Herbert Blau
The Human Nature of the Bot
The issue of livenesswhich Philip Auslander
[see his "Live from Cyberspace," also in the Open Source
archive] has moved to center stage, where we thought it had always
beenhas various levels and phases, reimaginable now in terms
of cyberspace. There was a time, however, when it seemed perfectly
understandable to speak of "live" or "living"
theater as distinct from acting on film or even, with the closing
down of the screen, the immediacy of television. Yet, long before
the Internet, it might seem a failing distinction. For there were
times within that time when I'd be tempted to sayin disenchantment
with what I was seeing in the mainstream of American theaterthat
the presence of live actors made no real difference: stage or screen,
the effect and/or affect was very much the same.
What I meant was that everything was so
unenlivening in its predictability, so insusceptible to the unexpected,
so invariable once staged, that it seemed (to use an image from another
era) like a carbon copy of itself. As for the text, when the play
was the thing, it might have done better in a reading without any
actors at all. And of course there was the tradition, from Kleist
through Gordon Craig to Roland Barthes on to the Bunraku, in which
puppets were preferred to actors whose impoverished subjectivity only
got in the way, except that the acting I am talking about seemed,
in its empty sameness, to be without any subjectivity. Whatever the
ontological distinction between the one-dimensional figures on the
screen and the presumably rounded figures in perspective on a proscenium
stage, the felt actuality was such, in various productions I saw,
that the quotient of liveness seemed more in the transparency of film.
Indeed, it was apparent that the factitious reality of the figures
on a screen could have considerably more vitality, as if they were
truly alive, than the flesh-and-blood actors up there on the stage,
whose behavior was so thoroughly coded and familiar it might as well
have been canned.
That has by no means changed entirely in
the contemporary theater. But shifting contexts altogether, Auslander
writes about the programmed responses in text-based digital environments,
in which words and word patterns are picked up so that "it is now
possible to be engaged in conversation with a chatterbot without knowing
it." When you're on an e-mail list, he adds, or in a chatroom on the
Internet, "it can be impossible to know whether you are conversing
with a human being or a piece of software." But sometimes, tooit
may be chastening to rememberÑyou may be conversing with a human
being and feel the same way, as if the person were programmed. Which
may suggest that liveness is variable in definition, with inflections
of value through a spectrum of meaning from being alive to being lively.
In shifting the notion of liveness from the ontological to the temporal,
"a relationship of simultaneity," an event in real time that can be
watched as it occurs, Auslander refers to a passage in Blooded Thought,
in which I wrote that the ontology of theater may be predicated on
the existential fact that the person performing is dying in front
of your eyes.