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Why Plato Would Hate Instagram

Sunsets are overrated, anyway
Sunsets are overrated, anyway
Roger-Pol Droit

PARIS — This summer, like every year, we'll take more and more photos. We'll send selfies and snapshots, any and all kinds of pictures and videos. Like 64% of French people recently surveyed, we'll take photographs of the meals we're about to eat at restaurants. These tens of billions of shots will be added to the colossal amount of images amassed in just a few years.

There was a time, in the history of mankind, when there were a lot more humans than pictures on Earth. They were rare, precious, magical, possessing powers of good or evil. They've since proliferated, become emancipated, uncountable — and common. Maybe not common as such, considering the way they have quietly taken over culture. This transformation deserves to be explored.

At first, there was distrust. Plato had great contempt for images, and this fueled a long tradition. For him, nothing is further away from reality than images. His reasoning is easy to understand, even though it can seem somewhat strange today. The closest thing to reality ... are Ideas, those eternal Forms, which, according to Plato, serve as models for things.

In this way, the "real" bed is also the idea of a bed, the abstract definition of a horizontal plane where one can lie down to sleep. All tangible beds — made out of wood, metal, with or without feet, rectangular or square — are only reflections, images, derivatives of this ideal reality. The carpenter "copies" the idea of a bed, makes an image of it out of wood. If the painter, in his turn, then reproduces this wooden bed on canvas, he makes an image of an image, a third-level sub-reality (first: the Form, second: the thing, third: the painting of the thing).

Why is this dangerous? The better the image of the painting, the more it distances us, according to Plato's point of view. Instead of pulling us out of appearances, it pushes us further into them, makes us believe that distant copies are real. Philosophy is meant to release us from images, free us from reflections, bring us out of the cave-jail, where we think appearances are reality. Paintings and their images are meant to do the exact opposite: They bind us to illusions, imprison us in subterfuges. This philosophical refusal is more than a mere depreciation of pictorial creations. It shows, in its own way, that there is, in images, a power to control, something that is far from harmless.

All idol breakers have known this and said this. These iconoclasts (literally, "destroyers of images") can be found, for different reasons, in the history of Judaism, Byzantine Christianity, Islam, Protestantism. Beyond their differences, they have a common intuition: images capture something, divert, deviate that which is essential. We arrive at a point where we barely understand the real thing anymore, submerged in our multitudes of pixels, copies, endless tricks. And still, without ruling in favor of fanatic rigorism, we would do well to realize that images have freed themselves by multiplying. And that they've built an empire.

In this way, we are seeing, with astonishment and anxiety, that nothing, in the visual field, is absolutely true or reliable anymore: all images can be edited, rebuilt, rendered older or young. Even archives are plagued by doubt. A Rembrandt that Rembrandt never painted has just been made, through digital analysis and reconstruction of his strokes, his themes, his pigments.

We are also stunned to see that pictures are starting to truly replace words. "Pic speech" is becoming the digital childhood illness. We no longer talk to each other, we send pictures: Show me what you're doing, I'll send you a picture of what I'm eating ...

More seriously, we have gotten used to seeing the world according to images. Walter Benjamin pointed out, in the 1930s, how a sunset made us think of a postcard. Since then, we've come a long way. Landscapes bring pictures to our minds, and not the opposite. We even sometimes think nature has bad taste or that it does well when it imitates our creations.

This is, in broad terms, what the empire of images looks like. It would also be absurd to think we can escape this. Living in it without being naive is a start.

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GLOBAL PRESS JOURNAL

Queer Reception: Mexico's LGBTQ-Owned Hotel, Where Every Guest Feels At Home

The hotel, the first in San Cristóbal de Las Casas to be staffed by a mostly queer team, is bringing the marginal into the mainstream.

Queer Reception: Mexico's LGBTQ-Owned Hotel, Where Every Guest Feels At Home

Tomás Chiu, a manager, and Pen, the hotel’s founder, lead the Casa Venus team. They pose for a portrait on the hotel’s roof.

Marissa Revilla, GPJ Mexico
Marissa Revilla

SAN CRISTÓBAL DE LAS CASAS — Casa Venus, a hotel with a simple white-walled exterior, opened its doors on a main thoroughfare in downtown San Cristóbal de Las Casas in September 2023. In the entrance, visitors see the hotel’s logo, which depicts Venus, the Roman goddess of love, emerging from a carnivorous plant. A nearby sign announces that there is no discrimination in this space.

Casa Venus is the first hotel founded and managed by trans people in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, the second-most touristic city in the state of Chiapas. It employs 12 people who identify as nonbinary, gay, lesbian, trans or allies. Since opening, it has been described as a pioneering local space for inclusive employment.

The hotel’s founder, a trans man named Pen, says the project arose as an alternative given “the lack of opportunities for trans and queer people,” groups that experience discrimination on a regular basis.

✉️ You can receive our LGBTQ+ International roundup every week directly in your inbox. Subscribe here.

Despite anti-discrimination laws in Mexico, and despite the fact that the constitution prohibits discrimination, 37% of people who identify as members of the LGBT community say they experience discrimination, according to the 2022 National Survey on Discrimination, conducted by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography. The survey also showed that less than half of workers in this group have written contracts (47.2%) or access to social security services (48.4%), both of which are basic rights stipulated in the Ley Federal del Trabajo, the country’s federal law governing labor.“We have been very intentional in selecting our team,” says Pen, who prefers to be referred to by this name.

Casa Venus employees say working in the hotel gives them a feeling of security they did not have at other jobs.

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