MELATONIN

The fictions of Brett-Eason Ellis and the theories of Paul Virilio

by Adrian Gargett


“The major advances in civilization are processes that all but wreck the societies in which they occur”
(A.N. Whitehead)


“One day the day will come when the day does not come”
(Paul Virilio)

The velocity of contemporary existence has fundamentally transformed notions of perception. As digitalized time ticks away, the mind has developed to cope with a phenomenological blizzard. The attraction to speed is ultimately suicidal, a rush towards disintegration. The ethos of speed is remorselessly belligerent.


We no longer appear to live in a real time experience but alternatively seem to exist in an immediate, phospherent instant – time cannot be conceived as linear and segmented, but multi-directional and deep.


The primary function of this project is to animate an intersection processed via interacting the fiction of Brett Easton-Ellis with the theories of Paul Virilio. In the investigation it is the attempt to adopt a strategy according to Virilio’s mechanisms (of concepts as mental images) to proceed by engaging the conceptual elements with the material in the program.


Paul Virilio as a “dromologist” claims not to believe in explanations, but in suggestions, “in the obvious quality of the implicit”. In his work he has opened up a new trajectory for the effective critique of contemporary discourses of social reality, and in particular the “social reality” of contemporary “hyper-capitalism”. Virilio has created an operational process by which to interrogate contemporary transformations and appearances and the radicalization of the “politics” of time. Not only would political rationality understand the motion of matter and of bodies, it would seek above all to perfect the mechanisms of producing it. The “movement-of-movement” or “speed”, as a technical achievement emerges, as a societal principle, re-ordering the modern world.


In the fiction of Brett Easton Ellis we observe artfully drawn satires that continually reflect an uncanny power of observation towards contemporary society. An “epic” flight through hyper-kinetic life. It is funny, hip and relentlessly sharp.


Ellis’ first novel “Less than Zero” (1985), a book of just 200 pages with autobiographical strains, introduced a passive, detached narrative concerning a group of spoiled but drifting Los Angeles youth “anaesthetised” by drugs sex and violence. Its parties and beach interludes and drug deals via parents’ telephones were so stylized, so similar to each other, so smoothly repetitive in their re-telling, that a reader becomes disconnected from the narrative. The crucial aspect is atmosphere: by turns, blissed-out and ominous, seductive and spooked. Throughout, the central character deliberates whether or not to let go of his feckless, coke-addled teen milieu and go back to college. This was satire, but so discreet it looked like celebration.


“Everything I write is monologue. “Less than Zero” is a monologue by this zombie surfer dude from L.A. Everyone thinks “Clay, he’s so sensitive because he went to school back East” He decides to leave in the end. That would always bother me when people would say, “the hero of the novel”. He’s isn’t a hero at all to me. He’s like this big void. He troubles me more than any other character that I’ve written about.”
(Brett Easton-Ellis) (1)


Ellis’ sentences were long, fast, and as hypnotizing as the LA freeways. To readers familiar with this environment they rang true to others they sounded strangely exotic.


“People are afraid to merge on freeways in Los Angeles”
(Less than Zero)


For the driver on a freeway, every moment is “now” by refusing the emotional resonance of a traditional novel, by denying the sentences the basic “humanity” of language and granting his words of freedom of innocence, Ellis reduces every moment in “Less than Zero” to “now”. The chapters are as brief as MTV videos and the vocabulary simple, not so much to reflect an ever-diminishing attention span but rather to terminate it. Too much happens in “Less than Zero”, you cannot possibly follow what’s happening because everything occurs simultaneously and nothing spans a perceptible expanse of time.


“Less than Zero” was received not only as a notable first novel, but also as a definitive reflection of a nihilistic generation. The second work “The Rules of Attraction” (1987) was a similar examination of the indulgent nihilism of youth, set in an East Coast campus, rather than L.A.


