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Archive for the ‘WWII’ Category

“Ambiguous aims”: a review of Crash: Homage to J.G. Ballard [NSFW]

By Ben Austwick • Mar 12th, 2010 •

Category: America, Andy Warhol, Lead Story, Salvador Dali, WWII, celebrity culture, media landscape, nuclear war, reviews, speed & violence, visual art

Ballard’s writing has a strong connection to visual art. It informed his work and led to him befriending some of the leading artists of his time, while in turn his work has influenced today’s crop. As Ben Austwick reports, the exhibition Crash: Homage to J.G. Ballard represent these diverse strands in a haphazard, yet always interesting fashion.



A Near Future: Nic Clear’s Tribute to JG Ballard

By Nic Clear • Dec 28th, 2009 •

Category: Lead Story, R.I.P. JGB, Shanghai, WWII, academia, airports, alternate worlds, architecture, audio, body horror, dystopia, enviro-disaster, features, urban ruins, utopia

JG Ballard’s writing encompassed topics as diverse as ecological crisis, technological fetishism, urban ruination and suburban mob culture. In this extract from the September-October issue of Architectural Design, Nic Clear explores how Ballard’s understanding of architecture and architects made him one of the most important figures in the literary articulation of architectural issues and concerns.



Miracles of Life: foreword to the Greek edition

By Simon Sellars • Oct 19th, 2009 •

Category: Lead Story, Shanghai, WWII, autobiography, features, medical procedure, memory, time travel

This is the foreword to the Greek edition of Ballard’s Miracles of Life, to be published by Oxy in November 2009.



Conference paper on Ballard and ‘circular time’

By Simon Sellars • Sep 29th, 2009 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Shanghai, WWII, academia, airports, alternate worlds, memory, time travel

I’m giving a paper on Ballard, circular time and the nouvelle vague this Thursday, October 1, at 3pm at ACMI in Melbourne, as part of the time.transcendence.performance conference. Come and say hello.



“Extreme Possibilities”: Mapping “the sea of time and space” in J.G. Ballard’s Pacific fictions

By Simon Sellars • Aug 23rd, 2009 •

Category: Japan, Lead Story, Pacific, Shanghai, WWII, academia, alternate worlds, features, inner space, memory, micronations, nuclear war, war

What’s the connection between J.G. Ballard, Hakim Bey and Fredric Jameson? Tracking Ballard’s surreal visions of nuclear conflict to Ground Zero in the Pacific, the paper maps his peculiar, irradiated sense of “affirmative dystopias”, a template for his more enduring urban works (famously, Crash) that, finally, intersects in striking ways with the writings of Bey and Jameson.



Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text

By Brian Baker • Jul 23rd, 2009 •

Category: America, Lead Story, New Worlds, Shanghai, WWII, academia, alternate worlds, architecture, death of affect, deep time, features, film, inner space, invisible literature, memory, pastiche, perception, short stories, time travel

Readers hoping to solve the mystery of J.G. Ballard’s ‘The Beach Murders’ may care to approach it in the form of a card game. Some of the principal clues have been alphabetized, some left as they were found, scrawled on to the backs of a deck of cards. Readers are invited to recombine the order of the cards to arrive at a solution. Obviously any number of solutions is possible, and the final answer to the mystery lies forever hidden.



Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text, part 2

By Brian Baker • Jul 23rd, 2009 •

Category: America, New Worlds, Shanghai, WWII, academia, alternate worlds, architecture, death of affect, deep time, film, inner space, invisible literature, memory, pastiche, perception, short stories, temporality, time travel

‘Iterative Architecture: a Ballardian Text’ by Brian Baker ..:: CONTINUED from >> Part 1 ::… ♣♠♥♦ The Joker. The Joker in the pack is the card that, in some games, can replace (or substitute for, take the place of) any of the others. In this sense, the Joker is the empty sign. ♣♠♥♦ Hearts ♥ [...]



