DOCUMENT
UFD029
Matthew Fuller
Nobody Knows What
A Book Is Anymore
[accompanying images show double-spreads
from Guttorm Guttormsgaard’s Arkiv: En bildebok
[Archive: A Picture Book] (Oslo: Pax, 2009).]1
this phenomenon, artists such as Aleksandra
Domanovic and Übermorgen have in recent years
been showing large stacks of sheets of office paper.
In Übermorgen’s case the stacks consist of printed
out documentation of legal papers generated in the
course of their projects, such as Vote-Auction, 700
Kgs of Temporary Injunctions (2005). Domanovic,
for her part, has displayed a series of
works ranging from
stacks of wrapped
reams of paper to
stacks of ink-jet printed pages with images
that bleed over the
edges, aligned to create a whole image in
works such as Untitled (Happy Office) and Untitled
(Why Can’t Women Time Travel), both from 2013.
These aren’t books per se, but they illustrate the kinds
of convulsions that in part map this condition: paper
is overflowing. In their 2010 exhibition Book-Machine,
The Office of Metropolitan Architecture produced
a one-off book, whose spine measured several metres in length, with printed documentation from all of
their projects. It was 40,000 pages long. The poet of
quantity Kenneth Goldsmith has recently held a work
called Printing Out the Internet (2013) as a meditation on the nature of digital abundance.
People say that nobody knows what a book is any
more. It is observed that people sit on trains or buses,
and in waiting rooms, and where a few years ago
they would have been
reading a book, they
will instead be consoled at their phone
doing some data processing. This might
be the case, but perhaps no one has ever
really known what a
book is, because the
book has always been changing. Today the book is
again bursting its bounds, becoming a point of mediation, swallowing other media systems and forms
of knowledge while fragmenting and migrating into
new forms.
Paper is Overflowing
One of the conditions of the book in the present day
is that, as a medium of information storage, it has
just gotten too big to cope with itself. Amplifying
1. <http://www.obs-osv.com/gutenberg>.
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An excerpt from the third Report from the Gutenberg
Galaxy (Blaker),1 this essay forms part one of a diptych
in which Matthew Fuller develops the idea of the book
as diagram, and tries to imagine what new forms of
readers might be bred in a book culture transfigured by
computational forms
codes, and a quality that became a regular marvel
in the era in which computers were thought of as
‘electronic brains’, is that the book exceeds its bindings. At the same time, as this amplification occurs,
habits and media behaviours that have been inculcated and intensified by books as media, migrate into
other forms and systems. Whilst certain strands of
the ‘Digital Humanities’ have simply seen fit to work
As digital abundance conjugates
with printing and with paper, it
generates other effects: hoarding,
ephemerality, deforestation,
but also an explosion of text
on the ‘digitization’ of books, making scans and text
corpuses available with tools for their analysis, as
if the book is essentially unchanging and originally
separate from digits, others such as Andrew Piper,
Lori Emerson, Amy Spencer and Hanna Kuusela are
busy tracing the way in which as they come into
combination, both computers and books change.2
The deep imbrication between books and computational forms is in turn part of a wider set of fields
of co-evolution that come to bear force upon and
work their way into the book.
Guttorm Guttormsgaard’s archive3 is full of books
that are entangled with other processes of object
formation. Some are magnificent comings together of different orders of objects—like the Ethiopian
Bible with its rucksack.4 In the present day, other
currents and kinds of movement intercept and remobilize the book’s constituent forms. As we see
books entangling with computational structures
2. A. Piper, Book Was There: Reading in Electronic Times (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012); L. Emerson, Reading
Writing Interfaces: From the Digital to the Bookbound (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 2014); H. Kuusela, What Can
a Book Do? Following a Book through a Literary Controversy
and a War, The Case of The Bookseller of Kabul (Doctoral
thesis: Goldsmiths, University of London, 2010); A. Spencer,
Author, Reader, Text: Collaboration and the Networked Book
(Doctoral thesis: Goldsmiths, University of London, 2010)
The Book as Diagram
One consequence of the massive amplification
of symbol processing made possible by electronic
computing, exemplified in its early ability to crack
3. <https://guttormsgaardsarkiv.no/>.
