el preferido de palermo

el preferido de palermo
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts

24 May 2010

DMZ

Brian Wood and Riccardo Burchielli's DMZ concerns a photojournalist who goes on assignment in Manhattan, otherwise known as the DMZ, during the second US civil war, a struggle between the United States of America and the Free States. Manhattan is the land between both armies, a no-go-out zone in which those who failed - or chose not - to vacate the island survive midst the bombing and political machinations of national conflict.

in fact, as a consequence of its in-between status, the DMZ, for all those who suffer sniper fire, is portrayed as a more likely place for an authentic community than either the United or Free States that surround it. the DMZ is beyond the pale but, it seems, none the worse for that. at the end of the second album the authors include a sort of guide book to the DMZ, an overview of places to eat, books to read and places to listen to music: 'Delancy's Kitchen: Delancey is an iffy street in terms of security, and that fucking subway entrance is right in front. Never queue up in front of this place if you can help it. If sniper's don't take shots at you from the bridge, the subway lunatics will. But this is one of the best places to see bands, so if you can get in safely, do it'.

the twenty pages that form the guide are, in many ways, a microcosm of the whole work, a distillation of its politics, its outlook and its aesthetic. not only do are we provided with a detailed portrayal of New York, with its eateries, immigrant diversity and monumental heritage, but we are provided with a vision of what that city would be in the midst of a divisive civil war. the key appears to be, however, that the DMZ itself is not particularly divided within itself. certainly there are suicide bombers and looters, but there is also a great deal of friendship, assistance and cosmopolitanism.

of course, one can't quite escape the sensation that Wood has tapped into a rather entrenched and long-lasting US tradition: the war to end all wars line. the work doesn't have any semblance of ultimate pacifism, but it does rely on the war as the instigator of the urban future. take Jamal's observation in his pop quiz that, speaking about his work restoring the walls along the Hudson River, 'This is the sort of work I dreamed about when I was young: designing and building something that'll make a real difference to my city. I wouldn't be doing this right now if the war hadn't happened, I bet'. The sentiment of Jamal's words are expressed by many of the characters in DMZ.

nevertheless, the urban world of the DMZ does indicate how the city of exception can quickly be transformed - or, indeed, is always co-existent with - the city in common, for the DMZ is as much a portrayal of everyday life as it is of life in the war zone.

20 May 2010

in protest at large budget cuts proposed for public libraries in New York a publicity stunt was pulled to draw attention to the proposals: none other than the Ghostbusters. as some stunned, some wilfully oblivious and some amused library users of the New York Public Library watched, three ghosts sat themselves down amongst the readers only to be quickly driven out with the arrival of the Ghostbusters (no Bill Murray, sadly, but a remarkably good effort to recreate Harold Ramis).

like all public buildings, libraries fulfil a wide variety of functions: places to read, to write, to study, to congegrate, to pass the time, to take shelter, to pee, to sleep, to dream; they're also symbolic structures, places to engage with the nation and the state and, especially in this case, the city. but it also strikes me that the arrival of the ghostbusters says as much as about the power of the film world's imaginary as it does about New York. the city here becomes self-referential within the film world and those who could make the leap between ghosts and funding cuts (presumably that the reader's will become ghosts if the cuts aren't stopped) will be wondering who - in the non-film world - the ghostbuster saviours will be? perhaps there is some encouragement for the library users themselves and/or a call to arms to otherwordly academics: of the four ghostbusters three have PhDs and the last one (though this isn't mentioned in the film) was originally scripted as being the most educated of the bunch. perhaps I'm deluding myself. the New York Public Library does at least attempt to pull off an act of artistic politics.

but my final thought relates to dress: the classic ghost as sheet with two holes. as Belgium and France push for a full ban for the burqa, I wonder what consequences this has for the traditional ghost? or is the burqa to be ghosted from the West too?