Alan Sondheim on Wed, 14 Mar 2012 15:03:56 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Prisonhouse of Age |
Prisonhouse of Age Something has to be said about age and ageism, which is so pervasive in our culture, that we're held down, tied up, unable to move. I'm told I look good for my age; that I play like a much younger person. In a performance I hear that a dancer, who died at 68, was in the middle of the end of her life. A friend says that his uncle dying at the age of 72, is quite old. Grandfathers and grandmothers on tv always look to retirement and playing with the kids. Television ads are increasingly aimed towards drugging us, those over 60 say, because of a variety of ailments we don't have. We're frightened of falling and not getting up. We're no longer mid-career artists, but a dying generation. We're waiting for the end. Friends say that now we're waiting for us to die off, that every day brings news of new deaths and again this isn't true. The rhetoric is hurtful and isn't meant to be hurtful. The rhetoric is made out of bits and pieces of the 'natural' progression from birth to death. We're the AARP generation. We're the baby boomers are are demanding to suck social welfare dry. We don't do anything. We're not worth listening to. We're hippies and repeat the 60s. We just love listening to 60s music which formed us. We're part of the social welfare state. Some of us who fought in Vietnam are an embarrassment. Some of us who didn't are an embarrassment. On tv we're told that 'all we have is our stories.' If this happened to anyone at any age, the result would be unbearable. We're not taken seriously. We're all waiting for us to pass away. We have to prove ourselves repeatedly. We're the result of hidden prejudice. We're on the way to dementia. We're on the way to Alzheimer's. We're told our short-term memory isn't what it used to be. In the most well-meaning areas of popular culture, we're forgetful. Our bones are weak and ready to fracture. We have to exercise more. Our family has to be everything. We're not eligible for grants and for jobs. We're eligible to die and the sooner we do that, the less the embarrassment. In fact embarrassment is the key to everything; we embarrass others. If we're sexual it's a joke. If we remarry it's a joke. If we refuse our assigned place in the family it's a joke. I first ran into ageism at the age of 30, applying for a job as editor of an art mag in Los Angeles. I've always been sensitive to it because I've always been told I look and act 'younger than my age.' Now the violence of age, an assigned number, a number we can't do anything about - almost but not quite like the color of our skin - is foregrounded. I get turned down for jobs because of it, illegal but of course there are always ways around it. My own feeling? If I can't do something now, just as if I couldn't do something at 20, then so be it; I don't belong where doing that thing is impossible. But otherwise, leave me alone, judge me on what I make, what I say, and leave goddamn age out of it. Don't call me a generation and don't tell me my best days are behind me. Don't tell me I'm in my golden years. This may all seem minor, idiotic, to you. You have no idea, at least in the US, how pervasive this is. There are pockets of resistance - Eyebeam for example, where I was resident until a week or two ago, is a healthy exception. But almost everywhere, the codes are in place, they're suffocating. I'm offered seats on the subway - because of age, not because I need them. People condescent, smile at me, since apparently I'm no longer sexual, have no desires, know my place. I'm told I'm a child again, that the elderly are child-like. I'm told I'm living on borrowed time. I'm told there's not much time left. I'm told I should be grateful. I'm told I have a loving family. I'm told my grandchildren are my future. I'm told my children are my future. I'm told I have no future. I'm told about generations, that I'm of this or that generation, that it's now the turn of a new generation. I'm told what our generation thinks and I can't recognize that. I'm told repeatedly that we were born before the digital age, that we think differently. The fact this isn't true, none of this is true, with people I know and I'm sure millions of people in this country, is irrelevant. I'm lectured _to._ I'm talked _to._ I'm taken out of the realm of instrumental thinking, consigned to a real which is a total mirage, told to act my age and behave myself. People don't tell me to retire, but they assume I'm headed that way. My theoretical work is assumed dated, somewhere back probably with existentialism or Bateson. My mind is supposedly elderly. Am I repeating myself? Did I forget something here? Should I send a birthday gift? Should I ask a grandson or daughter to drive for me, since I'm constantly running off the road? Should I start preparing for the end? Should I become a consumer of culture, preferably old tv shows and books, instead of a producer? It's remarkable how well I look for my age! It's remarkable I haven't had any major medical problems yet, but wait, they're just around the corner. Do I have enough money to do nothing? Should I do nothing? Should I worry about my IRA? I don't expect this to change, not even with radicalism on the rise among people I know. But I do want to say this - that when you see someone, at any age, turning towards senility or depression, you might ask yourself what happened to that person, how is that person perceived - by his or her family or friends, by others in the community, by granting organizations or hiring committees. You might look at studies of enforced helplessness, you might think for a moment how age, like race, manifests itself today - age more violently than ever, since we're assumed to be non-productive, eating away at the very foundations of civil digital society, of whatever's left of the commons, of the fabric of the sentient city. What I'm talking about is being called a 'geezer' or 'old geezer' or 'old man' with all the nastiness that implies. This isn't true of everyone, of course, but it's miserable enough, that it's true across the board. In the culture industry, such as it is, you either become blue-chip and/or elder- statesman or woman, or you sink into oblivion. If I go into a gallery, I'm immediately sized up in a certain way that parallels the not-so-subtle hatreds against race in the 1930s. I recognize the violence of that parallel itself, but there's no other way to describe it. Lyotard called this kind of situation the differend, and there's been writing on and off about the stigma that's applicable. We carry a sign on our foreheads, a sign not of our own making or choosing, but one imposed on us culturally. Whatever we do or accomplish is under or within the sign. Whatever we say is already signed, assigned. I'm sick of this, and this rant, so to speak, is nothing more than an expression of that sickness. And I'm well aware that nothing will be done about it, although things _can_ be done about it. I'm tired of ageist remarks being 'let slip' accompanied by apologies. We have no slogans like "we're here and we're queer." We're speechless. We're kept speechless. We're irrelevant, just as this protest is irrelevant. In the _foreground_ there are all the inadvertent and well-meaning comments, advertising, stereotypes in the media. In the _background_ there are concrete decisions being made against us, but 'benevolently' for us. In the background, Foucauldian power violates the commons. In the back- ground, the Occupiers don't see age as a problem. In the background, they're waiting for our deaths, forgetfulnesses, incapacities, hostels - they're waiting for our silencing. The _they_ is the Heideggarian They, the They of doxa, the They of the obdurate, idiotic inert. The they is always well-meaning; the They knows what's best for us. On and on: This would kill _anyone,_ this misreading, misrecognition, deprivation, fun-house mirror. Some people can ignore it altogether, most of us can't. We live within a social order of _continuous violation._ And there's no way out. - Alan # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org