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"Self as panoptician..." Self as panoptician: The X-Files, spectatorship, and discipline John M. Groves School of Journalism and Communication University of Oregon John Groves 1848 Madison St. Eugene, OR 97402 (541) 431-6727 [log in to unmask] 3/19/98 Self as panoptician: The X-Files, spectatorship, and discipline Cultural studies research on television has often taken the form of textual or reception analysis that examines the televisual production as if it were a written text. This paper looks at the serial plot of the X-Files, but places that plot within the non-diegetic context of the viewing experience. The cinematic 'look' of the show creates a coherent 'spectator' position, calling for application of psychoanalytic film theory. This effect works with the conspiracy-oriented plot to create a viewer/text interaction which inverts subjective relations to discipline. If in the workplace subjects occupy tightly circumscribed positions in panoptic networks, the X-Files offers textual positions which allow viewers to transgress symbolic constructions of panopticism. Solemn protagonists, bald aliens, Siberian torture camps, black extraterrestrial goo that seeps into your eyes, corpses bearing the marks of violent, paranormally inflicted death--all of this woven into an elaborate tale of conspiracy centered at the highest levels of the US government. Yes, I watch the X-Files. No, I am not proud. But I have come to be grateful that I have spent all those Sunday nights glued to the set, saying to myself, "this is absurd," even while I become agitated if I miss a word of dialogue. There is something going on here which I need to look into, I thought. This paper is the result. Where do we position ourselves among the UFO's, the acts of violence, the state conspiracy, the disease epidemics, the "others" of the X-Files? How do subject positions in the show draw us into the text, bringing us face to face with the slime-covered liver-eating mutant that kills five people every 30 years as a necessary part of his life-cycle? At $2.5 million per episode, the X-Files is one of the most expensive productions on television. The budget reflects itself in the technical quality of the show, with cinema-like special effects and dynamic camerawork that actively draws the viewer into the text. One of the show's directors states, "The show is about emotional reality rather than dramatic reality. That's why, if this show hadn't been done well, we would have been laughed off the air a long time ago" (Sterngold, 1998, p. B7). Point-of-view and shot-reverse-shot camera work are staples of production. The cinematic 'look' of the X-Files, I argue, creates a centralized spectator position much like the classic cinematic spectator position. And the specific qualities of the experience have numerous parallels to Foucault's metaphor of panopticism: not just as a metaphor for the metapsychology of 'spectatorship', but also as a metaphor for the conspiratorial basis of the X-Files serial plot. In Foucault's panoptic scenario, we find technology and behavioral norms integrated in highly-coordinated surveillance systems throughout society (prisons, the military, state security, schools, the workplace). Such systems instigate in subjects a self-policing operation. If you stray out of line, your deviance will become known, leading to punishment--so you act within prescribed boundaries. Schools or the workplace give many people with their most intimate exposure to panoptic networks: work habits, rules, technology, architecture, and even aspects of personal and occupational identity. Spectatorship in the X-files shifts the relationship of the subject to the panopticism of daily life. The X-files works metapsychologically by placing the viewer either at the center of, outside, or moving across the boundaries of a shifting, symbolic 'panopticon' that is constructed during the viewing experience. This is in contrast to daily life, where subjects are circumscribed in specific positions within the 'gaze' of a panoptic structure. So 'self as panoptician' refers to a viewing perspective either at the center, crossing boundaries, or in a 'transcendental observer' position, looking at disciplinary complexes from outside. The show invites the viewer to assume a spectator position and join Scully and Mulder as the text unravels, it hails the viewer into a symbolic world where he or she is suddenly the inspector rather than the inspected. In the X-Files, conspiracy operates as the symbolic construction of panopticism. This offers a therapeutic retreat from the panoptic situation of daily life, where we are all caught in networks of various and overlapping power systems--our workplace structure, the state, our high-tech surroundings. In this way, the X-Files functions to reproduce the existing capitalist relations of production by working out psychic tensions that might otherwise result in workplace resistance and increased political involvement on the part of subordinated subjects. I will examine this issue in relation to Althusser's (1994/1970) classic essay, "Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses." The parallels between panopticism and spectatorship have been noted before. Armstrong (1989; cited in R. Stam, et al. ,1992, pp. 212-213) looked at Frederick Wiseman's documentaries of various disciplinary institutions. The cinematic apparatus' panoptic spectator facilitates the effectiveness of these films by underpinning the storyline with a parallel metapsychological dynamic. Conspiracy and the X-Files Meghan Morris (1997) suggests that the X-Files' popularity rests on its appeal to the widespread circulation of Right-leaning conspiracy theories. The show plays off popular fears that there is one or more hidden 'evil Others' at work altering the foundations of social reality. In the case of the X-Files, varied combinations of aliens, hidden bureaucrats, and paranormal phenomena are the conspirators. Morris discusses the X-files