Archive for the ‘Civic Culture’ Category

#360 – Public Intellectuals For What?

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

on making more efficient the inefficient pursuit of ideas.

X-posted from Hastac blog.

All men are intellectuals, . . . but not all men have in society the function of intellectuals.” – Antonio Gramsci

The publicity around Louis Menand’s new book, The Marketplace of Ideas: Reform and Resistance in the American University*, is generating lots of contemplation of public intellectualism.

Horace blogs about re-imagining the teacher as public intellectual. Ferule & Fescue add that part of this intellectual activity involves offering students “ways to be in the world”:

But more generally, and maybe more importantly, by being public intellectuals in the classroom, we’re modeling for our students what it means to be engaged by literature or history or art, and why those subjects might continue to matter and have relevance for them even once they’re out of school. I think often about a comment a reader left on my blog, a couple of years ago, after I’d written about three former students who had collectively asked me out to lunch. I was trying to figure out whether they were looking for me to be a friend, or were thinking about grad school, or what–and my reader remarked that many smart young people are just looking for ways to be in the world, and that we often model that for them in ways we’re not aware of.

I have Menand’s book on my list to read, as I imagine many others do too, but in the meantime, since all of this conversation is occurring on blogs and websites, I return to questions that have arisen on HASTAC before: what role digital technologies in public intellectual life if we broaden it to include more than just a “marketplace of ideas”? Why does Menand equate public culture with the marketplace — and how are we both replicating these assumptions, and also offering alternatives to them, in the digital humanities?

The question of the marketplace leads to the vexing issue of “efficiency,” an ideal that Menand embraces, but which I argue we should probe more carefully. In excerpts published in Harvard Magazine, Menand borrows from William Bowen and Neil Rudenstine’s study,  In Pursuit of the Ph.D., to explain why graduate students in the humanities take so much longer than other graduate or professional students to complete their degrees (often up to 10 years), Menand writes that Bowen and Rudenstine:

suggested that one reason for this might be that the paradigms for scholarship in the humanities have become less clear. People are uncertain just what research in the humanities is supposed to constitute, and graduate students therefore spend an inordinate amount of time trying to come up with a novel theoretical twist on canonical texts or an unusual contextualization. Inquiry in the humanities has become quite eclectic without becoming contentious. This makes it a challenge for entering scholars to know where to make their mark.

Menand righteously criticizes the trick played on graduate students in higher education: the labor systems of universities exploit the old ideals of specialization to earn a Ph.D. in order to maintain a cheap labor pool of instructors; and even those who finish the degree then find themselves in an extremely difficult job market. Perhaps, he asks, if we abandon the dissertation for one peer-reviewed article and shorten the time to degree, this could improve the situation by making graduate school more efficient.

All well and good. But why does Menand obsessively focus on efficiency? Why a “marketplace of ideas” instead of some other form of public culture? Why are ideas — and the social institutions in which they are created — necessarily best operated on a market model?

I agree with Menand that, “there should be a lot more Ph.D.s.” I would also be willing to entertain the notion that Ph.D.s “should be much easier to get.” But I disagree about the rationale for this reform. Menand argues that it would lead to greater “efficiency” (this is a book titled The Marketplace of Ideas, after all). But this does not really address the deeper longings that drive people to seek graduate education.

Perhaps efficiency is the whole problem here. Menand bemoans that, “People are uncertain just what research in the humanities is supposed to constitute.” But maybe that’s exactly what those students are looking for when they emulate their professors. To return to Ferule & Fescue’s post, they are doing more than “just looking for ways to be in the world.” For, perhaps what professors as public intellectuals (at least in the humanities) “model” for students is not so much “ways to be in the world” as ways to not be so certain how to be in the world? And maybe the world could use more of that uncertainty.

If we started to imagine models of public culture and public intellectualism (and teaching and graduate education and economic dynamics) that were not equated with a mere marketplace of ideas, could this lostness regain its value, its purpose? Shouldn’t markets serve public culture (and private longings) rather than vice-versa?

*I hope the (unintended) irony of linking to the Amazon.com page for Menand’s book has become apparent by the end of this post. It makes me think about the potential non-consumer dimensions of Amazon’s vast storehouse of book titles and reviews — non-consumer value from which Amazon, of course, seeks to profit (just turn on 1-click order!).

#339 – (What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, and Cultural Studies

Friday, October 16th, 2009

thinking about cultural studies, civil society, the humanities, and more with michael bérubé.

Today and tomorrow, Michael Berube joins us at Northwestern for a talk and seminar as part of the Engaged Humanities Scholar as Public Intellectual research workshop.

Recently, Michael published an essay in the Chronicle of Higher Education, titled “What’s the Matter with Cultural Studies?,” that sparked quite a debate. Perhaps the best place to start out in exploring this debate would be Michael’s post at Crooked Timber, They Call It Theory Monday.

