Harun Farocki Film Analysis • Senses of Cinema

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Harun Farocki Film Analysis • Senses of Cinema

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  • Harun Farocki (1944-2014), orDialectics in Images

    Thomas Voltzenlogel December 2014 Feature Articles Issue 73

  • The mirror endows an object with new proportions, studies objects

    through other objects which are not quite the same. The mirror extends

    the world: but it also seizes, inflates and tears that world. In the mirror,

    the object is both completed and broken: disjecta membra. If the mirror

    constructs, it is in an inversion of the movement of genesis: rather than

    spreading, it breaks. The images emerge from this laceration.

    Elucidated by these images, the world and its powers appear and

    disappear, disfigured at the very moment when they begin to take shape.

    Hence the childish fear of the mirror which is the fear of seeing

    something else, when it is always the same thing.

    Pierre Macherey, A Theory of Literary Production (1966).

    This has, however, also been a historical lesson: it is because culture

    has become material that we are now in a position to understand that it

    always was material, or materialistic, in its structures and functions.

    We postcontemporary people have a word for that discovery a word

    that has tended to displace the older language of genres and forms

    and this is, of course, the word medium, and in particular its plural,

    media, a word which now conjoins three relatively distinct signals: that

    of an artistic mode or specific form of aesthetic production, that of a

    specific technology, generally organised around a central apparatus or

    machine; and that, finally, of a social institution. [] It is because we

    have had to learn that culture today is a matter of media that we have

    finally begun to get it through our heads that culture was always that,

    and that the older forms or genres, or indeed the older spiritual

    exercises and meditations, thoughts and expressions, were also in their

    very different ways media products.

    Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism, or The Cultural Logic of Late

    Capitalism (1991).

  • Fredric Jameson writes that, the dominant art form of the twentieth century was not literature

    at all nor even painting or theatre or the symphony but rather the one new and historically

    unique art invented in the contemporary period, namely film; that is to say, the first

    distinctively mediatic art form. (1) But he then goes on to stress that what was strange about

    this prognosis was that it should have had so little practical effect, that is, how little film art

    has opened up to experimentation and innovation, as opposed to literature (numerous authors

    took note of the existence and predominance of the cinema in their literary work).

    Experimental cinema and a fortiori militant, political and critical experimental cinema was

    and remains a marginalised, clandestine practice.

    If critical media theory has allowed us to clarify fundamental elements of analysis from an

    emancipatory perspective, a prevailing tendency for political resignation has made this activity

    the principal aspect of social and political struggle; thereby reducing domination, oppression

    and exploitation to a simple ideological question. Ideology is primarily a question of

    perspective, that is, the construction of a representation from the point of view of a subject

    who, far from being the passive spectator of whatever is deployed before his eyes, is an agent

    in its elaboration. (2) Ideology is a social production of representations which seem

    themselves as more true than nature itself, and which, on the condition of assigning the

    spectator to a fixed position, strive to shape the future and frame action. (3)

    The critique of the functioning of the dominant media has become the principal aspect of a

    certain form of social and political criticism. By denouncing the medias ideological

    hyperpower, the exclusive critique of the media paradoxically confers upon it a certain

    invincibility. The representation of the immateriality of its power (as it functions in the field of

    ideal representations) is shifted towards the representation of state power: political power itself

    is shown as a subterranean machination, which we are incapable of opposing. This

    representation has no difficulty in accommodating the circulation of conspiracy theories. (4)

  • To carry out a reflection on the emancipatory possibilities of art necessitates a repoliticisation

    of ideological and aesthetic questions by rooting them on the side of the question of the

    development of human capacities and the constant mutilation that capitalist relations of

    production subject it to, including among those who most believe they have escaped from

    them. (5)

    The German filmmaker Harun Farocki (1944-2014) was one of those who were able to ally a

    radical critique of the power of fascination exerted by the image with a certain goodwill, an

    amicalit (6), accorded to the spectator. The silence accompanying his death on July 30,

    2014, both in film circles and among activist networks, is an indication of the work that

    remains to be accomplished, not only to discover his oeuvre, but also to derive useful lessons

    for a political reflection on the image, culture and the social and political situation.

    Harun Farocki studied film at the Deutsche Film und Fernsehakademie during the 1960s. In the

    small circle of documentary, militant and experimental film initiates, he rapidly became an

    imposing figure. In succession, he went on to make agit-prop films (Die Worte des

    Vorsitzenden [The Words of the Chairman, 1967]), didactic films against the Vietnam War

    (Nicht lschbares Feuer [Inextinguishable Fire, 1969]), and, with Hartmut Bitomsky (another

    important documentary filmmaker), an attempted staging of Marxs Capital, from which two

    films will result: Die Teilung aller Tage (The Division of All Days, 1970) and Eine Sache, die

    sich versteht (A Thing That Is Evident, 1971).

    From 1974 to 1984, he was a writer and then editor-in-chief for Filmkritik, a film journal

    theoretically close to Cahiers du cinma and Tel Quel, and which, in its own fashion, followed

    the formers passage from the politique des auteurs to Maoism.

  • As was the case for numerous militant filmmakers, the sombre years of the 1980s and 1990s

    constrained him to a certain form of clandestinity. His films would be released in the ghetto of

    arthouse cinemas before disappearing from screens entirely (his last film to be projected in a

    regular movie-theatre was Videogramme einer Revolution [Videograms of a Revolution], co-

    directed with the Romanian Andrei Ujica, in 1993). From 1996 onwards, his work is

    rediscovered by galleries, which for Farocki became a way to encounter more spectators than

    he could in movie-theatres, but also a way of further marginalising his work by associating it

    with the artistic aura of museum institutions. He made more than a hundred films for

    television, cinema and a variety of exhibitions, including documentaries, historical films, essay

    films and a handful of fiction films.

    In parallel to his work as a critical filmmaker, Harun Farocki taught at UC Berkeley from

    1993 to 1999 and at the Akademie der Schnen Knste in Vienna from 2004 to 2011.