to launch a discussion of recent attacks on cultural studies in Australia. Offering a comprehensive analysis of the show is understandably not part of her paper. Frederic Jameson (1988) holds conspiracy theory to be, "a degraded figure of the total logic of late capital, a desperate attempt to represent the latter's system, whose failure is marked by its slippage into sheer theme and content" (p. 356). Such thinking holds no conception of the structural logic of capitalism, he maintains, but displaces and rewrites capitalist subordination into elaborate tales of conspiracy. I share Morris' thoughts on the politics of the X-files. Conspiracy theories tend to reinforce status quo politics by framing 'the unknown' as inherently threatening, reinforcing tendencies to mark anything unfamiliar negatively. The serial plot of the X-files, while never clearly defined, portrays FBI agents Dana Scully and Fox Mulder working to expose and understand a world of high-ranking state conspiracy that is intricately bound up with alien landings and abductions. Shows that veer away from the serial plot invoke a huge range of 'paranormal activity', from Satanic plastic surgeons to African immigrants who drink juice from people's pineal glands in order to stave off the onset of a rare disease. Yet the show's popularity can not be adequately explained by an analysis of the politics of its story lines. A semiotic analysis of the text as narrative, without a consideration of metapsychological factors, would not explain the appeal of the X-Files. I think the show's obsession with invisible networks of oppression, the relation of the central characters Scully and Mulder to those networks, and the unconscious activity invoked by this dynamic, is crucial to its appeal. I argue that the show creates on more than one level a viewing experience that brings into play numerous unconscious desires and aspects of personal identity that relate to daily life in a disciplinary society. By working out some of the tensions operating at this psychic/social intersection, the X-Files works in its own way to reproduce relations of production of advanced capitalism. Ideology and the reproduction of capitalism Althusser's (1994/1970) essay considers the reproduction of both the means of production--the industrial infrastructure--and the reproduction of capitalist relations of production--worker-owner relations. He suggest ideology is the foremost vehicle for the reproduction of the capitalist mode of production. He locates ideological production in a set of 'ideological state apparatuses', then considers how ideology attaches itself to subjects. Repressive state apparatuses (RSA's)--the military, police, security agents, the legal and legislative system--are located within the state political structure. Some of the ideological state apparatuses (ISA's) overlap with RSA's, but others are dispersed throughout society, beyond the political system. Althusser labels as ISA's religion, education, family life, the legal system, political parties, unions, mass news media, entertainment media, and recreational activities (p. 111). Each of these practices is located in material sites throughout the social matrix. Ideology is produced by specific practices, it is grounded in material relations. All these ISA's work to produce ideologies which maintain race, class, and gender subordination. His "central thesis" is "ideology interpellates individuals as subjects" (p. 128). This aspect of his argument, many observers have noted, is heavily influenced by Lacanian psychoanalysis. For Althusser, subjectivity and ideology are so closely related that he goes as far as to say, "The existence of ideology and the hailing or interpellation of individuals as subjects are one and the same thing" (p. 131). The psychological mechanisms invoked by such interpellation are 'universal', thus Althusser concludes that in one sense, ideology, broadly speaking, is a universal, ahistorical phenomenon. The implication is that our identities are constructed by ideology, that we recognize ourselves as subjects in ideology. Such a grim scenario has left many with the impression that Althusser offers no escape from the mechanisms of reproduction of capitalist relations: "There are no subjects except by and for their subjection" (p. 136). Stuart Hall (1985) has worked to construct a theory of ideology that overcomes what he refers to as a "creeping Marxist functionalism" in Althusser's conception (p. 99). The ISA essay seems to provide little account of how resistance can come about, what mechanisms of ideological circulation and identity construction contain exploitable contradictions. This is where the Gramsci's concept of hegemony has been called upon to provide a way of theorizing points of weakness and contradiction in dominant ideology. Implicit to this concept is the idea that ideologies are always historically contingent and open to contestation. In Hall's work (1982, 1985) this notion connects quite logically to the semiotics and cultural theory that he brings into the scenario--Volosinov, Levi-Strauss, Barthes. Semiotics facilitates an understanding of how it is that ideologies operate in discourse, opening up a window on points of contradiction, strands of discourse, that can be exploited. How does metapsychology in the X-Files articulate with these ideological theories? First, because of the dominant role of psychological regression in X-Files viewership, social reproduction here seems closer to the Althusserian/Lacanian schematic than more 'meaning-oriented' cultural studies approaches. The crucial consideration here, the starting point for an understanding of this specific type of metapsychological reproduction of economic relations, is the presence of frustration that revolves around the subject's relations to conditions of production. What is foregrounded here is desire, desire to somehow escape the disciplinary positioning of one's job. In the X-Files, the viewer locates a site of cultural expression that allows