parts and processes. They deal with mixed regimes of signs and
discourse, sometimes (especially in the earlier works) allowing these to
proliferate to the point of delirium. They don't make symbols; they
register effects.
- The books in question do not attempt to portray their
subjects as "realistic" representations of human beings, but, rather,
to investigate "new forms of individuation in the zones of intensity
produced by 'missing' information or its excess" (6). None of these novels
in any way returns us to the cozy notion of selfhood.
*
- Johnston divides the trajectory he posits into two parts.
Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 and Gravity's
Rainbow, Joseph McElroy's Lookout Cartridge, and
William Gaddis's JR fall in the vanguard, emerging in an
information-saturated environment where the separation between the
various media was just beginning to erode and uncertainty ran rampant.
- The novels of Don DeLillo, together with Pynchon's
Vineland, William Gibson's Neuromancer, and
Cadigan's Synners, were published in what Johnston calls a
"totalized information economy." Information multiplicity was assumed
and the commodification of information had become a fact of life.
Reflecting the interconnectedness of the media, the later works tend less
toward chaos and more toward conventional forms. They no longer present
information as viral, but instead portray a heightened level of
totalization and control. Johnston calls these "novels of media
assemblages."
- Though William Burroughs is not included as a formal
part of the study, Johnston notes that Naked Lunch (1959)
and Burroughs's subsequent works foreshadow the emergence of the novel of
information multiplicity. In place of the notion of authorial agency,
Naked Lunch substitutes a controller/controlled
problematic. The novel attempts to counter language as a control
mechanism by refusing to impose any control over its own diverse,
radically unstable parts. And Burroughs, who sees language as viral if
not continually slashed, folded, or otherwise disrupted, decodes his own
text using an intensification of slang, linguistic and grammatical
"deformations," and vivid streams of hallucinatory images that appeal to
the reader's nonverbal capacities. These techniques created an opening
through which the novel of information multiplicity could emerge.
- According to Johnston, The Crying of Lot 49
was the first novel about information in the contemporary sense of the
word. By the late 1960s, technology had begun to affect profoundly
theories of consciousness. Johnston pauses at the beginning of Chapter 3
to explain how Henri Bergson's concept of an organic "stream" of
consciousness had given way to Daniel Dennett's machinic notion of
"multiple drafts" produced by myriad mental channels and circuits in the
absence of some overarching awareness. Information theory and
cybernetics were increasingly familiar ways of explaining the world, and
neither necessarily implied the presence of a conscious subject. (Even
literary modernists like Baudelaire and Proust, the latter perhaps
influenced by Freud, looked to the unconscious for access to a pure,
authentic past--a practice that conveyed belief in a fundamental
separation between information and experience.)
- In Lot 49, Oedipa functions at once as a
recorder of perceptions and a blind spot, incapable of knowing how to read
all the information she acquires. She faces an array of either/or choices,
an experience she likens to walking among the matrices of a huge digital
computer. The novel allegorizes the difficulty of information processing
by presenting her with a range of possibilities representing the same
underlying semiotic structure. Oedipa wonders whether or not she's
paranoid, but she can never achieve any transcendent footing from which to
view her position; every "self" she might affirm is only a feedback-effect
in a cybernetic system.
- Pynchon's next novel, Gravity's Rainbow, was
written in the shadow of the American military-industrial complex brought
about by World War II. Information had been digitalized, and the networks
of global capitalization established. History, myth, and personal
experience were now contaminated terms, incapable of supporting stable
oppositions.
- In response to this situation, the novel presents a mix
of semiotic regimes all operating within the same historical context. The
question that initiates the book's central plot can serve as an example.
What is a reader to make of the fact that new German rocket bombs are
falling at starred locations on a map of sexual encounters kept by
American Lieutenant Tyrone Slothrop? Is there a cause-effect
relationship? If so, should the confluence of events be interpreted
statistically or behavioristically? Should more weight be given to what
is known about missile guidance systems, or to what is known about psychic
communication with "the other side"? The initial mystery detonates an
explosion of multiple plots and characters, accompanied by a dizzying
proliferation of possible ways to read their meanings. Where Lot
49 posited several interpretations of a single set of data,
Gravity's Rainbow depicts situations and signs that multiply
to the point of meaninglessness. Pynchon deliberately exacerbates the
narrative's complexity by shifting abruptly from one time, place, or point
of view to another, and by blurring the boundaries between what is
apparently real and what is dream, fantasy, or hallucination.
- As does any assemblage, Gravity's Rainbow
possesses an overcoding agency (the "They-system") as well as a constant
pull toward the outside--what Deleuze and Guattari call "lines of
flight." In this context, the novel's understandably paranoid/schizoid
subject has two options: either capture by the system, or disappearance.
- The book was influenced by the medium of film, whose
ability to halt and reverse sequences of cause-and-effect made any simple
relation with the world a thing of the past. Like a filmstrip,
Gravity's Rainbow is a stream of machinic images that never
stop, where diachronic order eventually collapses.
