Thursday, February 12, 2009

Dery on Ballard



At LA Weekly, a very nicely done review of J.G. Ballard's "pre-posthumous memoir," Miracles of Life, from the always-amazing Mark Dery. Dery does an excellent job in a brief essay of encapsulating the immense importance of Ballard, who managed to repurpose the narrative prisms of science fiction using the cultural pathology surgical instruments of psychology and criticism to dissect contemporary consciousness in a way none have really matched:

In a very real sense, Ballard did become a psychiatrist, albeit a dryly ironic one, at ease with his philosophical bipolar disorder — now profoundly moralistic, now exuberantly amoral, now both. All of his dystopias are in truth pathological utopias; Ballard rejoices in the breakdown of bourgeois morality and the Return of the Repressed. Like the Freud of Civilization and Its Discontents, he can always hear the scrabbling of our sublimated instinctual drives behind Western society’s liberal-humanist facade. But unlike Freud, and like R.D. Laing, Norman O. Brown and other radical Freudians of the ’60s, Ballard is equally wary of the soft fascism of our master-planned, socially engineered age, with its megamalls and Club Meds, its gated communities and New Urbanist retrovilles. “In a completely sane world, madness is the only freedom” is a copyrighted Ballard quote.

Ballard’s genius lies in his metaphoric use of scientific jargon and an antiseptic tone, somewhere between the dissecting table and the psychopathic ward, to psychoanalyze postmodernity. Long before deconstructionists like Jacques Derrida were slinging around references to the “decentered” self, Ballard is talking, in his trenchant introduction to Crash (1973), about “the most terrifying casualty of the century: the death of affect” and about “the increasing blurring and intermingling of identities within the realm of consumer goods.” Before postmodernists like Jean Baudrillard were announcing the Death of the Real and its unsettling replacement by uncannily convincing media simulations, Ballard is claiming that “we live in a world ruled by fictions of every kind” — advertising, “politics conducted as a branch of advertising,” P.R. “pseudo-events,” et al. — where “Freud’s classic distinction between the latent and manifest content of a dream, between the apparent and the real, now needs to be applied to the external world of so-called reality.” And before neo-Marxists like Fredric Jameson and Mike Davis were pondering the deeper meanings of the Westin Bonaventure Hotel and Frank Gehry’s Hollywood library, Ballard is pondering the psycho-spatial effects of the built environment: the experience of swooping around a freeway cloverleaf; of walking through a cavernous, empty multistory parking garage; of waiting, alone, in an airport departure lounge; of walking the privately policed streets of an obsessively manicured exurban community. How, Ballard wonders, is our sense of our selves as social beings and moral actors — our very understanding of what it means to be a self — being transformed (deformed?) by the whip-lashing hyperacceleration of technology and the media, the blurring of the distinction between real and fake? Ballard was the first to ask how we became posthuman.




I read the book last year, and highly recommend it for just about any reader. It's Ballard's first true memoir (unlike Empire of the Sun and The Kindness of Women, which beautifully (and transparently) experimented with fictionalized blends designed to find even greater emotional and meta-historical truths), rich with treacleless poignance and grand wisdom, finding incisively fresh perspectives on common biographical events such as the birth of a grandchild — the warm feeling of completion as if his evolutionary duty had finally been fulfilled. Attention to Ballard in the U.S. has lamentably waned in the past decade, so go get your copy from the homeland and find paths to inner liberation you didn't know existed. As Mark writes:

It’s not yet time to write Ballard’s epitaph, but when it comes, his poetic, almost liturgical credo, “What I Believe” (1984), will do nicely:

I believe in the power of the imagination to remake the world, to release the truth within us, to hold back the night, to transcend death, to charm motorways, to ingratiate ourselves with birds, to enlist the confidences of madmen.

I believe in the non-existence of the past, in the death of the future, and the infinite possibilities of the present.




Also, at NYRB:

Diane Johnson, "J.G. Ballard: The Glow of the Prophet" (October 9, 2008)

Robert Towers, "Believe it or Not" (October 24, 1991)

And, at Evergreen Review, the full text of "The Assasination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy Considered As A Downhill Motor Race."

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