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Navigating Movements: An Interview with Brian Massumi
I’ve been reading Massumi and struggling with how capitalism connects with a theory of bodily movement. For some reason, I just wasn’t connecting things. But, now that I am making progress on that front, I have the desire to talk about lots of things.
One of the ideas that jumped out at me tonight is on page 10 where he states, “[Capitalism] starts working directly on bodies’ movements and momentum, producing momentums, the more varied and even erratic the better. Normalcy starts to lose its hold” (6th para under The constraints of freedom). This makes sense to me because tonight on 20/20 (I had it on in the background), there was a story about weight loss and flavours. I don’t know the whole story, but when one of the women said she didn’t have time to cook good food because her lifestyle is so busy, things just clicked for me. Capitalism works on us in a sped-up fashion and we think we have to keep going and going and going in order to be productive. Later in the article, Massumi links this with participation and with branding and marketability. We think we have to keep going in order to improve our CV or resume so that we’re positioned to make the next move.
When we’re positioning ourselves (or trying to anyway) we are operating on the field of potential. We have the potential to do so many things. And, there is thought in preparing to move and act on this field. Massumi even says in talking about anger, “The overload of the situation is such that, even if you refrain from a gesture, that itself is a gesture” (page 5). This made sense to me to think about it in the terms of an indrawn breath, or a barely perceptible tightening of the shoulder blades. While these are gestures in the strictest sense, thinking about these minute movements enabled me to think of that second before gesture.
We’re on this train of movement all the time that it’s really difficult to change directions or move a different way. That is, “Power doesn’t just force us down certain paths, it puts the paths in us, so by the time we learn to follow its constraints we’re following ourselves” (10). Capitalism works by keeping us moving. Massumi continues, “The argument is that capitalist powers have pretty much abandoned control in the sense of ‘power over’” (10). In this flow, it doesn’t matter which way we move as long as we keep moving so the system can profit. “Capitalism starts intensifying or diversifying affect, but only in order to extract surplus-value. It hijacks affect in order to intensify profit potential” (11). And, we all want to be effective, right?
In some breathwork classes I’ve taken the instructor suggested breathing in the dissatisfaction and then blowing it out and releasing it. I always resisted this idea because I thought, why would I want to breathe in “issues” when what I really feel like doing is push them away. But, now I get that in the out breath there is potential. …just a side benefit of the reading that I thought I’d share.
I am a happy camper tonight. It’s not that I don’t realize that there is a lot to be done, especially in regards to capitalism, the ‘affective media loop, and pedagogy, or even any looseness in this post, but that I feel more aware and able to talk about things. hee. Well, at least for the moment! as I’m going to go back and try to read another chapter of Parables and try and do some scaffolding.
About m2h blogsMarcia Hansen works by day as a marketing manager in social media. At other times you'll find her traveling about speaking, writing, and learning. And, if she's lucky, it's on her Honda Shadow 1100.
Please note -- the postings on this site are my own and don’t necessarily represent my employer's positions, strategies, or opinions. If you want to know more about me, you can visit my About Marcia Hansen page above, or my home page at MarciaHansen.com.
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