There’s a lot circulating around in this debate: (1) the disciplinary home for (or homelessness of) cultural studies within the university, (2) the place of cultural studies beyond the university in the larger political and civic realms, (3) the history of cultural studies (British/British-French/Global/etc.), and (4) the distortions of cultural studies by its enemies, particularly by fellow progressive intellectuals on the “false consciousness” wing of the left — these who use the ill-defined populism of cultural studies to dismiss the field as confusing base and superstructure, focusing on culture when basic economics should be the purview of the left.

I’ll leave these (very worthy) debates to your own Internet explorations, but I do want to highlight one sentence from Michael’s article. In speaking about the goals of the left (and I think we could even say a goal beyond partisan politics), Michael argues against the notion that all we must do to improve society is lift the veil of media manipulation and “manufactured consent.” Instead, he writes, “you have to do a great deal of groundwork in civil society to try to forge an egalitarian response.”

I am hoping that this weekend, we can explore this concept of civil society and the kind of groundwork that humanities scholars might do using the tools and knowledge of specialized research to engage more broadly in civic endeavors (and one of those tools is listening, which I plan to do a lot of this weekend).

As part of this conversation, I (and I hope others) will post to HASTAC so that we can investigate the digital dimensions of this groundwork, starting with the question that’s been on my mind lately: how is digital networking not only affecting academic practice and knowledge production but civil society itself? And not just the netroots of political civil society, but the broader terrain of associational life, the “cultural ectoplasm” (as my teacher Bob Cantwell called it) of civil society? Now that seems a task that cultural studies (and cultural history, my own field) might be well-suited for.

Let the foundational (and anti-foundational, if your sensibility tends that way) labor begin!

X-posted to HASTAC blog.

#336 – And Now For Something Completely Different

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

michael palin stresses comedy’s changing role.

A lot of contemporary comedy seems self-conscious. It’s almost documentary, like ‘The Office.’ That’s a very funny show, but you’re looking at the human condition under stress. The Pythons made the human condition seem like fun.

- Michael Palin, quoted in “On Comedy’s Flying Trapeze,” by Charles McGrath, New York Times

monty-pythons-flying-circus-logo

One can surely find exceptions, but Palin’s comments seem spot on. Comedy was about breaking free ecstatically in the 60s and 70s, whereas contemporary comedy has oddly become the opposite. On “The Office,” “The Daily Show,” and, in deeply ironic mode, “The Colbert Report,” among other programs, comedy has become a call for restraint and common sense.

This isn’t a bad thing. It just is. And it is still funny. But it also has a larger significance.

In the 1960s, laughter marked what John Cleese called, in the New York Times article, “screams of liberation” against the limitations of society. But in a contemporary public culture that sometimes feels as if it has no more limits, less and less structure, and fewer boundaries of civility or standards of decency, comedy is no longer the clarion call for freedom. Goofy satire worthy of Aristophanes no longer does the trick.

In the 60s, the goal was to show that the emperor had no clothes. In the 2000s, when the clothes off various emperors were finally torn off, what we then saw were obscene and indecent abuses of power. And in the last year’s health care debates, we learned that efforts to engage in civic dialogue only resulted in screams of a different sort — not cries of liberation but coordinated efforts at distortion and obstruction.

Comedy becomes a barometer for this situation, but this barometer is a strange one, for it can make the weather as well as measure it. What role comedy will play beyond the Bush years of undisclosed locations, bungled wars, inept governance, and economic meltdown and subterfuge remains to be seen. But it’s not liberation we need anymore. We need something completely different.

So maybe it is good that contemporary comedy seems almost moral, with fish slapping replaced by ironic modes of  fingerwagging. The “screams of liberation” have become dire sighs of exasperation. And once those sighs are exhaled at “the human condition under stress,” perhaps we will be able to breathe again with a bit more ease.

#331 – The Public Health

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

struggles over the care of bodies private and public.

What has been most fascinating about the otherwise utterly scary town hall protests by radical right wingers around the U.S. (guns and swastikas anyone?) is that these protests point to a larger struggle going on currently in Obama’s America: the struggle over who will control representations of the American public.

It is odd, but somehow fitting, that this larger contest over representing the public is taking place through an issue that is most of all about the intimate and private dimensions of our lives: the health care of our bodies.

Central to the right wing’s goals when disrupting town hall meetings was not only to shift public debate itself, but also to recast perceptions of who the public was. Whether coordinated or spontaneous or both, these protests rippled through the mass media with a new representation of public opinion: of what “the people” of the republic, the citizens, us in the U.S., were thinking.