    The singularity of Farockis work resides in his anti-pedagogical attitude. He created a

    cinematic dispositif which, as opposed to a large number of documentary and militant films,

    does not presuppose an ignorant spectator in need of being educated, edified and informed in

    order to turn to revolt, but which, on the contrary, fashions a space-time in which the spectator

    is free to circulate within and between its images in order to be a (co-)producer of and not

    merely be a receptacle for knowledge.

    In the contemporary media age, with its proliferation of imagery, Farocki kept himself at a

    distance both from those who defended the image as a form of irrefutable proof (7), and those

    who ferociously critiqued images as playing an essential role in the process of the alienation of

    the masses by maintaining them in a state of passivity and fascination. Over the years, he

    patiently traced a method of producing films and image-analyses that invites us to serenely

    muse about them and envisage possibilities of making new uses out of them in order to

    accompany and enrich the production of a critical theory of images and society at large.

  • I propose, in this text, by investigating some of his films, to locate what is, in my view,

    Farockis dialectical and materialist method, and to draw out some theoretical tools useful not

    only for positioning ourselves in relation to images, but also for inventing possible new usages

    of these images. This is in no way an exhaustive and objective analysis of these films, but

    one from the standpoint of a unique spectature (8), that is, a mode of circulation in the space-

    times of Farockis films which is specific to myself, even while recognising my debt to a

    cinematic dispositif that has incited me to trace this path. More so than savoir (knowledge),

    Farockis films teach us that co-habiting with images necessitates the development of savoir-

    faire.

    Elaboration of a MethodFarockis work method was possibly born out of disappointment which is confessed in the

    form of a question addressed to the playwright Heiner Mller during an interview: I feel that

    both Godard and Brecht seem to have only proclaimed a method, but never began working

    with it. (9) Godard and Brecht are the two figures between whom the first cinematic essays by

    Farocki then, at the end of the 1960s, a young film student at the recently established

    Deutsche Film und Fernsehakademie will navigate: between Brechtian didacticism and the

    humour (or irony, the witticism, the Witz (10)) of Godards Groupe Dziga Vertov period.

  • Die Worte des Vorsitzenden (Farocki, 1967)

    In the short film Die Worte des Vorsitzenden, made in 1967 (the year Farocki is expelled from

    film school for his political and militant activities, before being re-admitted under probation by

    the administration), he films a man who, after reading The Little Red Book by Mao Zedong,

    tears out the pages so as to make a paper plane that he throws in the direction of two characters

    wearing the masks of Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, and his wife Farah Pahlavi.

  • The projectile that landed in the soup they were

    eating, splashing their faces.

  • Die Worte des Vorsitzenden (1967)

    Their visit to Berlin had provoked numerous student demonstrations. Police repression will

    lead to the murder of the young protestor Benno Ohnesorg. It is in the wake of this event that

    Farocki, assisted by Helke Sander (a future filmmaker and militant filmmaker, co-author with

    Farocki of a remarkable mid-length film Brecht die Macht der Manipulateure [Break the

    Power of the Manipulators, 1967]) and Holger Meins (director of a lone short-film, Oskar

    Langenfeld. 12 Mal [1966], and future Rote Armee Fraktion member) attempts to symbolise

    the contradiction between the idea that words are weapons, and the material fact that, at most,

    they are merely paper weapons.

    Die Worte des Vorsitzenden (1967)

  • Farockis artistic influences are multiple: beyond Godard, he recognises the influence of the

    films of Robert Bresson and Jean-Marie Straub/Danile Huillet, as well as the critical theatre of

    Bertolt Brecht and Heiner Mller, and the documentary theatre of Peter Weiss. He

    progressively fashions his working methods by taking into consideration both the new period

    and the new conditions in which he is working, as well as the subject of his films. This period

    begins in 1986 with Wie man sieht (As You See), and is marked by his refusal to continue

    working with actors: No actors, no images made by myself. Its better to cite something that

    already exists and create a new documentary quality. Abandon interviews with documentary

    subjects: leave all awkwardness to the idiots you want to keep away from. (11) Farocki will

    then make his films on the basis of heterogeneous filmic material accumulated by him over the

    years, vestiges of earlier works or gleaned by chance from his research activities. The images

    of archival documents, institutional films, advertisements, military operations or surveillance

    cameras, whether broadcast on television or not, are manipulated by the filmmaker so as to

    reveal a buried meaning which can only appear when we view an image independently of the

    others with which it is associated. It is just as necessary to be wary about images as it is about

    words. Images and words are woven into discourses and networks of signification. [] My

    path is to be in search of a buried meaning, to clear away the debris obstructing the images.

    (12) It is this Brechtian credo that determines the ethics and aesthetics of his work, namely: the

    articulation of a patient insistence on duration, an anti-nihilist attitude and a materialist

    impulse. (13)

    Absconded ImagesFrom 1969 onwards, Harun Farocki carries out a reflection on the use of documentary images

    in the media sphere. In Nicht lschbares Feuer, clearing away the debris obstructing the

    documentary image implies a refusal to show the spectator the photograph of a Vietnamese

    peasant who has survived the burns caused by napalm. Farockis work has the goal of

    deactivating the horrifying, terrifying and intimidating power of documentary images. Their

    violence would incite the spectator to avert their gaze and close their eyes before the events

    portrayed and the context to these events. By showing himself burning his own forearm with a

    cigarette, Farocki criticises and confirms the persuasive power of these images. It is on the

    basis of this benevolence refusing to show certain images and this belief in the persuasive

    power of images that the film is deployed.

  • If the spectators wish to know nothing about the effects of napalm, their responsibility for the

    reasons behind the recourse to napalm must be interrogated. (14) This phrase, pronounced in a

    voiceover that closes the first scene, links together the responsibility of the filmmaker and that

    of the spectator. If the filmmaker refuses to show an image that he thinks is unbearable for the

    spectators, he nonetheless warns that a spectator who refuses to know more about the effects of

    napalm must lead us to inquire into the responsibility of this spectator as to the use of napalm.