4. See Report from the Gutenberg Galaxy, no. 1, < http://obsosv.com/gutenberg >, 33.
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One further iteration of this project at the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf
(2014) consisted of 250,000 pages of pirated JSTOR documents
(a massive cache of papers from
the Philosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society made available via Pirate Bay) printed in tribute to suicided information activist
Aaron Swartz. What distinguishes such work from masses of
paper in earlier art? In the 1970s
Reiner Ruthenbeck used to make Papierhaufen,
heaps of monotone crumpled paper. More neatly,
artists such as Guy de Cointet (as part of the 1971
project ACRCIT) and later Félix González-Torres
(in early 1990s works such as Untitled (Aparición)
and Untitled (Blue Mirror)) placed stacks of newspapers or posters in galleries for visitors to take.
One of the distinctions then is that today’s paper
works are often printed out on a desktop printer. It’s
not a one-off necessarily, nor a numbered multiple,
just a print-out, something a bit more incidental to
objecthood and enumeration. The state of digital
abundance has its specific effects in relation to the
media of music, film, and photography where conditions of super-accumulation are reflected also in
numerous forms of circulation that exceed, disorder and amplify their capacities as media. As digital
abundance conjugates with printing and with paper
it generates other effects: hoarding, ephemerality,
deforestation, but also an explosion of text, especially notable in what was only a few decades ago
thought to be heading towards a post-literate condition. But equally, we see something of a reciprocal
explosion of books, and a proliferation and mutation
of their kind.
inventiveness to achieve beautifully inventive reorganisations of the book, and in turn how the book as
diagram grapples with and shapes what it gives rise
to: memory, thought, orthodoxy, belief, insight, compulsion, arousal, imagination, authority. Baskerville’s
folio version of the Bible of 1763—included in the
collection—inaugurated an era of clarity of typesetting and typeface design, but it also brought other
kinds of data into the book, such as the proposed
dates of specific events logged as notes in the margins. Moreover, it opened up the machinic quality of
the book as a space of expressive form—the beautifully exaggerated kerning of the titles for instance.
The book is an essentially shifting,
capacious form—there is not one
aspect of its characteristics that has
not been exceeded
and entities we can perhaps see them undergoing
a further transition: incunabula, codex, book, stack,
queue, heap. We can go on—lists, tables, interfaces,
windows, fields—the shape and modus operandi of
the book is mobilised as a conceptual scaffold into
manifold combinations. The book is an essentially
shifting, capacious form—there is not one aspect
of its characteristics concerning binding, titling, authorship, typesetting, pagination, orthography, and
so on, that has not been exceeded, gone beyond
or done without in various and numerous cases.
Books are also interspersed with other operations
that exceed their bounds, scanning, analyzing,
forming into corpuses, but they still hang together.
We can say then that the book is a diagram: a schematization of parts, a way of doing things and of
thinking and experiencing that manifests differently
in relation to different historical, material, aesthetic
and economic dynamics. This loose swarm of characteristics, each of which has their own genealogy,
is massively internally differentiated, and generative.
Some of these characteristics recede or come to
the fore at different moments, coming into combination with others and mutating their characteristics
as they do so. Others will stay remarkably resilient
across times and across the different manifestations of the book.
