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(most public spaces have been designed by powers that want to use the very size of the public space as way to
the “stop” as an architectural project itself (
we argue, in our project st.open, that there should be many activities going on at once in public space, that public space should be synchronous, productive as well as spectacular
looking at opera or television or driving,
we are in a dimension of contemporary experience that requires that we effectively cancel out or exclude from consciousness much of our immediate environment
the so-called crisis of subject disintegration is diagnosed as a deficiency of “attention”
attentive norms and practices
imperative of concentrated attentiveness within the disciplinary organization of labor, education, and mass consumption
ideal of sustained attentiveness as a constitutive element of a creative and free subjectivity
a cultivated individual gazing (
a factory worker concentrating on the performance of some repetitive task
19th century emergence of new technological forms of spectacle and recording
...set of terms and positions that cannot be construed simply as questions of opacity
vision is not an autonomous and self-justifying problem
(we have to rework the) forces of specialization and separation that allowed
(we should do that with all our ready at hand concepts)
what is the genealogy of attention in Persian subjectivity?
social economic representational shifts and practices
visual/auditory culture
...richer and more historically determined notions of “embodiment”
spectator culture is not founded on the necessity of making a subject ‘see’ (
rather, individuals are isolated, separated, and inhabit time as disempowered.
counter-forms of attention are constituted as other temporalities and states (
for
historical obliteration of the possibility of thinking
atemporal nature of perception
? direct perceptual access to self-presdenceex
(newly) designated “pathologies” of attention and creative, intensive states of deep absorption and daydreaming
(subjective conception of vision
interrelated problem of perception and modernization
general problem of perceptual synthesis and disintegrative possibilities of attention
optical verisimilitude
attention
how can something originate in its opposite?
Nietzsche
sudden emergence of model of subjective vision (in the 19th century)
complex and contingent physiological makeup of the observer
reality maintenance
aftershocks of apperception
failure of a capacity for synthesis of conscious thought (named dissociation) became linked in the 19th century with pathological psychosis
this label (of pathological disintegration) was evidence of a shift in the relation of the subject to a visual field
the rise of psychological explanation within epistemology
Kant saw perception crowding in upon the soul
for Külpe attention was the very condition of thinking, consciousness not in the mercy of external impressions
the importance of attention to the conception of subjective time in Augustine and Husserl
(curiosity triggered by) wonder for Descartes
in 18th century
-‘unified’ operation of mental life
-force of a sensation
-an effect of an event external to the subject
in 19th century, attention
running in the park, a motif of selfhood, of individual freedom, finality of the possibility of soul from the enduring experience of active, willed effort in relation to the body
-running in park/city
-your experience is yours
apperception
19th century
attention
character
attention
practical or knowledge world of objects (the berlin naturkunde museum)
attention became part of the dense network of institutional discourses/practices around which “the truth of perception was organised and structured”
not part of a “regime of power” rather part of a space in which new conditions of subjectivity were articulated
19th century reconceptualization of attention