    Nicht lschbares Feuer (1969)

  • Nicht lschbares Feuer (1969)

    Harun Farocki will then choose to film, in a didactic manner and with actors, the production

    process of napalm in the capitalist system. He thus exposes not only the responsibility of

    workers in the production of weaponry, but also, and just as much, the alienation of workers

    who, in the capitalist division and repartition of production, fail to recognise the endpoint of

    their work, or even the usage made of the object produced.

    The author only exposes documents filmed in Vietnam (using the medium of television news

    footage) when he wishes to underscore that the legibility of an image is linked to the social

    position of the spectator: scientists, chemists, department heads and labourers are terrified

    when faced with images of war broadcast on television but do not recognize the use of a

    weapon that they, in each of their positions, have contributed to producing. As Marx wrote,

    appearance is not to be confused with its essence: documentary images taken in isolation tell us

    nothing about the conditions permitting the production of what they represent. They do not

    take into account the processes at work. The commentaries of journalists associated with these

    images direct our reflection towards what is important for those who have produced these

    images: establishing the number of victims, providing proof of the effectiveness of napalm.

    Serge Daney uses the term the visual to designate the images produced and broadcast by

    television because it is the visual verification that a technical dispositif functions. (15) If, for

    imperialists, these images are the visual verification of the effectiveness of napalm, Harun

    Farocki demonstrates in his film that for the engineers and workers these images appear as

    totally foreign to their own activities.

    By refusing to show us an image considered as a document (the photograph of the Vietnamese

    villager burnt by napalm), Farocki yields a film on the production of napalm in the capitalist

    system, at the same time as showing us that the dominant use of documentary images serves

    the interests of the capitalists and plays a role in the reproduction of existing social relations.

    A Historical Materialism of Images

  • Since making Nicht lschbares Feuer, Farocki has entwined, in the same cinematic fabric,

    industrial history, military history and the history of images (whether handmade, photographic,

    cinematic, or digitally animated). However, Farockis work consists in no way of revealing the

    secret of images or the secret of commodities in these images, but rather of manipulating

    images in order to give rise to significations, and to incite the spectator to once more connect

    these images with each other, in order to give rise to new significations.

    He works, therefore, not at producing images of the world or a certain type of image of the

    world that would not exist or appear in the situation, but rather at extracting meaning by

    untying the knot of significations present in (or associated with) an image. Hence the recourse,

    in Wie man sieht, to images of weaving: A piece of fabric is a form of interlacing, a grid of

    recurring knots. (16) These images invite the spectator to think about the interlacing of

    significations contained in an image, by meticulously untangling the threads, deconstructing

    the armour of the image (We shall call the mode of disposition of the threads the weave; a

    fabric is defined by its weave. This particular weave is called a twill (17)), and by

    connecting these images to other images.

    Thus, from weaving, from fabric, Farocki leads us towards the factory, industry, the capitalist

    mode of production, the mechanisation of thought, logic, calculation. Let us cite some

    fragments from the voiceover commentary so as to understand the movement undertaken:

  • Capitalism and heavy industry took off with weaving. Fabric is simple,

    regular and endless. The regularity of the fabric puts the ill-assured

    hand of the worker to shame: the worker must be replaced. []

    Weaving is not too remote from calculation. Incontestably, the fabric

    of thought is like the weavers craft, where a movement of the foot

    agitates thousands of threads which make the shuttle bob up and down,

    the threads glide imperceptibly, a thousand knots are formed in a single

    stroke. Mephistopheles, disguised as a professor, addresses himself

    thus to a student. He speaks of the mechanisation of thought by logic.

    [] An observation warrants that we insist on it: the calculating

    machine is born from weaving at the moment that it was felt necessary

    to weave an image. Nothing has pushed the images back into the

    margins more than calculation. The image and the written word

    confronted each other for thousands of years, without noticing that a

    third force had developed, which would not delay in undermining both

    of them. Let us call this third force calculation. [] That, long ago,

    workers could skilfully use their feet affects them more than any other

    loss since then. In 1800, the English inventor Henry Maudslay

    constructed the first screw-cutting lathe that permitted the

    interchanging of parts. Marx wrote at the time: this mechanical

    appliance replaces, not some particular tool, but the hand of man. (18)

    Due to Farockis montage, we perceive the multiple histories to be told: the history of

    capitalism, logic, of the craft of weaving, of calculating machines, etc. But more than an

    exposition of all these possible histories, the montage of Wie man sieht, invites us to think not

    only of the coexistence of these histories, but also, and just as much, of the connections

    between these histories and their reciprocal influence on each other.

    Figures, fictions

  • These histories are only possible due to the intervention of a person who acts by connecting

    images with each other, by producing a discourse (a history) thanks to these connections. Such

    a discourse does not pre-exist the act of relating these images to each other, nor does it pre-

    exist the gaze that subject holds over these images. The images do not in themselves contain a

    discourse at the very most they are rhetorical figures. An image, like a concept, which can

    lend itself to so many types of messages, [] is often used so much that we can understand it

    with our eyes closed, without even having to look at it, as Farocki tells us in the commentary

    for Arbeiter verlassen die Fabrik (Workers Leaving the Factory), made in 1995 on the

    occasion of the centennial anniversary of the first film made by the Lumire brothers.

    The first camera was aimed at the factory in order to record workers leaving their shift. If the

    cinema has very often been kept at a distance from factories, a number of cameras have

    remained to continue filming workers leaving the factory or working there. La Sortie de lusine

    Lumire Lyon by the Lumire brothers showed a documentary vision of workers leaving a

    factory in 1895, but is silent on the fact that it is a fiction: a representation, a figuration by the

    bosses of what workers of both sexes must do when leaving a factory: dressed properly,

    without any external trace of labour, without any borrowed tools in their pockets, and in a

    regular flux without interruption. Like every figuration, this image is also an exclusion: of

    those who do not correspond to the model, to the figure of the worker, and those who are not

    workers: on the one hand, strikers, unemployed or underemployed workers, the ill-disciplined,

    saboteurs, recalcitrants; on the other hand, the chronically unemployed, those living on the

    margins, housewives, the disabled, etc.