this desire to desublimate in an intersection of affective and identity-related chains of experience and association which speaks specifically to those frustrations. In this way, the show acts to defuse potential oppositional practice in subjects by producing a psychic catharsis oriented around subject/discipline relations. This differs markedly from more conscious ideological types of social reproduction in that it works systematically to negate oppositional impulses rather than to affirm dominant ideologies. There are parallels here to Marcuse's notion of repressive desublimation (1964). In One dimensional man, Marcuse maps out the multitude of techniques and channels through which advanced capitalism obliterates any oppositional elements of discourse, practice, and even desire. Repressive desublimation revolves around the commodification of sexuality that has occurred in late capitalism. For Marcuse, this is one more way for the system to reproduce relations of subordination. The culture industries provide artifacts that allow for expression of sexual desire, but expression that falls within delimited bounds and does not invoke negative or oppositional forms of desublimation. I certainly want to avoid aligning myself with the sweeping rejection of popular culture, and corresponding valorization of high modern culture, that Marcuse and other Frankfurt School adherents propose. But specifically in the case of the X-Files, it does seem that a process similar to 'repressive desublimation' is at work. One important difference here is my post-Lacanian emphasis on relations between the unconscious, identity and culture, as opposed to Marcuse's more classic Freudian emphasis on ahistorical sexual urges and aggressions. Panopticism In Discipline and Punish (1977), Michel Foucault marks out the path of criminology and disciplinary technology over the last 300 years, suggesting that developments which first arose in these areas have since permeated broad sectors of the social matrix. 'Discipline' is a particular organization of technology, bureaucracy, architecture, habits, and identity that hierarchizes society, institutes networks of surveillance, normalizes behavior, and categorizes and regulates human activity. The resulting networks of rules, records, tools, machines, thought patterns, and micro-practices facilitates the operation of 'disciplinary power'. Power operates smoothly through this integrated network of paperwork, buildings, bodies, and identity (with the surrounding network), drawing people into positions where they are simultaneously restricted and enabled. Restricted by having to comply with disciplinary norms or suffer punishment; enabled by assuming a place in a productive network that allows one's labor to be linked smoothly with that of others, enjoying some of the power of the vast network. The Panopticon, a model of prison architecture designed by conservative late 18th century political theoretician Jeremy Bentham, struck Foucault as a powerful metaphor for the development and functioning of power in modern society. As an architectural design, the Panopticon is structured like a wheel, with a central point of surveillance surrounded by a circle of cells (Foucault, 1977, p. 200). Inmates' cells are perpetually lit from the central point, which appears to them as a shadow--they can not tell when they are being observed, but they know that any point in time someone may be watching. So they police their own behavior. Consequently, the prison need not be maximum security. Discipline places the operation of restriction and coercion to a large degree inside people's heads. Foucault emphasizes that using the Panopticon as a metaphor should not lead one to imagine a static, easily observed panopticism in society: "...it is in fact a figure of political technology that may and must be detached from any specific use" (p. 205). Panopticism is the metaphor for observation and surveillance, the crucial step in the disciplinary complex which then proceeds through categorization, analysis, regulation, and punishment. Panopticism is an 'effect' of discipline. In Foucault's description of control techniques used in France at the end of the 17th century for dealing with the appearance of the plague, we see common words and phrases in a new light: "permanent registration," "penetration of regulation," "hierarchy, surveillance, observation, writing," "measuring, supervising and correcting"(p. 196-99). Panopticism moves these techniques from a context of application in an emergency situation to the context of "the everyday life of men [and women]" (p. 205). Foucault goes on to connect discipline with related political, economic and scientific developments (p. 218). Oscar Gandy (1993), emphasizing the data-collection and categorization functions of panoptic apparatuses, coins the term "the panoptic sort" to refer to "the all-seeing eye of the difference machine that guides the global capitalist system" (p. 1). Gandy's book, subtitled, "a political economy of personal information," charts the various state and corporate techniques for collecting, distributing, analyzing, classifying, and utilizing such information. Advanced computer technology and bureaucratic organization form the infrastructure for such practices, practices which inform investment and administrative decisions that work to the benefit of hegemonic sectors. It is important to draw a distinction here between the two functions of panopticism. The first, informed by Gandy, takes the form of subjects in the central portions of apparatuses observing those on the periphery. This is the panopticism of data collection and administration. The second effect, the one that Foucault emphasized as so crucial to the functioning of disciplinary power, is the subjective manifestation of self-policing. The subject brings practice into the prescribed disciplinary framework for fear of the possibility of deviance becoming known and registered through the channels of the panoptic apparatus. Panopticism here