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Why I love Zotero

I started using Zotero, an advanced referencing software, about two years ago, a bit as one of many other extensions to Firefox (Mozilla free and open-source web browser). At the time, I was also daily commuting into work, so my reading was often done on public transport (sic!), and my note-taking very patchy. But only recently, when I began assembling resources for my Literature Review, I realized how useful, easy to use, flexible, and powerful Zotero was, and how many references I managed to collect in the last year only! Seriously, its slogan is: “Research, not re-search”, and with good reasons, and I now think it is an essential tool of my daily work-flow, as I explain below.

Firstly, Zotero has been unusually built by practising researchers and teachers, at the Centre for History and New Media at George Mason University, Washington D.C. This means that its efficacy is absolutely massive, a combination of the traditional bibliographic functions (e.g. the ability to grab and edit in one click information already available throughout other on-line services and export it in a host of metadata: no need to re-typing fields at all!), and the most recent and intuitive interface (the developers unashamedly refer to iTunes style of drag and drop, collections building, tagging, etc). The latter function is often been compared to the resilient habit of many researchers of using index cards and making connections among them by way of spreading them on the table. With Zotero you can easily move in a three-layered database and build links between your resources (with tags and links if you wish), while at the same time having at hand all the notes you took for each specific resource.

Aside from this, and very importantly for the current state of research practices, another unique feature for Zotero is its location. Previous software require you move into other tools to do your research, making your work-flow fragmented into multiple, generally unrelated windows, such as a Word processor, a Web browser, a standalone citation tool like EndNote, and notes written in various digital or analogue forms. Zotero, instead, ‘lives’ in your browser (it is ‘only’ a Firefox plug-in, in fact), therefore, it is already where you are online. This also allows you to be with your referencing and note taking in real time while trawling the web.

I cannot stress enough how simple and useful Zotero is, and I am afraid that the more I write about, the more this might sound complicated and some people might be even put off from trying it. The best thing is then to start using it immediately, and there are plenty of useful tutorials and documentation on the Zotero website: (http://www.zotero.org/support/screencast_tutorials).

Screenshot-ZoteroFirefox_web

The other thing I want to briefly talk about is the underlying political issue around Zotero, which makes it even more appealing for me: a bit of Foucauldian digging, so to speak. Zotero is distributed under the Educational Community License, which is OSI-certified, and GPL-compatible. General Public License is a free, copyleft license for software and other kinds of works, while the Open Source Initiative logo means that the Zotero code is open to further improvement, as well as being of course free to use.

This has got huge implications for Universities.

Let me give you a quick example. With your Goldsmiths username you receive (in the package of IT benefits) also a license to use EndNote Web, a miserable version of the EndNote software distributed by the powerful multinational of knowledge, Thomson Reuters (40th in the latest ranking for Top Global Brands). While studying, then, you are able to collect your references and build your bibliographies for your college works for free, but then, at some point, you leave with your degree. What happens to your diligently collected notes and sources? Well, you have two choices: either you leave them behind, or you buy a licence from Thomson at the current price of $300 plus upgrades. In a way, you pay to rescue your work from the software company!

Now, apart from disputing the efficacy of the above software (compared with the latest Zotero version, which really makes a huge impact in many ways, e.g. by providing a pioneering collaborative functionality, and by being multi platform), there is the obvious consideration that our diligent library staff are providing free training for EndNote Web, and therefore, they are providing also future customers to Thomson Reuters! It seems to me that, as matter of fact, we are paying a fee to a powerful multinational three times: firstly, as training hours, which could be used to help students to learn a very intuitive and reliable free software; secondly, as future license fees to purchase the proprietary software; thirdly, and rather obviously, as cost in software for the college as a whole.

To make matters worse, and not surprisingly, the people behind EndNote have recently sued George Mason University (which, by the way also owns an EndNote license), seeking $10,000,000 (yes, 10 millions, where did they get this figure from is still a mystery!) for providing “reverse-engineered software”. That is, for having given users the ability to move between reference software, in our example, to export your own work from a college licensed software onto a different database. To my understanding, this means that they were terribly scared by the fact that Zotero is able to provide (and encourages to do so) an import function for people who want to migrate from EndNote. The allegations sound to me a bit like saying that files created with Microsoft software would be opened just by the same original application. They were finally dismissed in June 2009, and full lawsuit is widely available on the web: (http://www.citmedialaw.org), for what somebody has poetically seen as Thomson Reuters v. Professors of History!

Finally, a curiosity: apparently, ‘Zotero’ is not an ancient Greek word, as I have always thought, but it comes from the Albanian verb zotëro-j, ‘master, acquire, learn fully’. The final -j marks the 1st person indicative (the regular citation form for Albanian verbs); in the imperative, we would get the bare verb root zotëro.

Whoever wants to know more about any of the issues I touched in this article, or wants an informal chat to share any technical matter relating to Zotero (e.g. synchronization, back-up, groups, compatibility), or to organize workshops, or even to promote a ‘Zotero Society’ (sic), can email me at p.cardullo@gold.ac.uk .