‘Le passé composé de J. G. Ballard’: JGB on Empire of the Sun

By Dan OHara • Mar 11th, 2009 •

Category: Alain Robbe-Grillet, Ambit magazine, America, France, Japan, Michael Moorcock, New Worlds, Shanghai, WWII, William Burroughs, archival, autobiography, death of affect, drained swimming pools, film, inner space, memory, science fiction, sexual politics, surrealism, technology, television

Dan O’Hara back-translates an interview with JGB originally published in French in 1985. As the interviewers observe, Ballard was almost the subject of a French cult due to Crash. Asking why there are no car-crashes in Empire of the Sun, they reveal a very suggestive lacuna, with Ballard replying that even when one characteristic theme is absent from a work, the underlying emotion may remain the same, expressed by different means. Choice of metaphor is merely a matter of tone



'Confronting Ourselves': Ballard and Circular Time

By Simon Sellars • Dec 11th, 2008 •

Category: Andrei Tarkovsky, Chris Marker, Lead Story, WWII, YouTube, alternate worlds, features, film, inner space, memory, science fiction, temporality, time travel

Time-travel, according to Ballard, Marker, Tarkovsky and Godard. Some thoughts on memory retrieval and personal mythology. Ballard and Marker’s ‘fusion of science fiction, psychological fable and photomontage … in its unique way a series of potent images of the inner landscapes of time’.



The Real Concrete Island?

By Mike Bonsall • Dec 3rd, 2008 •

Category: WWII, architecture, features, psychogeography, speed & violence

Mike Bonsall sets out on a mission to find The Real Concrete Island, and is surprised by what he finds: ‘Ballard must have walked the same streets that years later I was to haunt with my own damaged crew. Living within sight of the Westway, which I felt must have helped form his motorway mythology, I was moved to do some geo-detective work…’



An Exhibition of Atrocities: J.G. Ballard on Mondo films

By Ballardian • Aug 12th, 2008 •

Category: America, Lead Story, Pacific, WWII, alternate worlds, archival, boredom, conspiracy theory, film, music, politics, postmodernism, psychopathology, television, war

With thanks to Headpress books, here’s an interview with JGB conducted by Mark Goodall in 2006 for his book Sweet & Savage: The World Through the Shockumentary Film Lens. The interview covers JGB’s admiration for the Mondo Cane films of Gualtiero Jacopetti, so-called ‘shockumentaries’ that in their artfully faked scenarios present what Ballard terms ‘an elective psychopathy that would change the world (so we hoped, naively)’.



Ballardoscope: some attempts at approaching the writer as a visionary

By Jordi Costa • Jul 26th, 2008 •

Category: Alain Robbe-Grillet, America, Bruce Sterling, Shanghai, Shepperton, Steven Spielberg, WWII, autobiography, deep time, drained swimming pools, features, flying, hyperreality, inner space, literature, medical procedure, science fiction, sexual politics, space relics, speed & violence, surrealism, technology, war

Jordi Costa, the curator of J.G. Ballard: Autopsy of the New Millennium, currently exhibiting at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona, gifts us this incisive analysis of the major themes in Ballard’s work. Accompanying the essay is the alternate version of the exhibition’s promo trailer.



J.G. Ballard, Autopsy of the New Millennium: Press Release

By Ballardian • Jul 22nd, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Shanghai, Shepperton, WWII, autobiography, dystopia, enviro-disaster, film, inner space, science fiction, sexual politics, speed & violence, suburbia, surrealism, utopia, visual art

Press release with fuller information and accompanying images for JG Ballard, Autopsy of the New Millennium, opening today at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB).



Bunker Tales

By Simon Sellars • May 23rd, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Michael Moorcock, New Worlds, Philip K. Dick, Savoy Books, WWII, William Burroughs, alternate worlds, dystopia, fascism

A recent interview at the Burroughs site Reality Studio brings Ballard, Burroughs, Britton and Butterworth together … along with Arthur C. Clarke.



