(In reference to "I AM", an audience-participative public installation at George Town, 2009, by Iranian-born and German-based international video artist, Shahram Entakhbi)
“I AM…” as a form of production, research and curatorial
methodology, can be read as cultural studies in action, especially in regards
to language, culture and identity.
Language has long been taken as the core of cultural
studies. It does not only mirror an independent object world but constructs and
constitutes it. All cultural forms can be analysed like a language (Barthes,
1967, 1972). They are said to work like language especially in regards to identity.
The discourse of identity, which was the central category of cultural studies
in the 1990s, was held to be social and discursive construction (Barker, 2000).
Following Derrida (1976) and a good many cultural studies
writers following him, deployment of binary relation between signs in
structuralism was ‘deconstructed’ by the notion of the instability of language,
meaning and identity (Barker and Galashiski, 2001). Cultural studies then swung
from the structuralism’s study of texts to the post-structuralist’s exploration
of audience. Consequently, meanings in language, as in identities, were taken
to be unstable. They are nevertheless regulated and temporarily stabilised in
social practice into pragmatic narratives or discourses.
Discourses, especially after Foucault (1972, 1977, 1980)
refer to language and practice that are regulated as ways of speaking about a
topic. Meanings, including those pertinent to many the notion of multiple identities,
are relational and formed within ‘language games’.
Cultural studies read multiple identities as products of
signifying practices. To unveil Georgetown as a zone of multiple identities is
to explore how meanings attached to it are produced symbolically through the signifying
practices of language and representation. Similar to meanings in language,
identities are produced by active human agents.
Derrida’s influence has underpinned the widespread adoption
of anti-essentialism, social construction and textual deconstruction. Such
adoption has sparked further theorisation of identity as an unstable
description in language, that the notion of identity is more a state of
becoming rather than a fixed entity (Hall, 1992, 1996). Such adoption can be
traced in the discourse of gender (Nicholson, 1990 and Weedon, 1997); and
post-colonial theory (Bhabha, 1994). It has also lead to a proposition that all
forms of culture and identity are zones of shifting boundaries and hybridisation.
Such proposition reads multiple identities as to be wholly social, political
and malleable cultural construction, not necessarily biological and universal
all the time. Consequently, cultural studies now entails a process of
‘listening to people’, the active interpreters of signs and constructors of
cultural identities.
“I AM…” looks at ‘self-identity as a reflective project’ (Barker
and Galashiski, 2001). It surveys how the many notions of self, both personal
and collective as well as cultural are narrated by the public at large, in this
case the living dwellers of Georgetown’s ‘street of harmony’. As indicated by
the ‘findings’ of this project, the many notions of self-identity (and even of Georgetown
and Penang) are not necessarily given, universal, homogenous, fixed and frozen.
They are rather ‘performed’ and appear
to be in a constant state of ‘becoming’.
“I AM…” also epitomises
the spirit of ‘listening to’ instead of ‘talking to’. It marks a shift
from ‘institution/state-dictated’ to ‘people-defined’, while simultaneously returns
to the spirit of interdependence, inclusiveness and participation in dealing with
issues that are pertinent to the interest of the whole. Notwithstanding UNESCO’s
official recognition of Georgetown as a heritage site, the more substantial
meanings of heritage, of belonging and most importantly of becoming are best
constructed, re-constructed and performed by the citizens of Georgetown. Despite concerted efforts by many ‘experts’ to
define Georgetown (and perhaps its citizens) along the line of its unique
multi-cultural heritage, the actual ‘living experience’ of ‘multi-cultural’ identities
belongs to the people of Georgetown themselves.
“I AM…” reiterates several key principles that can be traced
in many forms of eastern traditions such as modularity, non-linear,
simultaneous, impermanence/ephemeral, communal, interdependence, convergence,
cross-disciplinary, cyclical, audience-centered and many more. These key
principles have also been deployed as the constant guides for Muzium &
Galeri Tuanku Fauziah (MGTF), Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) in advocating
sustainability as it steers itself into the challenging terrains of the
increasingly globalised world.
MGTF is honoured to be able to work collaboratively with the
internationally renowned contemporary artist, Shahram Entakhabi, the
indefatigable Joe Sidek, students of the School of the Arts and the blessed
citizens of Georgetown for this very special and meaningful project.
Hasnul J Saidon
Director
Muzium &
Galeri Tuanku Fauziah
Universiti
Sains Malaysia
December
2010
References
- Bhabha,
H. (1994) The Location of Culture. London
and New York: Routledge
- Barker, Chris and
Galasinski (2001) Cultural Studies
and Discourse Analysis – A Dialogue on Language and Identity. London:
Sage Publications
- Barthes, R.(1967) The Elements of Semiology. London:
Cape
- Barthes, R. (1972) Mythologies. London: Cape
- Derrida, J. (1976) (trans.
G Spivak) Of Grammatology. Baltimore:
John Hopkins University Press
- Foucault, M. (1972) The Archaeology of Knowledge. New
York: Pantheon
- Foucault,
M. (1977 Discipline and Punishment. London:
London: Allen Lane
- Foucault,
M. (1980) Power/Knowledge. New
York: Pantheon
- Hall, S.
(1992) ‘Cultural studies and its theoretical legacies’, in L. Grossberg,
C.Nelson and P.Treichler (eds), Cultural
Studies. London and New York: Routledge
- Hall, S.
(1996) ‘Who needs identity?’, in S.Hall and P. Du Gay (eds), Questions of Cultural Identity. London:
Sage
- Nicholson,
L.(ed) (1990) Feminism/Postmodernism.
London and New York: Routledge
- Weedon,
C. (1997) Feminist Practice and
Poststructuralist Theory. Oxford: Blackwell
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