However beneath the surface glamour in Ellis’ fiction there is an inverted “morality”. “When I wrote “Less Than Zero”, I was really writing about a person that I found totally morally bankrupt. The reason he troubles me more than the other characters is because at least he has a bit of a conscience. Yet he still refuses to break out of his passivity. He still allows evil to flourish around him” (Brett Easton Ellis). (2)


In Virilio’s theoretical investigations all the key tendencies of the contemporary epoch are envisioned; the fantastic acceleration of culture to its imminent moment of collapse in a nowhere zone between speed and inertia, the mutation of subjectivity into “dromocratic consciousness” and the irradiation of the mediascape by a “logistic of perception” that proceeds according to the “laws” of the virtual world. Virilio’s Dromology is an empire of immediacy, speed and communication where the self continuously mutates, where living means quick circulation through the technical capillaries of the mediascape and where culture is reduced to the society of the spectacle.


“American Psycho” (1991) is a first person narrative describing a part of the life of Patrick Bateman, a Wall Street executive who is – or believes himself to be - insane and a serial rapist and murderer. The story has no real plot; it follows no coherent time line. It is just a series of events in Bateman’s life told from his point of view. The desolation of the book lies not in its murder victims, its rising body count, ritualistic murders, torturous sex, or overabundant profanity, but instead in the fact that you are faced with a man who you are compelled to feel such sympathy for. Even the book’s most chilling moments seem to happen at a distance. We do not live inside the victim’s fear. We live instead inside Bateman. Horrified by Bateman’s actions you cannot deny his charisma, nor can you dismiss the metaphor he represents. Bateman is a nightmare of a human being – he experiences a vacancy of identity and cannot feel human emotion yet he comes to embody a society of glistening surface sheen. Bateman is a symbol who represents the craziness of an era, all its psychosis embodied in one person – obsession with clothes, obsession with food, obsession with skin. “American Psycho” is a dark satire on American “values”. Bateman is the All-American Boy except for the fact that he happens to butcher innocent people.


Ellis’s obsessive notation of designer labels and brand names suggests that Bateman’s world is all surface and its effect is numbing. “American Psycho” wants us to see Bateman as emblematic of his time, his material fetishism as the sick product of a culture that has enshrined acquisitiveness and greed. Everything including people are commodities.


In New York, appearance is everything, a form of currency, or at the very least a calling card. One must look wealthy in order to be recognised as a person of worth. In a sense the whole city is an audience and from time to time, someone will stand up and announce, “Last year I made $1,000,000, but this year I’m going to make $10,000,000”, while everyone applauds.


Throughout the streets of Manhattan, Ellis’ “American Psycho” takes you on a tour of a horrific American Elite, making you wonder who is truly the monster. Bateman lives his own perverse American Dream, which, in the chaos of his world, almost makes sense, and you come to like him more and moreÖ.and then the graphic violence begins. Horrified by it you cannot help but continue as the narrative accelerates, drawing to a detonation point at which you are left wondering if it was all real or not.


“There is an idea of Patrick Bateman, some kind of abstraction. But there is no real me. Only an entity. Something illusory. And although I can hide in my cold gaze, and you can shake my hand and feel the flesh beneath yours, and sense our lifestyles are probably comparable...I simply am not there”


(Patrick Bateman) – (3)The surface glistens and shines all at once: the period (late Eighties) the social milieu (affluent young Wall Street Traders) the tone (social satire) and the theme (the deadly price of greed and consumerism). Bateman’s problem as he informs us, is a feeling of “not being there”. He has no past, does no work except “murders an executions”, misheard as “mergers and acquisitions”. In this universe everyone looks good, and everyone works out, but this also makes them interchangeable. Bateman is often confused with someone else. The concentration on surface, the detached, affectless tone leads ultimately to an insistence on an erasure of identity. In the final sequence of the book, as the bodies pile up an intriguing question arises as to Bateman’s reliability as a narrator. Is he sufficiently insane to have merely imagined his crimes? Certainly no one wants to hear his confessions – but does that say something about him or the society he inhabits? It is a teasing enigma which allows “American Psycho” to slip away gracefully.


“So Harold, “ I say, “did you get my message?”