‘I really would not want to fuck George W. Bush!’: A Conversation with J.G. Ballard

By Dan OHara • May 17th, 2008 •

Category: America, Bruce Sterling, Germany, New Worlds, Philip K. Dick, WWII, William Gibson, archival, consumerism, politics, psychology, science fiction, short stories, surrealism

Dan O’Hara is back with another translation of a German Ballard interview, this time from 2007 with JGB in priapic, puckish form.



'The Crashman': An Experiment in Applied Internet Ballardianism

By Crashman • Apr 8th, 2008 •

Category: David Cronenberg, Freud, Lead Story, Michael Moorcock, WWII, YouTube, censorship, death of affect, features, film, flying, humour, media landscape, music, psychopathology, speed & violence, sport, war

Drawing inspiration from J.G. Ballard’s exhibition of crashed cars in 1970, the Crashman presents his own festival of Atrocity films: aviation disasters set to musical soundtracks.



Munich Round-Up: Interview with J.G. Ballard

By Dan OHara • Mar 15th, 2008 •

Category: Germany, WWII, archival, biology, deep time, entropy, enviro-disaster, inner space, science fiction, surrealism

Dan O’Hara has re-translated three interviews with JGB, originally published in German in the 60s, in which Ballard provides absorbing insight into his enviro-disaster trilogy: The Drowned World, The Drought and The Crystal World.



'Up a kind of sociological Amazon': Ballard on Miracles

By Mike Bonsall • Feb 21st, 2008 •

Category: Shanghai, Shepperton, Steven Spielberg, WWII, archival, autobiography, consumerism

Here’s the last in our batch of transcripts of recent Miracles promotions: James Naughtie’s interview with JGB for BBC Radio 4.



'Obeying the surrealist formula': Iain Sinclair & Hermione Lee on Ballard

By Mike Bonsall • Feb 17th, 2008 •

Category: Iain Sinclair, Salvador Dali, Shanghai, Shepperton, WWII, archival, autobiography, speed & violence, surrealism, visual art

Here’s a transcription of the BBC Radio Front Row review of Miracles, presented by Mark Lawson and featuring Iain Sinclair and Hermione Lee.



'Genius eye for the killer detail': Parsons, Harris & Myerson on Ballard

By Mike Bonsall • Feb 14th, 2008 •

Category: Shanghai, Shepperton, Steven Spielberg, WWII, archival, autobiography, celebrity culture

This one’s a transcript of BBC 2′s Newsnight Review segment on Miracles of Life. It features Tony Parsons, Julie Myerson and John Harris and is presented by Kirsty Wark.



'Marinaded in war and violence': Philip Dodd interviews J.G. Ballard

By Ballardian • Feb 7th, 2008 •

Category: Shanghai, Shepperton, WWII, alternate worlds, archival, autobiography, consumerism

Here’s a transcript of Philip Dodd’s recent BBC Radio 3 interview with JGB.



Miracles of Life (2008)

By Simon Sellars • Feb 2nd, 2008 •

Category: Shanghai, Shepperton, WWII, autobiography, bibliography, non-fiction

From amazon.co.uk: Synopsis ‘Miracles of Life’ opens and closes in Shanghai, the city where J.G.Ballard was born, and where he spent the most of the Second World War interned with his family in a Japanese concentration camp. In the intervening chapters Ballard creates a memoir that is both an enthralling narrative and a detailed examination [...]



‘This most astonishing penumbra’: Will Self on J.G. Ballard

By Ballardian • Feb 2nd, 2008 •

Category: Shanghai, Shepperton, WWII, Will Self, William Burroughs, archival, dystopia, science fiction, urban decay

Will Self was recently interviewed on BBC Radio 4 by Mariella Frostrup about his admiration for J.G. Ballard’s work. Here’s a transcript of that interview.



