



Inauthentic Hybridity – is that all we can hope for?
“In a world in which stylistic innovation is no longer possible, all that is left is to imitate dead styles, to speak through masks and with the voices of the styles in the imaginary museum.”
– Marjorie Perloff, Radical Artifice
And with this inspiring remark in mind, I try to motivate myself to carry on designing…


English trailer for Die Welle (The Wave, Dennis Gansel, 2008)
The latest re-imagining of this particular disaster experiment. Previous to this there was a TV version and a book.
An example of recycling, appropriating and re-imagining a disaster. An example of turning a disaster experiment into a myth by tapping into the mythologies of the “real” disaster that never(?) came. An example of situating the myth within the global experience economy through the film’s promotion and distribution. Film as commodity; film as a mediated experience of another mediated experience.
[The experiment: The Third Wave]
(A California high school, 1967: An experiment conducted by history teacher Ron Jones with his students. The experiment involved recreating the conditions in Nazi Germany and was meant to function as a demonstrative learning experience. ) Pedagogy gone awry. Isn’t this the biggest outcome pedagogy can hope for?
Youtube video: Greek youth against neonazism (posted May 2008)

Anarchists, like the disaster, are situated outside the experience economy. Like some aspects of the disaster, anarchists place themselves inside the experience economy only to destroy it. The fact that anarchists remain powerless against (and within) the experience economy makes them more determined to find their power outside of it. However, they usually end up becoming part of the experience economy by their very opposition towards it.
Anarchists = otherness. Their/ Our obsession with others.
Example & Application: the Greek Riots
The defacement of public property in large Greek cities such as Athens and Thessaloniki has impacted tourism, a contributing aspect to the experience economy >>> The anarchists have been integrated into the experience economy model through the commodification of their acts: for instance, millions of photographs of the riots and of public property damages have been circulating around the world. The riots and their aftermath turned the world’s attention to Greece and Europe in general. The apocalyptic overtones attached to the disaster by various global media outlets have placed Greece at the center of it all, only to ultimately decentralize it.
Profit/ credit= e.g. international exposure, profile, capital ## #
Debit= e.g. impact on: tourism, government, education labor…
Corporate media tend to ignore anarchists, or try to minimize their impact. The fact that corporate media outlets have been forced to detail the anarchist involvement in these and other struggles in Greece attests to the significance of anarchist activity. Leftists attempt to portray the events in Greece as a general uprising of “the people,” and this is not inaccurate, since countless “normal” people have participated. However, from the vantage point of anarchist supporters and those intimidated by anarchists, it is the anarchists that have instigated the riots and have remained the most influential force within the “movement”.
From one perspective, the anarchists – and “anarchy” in its abstract form – function as a political scapegoat. A scapegoat that is used to let the government almost entirely off the hook. A scapegoat that does not point to what is wrong with the System, but serves the purpose [to some] of placing blame outside the system and displacing the flaws outside the system.
If only it were so simple.
Democracy is dead. Long live democracy.
