Onto-Epistm-ology. Barad terms this “the study of practices of knowing in being” (Barad, 2003, p. 829). In differentiating between her diffractive methodology as opposed to a reflective one, she describes onto-epistem-ology as a “material practice of engagement as part of the world in its differential becoming” (Barad, 2007, p. 89) as opposed to the “Ontology | Epistemology boundary” where “knowledge is true beliefs concerning reflections from a distance” and where there is a clear “Knower | Known boundary” (Barad, 2007, p. 89). As Tim Ingold goes on to clarify, “There is no contradiction between participation and observation” and that it is ““only because we are already of the world, only because we are fellow travellers along with the beings and things that command our attention, (that) we (can) observe them”. (Ingold, 2013)
Material-discursive. Barad takes this idea from Donna Haraway’s Material-Semiotic apparatuses. For Barad “the primary semantic units are not “words” but material-discursive practices through which (ontic and semantic) boundaries are constituted.” (Barad, 2007, p. 141) Haraway explains that objects (race, the brain, computer chips, etc) are “constructs or material-semiotic” “object(s) of knowledge” (Haraway, 1997, p. 129). A material-discursive/semiotic method is relatable to Bruno Latour’s Actor Network Theory (Latour, 1999), and Deleuze and Guattari’s Rhizome (Holland, 2013). In essence; that the way we speak about things changes them materially, and that the materiality of things changes the way we speak about them.
Agential cut. For Barad, when an object is observed a cut is made between it and the observer through the apparatus used in its observation. For her, it is important to think about the “marks left on bodies”, when an object is cut in this way. For example, when an object is filmed, say the real, tangible rock that was filmed for Fig.1, a cut is made. Some of the object’s qualia, materiality, its constituent parts, become entangled in the new image-object. For Barad, this moves in both directions however, in that through being observed by the lens of the camera to generate the image of the rock, the rock-object has been marked by the observer. The agential cut is what makes difference between things.
Intra-action. As opposed to interaction, which assumes the retention of independence between the objects, intra-action proposes that agency does not pre-exist, but emerges from the relationships in intra-actions, “cause and effect emerge through intra-actions.” (Barad, 2003, p. 176) The agency of the {Sound-Image-Language} object comes forth from our intra-action with it, a performative act that calls meaning into being. It is where the “boundaries and properties of the “components” of phenomena become determinate” (Barad, 2003, p. 815). For Barad we are constantly reconfiguring our relationship with the world and materialising objects as we intra-act with them.
Apparatus. One of the most important tenets of Agential Realism is paying attention to the apparatus we use for knowing, “the point is not merely that knowledge practices have material consequences but that practices of knowing are specific material engagements that participate in (re)configuring the world.” (Barad, 2007, p. 91) Again this comes from thinking about Bohr’s experiments with light, in that one experiment, or apparatus, shows that light behaves like a particle, whereas another shows that light behaves like a wave. The point being that the apparatus we use to know the world has a direct impact on how the world materialises in front of us. At first this seems obvious; filming a rock gives you a different knowledge than recording the sound of the rock will. The same is true for writing about the rock in this essay. To know the rock then requires multiple apparatus, or at the very least an awareness that the apparatus we use for knowledge creation only enlightens in so far as it is able within its means. This seems especially important in arguing for, insofar as is still necessary, the need for practice research in academia. What then is the appropriate apparatus for a deeper knowledge of the {sound-image-language} object, one that allows us to hear, listen and read at the same time?
Diffraction. “Diffraction can serve as a useful counterpoint to reflection: both are optical phenomena, but whereas the metaphor of reflection reflects the themes of mirroring and sameness, diffraction is marked by patterns of difference”. (Barad, 2003, p. 71) Barad takes the idea of diffraction from Haraway; “Diffraction patterns record the history of interaction, interference, reinforcement, difference” (Haraway, 1997, p. 273) but goes much further in expanding the metaphor and in explaining its importance to thinking from an Agential Realist perspective. Diffraction is both the process and patterns that form when a wave bends around an object interfering with its trajectory. When a wave meets two slits however an interference pattern can be observed.
Barad explains that diffraction is not only a useful metaphor, but the method that allowed Bohr to discover that photons can act as both particles and a waves. To read diffractively, in Baradian terms, is to reject the “disciplinary domains of science, theory and art as separate” (Prophet & Pritchard, 2015) and instead think of their entanglement, whilst “retaining their difference, variation and heterogeneity”. In her performance-essay film The Museum is a Battlefield, Hito Steyerl explains how this diffractive process can be used to think about how an object, in her case a bullet, can “be both a missile and a piece of architecture” (The Museum is a Battlefield, 2013), a way of things not just being like other things, but being part of them, troubling the rigid line between signifier and signified.
Abstract
Through this paper, I propose a way of considering audiovisuality as an object in and of itself, thinking through its materiality and the role language plays in its construction. I discuss Karen Barad’s Agential Realist methodology as a way of accessing this object with a view to exploring how this might affect the way we sound an image. I propose that the essay film, or an essay film/text hybrid, is the form that can best articulates this way of thinking. I conclude by asking how a diffracted reading of the {sound-image-language} object can be used as a methodology for sounding images.
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