I decided to make public my Zotero Library collected so far, shared on Zotero website, where I also hold an account: here. By having a free account on Zotero, I can sync and backup my desktop/laptop Library database (pdf files are instead backed-up via Dropbox), join groups, and follow other people’s libraries. ((If interested you can even create a group whose library will work as a wiki, in which many users can modify and add entries))

Download my workshop handout, given at Sociology @ Goldsmiths in 2009, and spread the word.

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Spring Review Week Presentation Feedback

Presentation time at Goldsmiths, University of London, for 1st year (or 2nd year part time) PhD students. Mine received a very good feedback (in my opinion, of course) by the Head of the Graduate School, and it is downloadable here, under Creative Commons License (what does this mean?).

  • Timing: A little long, but well worth it!
  • Accessibility of Material: Very good.
  • Structuring of Material: Useful, helpful structure chosen to guide the audience through your presentation and your research.
  • Use of Visual: Excellent, as we would have expected.

The presentation has been compiled with Open Office software on Linux Ubuntu system, will therefore be not readable by Microsoft PowerPoint. Luckily, Open Office has got an “Export to Pdf” function to make it easier for the multitude of Gates’ customers :-) .

Download Pdf file here (821 kb: it includes a lot of cool pictures).

“I am the picture”, notes on Lacan ‘s epistemology

A definition of identity: ‘In order to vehicle the image, the subject own position must be fixed [as in the classic account of optics as geometrical diagram, the eyes must be fixed in order to be reached by the cone of multicoloured light that represent the field of vision]. It is from this fixity, and the images that are thus produced, that the subject is able to postulate objects of permanence and identity in the world. The mirror stage is therefore the focus for the interdependency of image, identity and identification (namely, the transformation that takes place in the subject when he assumes an image) ((J. Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision, Verso, 2005:173)) .

According to Lacan, the knowing subject is secured by the conscious. ‘This knower cannot recognize itself other than the I. Because the knower takes up a defensive position against its unconscious other, it cannot know itself in its refusal of the unconscious’ (rejection of the Cogito). The knower perceives ‘its self and its other in relation to narcissistic and objectifying identification in which they appear as objects to be controlled. In that position the knower projects consciousness, self, and subjects as a unifying identity and claim mastery and presence of self, producing its relation to others as aggressive relation of masterful ego to masterful ego’.
The knower’s representation of the world is confined to conscious material. ‘It fixes the relation of signifier to signified, giving it an imaginary permanence and stability and producing the illusion of univocal meaning [as] an effect of the knower’s refusal of the unconscious…The knower reproduces its symbolic economy, because it does not produce a new relation between signifiers, and so cannot produce new signifieds or meanings. However, the signification of the knower is also marked by what it cannot represent, because its signification is always in (unconscious) excess of that which it (consciously) intends to represent. For Lacan, the unconscious is ‘a chain of signifiers which…is repeated, and insists upon interfering in the breaks offered it by the effective discourse and the cogitation that informs. The knower mistakenly perceives itself as consciousness, and its consciousness as reality. This misrecognition produces the relation of the knowing subject to its known object. That relation is an aggressive, objectifying and distorting mastery of its object, which refuses its difference.’ ((K. Campbell, ‘Jacques Lacan and Feminist Epistemology’, Routledge, 2004: 37-39)) .

But, later Lacan develops a new form of epistemology based on the Four Discourses (Master, University, Hysteric, and Analyst), which produce four correspective apprensions to knowledge. ‘Reality is a function of discourse, for discourse produces both the world that is known, and the only world that can be known. Knowledge is contingent upon the discursive position of the knower. However, that subjective structure is necessarily an effect of discursive structure. By taking up a speaking position, the knower thereby is enmeshed in the fundamental relations of discourse…

…Discourse produces the known object, since the object can only be represented through signifying structures. The act of knowing is an act of representation that the stable structures of signifying chains produce. Therefore, knowledge itself has a discursive structure and thereby is rethought as the product of signification. [Crucially] in later Lacan’s epistemology what is know is inseparable from how it is known’ (cit: 54-55).

In other words, Photography is always a way of organising the symbolic and its elements. The symbolic order is a fiction, which masters the relations to Others. The image is, for Lacan, the scopic field and because we see ourselves in there, its imaginary is also its real: it creates us as subjects.

As Marianne Hirsh (1997) puts it: “The subject exists in time always as ‘other’ in one of several ways. On one hand the subject constitutes himself visually by way of a false identification with the misapprehended imaginary ‘other’ of Lacan’s mirror stage – the mistaken jubilant belief in the bodily wholeness and self-identity apprehended in the mirror. On the other hand, the subject constructs what Lacan calls the ‘moi’, the self as externally, socially, given and recognized – as a projected and therefore absent self/other, a personne in the double sense of person and no one. Third, existing in time, the subject is also always temporally other, that is, always, in addition to the present self, a previous or subsequent and anticipated self. By selecting one instant out of the subject’s temporal existence, the photograph stages the subject’s own specular self-encounter as an encounter with otherness: the subject represented in the photograph is always other to the one looking at the picture” ((M. Hirsh, Family Frames, Harvard UniPress, 1997:89)) .

