Towards an historical geography of nonrepresentation: making the countercultural subject in the 1960s
August 1, 2007 DOI: 10.1080/14649360701529865 via Semantic Scholar
Summary
Nonrepresentational perspectives emerged from 1960s countercultural experiments in arts, media, culture, politics, and everyday life. These practices, including psychedelics and underground cinema, aimed to shape countercultural subjects through performative acts. While nonrepresentational practices thrived in some enclaves, they struggled in others, remaining more represented than enacted in Los Angeles. The counterculture's explorations of the nonrepresentational realm were still engaged with representation, which can be a changing practice. Postwar representational practices referencing a newly understood cosmos evoked sensory and subconscious responses, creating nonrepresentational moments.
Study at a glance
| Design | historical analysis |
|---|---|
| Population | 1960s counterculture in Los Angeles and other enclaves |
| Key finding | Nonrepresentational practices emerged from 1960s countercultural experiments but were often more represented than enacted, especially in Los Angeles. |
Abstract
It is in the experiments in the arts, media, culture, politics and everyday practices developed by the counterculture in the 1960s that many nonrepresentational perspectives emerge. Aspects and examples of those experiments are reviewed with a particular focus on the construction of the countercultural subject and on some performative practices developed to shape those subjects, including psychedelics and underground cinema. During the 1960s nonrepresentational practices emerged and thrived in some enclaves of countercultural living, but struggled to develop in others. Although many of the counterculture's practices explored the nonrepresentational realm, they were still engaged in representational practices. The relative success of these practices in situ was closely tied to their representation. In 1960s Los Angeles they remained more represented than enacted and practised in the city. There is a danger in nonrepresentational work of rendering representation a stereotypical concept, one that is unchanging in its capacity to deaden, exclude and enframe. But representation as a practice is also subject to change. During the postwar period various representational practices, whose referent was a newly understood cosmos, attempted to evoke a range of sensory, experiential and subconscious responses in their consumers and performers, creating decidedly nonrepresentational representational moments.