carves its mark in occupational identity, forming one of the dominant themes of workplace communicative interaction. For my purposes, I want to theorize panopticism from the perspective of subjects caught up in it, from the self-policing function of panopticism. From the position of the subject we can see how discipline permeates daily life. The social security number, the address, the credit record, the SAT score, the grade, the degree, the job description, the management hierarchy, the tools and techniques of the workplace, the police, courts, prisons, and the repressive state apparatuses. Regardless of one's view of these realities, it is difficult to argue with the fact that we are caught up in disciplinary networks. From the position of all but the most privileged subjects in a disciplinary society, daily life is a process of navigating through panoptic networks. In order to understand how this all comes into play in the process of viewing the X-Files, I want to first examine the relationships between identity, subjectivity, and spectatorship. Spectatorship in the X-Files relates to the ways identity, subjectivity and desire are bound up in daily disciplinary relations. Identity and subjectivity Paul Gilroy (1997, p. 314-18) finds that the term 'identity' has been used in three general ways: identity as subjectivity, identity in terms of the relation between self and Others, and identity as a basis for social solidarity. In the first sense, identity is theorized at the level of the subject and personal identity. Through the second and third usages, identity becomes a negotiation between the subject and the broader social matrix. In line with semiotic and poststructuralist theories of signification, identity acquires meaning through differentiation of self from surrounding fields of signifiers. The most basic level of identity is identification of one's body as self. Beyond this point, identity constitution is achieved through distinction between self and others, in a perpetual maintenance of a shifting symbolic boundary. The process of designating what is outside the self is what defines the self. Stuart Hall (1996) follows Derrida in labeling that which is defined as 'not the self' as the 'constitutive outside.' The broadest level of identity is cultural identity, what Gilroy describes as the function of identity in social solidarity. Here we see the articulation of identity to categories spread through the social matrix--race, class, gender, ethnicity, national origin, sexuality, occupation. Morley and Robbins (1995) take as a starting point the disruption of traditional sites of identity formation that is symptomatic of late capitalism. Stable sites for defining identity in relation to all the above categories are no longer as common as in the past. Consequently, "Things are no longer defined and distinguished, in the ways that they once were, by their boundaries, borders or frontiers" (1995, p. 75). If images from all over the world float into one's home through television or the internet, then the meaning one ascribes to political geography is likely to change. National borders become potentially less significant in identity constitution. As Hall (1992) notes, this fragmentation of identities introduces a "tension between tradition and translation" (p. 312). In some instances, new hybrid identities are being consciously and actively constructed, but often, old myths of a pure cultural tradition are being rekindled, fueling hatred and exclusionary politics. This seems to have occurred in some of the former Soviet states and satellites. In the United States, the Right speaks of lost European-American tradition, and even broader sectors of society converge in the formation of a new anti-immigrant sentiment. So 'subjectivity' is identity operating at its most basic level of signification--body as self. Questions of subjectivity involve psychoanalysis and theories of the unconscious. The concept of 'spectatorship' in film studies describes a viewing situation in which a viewer is drawn into a subject position in the film text, a process which foregrounds liminal (unconscious/conscious interface) activity. Spectatorship Film theorists have used psychoanalytic concepts to analyze film viewing as a process akin to dreaming. Sandy Flitterman-Lewis suggests that this body of theory can be used to discuss TV viewing, as long as differences between film and TV are accounted for (1992, p. 203). She emphasizes that despite its common association with analysis of individuals, psychoanalytic theory is indeed a social theory (p. 204). Its application can inform questions about the relations between subjects and positions of subordination that are built into language and culture. Lacan's work on psychoanalysis has been a starting point for psychoanalytic film theory. Flitterman-Lewis reviews Freud's work (p. 204-207), emphasizing that the unconscious is constituted by the repression of unfulfilled desires. The fantasy world that pre-exists this subordination is one where biological drives and pleasure are in union. Forever after, they are never fully united. Infantile sexuality is gendered by the Oedipus complex, which initiates an ongoing complex of psychosexual dynamics revolving around suppressed affection for the parent of the opposite sex. Lacan rewrote Freud utilizing the tools of structuralism, theorizing the development of subjectivity as a discursive process. The departure from the earliest state of consciousness, called the Imaginary phase, occurs when the infant identifies itself in either its own reflection or in the figure of another person, the mother. The infant conceives the mother as another person and itself as a separate entity at the same time--self and other. The sense of the wholeness of the imaginary phase is never achieved again, but in the lifelong negotiation of identity we seek to somehow regain this wholeness of distant memory. In this way, the unconscious is constructed, and subjects are driven to social interaction in part