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Urban Planning: some thoughts

According to Campbell and Cowan (2002), “the planning system is not working for cities. We have a development control system, not a development planning system. The planning system is tortuously quasi-legal, doing its best to avoid any basis of physical design. It fails to give a vision of place except through words. A development plan map does little more than define policy areas and constraints. The system is geared to think about new towns, where places can be neatly zoned into discrete areas. The planning system cannot deal with complexity” ((K Campbell and R. Cowan, Re:urbanism, Urban Exchange, 2002:28)) . “Cities are complex networks with infinite inter-relationships, operating in different ways at different times of the day, the week and the year…” [complexity: the state of being composed of many interconnected parts. In a complex system a large number of independent elements interact. The system acquires collective properties of its own through those elements clashing with or accommodating each other. The structure of the network can be understood only as being constantly in transition as it responds to ever-changing conditions].

The problems lie deep in the anti-city origins of town planning, born of garden cities and Modernism. They are at the heart of Town and Country Planning Act [no mention of cities here]: “Every new Masterplan seems to have a combination of some of the same few design features: the landmark tower, the visitors attraction, the public space. They offer city varieties, not cities form” (ibidem: my italics).

“Sites like the Greenwich Peninsula are big enough to change the shape and the operation of entire parts of the city. They are big enough to create their internal world. Yet the planning system treats each almost as though it were an infill site in a local town centre…The disconnected blogs of development are as foreign to each other as they are to the surrounding environment. Although they are supposed to be publicly accessible, they entrances are often gated and their internal roads are designed to feel private. This is the realm of the CCTV camera, that gloomy emblem of urban dysfunction. Connections to the surrounding road network are kept to the minimum. The developments turn their backs on their neighbours or build buffers between them. The developer, offering exclusivity, has excluded urbanity” (cited: 33).

The traffic engineer’s unchallenged truths are rooted in an obsession to eliminate conflict at all costs. A roundabout (which is usually in fact four T-junctions) is the best way to reduce conflicts [and fly-over?]. Everything is pre-arranged. By eliminating conflict we are robbing the city of its first signs of civic interaction: the chance meeting, the eye contact that establishes dialogue, the smile and the offer to give way. Good urbanism manages this interaction. “The streets has been lost as central focus for making decisions about cities. It has fallen into the hands of the controllers. Their aims include safety, neatness, order, exclusivity and best value performance targets. Every action is intended to solve what is seen as a problem caused by excessive interaction between people and other people, or people and motor traffic” (cited: 56).

“Urban design has its unchallenged truths. Walkability is a favourite concept of American new urbanists. But drawing a 400-metre walk-band over an area does not make it work as a neighbourhood or support mixed uses. In a city what matters is the total journey from origin to destination – from home to work, for example – not just the walk to the corner shop.” (cited: 40-41).

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Signal Lost: the Space Beneath

The series of pictures (British Sociological Association Conference 2008 Student Artwork Competition Entrants) are part of a body of work of almost one hundred images taken over a period of three months around East Greenwich, London. They represent a particular aspect of the undergoing works of replacement of Victorian water pipes, and a possible backdrop of the regeneration of that part of London. The first thing I want to stress is the casualty of the subject as it became obvious after my son, aged four, started pointing out the signs, the letters, and the colours on the pavements to me. The signs are made by engineers with spray paint in order to map the invisible territory beneath our feet, before the actual digging starts. Whilst we would not normally stop and think about these strange marks on the ground, focused as we are on the delays to our daily routine caused by the road works, children have a different sensibility. Their embodied sensorial experience brings up small details otherwise unquestioned by adults’ rationale. There is an evident analogy here, between the collection of details of the photographer on the ‘scene of a crime’ (where to mark the X of the body found?) and the children’s practise of picking up small things like rag-pickers. This also made me think about the famous exhibition that the anarchist architect Colin Ward showed as example of children’s perception of the cityscape (‘The Child in the City’, London 1978), in which room furniture was represented as three times the normal size (Paul Ritter’s “Children’s Eye View”, 1959). The point was to reflect on how children experience the urban environment, as their acute sensorial experience and size make them closer to the ground and very attentive observers of the street pattern (floorscape).

As the visual research proceeded (and started becoming an obsession), it showed in more details (or better, hinted at) the intricate networks of pipes, cables, and wires that constitute the space under our feet in the urban environment. Where do all these links connect? To what extent can we still demarcate the boundaries of our private space of the home? How can we rethink the notion of natural resource, such as water, something that normally we would take for granted? What kind of embodied practice is embedded in the everyday use of utilities?

Moreover, the production of waste and the ordering of the self are two intertwined aspect of modernity. “Ruination produces a defamiliarised landscape in which the formerly hidden emerges; the tricks that make a building a coherent ensemble are revealed, exposing the magic of construction. And the hidden networks are laid open, released from their confinement behind walls and under floors” (in Edensor, Industrial Ruins, 2005:109,). In one of my peers’ feedback there was the suggestion of using the body of work as a metaphor of social connections, as they are less ‘natural’ (face to face) and more ‘constructed’ (virtual bodies and ‘Second Life’, mobiles and chat lines, the USB memories and so on).

