Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.Yes.. This is the record of
a successful sales discussion. When the buyer has said five times, the teacher
explains, his brain has become so sluggish, that he'll say yes a sixth time.
The teacher comes from West Germany. The classroom is in a Clubhotel in Tessin.
The pupils come from East Germany. They are employees of two East German building
firms now belonging to a West German owner. Harun Farocki's new documentary
"Die Umschulung" is an instructional film concerning work on the inner unity
of the country. […] The refinement of the educational method captured by Farocki,
lies in self-reference. The dialog in the lesson, which is intended to teach
the art of sales talk, is itself conducted in the form of a sales talk. The
teacher weaves in anecdotes, asks rhetorical questions, entices and warns. Goal
and method are one; a reduction of complexity. "When you leave here, your vocabulary
will be significantly reduced." The laws of supply and demand govern the marketplace
for words too. The rise in demand for 'yes' corresponds to the shortfall in
demand for 'no'. The pupils are not even allowed to shake their heads. "Why
are you not allowed to shake your head in a live situation, Herr Wagner?" "Because
it expresses refusal." "If now, we are in a stronger position, then we won't
have to discuss the price with them at all." […] The maxims the teacher has
them memorize are a summary of the paradoxes of individuality as produced by
moralistic theory. "I means nothing. You means everything. Only the person opposite
counts. You must change your life." But the subordination to the other person
is only aimed at overcoming him with a sale. The individual only exists by the
grace of society. (Barbara Sichtermann, Die Zeit, 17.
Juni 1994)