in a futile attempt to reconcile the ironic constitution of self-consciousness. We only see ourselves as subjects because we have repressed part of ourselves. (Woodward, 1997, p. 44-45). Flitterman-Lewis describes spectatorship: ...psychoanalytic film theory emphasizes the notion of production in its description, considering the viewer as a kind of desiring producer of cinematic fiction. According to this idea, then, when we watch a film it is as if we were somehow dreaming it as well; our unconscious desires work in tandem with those that generated the film-dream (p. 211). Baudry applies the term 'cinematic apparatus' to the complex of factors which interacts in film viewing--the various technologies, the film as a text, and the viewer. The viewing process is both conscious/semiotic and unconscious/affective, with the film text acquiring meaning and power as a result of this viewing dialectic between desire and logic. "At the very center of the cinematic apparatus, there is the spectator, for without this viewing subject the entire mechanism would cease to function" (Flitterman-Lewis, p. 211-12). At the very center of a symbolic panopticon, perhaps? I will take this point up again later. Spectatorship relies on the actualization of three general processes. First, subjective 'regression', in which unconscious desire vies with conscious sententiousness for psychic hegemony. Second, 'primary identification', assuming a position as a 'spectator' inside the film text, an appropriation of the text as one's own dream. This is 'primary' because it "makes all secondary identifications with characters and events on the screen possible" (p. 214). Third, the presence of a coherent 'subject position' in the film. Film production employs techniques that function to conceal a sense of authorship and work to hail the viewer into the text, facilitating primary identification. Flitterman-Lewis takes this theoretical framework and brings it to bear on TV viewing to see how it might be useful, and to see how it needs to be changed to accommodate for differences between the two mediums (p. 213-216). If the dream-effect of film creates a sense of "there and then," TV creates a sense of "here and now." In part, this is because the viewer links the experience to the wider 'text' of viewing--TV as part of daily routine, the familiarity of home, the placement of the TV set among a meaningful assemblage of furniture and interior decorations. TV tends to emphasize realism and 'liveness' as textual modes because they are well-suited to the medium (p. 218). In daytime soap operas, at least, primary identification and regression do not occur in the same unified mode typical of cinema. In contrast to film's tendency to draw the subject in to a central spectator position that is fluidly maintained through the experience, soaps tend to offer a multiplicity of shifting and fragmented 'looks'. The preferred subject position changes as the text unravels (p. 219). Flitterman-Lewis holds, however, that this fragmentation of points of entry into the TV text does not throw a monkeywrench into the pleasure of a viewer's interpretive experience. This diversity's effectivity remains an open question. Mimi White argues that this diversity does not disrupt TV's textual fluidity. Her idea is based on Raymond Williams' concept of flow--the tendency for TV to blend into a continuous text that incorporates a diversity of programming. She suggests "that American commercial television currently engages in practices that assert unity and address the spectator-as-ideal-subject across temporal, spatial, and narrative diversity" (1986, p. 62). She cites numerous examples of cross-referentiality between different TV shows. Flitterman-Lewis' theory of TV spectatorship is based mostly around an analysis of soap operas, which she suggests are a representative TV form. Soaps lack the point-of-view and reverse-shot techniques utilized in movies that help create a unified subject position. So enjoyment of soaps like All My Children revolves around a voyeuristic as opposed to participatory textual engagement. The diversity of 'looks' offered can provide a feeling of omnipotence in this regard. This is "a televisually specific 'subject effect' in which both primary and secondary identifications are reorganized, multiplied, and intensified" (p. 225). She concludes: Blurring the categories of fiction and nonfiction, embedding distraction in its very core, fragmenting vision into a plurality of views, rupturing primary identification and amplifying secondary identifications, instilling a desire for continual consumption (not only of its programs but of the products that it sells), and trading on the powerful sense of immediacy that it creates, the television apparatus is in many ways more pervasive than its cinematic kin (p. 238). By choosing soap operas for her analysis and theory-building, I think Flitterman-Lewis overstates the differences between film and TV. Soaps utilize stationary cameras and are shot 'live', without much in the way of point-of-view or shot-reverse shot sequences. The X-Files is shot more like film, with heavy use of point-of-view and shot-reverse shot techniques, coming closer to film's centralized spectator effect. In considering the X-Files, I will consider the range of apparatus effects marked out here--Flitterman-Lewis' theorization of subject position diversity on one hand, and film theory's model of centralized spectatorship on the other. The X-Files tends to construct a more cinematic, as opposed to soap-operatic, spectatorship. Self as panoptician in the X-Files "These people [the special effects producer and production designer] really help to give it the cinematic look that I think it has, and that makes it different than anything else on television," Chris Carter, creator of the X-Files. (Fallen Angel/Eve, 1996). What dynamic is at work in a relationship between panopticism in the workplace and panopticianism in spectatorship? How do these manifestations of panopticism come