Carnes seems confused at first and, while lighting a cigarette finally laughs. “Jesus, Davis. Yes, that was hilarious. That was you, was it?”
“Yes naturally”, I’m blinking, muttering to myself, really, waving his cigarette smoke away from my face.
“Bateman killing Owen and the escort girl?” He keeps chuckling, “Oh that’s bloody marvellous. Really key, as they say at the Groucho Club

“...”Davis”, he sighs, as if patiently trying to explain something to a child, “I am not one to bad-mouth anyone, your joke was amusing. But come on, man, you had one fatal flaw: Bateman’s such a bloody ass-kisser, such a brown-nosing goody-goody, that I couldn’t fully appreciate it. Otherwise it was amusing".

“ Wait, Stop”, I shout, looking up into Carne’s face, making sure he’s listening. “You don’t seem to understand. You’re not really comprehending any of this. I killed him. I did it, Carnes. I chopped Owen’s fucking head off. I tortured dozens of girls. That whole message I left on your machine was true. “I’m drained, not appearing calm, wondering why this doesn’t feel like a blessing to me”(American Psycho) (4)

Virilio’s theorizes the contemporary mediascape. In his work we observe the fundamental trajectories of the “now”. The primary conflict between subjugated human knowledge and a menacing dromocratic intelligence flashing across all of the screens and networks (“The Aesthetics of Disappearance”), the “jet-subjectivity” of the vacant bodies drifting across the airport terminals of the world (“Speed and Politics”), the “exhausted offence” of the dictatorship of movement (“Pure War”) the disappearance of politics into the terminal phrase of the “logistics of perception” (“Cinema and War”), and the transformation of city-scapes into an architecture of virtuality complete with eviscerated bodies caught up in an endless drift through the circulatory capillaries of the transportation network.


Ellis’ latest work “Glamorama” (1999) is an insider look at the media and the cult of celebrity. This is a frantic but shallow fast-living world peopled by the gorgeous, the mindless and selfish. It depicts an era where physical beauty is regarded as an accomplishment and rewarded with huge sums of money and fame. This disturbing and breathtaking novel sends the reader on an epic journey from a celebrity obsessed New York to a Paris under siege by chic terrorists. This is a world of drugs, vicious sex, loud music and technicoloured violence. Ellis adopts flat dead-eyed prose, avoiding metaphors and adjectives and aspiring only to description, even when the subject is sex or disembowelling violence.


The hero of this novel, a model/actor, glides effortlessly through a shallow self-absorbed experience like a spiritual refugee, unable to make meaningful contact with any of the inhabitants of this moneyed desert. Ultimately, the human carnage unleashed by his terrorist associates on the City of Paris temporarily re-focuses his perspective. Unfortunately, though, he experiences no real redemption even after witnessing the unspeakable carnage enacted by his “glamorous” friends. In fact, the violence serves only to increase his celebrity.


Virilio’s “dromocratic” subject is a body emptied out, turned into a blank “metabolic vehicle”, a speedway absorbing all the iridescent signs of the mediascape, trapped in a closed horizon which moves according to technological not biological time.


“Glamorama” is in a way the ultimate Brett Easton Ellis product. It is two and a half times as long as “Less than Zero” and contains characters from that and every other Ellis volume. “Glamorama” has sections set in Manhattan, Los Angeles, London, Paris, Milan and the middle of the Atlantic. Its protagonists are super models and slouching teenagers, night-club owners and terrorists, spies and slack-jawed tranquillizer addicts. Their wandering and wealthy lives are detailed, as Ellis always does, with an immensely mocking dryness. One character. For example, is described as “Uma Thurman if Uma Thurman was five feet two and asleep”.


