Thursday, September 23, 2010

Surveillance on Display

Erol Morris's film Standard Operating Procedure was a series of snapshots into a world of self-incriminating surveillance. Just as the set of these military police perform for their digital cameras at Abu Ghraib, they perform for Morris, allowing themselves to tread the boards for yet another lens.
I believe that Morris aims to paint us an idealized picture of Abu Ghraib. The antagonist of the film Lynndie England appears not in the soft lighting of a Barbra Walters interview, but in a cold, dark light which shows her as some kind of evil even before she opens her mouth. This is not a warm environment, not even warmth you feel from a tape recorder interview (which is not warm at all), but a Clarice/Lector rapport.

Is this considered public surveillance? Yes, an on-T.V. or movie interview are types of censored public surviellance (the filmmakers being the censor), the interviewees are the surveilled, and are totally aware of it. The difference between this film and the self-surveillance the MP's took on through their digital snapshots could come down to the lack of smiles and thumbs up in Morris's film.
Their interviews are only subsidiaries to their photos, maybe more quasi-vignettes to be typed in italics on museum board and posted underneath their matted digital prints, surveillance on display. How very so Well Live in Public/Josh Harris of them.
Josh Harris chose self-surveillance on his own accord, as did the MP's of Abu Ghraib, and both were doing it to prove a point, to show something. Instead of righting an autobiography or researching and writing a Bob Woodward-like article, we now default to the image. The power of the image and more-so the power of the film (complete with Hollywood magic and dissonant music) are relaying messages to the greater public at a speed far greater than the written word. While some argue that we are de-sensitized to "heavy" images, like the ones taken at Abu Ghraib, filmmakers like Morris and Harris continue to take them to the next level. Morris's reenactments, subjectivity and mere camera technology enhance the power of the image. I could enhance the contrast, take down the exposure and add a sickly, green tint, and make any image appear a bit more sinister.

The first posted picture is the famed prisoner pyramid, complete with two military police in the background giving us an Ovaltine smile and Uncle Sam's thumbs up. The second picture is a mass grave from the Holocaust. Differences? Similarities? Yes, I know that this is a stark contrast, different context, difference scales, but both of these images are strong, heavy and disturbing. Forced piles of bodies, captured on film, naked and helpless.

Friday, September 17, 2010

"Artificial Memory"


An idea that really struck me about Englebart's article was the original simplicity of his ideas and how they translated into complex machinery. His idea of information storage and its technological organization was taken directly from the constitution of file cards. Englebart essentially improved the file card organization process by eliminating its physical presence, which in turn cuts down on human error like misprint, damage, or loss of information all together.
While I really like this idea of storing information outside of both a tangible object and our own mind, I found that I had the same reservations as Englebart who says, "The price I pay for this 'augmentation' shows up in the time and energy manipulating artifacts to manipulate symbols to give me this artificial memory and visualization of concepts and their manipulation." When I buy an external hard-drive, I'm not buying it so my computer won't gum up and slow down, I'm buying it as an extension of my brain, of my own memory. However I'm not sure I agree that I'm augmenting my human intellect by storing my information elsewhere. My potential intellect isn't any greater with this supplemental technological memory, its just like having a pocket-sized library, its just a pocket sized reference.