At the end, there is a feeling of loss, uncertainty and almost despair as we are disturbed and perhaps unable to make sense of the vain attempts to map the stratification, both in space and time, of the myriad of networks and signals around us (as well as of their ‘geometries of power’ between local and global, embeddedness and disembeddedness, imagined and experienced, self-sufficiency and interculturality).

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“You’ll get moved on here”

The other day I came across a great piece of ruin, an other fragment of this incredible city: a London based charity invites people sleeping rough to author a ‘Homeless City Guide’ by drawing listed signs on the wall in order ‘to help others to read the city’.

By scrolling down the list of symbols, I felt a sense of hollowness reading tags like ‘an attack happened here’, or ‘strong police presence’, and ‘unfriendly place’. Risk is a major concern in everyday life in the cities, and the media campaigns fulfil many moral panics alike. By thinking about geographies of danger, though, there is a sense in which risk cannot be a rational calculation made by rational individuals: on the contrary, there is a strong social element in the evaluation of risk, interlocked with personal memories, shared experiences, unconscious feelings of desire and uncanny, and relative positions in-between fields: so to say, we live in descriptions of places, which organise, link and make itineraries out of them.

Ah, the charity also recommends to use chalk in order to keep the system up to date. There is in fact the impression that non permanent marks can tell us more about the ever changing and ephemeral geographies of our living spaces: can chalk write on Teflon or glass, I wonder?

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O’ sole mio…

Please note that I have added a downloadable pdf file of this post with bibliography.

…or ‘The Italian Mating Game’, just to paraphrase an excellent ethnography of inner street youth in Philadelphia ((by E. Anderson: beautiful book but somehow bold, as something was missing there, perhaps a more visual based approach would have added more to it)). This story started in my home town, Eboli, when last summer I visited my parents. It is a medium-size town not far from Naples, unjustly infamous because of Carlo Levi’s ethnography ((‘Christ Stopped at Eboli’ which in fact has not much to do with this place)) . I found hundreds of ‘love’ graffiti, hearts, strong declarations of affection, and ‘love’ poems: they adorn or vandalize the walls of the nearby streets (I did not make much of an effort to find them, I have to admit). I published a significant selection in my photoblog, but still only a small part of the portfolio. I strongly recommend to visit these pages and the relative comments as they are – in my opinion – extremely significant. More than any words, I shall say. I need, however, to add some other notes as there is also a need to dig all around them in a foucauldian way, in order to put these pictures in the context they deserve. I have been taking pictures of graffiti for the past three years, but nothing has ever struck me so much: to the extent I decided to tell these stories in order to try to make more visible young sexual subjectivities, their positions in ‘the sexual spaces of the community’ ((C. Philo ‘Sex, Life, Death, Geography,..’ Population, Space, and Place; 11, 2005)) , and make personal affection a public problem. For the purpose of this paper, I will use those pictures as a form of knowledge production or ,even better, as a gateway for discussing power relations within a situated context. In a Foucauldian fashion I will treat a discourse on sexuality as a ‘dense transfer point for relations of power: between men and women, parents and offspring, teachers and students, priest and laity, and administration and a population’ ((M. Foucault, ‘The History of Sexuality’, Vol 1, 1998:103)) . I will cunningly use sexuality as an instrument for discursive practise: however, a practise that has been unveiled by photographic exploration.

  • Often these inscriptions on the wall in the southern province in Italy are simple and direct, there is no aesthetic concern, nor artistic aim: they represent almost primordial needs to communicate affection, naive declarations of eternal love: WE are a couple, WE are in love (and this message is often repeated over and again all around). They are ‘just’ an expression of belonging and a claim to territory, a bold, plain, direct message, in this case a possession of a companion or a presumption of love. However, they are not less revealing…In this part of Italy, the legal act of the ‘Publications’, usually one year before the actual wedding, are an occasion to render public with invitations and parties the happy event to come;
  • sometimes, declarations of Love/Hate are made on large canvases, in busy roads to get as much attention as possible. However, I argue, this is less to do with the attempt to reach a wider audience than with the chance to impress the beloved one. In fact, these kinds of messages seem to have as recipient a specific person or group of peers and they probably address the need to impress him or her as object of worthy attentions. In fact, the vast majority of these writing appear in the back streets, around schools and pizzerias, in other words the hang-out corners or the arenas and have specific recipients (we must not forget that, in that context, ‘going for a walk’ is a major activity which involves both adults and kids, last but not least because of a more favorable climate);
  • the recurrence in frequency of these messages of (eternal) love, which often take the shape of a poem, is simply overwhelming: they beat by large any other subject, such as football or ‘political’ belonging, which used to be more in vogue when I was a kid there;
  • increasingly, and with my surprise, girls are out in the street in early hours (I imagine), with cans and paint to declare love, affection, and desire. It is relatively easy to recognise the gender of the ‘mating gamer’ as the Italian first names are strictly gendered. On the other hand, there was a particular writing that really struck me, probably a professional thing as I work for the New Deal for Lone Parents in London: “Marina is pregnant”. In a small town of southern Italy teenagers pregnancy is very much a shameful event, and when attempts of recovery, usually from older brothers or dads, fail (which means no wedding is going ahead) then the ‘bad fact’ (malaffare) is kept as quite as possible. Here, notifying the news is probably a matter of revenge, maybe from a previous lover (but this is a speculation).