    This figuration has no time to be seen, analysed, or critiqued: as soon as the doors of the

    factory are opened, the entity that is the working class, the exploited, the industrial

    proletariat are atomised: the personnel take leave of each other, the life of the individual can

    commence. The majority of fiction films begin after working hours have ended. (19)

    Cinematic fiction begins with La Sortie de lusine Lumire Lyon, film fictions begin once the

    characters leave the factory. Workers are liberated (for a time) from the factory much as

    meanings must be liberated from the images and images liberated from the meanings and

    discourses assigned to them.

  • Arbeiter verlassen die Fabrik (1995)

    Arbeiter verlassen die Fabrik (1995)

    By tearing images from the contexts in which they are produced and disseminated, Farocki

    gives them a new life, thanks to a new assemblage, to new relations between images. This new

    life is the possibility that a new discourse can be produced by the filmmaker and/or by the

    spectator on, or on the basis of, these images.

    Dialectical Operations

  • According to Deleuze commenting, incidentally, on the work of Jean-Luc Godard this

    method is not an operation of association but differentiation, as mathematicians say, or

    disappearance, as physicists say. (20) Farockis montage works on the disappearance of the

    dominant signification, of the discourse spontaneously associated with it. He does not proceed

    by the addition of meaning, but by the association of different significations: images succeed

    each other, repeat each other, but do not add up with each other. They assume a different

    meaning as a function of their positions within a montage sequence, as a function of the

    moment in which they (re)appear. What opens up before the spectator is not an accumulation

    of significations that outline a meaning unique to the film, but a disappearance of significations

    and a transformation of the gaze that is held over these images and the discourse that is

    produced on them.

    The aim of this differentiation operation is the willed failure of the psychic remembrance

    operations of the significations bestowed on these images, but also a shattering of the

    foundations of the dominant film language. Harun Farocki explains that, in his view:

    The structure is created by words and not by images. In narrative films,

    the narration creates a structure, we know how to read a film, the

    matrix of narration pre-exists. With documentaries, it is the logic of the

    discourse that dominates in the majority of cases, and this is not

    sufficient, because commentary is a major problem. How can we avoid

    the reign of words? In certain cases, for example in my films Wie man

    sieht and Bilder der Welt und Einschrift des Krieges, I used a lot of

    language, but a language where the texts function a little like images.

    With regards to words, I am trying to make use of the same cinematic

    methods of repetition employed for images. Perhaps this is a solution

    for the continued existence of commentary. (21)

  • This method of the repetition of shot, images and fragments of commentary allows Farocki to

    disturb the logic of the film structured like a language. He also disturbs the idea that images are

    assembled like a discourse, by letting us imagine that the commentary may be a montage of

    scattered fragments, thoughts born in the moment when the gaze hits upon this montage, and

    not a discourse unfurling before us. The repetition and recurrence of shots and ideas have the

    goal of undoing the impression that his films obey a narrative structure that organise the

    exposition of images. They are procedures at the service of a de-suturing of commentary and

    image, in order for the commentary to be a supplement, and appear as such in the eyes and ears

    of the spectator.

    Farocki begins by subtracting the discourses that accompanied a certain type of media imagery.

    In Erkennen und verfolgen (War at a Distance, 2003), he places, at the heart of his film, three

    video extracts recorded during the Gulf War in 1991 by cameras situated on board aerial

    military vehicles, as well as two videos taken from cameras fixed directly on the missile heads.

    Erkennen und verfolgen (Farocki, 2003)

  • Erkennen und verfolgen (Farocki, 2003)

    In the case of the former images, we see buildings supposedly military sites being smashed

    to bits after being hit by what seem to be missiles. In the latter images, we see the target get

    closer and closer until the collision happens: cameras launching themselves on the target.

    These images occupied television screens around the world, and are still shown by news

    broadcasts. In a voiceover, a journalist tells us that the target, an Iraqi army barracks or a

    presidential palace, was struck by the American armed forces. We will no doubt later learn that

    among the targets of these surgical strikes are schools, hospitals or residential

    neighbourhoods, thus invalidating any belief in the effectiveness of these clean war

    operations. This matters little; these images produced by smart weapons which show war

    like a video game (22) are not really destined to be watched. They are the product of a

    vision without a look. (23) They are documents of power, the visual sign of military power.

    In the televisual dispositif, the voiceover is there to explain to the viewer what he must (or

    should) be seeing, what the image is supposed to tell: the invasion of Iraq by the American

    army and the commencement of aerial bombing operations.

  • Erkennen und verfolgen begins with the presentation to the viewer of these five shots without

    commentaries explaining what we are supposed to see, or providing complementary

    explanations (Where do these images come from? Who produced them? Who is shooting?

    What is the target?). Here, the voiceover of Farockis commentary does not have the function

    of explaining to the spectators what they should understand. The filmmaker is not concerned

    with making a counter-information film furnishing alternative information in order to correct

    the dominant version. The commentary, here, has two functions: providing a legend for the

    images we watch, and communicating the reflections of the filmmaker.

    Farocki methodically confronts images of the Gulf War with other images, whether they be

    familiar or a priori totally foreign to this war. The first shot that succeeds these images is that

    of a man working, seated at an industrial punching machine from the mechanical era. After

    this, there is a short sequence extracted from a promotional film for the long-range guided

    missile Taurus. These two shots are then brought together in opposite corners of the screen,

    while a voiceover tells us: There must be a connection between production and destruction.

    It is through the montage of shots showing opposed activities (production and destruction) that

    Farocki intends to perturb the spectators gaze.

    Erkennen und Verfolgen (Farocki, 2003)

  • Erkennen und Verfolgen (Farocki, 2003)

    If these shots are contradictory, they are no less indissociable: the tools of destruction are the

    result of industrial production; destruction is the production of a new space, or of new

    conditions (which is at one and the same time social, mental, imaginary, absolute, abstract and

    contradictory (24)); production is the destruction of a prior situation, a primary material, of the

    land and of the worker. (25) However, Harun Farocki does not commit the abject error which

    is made by Heidegger of confusing production and destruction or, more precisely, of turning

    the essence of technology per se into the essence of destruction and extermination. In his

    commentary to Wie man sieht, Farocki remarks: Henry Ford introduced the assembly line

    [Montagelinie], inspired, it is said, by abattoirs. This does not mean that mass production finds

    its origins in the blood of beasts the abattoir slices up, while the factory assembles. (26)

    Only the visual satisfaction of the spectacle and visual verification of the orderly development

    of operations count for the dominant form of audiovisual production. Was it not George W.