together in viewing the X-Files? Foucault (1977) speaks of the development of discipline in relation to the development of capitalism. If capitalism is about the construction of a system for maximally efficient accumulation of capital, then discipline is a system for maximally efficient accumulation of productive bodies (p. 221). Humanism as an ideology blossomed only because disciplinary apparatuses grew simultaneously, insuring that new liberties and rights would not foster practices that strayed too far from dominant interest: "The 'Enlightenment', which discovered the liberties, also invented the disciplines" (p. 222). Directly addressing the relationship, he states, "The disciplines should be regarded as a sort of counter-law. They have the precise role of introducing insuperable asymmetries and excluding reciprocities" (p. 222). Discipline puts into play subtle, infrequently discussed micro-practices which subvert the egalitarian rhetoric of liberal democracy. This relationship between discipline and humanism is analogous to what Levi-Strauss (1967) has referred to as a dialectical relationship between myth and ritual. His particular argument centered around Pawnee mythologies of the origin of shamanistic power and their relation to the age-group initiation ritual of closely related Hidatsa tribe (p. 234). For Levi-Strauss (1967), this was part of his larger, much-criticized reductionist project of surveying ethnographies, finding cross-cultural structural themes, and laying out a tentative universal cultural logic which he suggested corresponded with the dynamic of 'the human mind'. Without taking on Levi-Strauss' metaphysical baggage, the concept of a myth/ritual (discourse/practice) dialectic becomes a useful tool. It is important to note that this move does not suggest sweeping statements about the 'human psyche', nor does it suggest that such a dialectic is a neat, balanced package, indicative of egalitarian power dynamics and pluralism. On the contrary, Foucault's discipline/humanism relation creates a power-surplus on the side of hegemonic sectors. Upper classes, whites, and men receive a disproportionate reward from this relation. How does self-as-panoptician/daily discipline relate to the broader historical dialectic between humanism and discipline? The discourse/practice dialectic in this particular case is X-Files /workplace practices. The X-Files is part of the larger mythology of conspiracy; workplace practices are part of the larger context of discipline. So here we find conspiracy replacing humanism as the wider mythology that relates to discipline. As noted above, Jameson sees conspiracy as the popular explanation of the dynamics of late capitalism. But whereas he suggests it is, "the poor person's cognitive mapping in the postmodern age," the crude analysis of the deluded masses, I would suggest that it is a discursive formation with intimate connections to the micro-practices of people's daily lives, the micro-practices prescribed by their disciplinary positioning. And if indeed conspiracy is replacing humanism as the discourse of choice in late capitalism, then I would argue it points to qualitative changes that have occurred in disciplinary apparatuses themselves. As the information age increasingly entangles disciplinary networks with advanced technology, subjects positioned in such complex networks are in turn seeking discourses that speak to their new situations. I will take up this point again in the conclusion. Since spectatorship is conceived as a position at the center of the cinematic apparatus, parallels to panopticism cry out to be examined. This can be interpreted as the placement of the subject at the center of a symbolic panopticon, inverting workday positioning. Of course, this non-diegetic aspect of the text, which exists in many cinematic and televisual productions, works synergistically in the X-Files to foreground the diegetic aspects of panopticism and conspiracy. This is a phenomenon which can occur in movies of all types, regardless of whether the plot speaks to issues of conspiracy or discipline. So from the start, a 'televisual' apparatus, which is reconstructed with a great deal of success during X-Files viewing, works in conjunction with the plot on a different psychic level to reposition the viewer in relation to systems of discipline. As the show itself unfolds, the viewer is already placed in a psychic space which foregrounds 'disciplinary' tensions. First, the serial plot of the X-Files. Dana Scully and Fox Mulder are two young FBI agents who have been assigned to work together on a special category of cases called the 'X-Files'. These are paranormal cases, ones that seem to involve an element of 'the supernatural.' Mulder has a fondness for such cases, and an apparent intuitive ability that invariably points toward their resolution. Scully, trained as an M.D., is a positivistic skeptic who develops scientific explanations for each case. Her ideas invariably are wrong. Both characters are apparently heterosexual, but neither involves themselves in romance more than on rare occasions. They have a close friendship, but neither hints at sexual involvement with the other. The serial plot both inverts and keeps intact several themes of what might be called 'expected TV ideology'. The two attractive protagonists are largely asexual. The man is 'intuitive', and the woman is 'logical'. But other aspects of popular ideology are affirmed--the man is still always 'right'. And during the show's introductory sequence, the words, 'The truth is out there' flash across the screen. Yet the 'truth' in the X-Files always lies in Mulder's realm of the supernatural, clearly marked off as a distinct metaphysical territory from Scully's materialist world. Thus, the show presents a variant of a dualist epistemological shematization, with clear demarcation and discontinuity between two planes of existence. Truth is presented as an unproblematic but as yet undiscovered entity--it is 'out there' but Mulder hasn't found