I did not manage to interview any of these kids, but I think I can interpreter their tagging or translate their revealing poems. The latter clearly uncover a division in the achievement of different goals according to the gender of the writer: girls are the dreamers of a stable, long lasting relationship, such as:

”Finally I found my Prince Charming! Oh, I love you”.

Boys, on the other hand, being brought up in their special cocoon since early age, seem more inclined to persevere an erotic dream of frustrated longing:

“And I get uncovered in my bed at night time while dreaming a different world made of hypnotic melodies. I love you Mary”.

This might sound funny, but it is tragic. What the many adults I spoke to labelled as ‘vandalism’ is, in my opinion, an expression of profound malaise of these kids, with their repressed needs and sexual desires put up on the wall. These are determined or constrained within the family, the schools, and the ‘decent’ social values that inform their very daily lives, as power in the forms of institutions and symbolic ordeals reaches ‘into the very grain of individuals, touches their bodies, inserts itself into their actions and attitudes, their discourses, learning processes and everyday lives’ ((Foucault, ‘Power/Knowledge’ 1980:39)) . The cultural symbols that they bring with them since early age talk opposite languages that inform the ‘game’: for the boys is the ‘macho’ element to be predominant, while the girls cultivate the dream of ‘having a boyfriend, a fiancé or a husband and the fairy tale prospect of living happily ever after with one’s children in a nice house in a decent neighbourhood, nurtured by daily watching of television soap operas and popular love songs’ ((E.Anderson, 1999: 151)) . What for me seems to appear from this discourse is that the celebrated country of Love, Desire and Emotion is turned inside-out into a landscape of sexual repression and constrained libido, where seminal fluids literally leak through the private walls of the bedrooms of these kids’ private homes and manage to slip through the vigilant nets of their families’ boundaries, in order to enter the public visual sphere: they thus splash over the walls, and finally become a public issue, reinscribing the urban landscape. What is left of that romantic imaginary of the love songs is perhaps ‘only’ a folkloric tale well embedded in the ‘macho’ culture, which, among other things, differentiates and separates boys from girls since early age ((‘The machist type is never misogynist. Between the two there is an important difference. The macho will often say: “I am not maschilist. I love women!”, and it is true. He loves anything that is feminine, as long as it stays where it belongs, that is with the women. However, they do not tolerate anything ‘feminine’ in the men: that’s why ‘machismo’ and homophobia go often well together’. Marina Castaneda ‘From Machismo to Equality’, 2002)) .

This is probably nothing new, however what seems to be crucial here it is the fact that ‘machismo’, especially among middle class youth, is gone out of fashion, it is more hidden than before, but it remains ever present in practice (again Castaneda’s studies in Mexico are exemplar). The locations where these pictures were taken, in fact, are geographically central (in these towns the centre with the square or the high street counts a lot), and have been chosen around schools highly perceived as middle class choices. In other words, these pictures might even tell us something about the class disposition of these young lovers. I understand that a more serious research needs also the collection of other kind of data (e.g. interview and qualitative evaluation), but it is also arguable that pictures can open some reflections onto fields difficult to reach, as well as entail a more holistic impression of the arguments exposed. Moreover, we know from other researches that kids and teens tend to hang out and play around their immediate neighbourhood, hardly moving too far, especially if there are at stake territorial claims (either of turf or love). If we maintain, as I believe, that these kids are mostly from a middle class background, then we might want consider the ‘leakage’ on the walls as a response to a highly controlled environment, in which notions of ‘decency’ and claims to ‘chastity’ are almost equal. If we maintain with Foucault that, with the rise of the middle classes in the Eighteen century,

‘Sexuality was carefully confined; it moved into the home. The conjugal family took custody of it and absorbed it into the serious function of reproduction. On the subject of sex, silence became the rule’ ((M. Foucault ‘The History of Sexuality’, vol. 1, ca 1978:3)) ,

then we need to account of a system of control, regulation, and repression (bio-politics) of children’s sexuality, which cannot possibly lead to procreation (even if we can argue that the female teenager body is in fact highly fertile). That is, a pedagogization of children’s sexual drive would have been put in place, maintained, and justified by ‘parents, families, educators, doctors, and eventually psychologists’ ((cit:104)) . This argument reinforces Skeggs’ s idea that ‘morality is absolutely central: it informs the perspective taken, the inscriptions made, and the value attributed’ ((B. Skeggs ‘Class, Self, Culture’ 2004:23)) . To make sense of this discourse, though, we need to take into account the generational gap, too: what it has been described as a class in its own right, juxtaposed to the dominant class of the adults ((Oldman, in Qvortrup, 1994)) , which complicates the scheme further. In this framework, I believe that the denominator of class in traditional sense is crucially intertwined with the generational element (age group). In the latter context, more than the former, we can claim that ‘it is the ability of energy to leak beyond its inscribed containment that makes a class struggle. The refusal to accept inscription and be bound by its value is a significant act in challenging the dominant symbolic order’ ((Skeggs, cited:13)) . In my representation, it is the young middle class kids (often girls) that challenge the strict values of decency and sexual constraints they have found all around them, from family to institutions, for the simple fact that they are youth in the first instance: ‘indeed, it is the relation between the production of subjectivity and social regulation that is of central importance to the production of sexuality today’ (( Walkerdine et alia, 2001:209)) . In their graffiti there is scarce room for mainstream practises that make the middle class subject since childhood as the rational and autonomous subject, with a strong and bounded ego, to whom is given the illusion of choice and own power. This process is particularly at odds with the pressures on the fecund femal body, and the inscription of middle-class girls as bourgeois subjects can create incompatible positions, ‘and that incompatibility must be lived by the girl herself as a psychic struggle from which she never escapes’ ((cited:187)) . On another level, and at the same time, these kids (normally and significantly addressed by working-class peers “dad’s children”, figli di papa’, which essentially means that they have the emotional support and the money they need from their fathers, seen as traditional central authority of the family), participate in specific parties with rather selective friends and hang out in particular places, in which the dynamics of class formation are played up continuously: by showing off trendy positional goods, by discussing university choices, by pretending modesty and self-control, they soon display all the elements of class inscription and symbolic distinction.