    Bush himself who declared that what was needed were dramatic strikes visible on TV and

    covert operations, secret even in success? (27) The broadcasting of images of war does not so

    much involve the presentation of analysable proof for the attentive TV viewer, as it does a

    spectacularisation of war coupled with a procedure of dissimulation and disinformation. (28)

  • That the images are missing does not mean that the images necessary for a decent

    comprehension of the challenges of the US invasion of Iraq are missing, let alone that those

    necessary for the mobilisation of masses of people against the war are missing (no militant

    anti-war film is the source for the protests that broke out in several countries), but that it is the

    points of view which would lead to a crisis in the dominant representations of conflict that are

    missing. Whether these latter are partisans of or opponents to the war matters little because

    what artists offer us is not a rectification of information but modes of sensual presentation that

    break the same frames of representation. (29) Nor does the images are missing signify that

    the images which would present a possible counter-space do not exist, but rather that they do

    not appear in the commodity-circulation of information, that there is still an image that

    imposes itself rather than another image: the image of Stevie Wonder, for example, singing a

    song for children dying of hunger in Africa rather than an image of the state of the world; the

    commodity-image of charity is substituted for the images of compassion. In this the image

    of charity, the Other no longer appears, and the possibility of being positioned as the Other

    of the Other becomes impossible. (30)

    An EstrangementIt is through the relation of heterogeneous filmic materials that Harun Farocki creates the

    conditions allowing for the birth of critical reflection. This dialectical montage is the cinematic

    transposition of the disassembling-reassembling [dmontage-remontage] effects of Brechtian

    theatre and an application of the procedure of estrangement. While certain forms of montage

    present a logic, and even diegetic, continuity (such as the enchainment of shots presenting a

    mechanical simulator of a bomber in the German army in 1943, composed out of model ships

    placed on a conveyor belt and a digital military simulator of a contemporary tank recreating a

    virtual landscape), other forms of montage are destined to produce estrangement.

  • It is in this way that the montage of a sequence in which a soldier in a flight simulator is being

    trained to escape a missile pursuing him accompanied by a shot from a commercial clip of the

    Taurus missile (and its heady electronic music) invites the spectator to watch these images

    differently. Similarly, the images of military control of the bombings in Iraq succeeding the

    shots presenting virtual simulation exercises modify our relationship to these images. Recorded

    in Iraq in 1991, these images at the heart of Erkennen und Verfolgen become progressively

    charged, during the viewing of the film, with different visual and audio elements selected and

    accumulated by the spectator. The repetition of these shots and their re-assemblage throughout

    the film invite us to reflect on the modification, not of these images, but of the gaze that we

    hold over them, as if they were no longer the same images, as if they told us of something else

    or as if we made them tell us of something else.

    For the film does indeed tell a story, or stories, in the plural: those conjoined histories of

    industrial and military technological development, the transformation of industrial production,

    and the modification of our gaze, our capacity as observers. Those images of control produced

    by surveillance cameras which are still destined to be watched by a human eye are sufficiently

    treated by software tools to more rapidly and precisely reveal the information that is judged to

    be worthy of interest for industry or the armed forces. The estrangement reaches paroxysmic

    levels when we slowly become aware that certain images that are presented to us are no longer

    even destined to be watched and are already no longer watched by a human being.

    The story told is also that of the double disappearance of the hand that manipulates and the eye

    that gazes it is not only the eye as an organ, or the gaze by itself, but the conjunction of the

    two that guarantees human presence. In Schnittstelle (Interface, 1995), Farocki explains that a

    modern conception of scientific labour would prefer that the hand does not intervene in

    process. As long as the experiment lasts, the scientist is a pure spirit, (31) a body and an eye

    absent from the space of experimentation. This is the history of the double disappearance of

    workers from factories (even if these factories still need workers not for their skills, but due to

    the lack of space for a supplementary robot) and of humans from images of war (Human

    beings seem to have disappeared from the battleground, much as they have disappeared from

    automated factories). (32)

  • In effect, Harun Farocki remarks that the images produced by industry are not aimed at

    showing the process of production, they are part of this process, in the same way that images

    taken from bomber jets are part of the process of war. By being broadcast on television news

    reports, they assume their role as a verification of the orderly development of military

    operations, while purging them of horrifying views of the corpses that they produce.

    The work of the filmmaker does not reside in the decryption of images, in the revelation of

    what might be buried or hidden in them; it resides in the invention of a cinematic dispositif that

    beckons spectators to learn for themselves to watch images and create their own history. This

    has the goal not of discovering what they dissimulate, but of seeing precisely how little they

    show, seeing their function(s) in the contexts in which they are produced and broadcast (or

    not). Harun Farocki is concerned with making us sensitive to the fact that images of war tell us

    nothing about war. Only human beings are in a position to produce a discourse based on the

    images they observe. It is thus important to grasp the political orientations that subtend these

    discourses. Bu this is not what interests Harun Farocki. Images here are indices that can (and

    must) manipulate in order to give rise to thought, both among the author and among the

    spectators. Erkennen und verfolgen equally recounts the history of the production of the

    conditions that make this thought possible. To produce the conditions allowing for a spectator

    to be emancipated from discourses and images implies deactivating the dominant functions of

    images and sounds.