Ballard & Kunzru, part 2

By Simon Sellars • Jan 28th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, WWII

Photo from Waterstones Book Quarterly; photographer Gautier Deblonde. British readers should note that the Waterstones Book Quarterly has published the full print version of Hari Kunzru’s filmed interview with JGB. Still no major revelations, but yet another great quote from Ballard: We’re all shaped by our childhoods, but particularly so if one’s childhood takes place [...]



New Ballard video interview

By Simon Sellars • Jan 25th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Shanghai, Shepperton, WWII, autobiography

Still from Hari Kunzru’s interview with J.G. Ballard. © Waterstone’s Books Quarterly. Waterstones is featuring a video interview with JGB, conducted by Hari Kunzru to promote Miracles of Life. There are no surprises here. Kunzru asks Ballard about the relationship of Miracles to JGB’s semi-autobiographical novels, Empire of the Sun and The Kindness of Women, [...]



Miracles of Life extract & interview

By Simon Sellars • Jan 20th, 2008 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Lead Story, Shanghai, WWII, autobiography, features

The Times is featuring an extract from Ballard’s forthcoming autobiography, Miracles of Life. There’s also an accompanying interview, in which it’s revealed that Ballard has been diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer.



‘You are Hochhaus!’: Ballard in Berlin

By Dan OHara • Jan 9th, 2008 •

Category: Chris Marker, David Cronenberg, Germany, Steven Spielberg, WWII, architecture, dystopia, entropy, fascism, film, gated communities, interviews, urban decay, urban revolt, urban ruins, utopia

Dan O’Hara interviews the creators of Hochhaus, a German mixed-media radio play based on High-Rise. Transposing the novel to Berlin in 2013, it references Nazism, notably Speer’s social engineering through architecture, on its way to exploring Ballard’s relevance to speculative models of German life.



Ask Ballard a Question

By Simon Sellars • Dec 16th, 2007 •

Category: Shanghai, WWII, autobiography

From the BBC World Service: World Book Club – J.G. Ballard (Radio) (24 January, 2008) January’s guest is J.G. Ballard talking about his novel Empire Of The Sun with Harriet Gilbert and a studio audience. Each month an internationally renowned author discusses their most celebrated novel with presenter Harriet Gilbert. To be part of the [...]



Miraculous Foreplay

By Simon Sellars • Dec 10th, 2007 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Lead Story, WWII, advertising, autobiography, surrealism, urban ruins

The publicity machine is warming up for Ballard’s forthcoming autobiography, Miracles of Life, due for publication February 2008.



Grave New World: Introduction, Part 2

By Dominika Oramus • Nov 13th, 2007 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Michael Moorcock, New Worlds, Salvador Dali, Shanghai, Steven Spielberg, WWII, William Burroughs, academia, features, science fiction, surrealism

by Dominika Oramus World’s first hydrogen bomb explosion, Eniwetok Atoll, 1952. Dominika Oramus teaches Brit.Lit. professionally at the University of Warsaw. The following is Part Two of the introduction to Grave New World: The Decline of the West in the Fiction of J.G. Ballard, her post-doctoral thesis. Grave New World currently exists as a (very) [...]



Grave New World: Introduction, Part 1

By Dominika Oramus • Nov 5th, 2007 •

Category: David Cronenberg, Iain Sinclair, Jean Baudrillard, Michael Moorcock, New Worlds, Salvador Dali, WWII, William Burroughs, academia, death of affect, dystopia, features, psychiatry, science fiction, surrealism, technology, urban ruins

Dominika Oramus reads Ballard’s work as a record of the gradual internal degeneration of Western civilization: though we are not literally living amidst the ruins, the golden age is far behind us and we are witnessing the twilight of the West.



Minimal Concrete City for Sale: Serious Interested Parties Only!

By Simon Sellars • Sep 30th, 2007 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Borges, WWII, alternate worlds, architecture, gated communities, micronations

Traven stumbled into a set of tracks left years earlier by a large caterpillar vehicle. The heat released by the weapons tests had fused the sand, and the double line of fossil imprints, uncovered by the evening air, wound its serpentine way among the hollows like the footfalls of an ancient saurian. … One question [...]