Throughout the paper there is also a sense in which young people’s sexuality plays a huge role in determining the level of anxieties and hence the response of the adults to it: childhood in the Western world, more in general, has been given the attributes of being at the same time asexual, sexual, and sexualized. But this brief excursus on children’s and young people’s (for our purpose the terms are really synonymi) sexuality cannot be complete without making reference to the debate surrounding the danger of the Internet and the television, as the media become more pervasive and enter almost undisturbed the domestic realm. In a media saturated culture, in which the image is predominant, state and family are at odd at attempting to control the once perceived secure boundaries of the private home, so to keep up with the moral imposition of sexual purity. Moreover, children are more and more competent and skilled in the use of new technologies, becoming prime consumers in the markets of media derivatives, which also create conflicts on different scales for the capitalist order.

In this dynamic and yet situated framework, there is no much room to accommodate rhetoric of agency, visions of ‘plastic sexuality’, presumptions of ‘democratization of the private sphere fully compatible with democracy in the public sphere’ ((A. Giddens “The Transformation of Intimacy” 1992:3-184)) . Nor there is possible space, in this context, for agents free to choose lifestyle choices in the ‘emergence of pure relationship, not only in the area of sexuality, but also in those of parent-child relations, [within] an ethical framework for a democratic personal order’ ((ibidem)). What I have tried to describe, in fact, is the daily struggle and the stubborn exercise of resistance played out by these kids on the walls of a provincial town of southern Italy against different manifestations of power (family, schools, public morality, etc). These are embedded in a complex matrix of social identifiers, within the interlocking fields of gender, age, and class (race and sexual orientations are kept as a given as no other data have been collected about). The subjects of my research/representation are not the bold, rational, and self-determined agents of such literature, they are instead also ‘irrational, anxious, and defended’ ((Walkerdine, Lucey, and Melody ‘Growing up Girl’ 2001:84)) . There are in fact powerful unconscious motivations at play here, which are made manifest on the public wall and ‘profoundly influence and are intertwined with more conscious processes; not only individual and social ones, but also the very structures of collective human life – material and ideological institutions such as the state, education, the family and work; the organization of biological processes such as motherhood; the lived experiences of class, race, femininity’ ((ibidem)) . What I hope to have achieved is also a representation of class that is ‘at once profoundly social and profoundly emotional, and lived in its specificity in particular cultural and geographical locations’ ((cited: 53)) , as well as give some hints of ‘the complex psychosocial processes through which young women live the contradictions of the discursive positions’ ((cited:187)) .

We have also taken into consideration the possibility that it is not just sound or smell that permeates the domestic walls and get its way into the public: in my opinion, these pictures communicate the sense in which the private becomes inscribed onto the public via the writings on the wall. More in general, we can suggest that the public visual sphere is often an extension of the private space of the home. It is not to say that the public and the private, the space of the imaginary and the experienced, the normative and the subjunctive are parallel worlds which eventually meet in the third space of the graffiti. The simplicity of this dualism is even more evident in a paper by Boris Ewelstein (2005), who eventually gets to the paradoxical conclusion that opposite and distinct worlds exist side by side until the piece has been drawn: ‘Below the paint lies the cosmos of a rational and disciplined society, while from above the paint, extending outward from its two-dimensionality, rises the diegesis of the graffiti writer. The piece becomes a permeable membrane that allows both worlds to flow into each other’. I have suggested instead the possibility that the representation is the expression of a malaise which starts at home or in the schools, shows anxieties and fantasies which seriously challenge any notion of ‘reality’, and entails a whole set of conflicts and negotiations which start on the quotidian, for instance about the ‘time to go home’, or around the ‘hanging about with whom’, or even what programme should be watched on telly. On the other hand, though, I believe that the public visual sphere of that town has been changed to a degree that the world of the adults, their institutions, and the communities have to come to terms with this increasing pressure, at least in terms of their condemnation: what struck me since I began thinking about this paper were both the extraordinary number of the inscriptions (a quantitative concern?) and the elementary vernacularity of the message. Therefore, I started asking what was going on, what kind of motivation might have pushed so many young people to paint their messages over the walls, and what kind of thoughts adults had about it.