    It is the present that should be intolerable and not its imagesSerge Daney described the film image as having been:

  • Hollowed out by the power that has permitted it, that has wanted it. It is

    also something that some people have enjoyed making, while others

    have enjoyed watching it. And it is this pleasure that remains: the image

    is a grave for the eye. Watching a film means being confronted with

    dj-vu the dj-vu of others: the camera, the author, the audience(s),

    sometimes even politicians. [] And dj-vu is also the already-

    enjoyed [dj-joui]. (33)

    Images already-seen by others: images which, in addition to being the result of an act of

    framing, of a certain type of look, have thus already been controlled, verified and validated

    before being imposed on screens or in newspapers. Daney highlights, in this film, the

    importance of its order of exposition, of the time that it grants itself in order for us to restore

    these images to what they were, images taken from the standpoint of US power, taken from the

    other side. (34) Farockis objective thus consists of: washing the images from all sense of

    dj-vu. This involves bringing out (showing up, but also chasing away, extirpating) from

    these images the power which called them forth, and which would like them to surprise us even

    more. From this point on, the horror is no longer an eternal return of the Same with the features

    of the Same (the retro mode), but the intolerable present. (35) At issue is the defamiliarisation

    of the spectators when faced with these images which only present facts, that which was,

    without its possibility, without its power. [The media] thus gives us a fact in relation to which

    we are impotent. In order to bring out the power that called forth these images, in order to

    bring out their function in the broader media process of the circulation of information and

    commodity-images, Farocki accords a major importance not only to the order of exposition

    (which image before/after which other image?) but also to the time he is given to restore

    these images: in order to present the spectator with what was lost in their original process of

    exposition, what was unjustly captured or possessed: a time of the gaze, the possibility in time

    and space of connecting this image to other images, of producing a discourse.

  • The possibility of watching an image passes through the time of its exposition, through its

    reappearance (repetition) within montage and through the deactivation of its initial function.

    What the repetition of shots and phrases in the films of Farocki permits is the constant

    modification or transformation of the signification of images, the possibility, as a spectator, to

    always have to re-associate these images or textual fragments to others. In this sense:

    repetition is not the return of the identical, the reoccurrence of the same in and of itself. The

    force and the grace of repetition is the novelty it brings, it is the renewed possibility of that

    which was. Repetition restores the possibility of that which was, and makes it possible once

    more. (37)

    The Functions of ImagesA photograph is not an anodine image, one image among others whose essential function that

    which results from the intention of the individual who has produced it would be inscribed in

    its form. The photograph of the dead Communards in their coffin can not but evoke what

    Roland Barthes recalls in Camera Lucida: certain Communards paid with their lives for their

    willingness or even their eagerness to pose on the barricades: defeated, they were recognised

    by Thiers policemen shot, almost every one. (38) The use of images depends on those who

    utilise them and manipulate them. In the hands of some, they are souvenirs, symbols, historic

    documents; in the hands of others they are tools used for repressive purposes. The inverse also

    applies: the photographs of (forcibly) unveiled Algerian women taken by a soldier from the

    battalion: Marc Garanger will be used to establish identity cards. These portraits are today

    considered as artistic photographs and are reproduced in a book that Farocki leafs through in

    the 1989 film Bilder der Welt und Inschrift des Krieges. We will establish an identity card for

    them. Faces that until now have worn the veil. These two phrases a repeated on two

    occasions, as if to insist on the presence in these portraits of the terror of being photographed

    for the first time (39), of the violence of colonial, patriarchal unveiling, and of the violence of

    administrative census taking and bodily control. Such a presence is invisible, because the

    photographs captures an instant, and thus divides the past from the future (40) namely:

    wearing the veil and identity cards. This, once again, is what a photograph neither tells nor

    shows: its function is not inscribed (or imprinted) on it.

  • Bilder der Welt und Inschrift des Krieges (Farocki,

    1989)

    Like advertising imagery and war footage, these photographs assure a certain function in the

    situation where they are presented. Video images of the verification of military operations are:

    functional images with a purely technical finality, which are utilised for

    a precise operation, and for the most part are subsequently effaced of

    their material support. They are images with a single use. That the US

    command showed such footage from the Gulf War, images which sought

    neither to edify nor instruct, but only to function once this too is an

    unbelievable displacement, this too is conceptual art. My images also

    only wish to attain art as, at the very most, an accessory. (41)

  • But these images do not only have, in their essence, a single possible usage, a single function.

    Transposed into the space of the media, they transform military operations into facts, they

    visually validate warmongering speeches, the power of military technology which permits, at

    the same time as it destroys, the production of an image of this destruction. Displacing these

    images and manipulating them (by re-editing them, re-framing them) creates the ability to offer

    them to a different type of gaze and to open up the possibility of learning something of these

    images, even if only to learn to make ones gaze circulate among these images, to locate what

    might interest us as a spectator. To (be able to) do what the photo-interpreters did not do in

    1944 when they received an aerial view of Silesia: seeing that there is something important

    the concentration camp at Auschwitz. Why did they not see it? Because this image did not have

    the function of showing a view of Auschwitz, but enabling us to identify the positions of the

    factories surrounding it: They were not charged with searching out the Auschwitz camp, so

    they did not find it. (42) The image was assigned a precise function, and so this function

    instituted a gaze and determined a way of seeing the image. The order and the time of the

    exposition of images that Farocki proposes in his films allow for the liberation of the

    spectators gaze from this assignation by offering the possibility of focussing on aspects of the

    image that are not entailed in their projects. How close these two things are: industry the

    camps. (43)

    In Aufschub (Respite, 2007), Farocki presents the rushes of a film shot in 1944 at the

    Westerbork camp. (44) The commentaries are not in voiceover, but inscribed on title cards.

    The structure of the film, the freeze-frames, the repetitions of shots, the interruptions made by

    the title-cards commentaries, the digital modifications (a circle surrounds the face of a camp

    Kommandant), open the space for a dtournement of these images away from their prior

    functions, thereby inviting the spectator to a personal reading. (45) Farocki initially refuses

    the dominant montage practice in compilation-films using archival footage: the use of

    voiceover commentary and the use of musical accompaniment. The spectator feels the absence

    of sound.

