Dirty Ruins and Their Online Afterlives

by
Elena Rădoi

Keywords

media theory
post-humanism
agential realism
feminist theory
ruin porn
objectification theory
Japanese animation
Suzume
The Boy and the Heron
Ruin porn proves, as the contemporary successor of Ruinenlust, that humans still share Georg Simmel’s fascination for ruins. However, modern ruin-enthusiasts of the Mediocene consume them through visual media, because “real ruins” are either musealized or too dirty to be accessed. They seem – unless staged by contemporary media – on the verge of losing their meaning. Similar to Bram Stocker’s Dracula, who lived in a Transylvanian “vast ruined castle” before transferring to Whitby Abbey, ruins seem like empty shells, gradually robbed by humans and metaphorically “eroded by time.” However, they “host” a multitude of life forms. Analogously to the simultaneously dead and alive Dracula, ruins are trapped in traditional dichotomies of nature-culture or absence-presence. Nonetheless, the doorless ruin takes dichotomies off their hinges by annulling the door as operative ontology and ceases to delimitate the inside and the outside. I argue that, either dirty crumbling objects or captured in (digital) media such as photography or film, ruins remain meaningful for both humans and non-humans. Ruin porn, which is online available, makes them everywhere accessible. Yet they objectify the ruin as their aesthetic has assimilated a universal visual grammar established by porn.
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Chicago citation style
Rădoi, Elena. “Dirty Ruins and Their Online Afterlives.” studies in History and Theory of Architecture, no. 11 (2023): 277-296. https://sita.uauim.ro/article/11_17_Radoi