By revisiting places of my own childhood, on the other hand, a certain biographical tune has been finely played, in which a sense of self-reflexivity (or, better, I shall use a less fashionable term of ‘class consciousness’) becomes an important part of the research process in an attempt of making visible the power of the researcher/photographer to interpret, represent and produce knowledge: in this research context, for sure, there is no room for claims of objectivity. Therefore, I prefer to try to make the perspectives taken as much clear as possible, without taking over the actual representation. And surely, these places maintained an aura for me, a certain presence seemed to be there thanks to those very inscriptions on the walls, which they are surrounded with. Even if comparisons of landscapes and young people’s behaviours between then and now are almost impossible (due to the fast paced changes of cities and of many other structural elements that invested the new generations, as well as the problematic reliability of mnemonic processes), still there has been a search for the ‘known’, digging in my own memories and experiences, although most of the findings happened to come about as surprise or revelations. As Susan Sontag wrote about Benjamin’s way of looking at his past:

‘[past] evokes events for the reactions to the events, places for the emotions one has deposited in the places, other people for the encounter with oneself, feelings and behaviour for intimations of future passions and failures contained in them’ ((S. Sontag ‘Intro to One-Way Street’, 1979))

In other terms, in the process of taking pictures my own identity has been put in question and worked throughout it ((‘Just as subjects are produced through experiences so are theorists. The experiences of the theorist are the means by which the theorist becomes a knowing subject and these are significant to understanding the theoretical debates in which we engage’ Skeggs 197:167)) : my experience, reported in the pictures I showed, has been dialectical (in benjaminian terms of the now-time), in the way that these concealed presences of young lovers actualized feelings, of desire as well as of anger, of envy and aversion, about attitudes, behaviours, emotional responses and class inscription that could not be understood at the time, and with which now I started to come to terms with, thanks to the possibility of using a newly accrued cultural capital (a full display of a ‘psychic landscape of social class’ I think has been deployed ((Diane Reay, Sociology 2005; 39; 911)) ).

In conclusion, I suggest with Mike Keith (2005) that the inscriptions and the surfaces, the normative city and the memories, are incessantly iterative, complementing and re-enforcing, often in an inconsistent manner, a sense of identity of a place. Or with Cohen:

‘the relation between real and the imaginary is not fixed, but tactically determined. By the same token the imaginary is not a distorted reflection of the real, nor the real is simply a site for a projection of fantasy. We are always dealing with a process of double inscription whose articulations vary according to a range of social circumstances’ ((1999:11, italics in the original))

But also you might want to appreciate the fact that every graffito comes about in a specific context: most of the writings in the southern province of Italy appear to be about couples, declaration of love, and erasure of other couples or potential rivals’ statements. Here, the battle for the turf, for the block or for the postcode, seems to fade into disputes of other kinds, other ‘territories’. Every wall tells a different story and open up a different discourse… I have never seen anything like it in England, especially in London, have you? More precisely, every city or, even better, every surface provides a different context or frame for the bodies, it represents

‘one of the crucial factors in the social production of (sexed) corporeality, the condition and milieu in which corporeality is socially, sexually and discursively produced, [and crucially provides] the site for the body’s cultural saturation, its takeover and transformation by images, representational systems, the mass media and the arts – the place where the body is representationally reexplored, transformed, contested, reinscribed: the question is to examine how different cities, different socio-cultural environments actively produce the bodies of their inhabitants’ ((E. Grosz ‘Space, Time and Perversion’ 1995: 104-109)) .

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The Mating Game

This is the title of a chapter of an amazing book I have just finished: ‘The Code of the Street’ by Elijah Anderson ((Anderson, Elijah: Code of the street: decency, violence, and the moral life of the inner city. New York; London:Norton, 2000.)) , probably one of the best inner-city ethnography, concerned mostly with poor black youth of Philadelphia.

The teenage pregnancy and the widespread one parent family have to be framed as an other manifestation of that set of attitudes, behaviors, non written rules, dystopian symbols that form the ‘code’. This is well embedded in a more general ‘kind of institutionalized oppositional culture, a reaction to a history of prejudice and discrimination that now finds its way into schools and other institutions’ (323). According to Anderson, a dangerous vicious circle has been allowed to start and develop in the impoverished inner city communities, which primarily has structural causes:  ‘The emergence of an underclass isolated in urban ghettoes with high rates of joblessness can be traced to the interaction of race prejudice, discrimination, and the effects of the global economy’ (316). Poverty, isolation, alienation, oppositional culture: ‘but such oppositional produces even more alienation and lines become hardened, polarities develop’ (318). ‘This alienation from the system and the belief that blacks have to mobilize against it helps to legitimate – for its participants – the code of the street, settling scores personally, going for oneself’ (299)…

It is in this deprived economic settings and vicious cultural context that the mating game has to be inscribed. What in fact becomes obvious is the sexual game among urban youth is the outcome of two opposite drives, the longing for sexual gratification and peers recognition from the boys and the dream of forever happiness and solid family of the girls. What makes this game more cruel and distintive for inner city black youth is the social and economic context: on one hand, the ‘code’ dictates the maschilist attitudes of the boys, for whom the woman becomes the ultimate sexual object to control in order to gain respect from the peer group; on the other, the promises and the perhaps genuine intentions of the Prince Charming cannot be fulfilled as the middle class American dream of the caring father and the supporting husband is an empty and distant dream for these deeply deprived communities. In the end, it is often the boy who prevails, as often very inexperienced girls, whose role model is often an older sibling or their own mother with a similar background, tend to adjust to the rap, the attentions, the symbolic climate, the prospectives of a welfare payment (often the only source of income, flat, and security in their young lives).