“Glamorama” Is “American Psycho” with the volume turned full on, louder and more extravagant in its death count and uniquely and wildly distorted as to obtain a quality quite distinctive in contemporary literature. In “American Psycho” Patrick Bateman appeared to have a near-authorial control over his circumstances; in “Glamorama” nobody, not even Easton-Ellis seems to have control over Victor Ward’s. Beneath all the “pre-packaged” gore and empty personae, the real action is structural – it is fundamentally an experimental work. “Glamorama” is primarily not a novel about people, but about the state of the novel itself – there are too many narrative lines for the reader to draw a single conclusion or to infer a coherent hypothesis.


“I’m just staring at nothing or what I image is nothing until I’m finally moved to say, “As a general rule you shouldn’t expect too much from people, darling” and then I kiss her on the cheek.
“I just had my make-up done, so you can’t make me cry”
(Glamorama) (5)

Ellis likes to evoke enclosed, solipsistic worlds, which are also, conundrums. “Glamorama” not only fits the pattern of its predecessors, it also remakes them. Just as Patrick Bateman suffers deep ennui at the consumer perfection of his existence, so Victor is aghast at his own self-absorption. Society in Ellis’ books is an urban nightmare labyrinth disrupted by the seething denatured and confined male ego it was built to control.

“ (it) sums up my feelings about where we are today: either by ridiculing the things we seem to find important or the way we’re obsessed with surfaces glamour and status”(Brett Easton Ellis) (6)

“The question is “How has television informed every book?” Media has informed all of us, no matter what artform we pursue, whether painters or musicians. T.V unconsciously, whether we want to admit it or not, shaped all our visions to an inordinate degree. How? I don’t know, I couldn’t give you specifics. Is it good or bad? I don’t know. I think it just is.”
(Brett Easton-Ellis) (7)


The sociology is now re-inforced by a second section engaging a plot detailing a mysterious assignment, a voyage on an ocean liner, and a scramble against time. The great drifting paragraphs are now compressed and accelerated, in places, into one-line shots of story development. “Glamorama” is really about conspiracy. The connection between fashion and terrorism. Powerful forces of insecurity.

“I think the connection I’m making has to do with the tyranny of beauty in our culture and the tyranny of terrorism. Of course that’s a metaphor and the idea of models actually blowing up hotels and air lines is far fetched. But the idealization of beauty and fame in our culture drives people crazy in a lot of ways; we resent it, we want it, we love it, we hate it. And the psychological toll it takes on our psyche is pretty big”.
(Bret Easton Ellis) (8)

“I am so tired of looking at that empty expanse that’s supposed to be your face” (Glamorama) (9)

“Glamorama” shows us what we have become in the inside in the era of mediascape, where we are passive observers of what is happening to us in the complex sign-system of information society. Ellis’ work is insightful as a “Virilio-like” analysis of the construct/inner discourse of contemporary image formulated consciousness. His writing is principally about the “subjectivity of the instant”, which does not exist except as an empty site for a convergence traced by the discourses – a technical culture which is programmed by techno-generated logic, the implosive logic of he image/the screen and of imminent violence, that is a “narrative continuity” in information society can only be assured by a violent increase in speed. Everything plays at the edge of the ecstasy of speed and the detritus of inertia – we are positioned as inert observers of the spectacle of velocity. “Glamorama” combines its narrative lines of flight into an exact simulacrum of how power as speed functions today.Throughout his fiction Ellis has ultimately secured a place as a chronicler of an amoral society virtually tearing at its own entrails. He depicts an empty society, inhabited by bored designer clones engaged in mindless conversations. Sleek, shiny surfaces have always been paramount in his work, his characters value beauty, fame, designer labels, consumer products and well-tanned bodies. In fact they do not see anything else.Virilio describes a culture that is pulverised by the mediascape, a society held together by the sleek sheen of surface and network entering into the simulacra. This culture is modelled on pure speed, driven from within by the reduction of experience to “dromocratic consciousness”.