Bindings
Books interfere with stories and with information
as they give rise to them, shape and pummel the
words, images and structures that also engender
the book. In certain societies, those corners that are
not marked heavily by the production of books, an
index of how much power one has in the world, is
how much paper you have in your dwelling. Identity
papers are a basic form of document, a means of
relaying obligation, evading or insisting on certain
kinds of compulsion in relation to codes, titles, systems, personhood. Books too take on related roles,
of being an authority to turn to, even if only in the
form of a consolation. Academic books act as a
condenser of referrals to other authorities via citations, bibliographic links, vague gestures towards
or precise analysis of other books, other knots
The religious, avant-garde and popular books
amongst others gathered by Guttormsgaard are
beautiful examples of the way in which books combine with specific forces of material and cultural
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Consider too, books made for children who can’t
yet read: picture books; plastic-paged books to look
at and flap about with in the bath; books of thick
cardboard that are good for gnawing on with sore
teething gums; ugly books with plastic
chains that can be attached to buggies
and fiddled with until they rot; books that
come with small piezo-speakers to make
pleasingly unpleasant noises; or those
with toy figures or puzzles in. Here, the
book, as an image of a book, a substitute
for books to come, contains and moves
into the world, starts forming habits,
couples with the need to relieve physical
pain or boredom, becomes something to
be attached to. Is this a recent phenomenon? The
archive formed at Blaker by Guttormsgaard will inevitably have the answer to that somewhere.
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of interlinked argument.5 David Markson’s novels,
thick with citation and memory, act as patchbays
linking different streams of text, ideas and experience across time, turning the book as diagram into
a meta-medium, one with its own idiosyncrasies
and deficiencies yielding expressive texture. William
Burroughs, Kathy Acker, Ronald Sukenick, Lawrence
Sterne, Bill Atkinson, Isabel Waidner, John Latham,
Tim Berners Lee, Ted Nelson, Karl Krauss, Oulipo,
William Caxton and myriad others all do something
slightly unspeakably physical with the book, forcing
and enticing the diagram to rework and rebind itself
in composition with other forces. Poems are written
out of the concatenation of such indexes of persons
as that just mentioned, poets and engineers filching and filtering the recursions of the diagram.6 But
these are big names, proper ones, we might also
recall the achieved impossibility of the invention of
the different marks of punctuation by anonymous
operators that give birth to other operators, readers, writers and further books. Oddly, as Joseph
Mazur points out, the culture of mathematics, with
its different modality of reflexivity, allows for a rather more certain recall of the introduction of specific
symbols.7 Each symbol in turn becomes a point of
inflection for language to crystallise around and rework clusters and tangles of relations.
This state of being a point of condensation makes
some books into a treasure trove, a chamber inside
a mountain of words and pages that can only be
entered by a slender, pressurising aperture; other
5. In their reading of Gabriel Tarde’s economic theories, Latour
and Lépinay note the way in which books rely on other books
to work. B. Latour and V. A. Lépinay, The Science of Passionate Interests: An Introduction to Gabriel Tarde’s Economic
Anthropology (Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2009).
6. A. Henri, ‘Me’, in A. Henri, R. McGough and B. Patten, The
Mersey Sound, revised edition (London: Penguin, 1983)
7. J. Mazur, Enlightening Symbols: A Short History of Mathematical Notation and Its Hidden Powers (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2014).
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books act as open forms of gathering and assembling, of objects, of people, movements; still others
trigger the gratification and curse of compulsive
reading, a line out of everyday life that need only
be a line here and there. Books are interwoven with
computational forms, register, memory, network,
code, variable, symbolic systems transposed to other symbolic systems, tangling with language, metals,
electricity, imaginary, and unfolding too in systems
of record and domination through which modes
of evasion, suggestion and flagrancy sift, filter and
form their own crucibles of language, technology
and instruction. The book too is sometimes a barricade, something lodged in the midst of matter to
constitute a specific locus that may submerge for
years, intensified thickenings of substances as varied as can be brought together by structured strings
of symbols. Each entity in such a collection acts as a
potent residue for forms of life yet to come. Perhaps
we will find out what a book is when it is over, when
they become mysterious artefacts from another
age. Until then people are in the midst of books and
as such, since we also have a certain difficulty in
knowing what we are any more, books might tell us
something about ourselves.
The book is sometimes a barricade,
something lodged in the midst of matter to constitute a specific locus that
may submerge for years, intensified
thickenings of substances as varied as
can be brought together by structured
strings of symbols