LEFT WITH TINA: ART, ALIENATION AND ANTI-COMMUNISM Cover Image

LEFT WITH TINA: ART, ALIENATION AND ANTI-COMMUNISM
LEFT WITH TINA: ART, ALIENATION AND ANTI-COMMUNISM

Author(s): Angela Dimitrakaki
Subject(s): Cultural history, Political history, History of Communism, Theory of Literature, History of Art, American Literature
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: contemporary art; politics of anti; democracy; alienation; anti-communism; Generation X; accelerationism; anti-fascism; ethical left;

Summary/Abstract: The article traces the haunting of the contemporary art field by a post-1989 cultural and political imaginary captured in Douglas Coupland’s novel Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture (1991). This was a formative literary work for its anti-work stance but also the narrativisation of withdrawal in awe of processes of acceleration that saw production principles translating into “dazed and confused” lifestyles. The preference of Gen-Xers for “microcosms”, where withdrawal encountered low-fi collectivism, became more prevalent in subsequent decades and aligned with a democracy realised, and idealised, as the politics of “anti” (including anti-fascism) – exemplified in the art field in its association with an ethical left. Constant and glorified antagonisms join the liberal art field to the social field, forever re-scripting ‘anti’ as TINA – the principle that “there is no alternative”. TINA, it is argued, is assuming specific figurations within the largely left-inclined art terrain where commoning practices remain cut off from the propositional politics of communism while, both within and beyond the art field, technophilia is legitimised left and right as a substitute for the desire for communism.

  • Issue Year: 2019
  • Issue No: 31
  • Page Range: 25-48
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English