it yet. This could be called 'transcendental positivism'. Unlike Baconian variants of positivism, where truth is planted for discovery in the empirical realm, truth in the X-Files is located for our finding in the transcendental. Instead of utilizing tools like microscopes to find it, we need to utilize intuition. The serial plot places Scully and Mulder's work in the midst of a vast conspiracy. A group of men most closely associated with the Pentagon seems to control a subversive network that stretches across broad sectors of Federal bureaucracy. A large part of their activity involves the suppression (or elaborate construction) of evidence of alien landings and abductions. The aliens themselves are the other conspirators, abducting people or muddling around on earth in various forms for reasons undisclosed. One of the most powerful conspirators, 'Smoking Man', forced Mulder's father to give Fox's sister to the government/aliens when she was a girl. Smoking Man is thought to be Mulder's real father--an interesting Oedipal twist. The X-Files achieves its immense popularity, I argue, by producing an effect that is much closer to that of the 'cinematic apparatus' than to the voyeuristic 'looks' of certain types of TV. But even where the viewing experience falls out of centralized spectatorship and into a mode of shifting points of textual entry, I suggest that 'self as panoptician' is still an apt metaphor for the X-Files experience. Primary identification and regression are enabled by the heavy use of point-of-view and reverse-shot camera work. Shadowy set lighting, eerie techno-music, and expensive special effects further enable regression. Secondary identification operates through the protagonists Scully and Mulder, allowing the spectator to join them as they navigate through networks of conspiratorial association. Conspiracy is the symbolic reconstruction of panopticism. Aliens, secret bureaucracies, and epidemics comprise the disciplinary apparatus. Scully and Mulder's movement through these threatening worlds hails the viewer into a position of exploration, a chance to see who might be behind the disciplinary apparatus, watching. Consider panopticism in labor industries: the supervisory gaze, enabled by architecture and spatial positioning of work practices, allowing the registration of deviance to transmit quickly up the managerial hierarchy. Panopticism in the white-collar world: networks of gossip and paperwork, the subtle registration of professional behavior. Panopticism in the X-Files: conspiracy behind the cheesy handshake of every bureaucrat, an alien lurking under the skin of every clone of Mulder's sister. Consider the worker, who has limited freedom to explore the extensiveness of the disciplinary apparatus she/he is positioned within, the apparatus that produces panopticism, the apparatus that circumscribes workplace practice, yet the apparatus that at the same time enables the worker to feel some of the power of the productive network. The worker enables the system that restricts him/her. Scully and Mulder, on the other hand, have as their job description the exploration of various manifestations of a conspiracy, a conspiracy that signifies the effect of panopticism (somebody is in control here, I know they could be watching me). But Scully and Mulder have broken free of the self-policing function of panopticism. They are well aware that Smoking Man and his buddies chart their activities. Yet they choose to delve into the depths of the conspiracy itself. And they generally get away with it--they are exempt from punishment. The protagonists' lack of involvement in sexual relationships plays a prominent role in viewer regression. Here the expectation of sexuality between Scully and Mulder increases unconscious libidinal activity, opening up the spectator for primary and secondary identification. But this sexual expectation is not rewarded, but displaced. Desire is transferred to the self-as-panoptician effect. This desire works dialectically with conscious skepticism of the supernatural aspects of the show. Conscious doubt is subsumed by the desire to enjoy the spectator-as-panoptician-effect. The regression effect becomes more powerful as logical doubt calls it forward to fill a void of disbelief. There is a second aspect of subjective relation to panopticism that the X-Files speaks to and inverts. From the perspective of a position in a disciplinary network--let's call this by the more common word, job--one's identity at a certain level is intimately bound up in job tasks. Of course, as a job becomes habitual, one's mind becomes free to wander, to fantasize during the workday, to occupy identities that are not directly prescribed by the job. So tension develops between imagination/desire, and job routines and practices. This is reversed in the X-Files. While watching the show, identification with the protagonists tends to circumscribe a viewers immediate sense of identity. By assuming a central spectator position, unconscious desire to move across and challenge disciplinary boundaries is rewarded. The dream-effect of regression opens even more psychological space for roaming through a world of panoptic conspiracy. This is a reversal of the workday situation where the habits and micropractices of work are relegated to the unconscious. On the job, conscious thought can often launch into the construction of semiotic associations that place the job itself in a bearable light. Another subject-effect of the X-Files relates back to Lacan's work. In Lacan's view, the obliteration of the wholeness of the imaginary phase results in the subject/object distinction, formation of the ego, and the subjugation to the unconscious of repressed desire for the mother's body. Identity, a statement attached to 'I', is in this light a fruitless, lifelong suturing of signifiers into an empty, linguistic subjectivity. This act is motivated by a deep desire to somehow grasp hold of that infantile wholeness, when desire and pleasure were in union. And