Myths of Things Seen in the Sky

By Simon Sellars • Sep 24th, 2007 •

Category: Ballardosphere, WWII, flying, paranormal, short stories, space relics

Ridgewell WWII Airfield: ‘Now little more than a collection of old huts, the area is haunted by the sounds of crashing WWII aeroplanes, shouting airmen, and other noises.’ (from paranormaldatabase.com). Heuristic England is an interesting new blog exploring dreams, parapsychology, spectral presence, Freud, Jung … and Ballard. In a couple of recent posts, the blog’s [...]



Dream's Ransom: Steven Spielberg's Empire of the Sun

By Pedro Groppo • Sep 14th, 2007 •

Category: David Cronenberg, Shanghai, Steven Spielberg, WWII, YouTube, autobiography, features, film, filmography, flying

Christian Bale in Empire of the Sun (more at YouTube.) by Pedro Groppo EMPIRE OF THE SUN (1987) Director: Steven Spielberg Screenplay: Tom Stoppard, based on the novel by J.G. Ballard Starring: Christian Bale, John Malkovich Whereas the sensibilities of J. G. Ballard and David Cronenberg, who directed Crash (1996), seem to overlap and complement [...]



Shanghai Jim: Form Dictated by Time

By Pippa Tandy • Aug 27th, 2007 •

Category: Shanghai, Steven Spielberg, WWII, deep time, features, film, filmography

ABOVE: Youtube uplink for Shanghai Jim (BBC Bookmark, 1991; produced by James Runcie). by Pippa Tandy SHANGHAI JIM (1991) Director/Producer: James Runcie Executive Producer: Nigel Williams Starring: J.G. Ballard, Michael Troughton, Hans Gebruers See here for a transcript of J.G. Ballard’s commentary from the film. DOCUMENTARY FILMS about the lives and works of artists have [...]



Shanghai Jim: Voiceover Transcription

By Ballardian • Aug 27th, 2007 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Shepperton, WWII, deep time, features, film, filmography, flying

ABOVE: Youtube uplink for Shanghai Jim (BBC Bookmark, 1991; produced by James Runcie). NOTE: The following is a transcription taken from J.G. Ballard’s commentary for the documentary Shanghai Jim. It also transcribes the film’s brief interviews with his daughters, Fay and Bea, and the film’s direct quotes from Ballard’s work. See here for Pippa Tandy’s [...]



China Odyssey

By Simon Sellars • Aug 18th, 2007 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Shanghai, Steven Spielberg, WWII, YouTube, autobiography, film

Over on BallardoTube, the “China Odyssey” doco on the making of Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun has appeared. Ballard features prominently. Don’t forget part two. [ thanks Pedro! ]



Empire of the Sun (1984)

By Simon Sellars • Sep 16th, 2006 •

Category: Shanghai, Steven Spielberg, WWII, bibliography, media landscape, surrealism

OPENING LINE: “Wars came early to Shanghai, overtaking each other like the tides that raced up the Yangtze and returned to this gaudy city all the coffins cast adrift from the funeral piers of the Chinese Bund.” There’s not much left to say about the autobiographical Empire, perhaps Ballard’s most popular book and the work [...]



A User's Guide to the Millennium (1996)

By Simon Sellars • Sep 5th, 2006 •

Category: Salvador Dali, WWII, William Burroughs, advertising, architecture, bibliography, boredom, celebrity culture, consumerism, death of affect, deep time, dystopia, enviro-disaster, fashion, film, flying, humour, invisible literature, media landscape, medical procedure, non-fiction, photography, politics, psychogeography, psychology, science fiction, sexual politics, space relics, speed & violence, surrealism, television, urban decay, visual art

OPENING LINE: “In his prime the Hollywood screenwriter was one of the tragic figures of our age, evoking the special anguish that arises from feeling sorry for oneself while making large amounts of money”. (from ‘The Sweet Smell of Excess’). From the 1996 Harper Collins edition: The first-ever collection of J.G. Ballard’s articles and reviews, [...]