- At first glance, Joseph McElroy's Lookout
Cartridge appears to deal with film as well. The novel documents a
quest to discover why a film made by the narrator and his friend has been
destroyed. With its multiple plots, characters, objects, bodies of
knowledge, and patterns of significance, it is clearly another fictional
assemblage. Its central metaphor, the cartridge, evokes how subjects may
be inserted into various networks of determination and control. But
McElroy's novel is less a cinematic flow than the articulation of
Dennett's notion of multiple drafts. Temporal and spatial leaps in the
narrative create a crucial sense of "betweenness," of gaps, even as
information proliferates. The novel tries to show how human experience,
like the missing film, is a "collaborative network" made by people with
varying motives and different understandings of what it's actually about.
At the novel's end, while the reader does discover what happens to the
film, she is left with many unanswered questions, awash in the many
ambiguous narratives that do not achieve narrative closure.
- Gaddis's JR, published in 1975, was
influenced by television, a medium then seen as radical because its
messages weren't delivered as discrete units, but rather, like capital,
in flows. This book deals with the stock market. Its eleven-year-old
title character doesn't require an authorized identity in order to
function effectively as a switching mechanism for the flow of capital.
- Much of the story unfolds in a series of telephone
conversations, in which individual voices give way to "a molecular
assemblage of enunciation," a decoding of speech to the point that it
almost resembles the decoded flows of capitalism. In the end, JR's empire
becomes so deterritorialized that it's swept away by its own
out-of-control flows. Don DeLillo is the first author in Johnston's study
to write about the media as an interconnected system rather than as
discrete events and technologies. In DeLillo's novels, as in our
contemporary hypermediated culture, the media forms a kind of "wrap-around
frame" and old truths no longer hold. The Kennedy assassination was
mainstream America's first real encounter with information multiplicity, a
historical event from which contradictory facts and accounts kept
proliferating.
- Conventional history rests on a classical
representational scheme, but Libra, DeLillo's fictionalized
portrait of Lee Harvey Oswald, functions as a Deleuzian "intensive
system," where events are no longer defined by the protocols of
representation, related by similarity, but rather are instantiated in
arrangements of difference. Subjectivity in this context is
"subtractive": we are the image minus that which fails to interest us.
Oswald's schizophrenic dispersion of identity can be viewed as the
response Deleuze and Guattari pose to the Oedipalization of capitalist
culture.
- In Pynchon's Vineland, the media forms the
context in which the characters attempt to make sense of their lives.
Film splits and penetrates the identity of Frenesi, a former hippie
filmed in the act of conspiring in the murder of her lover. Frenesi's
daughter Prairie constructs her identity through a series of partial
identifications with TV characters. As she attempts to research her
mother's deeds on-line, the computer's memory comes to function as a
"ghostly realm" where she can achieve a temporary transition from third
person to omniscient point of view. Differences between media still
create varying subjective readings of events, but in
Vineland, it is possible to anticipate a world where a
homogeneous media network will cause all confusion to disappear.
- This is what finally transpires in Gibson's
Neuromancer (1984) and in Cadigan's Synners.
Both of these cyberpunk fictions deal with the interface of electronic
data and the materiality of the body. In both, information is not
multiplicitous, but comes from a single, interconnected source. The
consequence of these programmable, interconnected sources is the
elimination of chaos--and with it, the elimination of freedom. In place of
the
paranoid/schizoid opposition, Cadigan shows the individual giving way to
a subjective continuum that ranges from an ex-orbital self at one extreme
to hive mind at the other.
- I find the first part of Johnston's book, which
documents the emergence of the novel of information multiplicity, more
satisfying than the analysis of these final works. Perhaps life in the
"totalized information economy" is still a relatively new proposition,
and we are still grappling to understand its effects. Nevertheless, I
wonder why Johnston chose to narrow his discussion of works marked by
the "disappearance" of the media to the category of cyberpunk. Johnston
tells us that the media disappears because we take media as a given. But if
cyberspace is now truly everywhere, if the media truly has become
"wrap-around," then novels of media assemblage must occur everywhere as
well. Future discussions of novels of media assemblage should probably
expand to include literary and mainstream fiction.
- Hive mind, the elimination of freedom--the stakes
described in Information Multiplicity's final chapter--are
high. I find myself wishing for a call to action, something along the
lines of Donna Haraway's "Cyborg Manifesto" with its assertion that "the
need for unity of people trying to resist world-wide intensification of
domination has never been more acute" (154). But the tone of Johnston's
study remains scrupulously neutral, and perhaps in the end that's also a
strength. Detached assessment is as necessary as passion if the goal is
to bring about change. Few, if any, have traced the trajectory of media
proliferation and its effects on literature more lucidly or meticulously
than Johnston. His study leaves no doubt that the media is changing us
in ways that make Deleuze and Guattari's theories sound prophetic. And
it's changing the kind of books we can write.
Department of English
Purdue University
rrauve1@purdue.edu
COPYRIGHT (c) 2001 BY REBECCA RAUVE.
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Works Cited
Deleuze, Gilles, and Félix Guattari. A Thousand Plateaus:
Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Trans. Brian Massumi.
Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1987.
---. Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature. Trans. Dana Polan.
Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1986.
Haraway, Donna. Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of
Nature. New York: Routledge, 1991.
Newman, Charles. The Post-Modern Aura: The Act of Fiction in an Age
of Inflation. Evanston, IL: Northwestern UP, 1985.
Tabbi, Joseph. Postmodern Sublime: Technology and American Writing
from Mailer to Cyberpunk. Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1995.
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