  • The material that Farocki reworks derives from an aborted film project, shot with two 16mm

    cameras by Rudolf Breslauer, a photographer who, having fled the Netherlands, was interned

    at the police transit camps for Jews in Westerbork. By presenting the raw material in the

    initial section (without cuts or additions), Aufschub progressively presents what would have

    been the function of these images: to show the extent to which the camp was productive. []

    The images were supposed to say: dont close the camp, dont deport the prisoners (46) to

    Auschwitz. This camp film is inscribed in the genre of the company film. As such, its aim was

    to have been the championing of the economic efficacy of the camp at the precise moment

    when its existence seemed under threat. (47) We can thus see in Breslauers film shots in

    which Jewish prisoners replace horses in the fields, and machines in the workshops.

    With his commentary and his montage, Farocki shows that these images can be interpreted

    differently, that they can be associated with other images (which he refrains from showing

    here) and that they can consequently have a different purpose to that for which they were

    made. The images of Jewish prisoners labouring in the field can be interpreted differently.

    The labour of the detainees may lead us to think that they are cultivating virgin soil. [] As if

    they were constructing something that was their own, their own society perhaps. As if the

    gaze that Breslauer held had not been totally at one with the gaze of his patron-executioner SS

    Gemmeker.

    But in Farockis view these images summon other images images with which we are familiar.

    The image of the bodies of workers stretched out under the sun during the lunch break has us

    think of the image of the corpses that were strewn on the ground in the death camps; the white

    shirts of the people working in the laboratories resemble those worn by the butchers of

    Auschwitz and Dachau, who carried out experiments on human beings; the dentists office

    recalls the extraction of gold teeth in other camps, the work of dismantling Westerbork recalls

    that, at Auschwitz, profits were made from the bodies of detainees.

    Emancipation

  • To emancipate the spectators from images from their significations and the functions that are

    assigned to them, or that we spontaneously assign to them involves: offering [] these

    images in us that offer the possibility of re-editing them ourselves, imaginatively, according to

    multiple trajectories that it [Farockis montage] proposes to us beyond his own solutions

    (hence the interest in looping, repetition and freeze-frames). (48) Even if we retain this

    possible characterisation of the emancipatory process that Farockis films activate or permit

    that offering, in this sense, means opening the meaning (signification) to the honed senses

    (sensations) of the spectator (49) we may also argue that this process does not stop there.

    The emancipation of the spectator is not confined to this opening of meaning and honing of the

    senses; rather, these are the necessary conditions for pursuing the process of emancipation.

    The political and aesthetic orientation of Harun Farockis works is inscribed in a struggle

    against the essence of media violence [] which has become widespread on both surveillance

    monitors and television sets and whose objective is to transform the spectator just like in

    times of war either as an abettor or as a potential victim. (50)

    Farockis films therefore occupy a singular position in the field of cinematic and audiovisual

    production: they do not presuppose the ignorance and incapacity of these potential spectators

    who would be mired in passivity. It is against such a logic which places the respective

    silences of the abettor or of the victim back to back that Harun Farocki constructs, in his

    work, a cinematic dispositif open to an encounter with other spectator-authors, other historians

    (May everyone be their own historian, wrote Brecht) with which he can share his thoughts

    and his savoir-faire, in order to live more carefully and more exactingly. (51)

    Endnotes1. Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism, or The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (Durham NC: DukeUniversity Press, 1991), p. 68.2. Isabelle Garo, Lidologie ou la pense embarque (Paris: La Fabrique, 2009), p. 7.3. Ibid., p. 14.4. See Fredric Jameson, Totality as Conspiracy, in The Geopolitical Aesthetic: Cinema and Space in theWorld System (Bloomington: Indiana Unviersity Press, 1992), pp. 9-86.5. Isabelle Garo, op. cit., p. 107.6. Amicalit is a French neologism adopted by Philippe Ivernel as a translation for Brechts Freundlichkeit

  • (friendliness).7. See, on this subject, the controversy between Jean-Luc Godard and Claude Lanzmann on the subject ofthe lost or non-existent images of the extermination of European Jews. Libby Saxton, Anamnesis andBearing Witness: Godard/Lanzmann, in Michael Temple, James S. Williams and Michael Witt, For EverGodard (London: Black Dog Publishing, 2004), pp. 364-379.8. I use the term spectature to designate the singular mode of investment of images and sounds of filmsmade by the spectator and to distinguish this investment from that of reading [lecture] which even today isthe term widely used to refer to film analysis. Too often, the reading of films induces them to be reduced tolittle more than a discourse to be deciphered or decrypted, as if only images and/or their montageproduced a message that only the expert would be capable of grasping and communicating to the ignorantand incapable crowd.9. Harun Farocki, in Heiner Mller, Intelligence without experience: Interview with Harun Farocki, inGermania, trans. B. Schtze and C. Schtze New York: Semiotext(e), 1990), p. 163.10. See Nicole Brenez, Jean-Luc Godard, Witz et invention formelle (notes prperatoires sur les rapportsentre critique et pouvoir symbolique), Cinmas: revue dtudes cinmatographiques, vol. 15 no. 2-3 (2005),pp. 15-43.11. No actors, no images made by myself, better to quote something already existing and create a newdocumentary quality. Avoid interviews with documentary subjects; leave all the awkwardness to the idiotsyou distance yourself from. Antje Ehmann, Kodwo Eshun, A to Z of HF or: 26 Introductions to HF,Harun Farocki: Against What? Against Whom? (London: Koenig Books, 2009), p. 208.12. Cited in Christa Blmlinger, Harun Farocki ou lart de traiter les entre-deux, in Harun Farocki,Reconnatre & Poursuivre, texts collected and introduced by Christa Blmlinger (Courbevoie: ThtreTypographique, 2002), p. 11.13. Hanns Zischler, Travailler avec Harun, trans. into French by P. Rusch, Trafic, no. 43 (Autumn 2002),p. 27.14. Harun Farocki, Feu Inextinguible, in Harun Farocki, Films: Feu Inextinguible, Tel quon le voit,Images du monde et inscription de la guerre, Sorties dusines, Section, Images de prisons. Suivi de: Journalde guerre (Courbevoie: Thtre Typographique, 2006), p. 16.15. Serge Daney, La guerre, le visuel, limage, Trafic, no. 50 (Summer 2004), p. 440.16. Harun Farocki, Tel quon le voit, in Harun Farocki, Films, op. cit., p. 40.17. Ibid.18. Ibid., p. 43-47.19. Harun Farocki, Sortie dusine, in Harun Farocki, Reconnatre & Poursuivre, op. cit., p. 91.20. Gilles Deleuze, Cinma 2: limage-temps (Paris: Minuit, 1985), p. 234.21. Harun Farocki, in Alice Malinge, Questions Harun Farocki, Revue 2.0.1, no. 1 (November 2008), p.67.22. Harun Farocki, La guerre trouve toujours un moyen, trans. into French by P. Rusch, in ChantalPontbriand (ed.), HF/RG: Harun Farocki/Rodney Graham (Paris: Jeu de Paume/Blackjack, 2009), p. 91.23. Paul Virilio, Lcran du dsert: Chroniques de guerre (Paris: Galile, 1991), p. 102.24. See Henri Lefebvre, La Production de lespace (Paris: Anthropos, 2000 [1974]).25. Moreover, all progress in capitalist agriculture is a progress in the art, not only of robbing the worker,but of robbing the soil; all progress in increasing the fertility of the soil for a given time is a progress towardsruining the more long-lasting sources of that fertility. The more a country proceeds from large-scale industryas the background of its development as in the case of the United States, the more rapid is this process of

