blackbird online journal spring 2002 vol.1 no. 1

 

MARK HARRIS | Work and Commentary

Video

Marijuana in the UK, 1999.


I am reading texts to cannabis plants. In the two-screen synched video, lasting ten minutes, sections of Charles Baudelaire's 1858 essay "Poem of Hashish" and Walter Benjamin's "Hashish in Marseilles," from 1928, are read to cannabis plants. The edits to each tape are indentical and the sound of each is heard simultaneously. It was expected that exposure to these texts, concerning the narcotic properties of hashish, would stimulate the plants and improve their concentration of THC, the primary psychotomimetic ingredient of cannabis. The viewer is caught in mirrored monologues, eventually unable to distinguish one text from the other. "There were times when the intensity of acoustic impressions blotted out all others." The images blur closeups of the reader's mouth. "Next occur mistakes in the identities of objects, and transposals of ideas." Behind the reader are cannabis plants whose drowsy scent distracts him from his book. "Sounds clothe themselves in colors, and colors contain music." He struggles to concentrate on his reading. "And when I recall this state I should like to believe that hashish persuades nature to permit us—for less egoistic purposes—that squandering of our own existence that we know in love." Benjamin develops his essay from notes made while hallucinating. The intimacy with which both these writers describe their hallucinations suggests that the vulnerability to phenomena induced by the drug had stimulated a new kind of writing.

 


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