“It’s interesting, this idea of being so overwhelmingly influence by pop culture, and yet, in your writing, not that influenced by events in your life. That’s a new idea very common to artists of this generation. You’re making up stuff, but at the same time it’s autobiographical because it stems from how you’re feeling. I think temperament and sensibility can be autobiographical”.
(Brett Easton-Ellis) (10)


The dual phenomena of immediacy and instantaneity are presently among the most dramatic problems confronting society. Real time now dominates, prevailing above both real space and the geosphere. The primacy of real time, of immediacy, over and above space and surface is a “fait accompli” and has inaugurated a new epoch. This situation is critical in our relation with the world and our vision of that World.


“I think that the infosphere – the sphere of information – is going to impose itself on the geosphere. We are going to be living in a reduced world. The capacity of interactivity is going to reduce the world, real space to nearly nothing. Therefore in the near future, people will have a feeling of being enclosed in a small, confined environment. In fact, there is already a speed pollution which reduces the world to nothing. I believe that there will be for future generations a feeling of confinement in the world, of incarceration which will certainly be at the limit of tolerability, by virtue of the speed of information”
(Paul Virilio). (11)

In “The Art of Motor” (12) Virilio suggests the “Subject” in the figure we understand it is barely able to hold together or maintain form – like trying to watch a million T.V. channels at once. The culprits: television, the Industrial media, and the twin spectres of biotechnology and cybernetics. For Virilio each of these elements represents a particular combination of Speed and Vision; combined, the play of these two forces, mediated through the four factors mentioned, obliterate the “Subject”.


“The Art of the Motor” conjures up a world in which information is speed and duration is no more. Information as Speed, Virilio, tells us is the third dimension of matter replacing old notions of information as mass and energy. He details the ways in which this change has led to a new visual regime – a serialization of images and sound that permits an extraordinary manipulation of both the form and content of messages. According to Virilio, the incredible pace of the mutation of appearances – made possible by the “Art of the Motor” ends up mutating reslity itself.


The theories that Virilio elaborates are related to increasing speeds. He traces the development of vehicular relationships from the inside, marking the various amputations and extensions as they occur. He suggests that we can trace the dominant diversions of various speeds of culture, from the locality of sex to the ubiquity of telepresence. Some of the transitions are surprising, as when he traces the movement out of theatres and onto the freeways. The windshield of the automobile, he says, is the mechanism/screen for experiencing the world at a new speed. The driver is a voyeur – voyager, now dedicated to a kind of pure circulation which works against the possibility of contemplation or critical thought. The real world becomes increasingly replaced by our pre-emptive engagements with it.


What lies ahead is a disturbance in the perception of what reality is; it is a shock, a mental concussion. Experience entails a loss of orientation regarding alterity (the other) – a disturbance of the relationship with the other and with the World. It is apparent that this dislocation, this non-situation, will inaugurate a deep crisis which will affect the complexion of society.


History now unfolds within a “one time system” – global time. What is being effectively globalized by instanteity is time. Everything now happens within the perspective of real time – henceforth we will exist in a “one-time system”. Previously History has occurred within local times/local frames, regions/nations. However globalization and virtualization inaugurate a global time that prefigures a multitude of distorting perspectives. History had been localized existing in spatially banded lines which overrode universal time. Our History now appears in universal time, the consequence of instantaeity.


We now encounter real time superseding real space. A phenomena that renders both surface and distance irrelevant in favour of time-span. In addition global time, belonging to multi-media and cyber space increasingly dominates the local time frame of our cities and communities. This deconstruction of the relationship with the world is not without consequences for the interaction of citizens themselves.


In “The Aesthetics of Disappearance” (13) Virilio suggests that the contemporary subject is prone to a mild form of epilepsy. This has interesting consequences in the realm of creativity, since it has been observed that picnoleptic children faced with absences that they cannot explain and which they must account for, will begin to recall more than actually happened. They will insert additional details to cover gaps. This is a type of deterrence in the realm of narrative and experience. The best memory is one that interacts with experience at a median point, manufacturing additional experiences.


The explosion of unlimited experiences produces a distinct “accident”. No information exists without dis-information. The contemporary situation creates a new form of dis-information, totally different from voluntary censorship. It centres upon a type of “choking” of the senses, a loss of control over “reason”. Real-time interaction is to information what radioactivity is to energy. The disintegration does not simply affect particles of matter, but also the constituents of which our societies are constructed.