  • destruction. Capitalist production, therefore, only develops the techniques and the degree of combination ofthe social process of production by simultaneously undermining the original sources of all wealth the soiland the worker. Karl Marx, Capital, vol. I, trans. Ben Fowkes (London: Penguin, 1976), p. 638.26. Harun Farocki, Tel quon le voit, Films, op. cit., p. 42.27. Georges W. Bush, Speech on September 20, 2001, cited by Daniel Bensad, loge de la politiqueprofane (Paris: Albin Michel, 2008), p. 55. Emphasis added.28. Paul Virilio, op. cit., p. 181-182. The war of images and sounds tends to supplant that of the projectilesof the military arsenal. If the Latin root of the word secret means put aside, putting aside comprehension, thisputting aside is currently less that of the classical spatial distance than that of temporal distance.Deceiving the adversary about duration, making secret images of weaponry trajectories, becoming moreuseful than the destructive performances of the machine. Deceiving the enemy about the virtuality of theprojectiles passage, about the very credibility of its presence here or there, has become more necessary thanluring him as to the reality of his existence. Whence this generation of furtive machines, discreet, almostundetectable vehicles, whose use in the Gulf War was supposedly decisive. (p. 183).29. Jacques Rancire, La Mthode de lgalit (Paris: Bayard, 2012), p. 288. Emphasis added.30. One could, provisionally, call visual the sum of images of replacements for very precise reasons. Notreplacements because we would have the choice and the game for ludic reasons it would be formidable ifone could know about a given situation that one can make a given image, but also this one this is not whathappens. On all the events which take place in the world, there is an image that comes very quickly to coverall the others and prevent them. Serge Daney in Pierre-Andr Boutang and Dominique Rabourdin, SergeDaney: Itinraire dun cin-fils (France, 1992, 188 minutes). Emphasis added.31. Harun Farocki, Section, Films, op. cit., p. 101.32. Voiceover commentary from Erkennen und verfolgen.33. Serge Daney, Un tombeau pour lil, op. cit., p. 33.34. Ibid., p. 35. Emphasis added.35. Ibid.36. The media loves the indignant but impotent citizen. This is even the goal of television news. This is aform of bad memory, which produces the man of ressentiment. Giorgio Agamben, Le cinma de GuyDebord, Image et mmoire (Paris: ditions Hobeke, 1998), pp. 70-71.37. Ibid., pp. 69-70.38. Roland Barthes, Camera lucida, trans. Richard Howard (New York: Hill and Wang, 1981), p. 11.39. Ibid.40. Ibid.41. Harun Farocki, Influences transversales, trans. into French by P. Rusch, Trafic, no. 43 (Autumn 2002),p. 24.42. Harun Farocki, Images du monde et inscription de la guerre, Films, op. cit., p. 60.43. Ibid.44. Westerbork was an atypical camp, where the SS played a withdrawn role. The administration wasconfided to the inmates; Jewish inmates recorded the new arrivals, assigning them a barrack and overseeingforced labour. Jewish inmates also formed the camp police and established the deportation lists. The campKommandant made decisions as a last resort. At Westerbork, there were no beatings, no killing. Food wasscarce, but nobody died of hunger. The inmates did not have their heads shaved and they could wear civilianclothing. There were newspapers to read, a school, a large hospital, sporting events, and a cultural eveningtook place once a week. Harun Farocki, Comment montrer des victimes?, trans. into French by P. Rusch,

  • Thomas Voltzenlogel [HTTP://SENSESOFCINEMA.COM/AUTHOR/THOMAS-VOLTZENLOGEL/]Thomas Voltzenlogel is a doctor in Arts Film Studies at the Unviersity of Strasbourg, and

    currently teaches at the Universit Louis Lumire Lyon II. His thesis concerned the

    relations between aesthetics and politics and the transmission of method in the films of

    Danile Huillet/Jean-Marie Straub, Harun Farocki and Pedro Costa.

    Trafic, no. 70 (Summer 2009), p. 23.45. Ibid., p. 24.46. Ibid.47. Sylvie Lindeperg, Vies en sursis, images revenantes, Trafic, no. 70 (Summer 2009), p. 28.48. Georges Didi-Huberman, Remontages du temps subi: Lil de lhistoire, vol. II (Paris: Minuit, 2010), p.120.49. Ibid., pp. 120-121.50. Christa Blmlinger, De la lente laboration des penses dans le travail des images, Trafic, no. 14(Spring 1995), p. 31-32.51. Bertolt Brecht, Me-Ti: Buch der Wendungen (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlga, 1965), p. 112.

    Translated by Daniel Fairfax.This article first appeared on the French website Revue Priode [HTTP://REVUEPERIODE.NET/HARUN-FAROCKI-1944-2014-OU-LA-DIALECTIQUE-DANS-LES-IMAGES/] .

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