J.G. Ballard: The Complete Short Stories, vols 1 & 2 (2006)

By Simon Sellars • Sep 1st, 2006 •

Category: New Worlds, Shepperton, WWII, advertising, architecture, bibliography, boredom, celebrity culture, consumerism, death of affect, deep time, dystopia, enviro-disaster, flying, humour, invisible literature, media landscape, medical procedure, photography, politics, psychogeography, psychology, science fiction, sexual politics, short stories, space relics, speed & violence, suicide, surrealism, television, terrorism, urban decay, urban revolt, visual art

OPENING LINE: “I first met Jane Ciracylides during the Recess, that world slump of boredom, lethargy and high summer which carried us all so blissfully through ten unforgettable years, and I suppose that may have had a lot to do with what went on between us.” (from ‘Prima Belladonna’). From the 2001 Flamingo edition (originally [...]



My Dream of Flying to Tinian Island

By Simon Sellars • May 30th, 2006 •

Category: Ballardosphere, WWII, consumerism, features, sexual politics, suicide

Military church, Tinian, © Dan Norton 2006 Thanks to Iain X from the JGB Mailing List for this link, a series of photos taken by a ‘seabee’ stationed on the North Pacific, Micronesian island of Tinian during WWII. As the site’s author, Dan Norton, says, “These photos were developed by my grandfather in his clandestine [...]



J.G. Ballard Looks Back at Empire of the Sun

By Tim Chapman • Mar 5th, 2006 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Shanghai, Steven Spielberg, WWII, film, media landscape, non-fiction

From the Guardian, Saturday March 4, 2006. “Look back at Empire JG Ballard waited 40 years before writing about his experiences in a Japanese internment camp. Here he remembers how Hollywood hijacked his childhood memories to create a deeply moving film. Memories have huge staying power, but like dreams, they thrive in the dark, surviving [...]



Empire of the Sun: New JGB Interview

By Simon Sellars • Feb 23rd, 2006 •

Category: Ballardosphere, Shanghai, WWII, non-fiction

Over at the J.G. Ballard Yahoo Group, prominent Ballard scholar David Pringle informs us that the new 2006 paperback printing of JGB’s Empire of the Sun (the “Harper Collins Perennial Classic” edition) contains a new interview with JGB at the back of the book. As David says, “This covers mainly old autobiographical ground, about WWII, [...]



JG Ballard & the Secrets of the Empire's Bunker

By Ben Austwick • Sep 18th, 2005 •

Category: Ballardosphere, WWII, non-fiction

JG Ballard applauds Alexander Sokurov’s remarkable film portrait of Hirohito, from the Guardian, 13/9/2005 "Should the war against Japan ever have taken place? The surprise attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 brought a devastating response from the United States, and turned the European war into a world-wide conflict. Sixty years after Japan capitulated, the [...]



JG Ballard on the Beach

By Simon Sellars • Jul 30th, 2005 •

Category: Ballardosphere, WWII

Real beach reading: don’t be shamed by the pundits into packing an inscrutable doorstop. Geordie Greig suggests holiday books you’ll actually finish. From the Times Online, July 30 2005. “To forget where you are on holiday, and that is what a good book does, J. G. Ballard spins you off into hellish destruction and war [...]



The day of reckoning

By Simon Sellars • Jul 16th, 2005 •

Category: Ballardosphere, WWII, non-fiction

JG Ballard’s review of 2 books about Nazis. New Statesman, Monday 4th July 2005  “Strange though it is, our fascination with the Nazi era shows no signs of fading. Scan the shelves of your local bookshop and you will see more swastikas than Union flags, and many more jacket portraits of Hitler than of Winston [...]