Being noisy, putting private bodies and voices into public forums (or what passes for them), was an effective way to re-represent whose political opinions were legitimate and worthy of explicit political representation, in other words of who the public was and what they desired. Right-wing protesters transformed what seems to be, demographically-speaking, a small fringe population into the population writ large: the people were speaking, their protests suggested as they circulated through the media, and this public was saying that they might have to water the tree of liberty with their “natural manure.”

The struggle over the representation of the public is largely a matter of scale and mode of expression: in a mass society, an effective roar by a few citizens can overwhelm quieter but more widely-held opinions. And, if you think about it, what do we think and want, anyway? Privately, I would wager, many Americans have quite complex and intricate attitudes, particularly when it comes to the issue of health care. So the individuals in the American public, and the concept of the public itself, are both very amorphous.

And yet, in a democracy, the public is an essential — perhaps even required — concept. Whether one argues that consent gets manufactured in this public, or that opinions can arise authentically from debate and discussion, in order for democracy to be democratic, it requires a public. This social body has to arise out of private citizens whose opinions, whether freely-formed or manipulatively forged, define what seems normal and right. More importantly, this public’s opinion,  its perceived beliefs and values, give ballast to the actions of the state. Without the public, in a sense, there is no democracy — even a questionably democratic one.

So the public and how it gets represented is very important. Maybe this is why the left as well as the right has been spending so much time exploring how it might function now in the age of the blogosphere. Could a new kind of public emerge from online interactions of opinion and information? What sort of public?

The health care debate is becoming a test, in a sense, of the left’s ability to represent the public that supported and elected Obama. The idea (always a distortion) that the left was a small group of “latte-drinking” liberals controlling the larger American public no longer holds in post-Obama America. But then, what sort of public replaces this representation by the right of the left over the last ten or twenty years?

Yesterday, we began to see that new, amorphous public coming into view. Progressives were able to pressure their representatives in the House into making the “public option” (interesting appearance of that word, in this case as a representation of the state) a non-negotiable item for the health care bill that might emerge in Congress. And Internet-savvy activists flooded television and other forms of media to represent the constituents of those House reps — which we might call “the public,” of course, that is demanding the “public option.”

It helps, too, that the mass media itself has had to respond to these changes in the public by representing progressive voices and bodies. A station such as MSNBC is doing this for commercial gain, but commerce, like politics, is rooted in perceptions of who the public is and what they want.

Was it any accident, then, that this dramatic change in perceptions of the public debating — and the public debate over —health care occurred the same week as Netroots Nation? Probably just a coincidence, but a telling one. “Changing the face of progressive politics,” which Netroots Nation declares as its slogan, has everything to do with putting a new face on the public: who is in it and what it desires.

It turns out the health care of individual bodies has everything to do with the care paid to the social body. We live and die by what we think the public is and want it wants.

#329 – Highest Common Denominator

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

envisioning the dream of the commons in mass culture.

An increase in scale does not always entail reductiveness: one effect of the best mass culture is to trace or forge the connections among the unprecedentedly diverse experiences of its unprecedentedly broad audience. When artists find this common ground, the experience, however fleeting, of so enormous a community is visionary and exalting. When they fail, they can retreat into an irony that thrives in the vast range and dense detail of American consumer culture.

- George Scialabba, writing against Dwight Macdonald’s “Masscult and Midcult”

#314 – Alleyway Allegory

Monday, May 25th, 2009

the imperfect necessities of state intervention.

civil

#304 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

of massy bodies & mutual concert.

The greatest difficulty lies, in setting a huge massy body in motion. To point out to mankind their real interest, is easy enough; but to convince them of their duty, and to persuade those who are activiated by different views, and subject to different passions, to lay aside their prejudices, to give up a strong attachment to their immediate interests, and to act in mutual concert, for the good of the whole, is an arduous task.

- “Libertas at Natale Solum,” South-Carolina Gazette, 20 August 1770, quoted in T.H. Breen, The Marketplace of Revolution

#302 – Standing In the Shadows

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

mapping buzz but missing the quotidian?

Even though it’s like, ‘What the heck does that mean?,’ it means something.” – Elizabeth Currid

Elizabeth Currid and Sarah Williams map out the “geography of buzz” using media coverage of arts and entertainment events in New York City and Los Angeles to visualize concentrations of “buzz,” that elusive sense of public attention that seems to be such a desire in our culture. Following the work of Richard Florida, they stake a claim for the essential contributions of “creative workers” to the lives of cities economically and culturally.

0407-buzz-nyc-maps

But their work oddly seems to miss out on the lifeworld of cities, those vernacular spaces of quotidian experience in which something more than buzz — something more substantive, robust, and significant — takes place culturally but not always economically.

Williams speaks of “data shadows,” those traces we leave behind of our urban lives, but it might be worth exploring non-data shadows as well: those areas of everyday experience suffused with aesthetic and political import that lurk beyond the zones lit up by mediated buzz.