The prescient question Virilio advances asks: is there any space remaining for us to occupy which is not the non-space of perpetual movement of speed moving towards its limit, or, at the limit, the non-space of inertia? He describes an epochal tension between the labyrinth of domination of everyday technological life and the subjugated knowledge of a “possible” human experience outside the technical maelstrom.


Media, but altering the environment, evokes in us unique ratios of sense perceptions. The extension of any one sense alters the way we think and act- the way we perceive the world. When these ratios change, people change.

While multi-media modern technology has ended primary alienation, social alienation in the form of a hierarchy has continued. People are treated as passive objects, not active subjects. After degrading being into having, the Situationists concept of “the spectacle” has further transformed having into merely appearing. The resultant situation positions a dramatic contrast between cultural poverty and economic wealth. The contemporary first World may well guarantee a society of security but it’s one that entails the risk of “dying of boredom”.
We are today increasingly unable to discriminate the validity of information. We require a new form of critical competence, an as yet unknown art of selection and decimation of information, in effect a new critique. The spectacle now pervades all reality, making every relationship manipulated and every critique spectacular. The speed of life, the pace of the spectacle, is proportional to the speed of computers and communication. The challenge at the present is to recover the Situationist critique from the abyss of the spectacle itself.


Virilio claims that the elimination of the logic of power/knowledge has presented a situation of “moving power”. Consequently there has emerged an order of knowledge defined not simply by its space, but its relation to time; what we might term a span of conscious mobility. Individuals become subordinated to a higher realm of ordering (speed). Revolution and not status has established itself as the universal principle of modern order, leading finally to what he has termed the “peace of exhaustion”. Motion has emerged as the destiny and law of a new “politics” of order.


Dromology: the will-to-speed finds its final realization in the destruction of space, reducing the expanse of the world into the negative initiating a global epoch. Dromocratic power has facilitated the release of the will-to-speed through which we confront a “negative horizon” – the implosion of space under the violence of speed.


Adrian Gargett (PhD) May 2000

NOTES

(1) Interview (1994) with Mark Amerika – Alexander Laurence
(2) Interview (1994)
(3) “American Psycho” – (film version – 2000)
(4) Brett Easton-Ellis – American Psycho (1991) – New York: Vintage Books.
(5) Brett Easton-Ellis – Glamorama (1999) London: Picador
(6) Interview (1999)
(7) Interview (1994)
(8) Interview (1999)
(9) op.cit Brett-Easton Ellis (1999)
(10) Interview (1994)
(11) Paul Virilio – Interview with James Der Derain – Speed 1:4 (1997)
(12) Paul Virilio – The Art of the Motor – (trans Julie Rose) University of Minnesota Press 1995.
(13) Paul Virilio – The Aesthetics of Disappearance (trans Philip Beitchman) Semiotext (e) 1991.

REFERENCES
Paul Virilio – The Aesthetics of Disappearance. (trans. Philip Beitchman) Semiotext (e) 1991.
Paul Virilio – The Art of the Motor (trans Julie Rose) – University of Minnesota Press 1995.
Paul Virilio – Speed and Politics: An Essay on Dromology – Autonomedia 1986.
Paul Virilio – War and Cinema: The Logistics of Perception. (trans. P Camiler) Verso 1989
Paul Virilio – Pure War – Semiotext (e) 1998
Paul Virilio – The Vision Machine – BFI Publishing 1994.
Paul Virilio – The Lost Dimension – Semiotext (e) 1991
Paul Virilio - The Information Bomb – Verso 1999
Paul Virilio – Open Sky (trans Julie Rose) Verso 1997
James Der Derian (Ed) – The Virilio Reader – Blackwell Publishers 1998.

FROM;
ADRIAN J.H GARGETT (PhD)
30 Darley Mead Court
Hampton Lane
Solihull
West Midlands B91 2QA
England
Telephone: 0121 704 4985