Lacan's view of the meaning-producing process of discourse adds to the irony of identity formation. His view on signifier relations is much like Derrida's poststructuralist position. Signifiers only generate meaning through an endless chain of difference, not through tidy, semiotically stable signs comprised of signifier and signified. Meaning is stretched out along these chains, with traces from past associations stretching into the present, and present associations perpetually deferring meaning to the future in endless metonymic deferments. This means that there is not even the possibility of a moment when a whole sign can crystallize in the mind and provide a fleeting illusion of psychic integrity. (Eagleton, 1983, p. 167-169). Once again the X-Files inverts the 'normal' functioning of a psychic tension and draws it into the realm of symbolic panopticism. Spectatorial navigation through networks of gubernatorial and paranormal conspiracy is fueled by a quest: "The truth is out there." Keep peeling away webs of conspiracy (chains of signifiers), keep looking for your sister who has been cloned into existential oblivion, keep sticking your nose into extraterrestrial mischief. The unconscious desire to explore the panopticon invokes self-conscious logic, logic which is saying, "part of that panopticon is me--I'm part of that apparatus (at work)." This dreamy exploration then becomes not just a fleeing from the grind, but a quest for identity, a quest for the part of the self that one knows is implicated in one's own policing. We know that discipline makes us self-police, but this acknowledgment is pushed into the unconscious. As a spectator, we can allow that tension to surface in a dream world. In the mode of spectator we can pursue the construction identity within a symbolic panopticon, amidst all the other psychic dynamics intersecting in this experience. Finally, X-Files viewership does not always take the form of cinematic spectatorship. As Flitterman-Lewis has argued, a TV viewer occupies at times a series of shifting, voyeuristic 'looks.' How does this change the way subjects relate to panopticism in the X-Files? Does this voyeuristic, as opposed to centralized, spectatorship prevent a 'self as panoptician' operation from occurring? The shift from a centralized, continuous spectator position to shifting, multi-perspectival positions is analogous to moving from inside the text to outside the text. Flitterman-Lewis (1992) finds this second type of spectatorship very effective in soap opera viewing, where it gives the viewer a sense of being able to enjoy sexual tension between characters from a 'safe distance', outside the story. When the X-Files experience takes on fragmented spectatorship, the viewer no longer is positioned alongside Scully and Mulder inside networks of conspiracy. Voyeuristic spectatorship here pulls the viewer back to a more 'transcendental' position. Here, one is not 'locked' into a fixed subject position alongside Scully and Mulder in the show, but one occupies a series of positions that allows for the feeling of a more 'objective' inspection of the conspiracy. These shifting positions put the spectator not at the center of the panopticon, nor navigating across panoptic structures with the protagonists, but outside the panoptic conspiracy. So with this development, the X-Files brings into play the full range of alternate positionings to the rigid disciplinary positioning of the workplace. First, there is the non-diegetic effect of centralized spectatorship, where one is at the center of the panopticon. Second, there is the diegetic effect of spectatorship, where one transgresses panoptic boundaries with Scully and Mulder. Lastly, there is the set of shifting positions outside the entire panoptic structure, coming into play when spectatorship falls out of a centralized textual position. All three of these metapsychological dynamics work powerfully to invert workplace disciplinary relations, offering a therapeutic televisual escape from panopticism. Such a phenomena could play a prominent role in the reproduction of advanced capitalism, effectively working out frustration accrued on the job, frustration that otherwise might take the form of resistance. Late capitalism and the X-Files I have painted a picture of a hyper-disciplinary society that drives people to seek pleasure in a TV show about aliens and unending conspiracy. Unless one is a robot, this scenario has disturbing implications. While it is not my task here to attempt a full answer to that question, I believe it is important to keep in mind issues foregrounded by a consideration of discourse/practice (myth/ritual) dialectics. Of importance here is a broad shift from a humanism/discipline relation to a conspiracy/hyperdiscipline relation in late capitalism. 'Common sense' has long spoken of TV as an 'escape' or a 'drug'. This paper suggests that the popularity of television is indeed enhanced by its escapist effect in relation to other aspects of daily life. But it suggests that in the case of the X-Files, this 'alternate reality' can take the form of not a crude inebriant which dissolves away the daily grind, but a sophisticated production which directly invokes, inverts, and therapeuticizes that daily grind. References: Althusser, L. (1994/1970). Ideology and ideological state apparatuses (Notes toward an investigation). In S. Zizek (Ed.), Mapping ideology (pp.100-140). Verso: New York. 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(1992) New vocabularies in film semiotics: structuralism, poststructuralism, and beyond. New York: Routledge. Sterngold, J. (1998). 'X-Files': an adventure for directors. New York Times, 3/10/98, p. B1, B7. Woodward, K. (1997). Concepts of identity and difference. In K. Woodward (Ed.), Identity and difference (pp. 8-50). London: Sage. X-Files: Fallen Angel/Eve, (1996) Twentieth Century Fox Home Ent., Inc. (home video of two shows plus interview with creator, Chris Carter)
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