Anderson distinguishes clearly between ‘street’ and ‘decent’ families as fundamental background in which this game is played: the lack of prospective, middle-class values, hopes in the future, and entrenched ‘code’ culture, all play their role in forging these young people’s expectations ((alarm! there is the underlining risk of defining the poor as lacking of middle class values. In the discussion of class and race, on the other hand, there is often the case that all blacks are deemed of belonging to the working class, or even worse that they would not care of the signifier of class as are fully embedded in a conclusive discourse of race around their subjectivity: is Anderson’s argument descriptive or normative? Also compare Walkerdine’s view (cited: 194) that ‘prospects of a professional career act as a contraceptive for middle-class girls: nothing is allowed to obstruct the academic path – certainly not motherwood, which is seen as the ultimate failure, to be avoided at all costs)) .The class background and the cultural context are here crucial: ‘Sexual relations, exploitative or otherwise, are common among middle class teenagers as well, but most middle class youth take a stronger interest in their future and know what a pregnancy can do to derail it’. On this point, also Walkerdine et alia (2001) distinguish:

‘The pressures on the fecund body present a problematic path through education and life, whatever the class position. What is important is how that fecundity is regulated and lived. For middle-class young women it is their inscription as the bourgeois subject that counterposes fecundity in a way that simply does not allow the possibility of pregnancy. Conversely the position of working-class girls is to be the fecund Other to the middle-class girls, a designation that is difficult to escape in order to follow a career or manage upward mobility. It seems that the regulation of femininity works quite differently upon the body of working- and middle-class girls. Indeed it is the fecund body of the middle-class girl that has to be regulated at all costs in favour of the predominance of the mind [as school achievement and career]. On the other hand, the fecund body of the working-class girl does not represent a threat to bourgeois masculinity but rather contributes to a discourse on welfare scroungers’ ((Walkerdine, Lucey, and Melody ‘Growing up Girls’ 2001:187-188; I think that massimalist arguments do not help us to read the social world. I have the impression that normative (e.g. welfare) and academic (that is mainly white, liberal, and middle class) discourses on race have helped to conceal the issue of class. That is, there is the tendency to think about ethnic minority groups as ‘poor’ or ‘working-class’. On the other hand, birds’ eye view on poverty have created a voyeuristic and sexualised discourse of the working-class female body )) .

And while ‘it becomes extremely difficult for the boys, in view of their employment prospects, to see themselves taking on the responsibilities of conventional fathers and husbands’, on the other hand ‘the young woman has a certain amount of help in settling for the role of single parent. A large part of her identity is provided by the baby under her care and guidance, there is no quicker way to grow up’ (148-149). And to stress this last point further, there is the status oriented behaviour, the large sum of money spent on dresses and shoes on the babies: ‘for a young mother who fails to secure a strong commitment from a man, a baby becomes a partial fulfillmant of the good life. The young mothers who form such baby clubs develop an ideology counter to that of the more conventional society, one that not only approves of but enhances their position. In effect, they work to create value and status by inverting that of the girls who do not become pregnant. The teenage mother derives status from her baby’ (164-165). Also in Walkerdine (cited:196), ‘to understand why keeping the baby appeared to be a better solution to the working-class girls and their families, we need to understand their embodiment as the fecund body as a psychically and socially safe place to be, which kept them away from the terrifying path to transformation’.

On the other hand, ‘the lack of gainful employment today not only keeps the entire community in the pit of poverty but also deprives young men of the traditional American way of proving their manhood – by supporting a family. They must thus prove themselves in other ways. Casual sex with as many women as possible, impregnating one or more, and getting them to have his baby brings a boy the ultimate esteem of his peers and makes him a man’ (177). This is the essence of the mating game, the extraction of the maximum personal benefit from sexual relationships, and cannot be understood if taken away from the severerly impoverished inner-city neighborhood: ‘trapped in poverty, ignorant of the long term consequences of their behaviour but aware of the immediate benefits, adolescents engage in a mating game’ (177).

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Preface

This is Paolo Cardullo’s flogging trip in the invisible city: each entry is a tactic.

This blog is mostly taken from my research diary notes, made open for further discussion (‘Feel the Source’). It is open to the wider public of course, but a peer-to-peer (p2p) eye is especially welcome as “for the critic his colleagues are the higher authority. Not the public. Still less posterity” ((W. Benjamin in ‘One-Way Street’, 1979:67)) . It is obviously linked to the pictures in my photoblog, as one feeds into the other. Please also read this thread in full where a critical understanding of the actual Medium is deployed. It also works well as a sort of Preface to the rest.

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Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0