These non-data shadows lurk in plain daylight yet are oddly made darker by the glowing dots of buzz. Nonetheless, because they take place in parts of life beyond the momentary flashes of buzzing attention, they may well be more crucial to the civic health of places and peoples.

Image: Maps by Sarah Williams and Minna Ninova, Spatial Information Design Lab, Columbia University

#289 – Afterthought

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

from the corner of the local whole foods market.

takeactioncenter

#277 – Wherefore Art Thou?

Monday, January 26th, 2009

should the u.s. government have a secretary of the arts?

What is most striking about the current push for — and backlash against — establishing a federal Department of the Arts is that debates about the state’s role in sponsoring art almost instantly become referenda on the nature of American democracy. Thinking about the funding of art seems to bring out divergent opinions of what exactly American democracy is.

On one side, proponents of establishing a European-style culture ministry contend that the U.S. needs to bring “coherence” to support for artistic endeavors in order to better protect and preserve the national cultural treasures of the country. They go so far as to argue that a more coherent arts policy could bring a stronger sense of unity to the polity at home and improve U.S. relations around the world.

On the other side, opponents of creating a federal level department of arts and culture think that government funding and organizing would inevitably bureaucratize what is the best quality of American arts (and by implication American democracy): its decentralized, anarchic, disorderly nature.

WPA Art classes for children

Albert M. Bender, Art Project in Chicago Illinois, 1940.

This is, in a new form, a replay of FDR’s New Deal vs. Republican opposition. It’s the 1930s all over again in more ways than one: economic crisis not only leads to political reevaluations, but also raises debates about what role culture should play in the fate of the republic.

The story runs deeper, too, as it always does. The current debate contains weird echoes from the struggles between federalists and republicans, circa 1800. The question returns again in America: which is the best way to foster a robust democracy? Hamiltonian centralization or Jeffersonian decentralization?

Centralization promises more opportunities for artists, and in doing so, it might also, somewhat contradictorily, better protect the diversity of American arts and culture. This is the “coherence” that supporters seek: a way to identify and rectify imbalances in artistic support in order to defend the pluralism of American culture.

Not so, opponents claim. Suspicious that “coherence” would inevitably narrow opportunities for the arts to palatable forms because of the political risks involved with supporting the marginal or edgy, they long to guard the arts against what they see as the tyranny — even the unintentional, well-intentioned tyranny — of centralization.

They would rather risk impoverishment. A Department of the Arts would, they believe, put us into the movie Culture Wars: The Sequel, in which Al D’Amato and Jesse Helms wannabes will win easy political points for once again pulling the crucifix out of the jar of urine.

WPA more courtesy

Poster created by  Federal Art Project in New York City, 1936-1941.

Both positions on state funding for the arts — and on American democracy as a whole — warrant more explication and a willingness to entertain uneasy questions.

The opponents,  such as CultureGrrl, contend that a national arts department would turn culture into a “political football” as it has done in the past. But this seems rather like blaming the victim. Arts and culture are already politicized. After all, it is the fear of political manipulation that motivates CultureGrrl and others to petition against a Secretary of the Arts.

But they do raise an intriguing point: is it the pluralistic disorder, the messy incongruences and lack of unity, that defines the arts in America (and by implication, democracy in America)? How would a centralized authority enrich and extend this distinctive quality of American culture through political means? How to bring “coherence” to what is, at its most ideal, something profoundly and beautifully incoherent? The problem is a real one.

And yet, as suggested above, it is indeed the very problem FDR faced with the American economy in the 1930s. You could not protect liberty anymore, FDR discovered, by constraining state power; in a complex industrial economy, individuals were too weak to claim hold of their freedom. Most would lose their liberty to the elite economic powers who stepped into the void left behind by limited state power.

This is essentially the position taken by supporters of a national-level Department of Arts and Culture. Former National Endowment for the Arts head Bill Ivey, for instance, argues that when the state does not step in to fund, monitor, and shape cultural life, the market commodifies and conquers the civic dimensions of art and culture. What should be our common heritage becomes at best watered down and at worst destroyed in the march of corporate consumerism. The mad, disorganized dash for profit from and funding for the arts leads to a profoundly undemocratic disorder, rather than a democratic one.

On balance, the supporters strike me as on the right track. However, they need to address more clearly the critique of CultureGrrl and others. The question is: How can the U.S. create a central authority whose purpose is not just to cohere the arts into a treasure of national heritage? This is a worthy project in of itself, but it should not be the only purpose of a Department of the Arts. If it is, the use of central power will ironically work against the desire of supporters to bring out the best in American aesthetic life. Daring, unexpected, and challenging art will fall by the wayside of consensus-affirming culture.

In the rush to support a Department of the Arts during what many supporters feel is a historic opening, proponents are not confronting the deeper challenges of such an agency. If a Department of the Arts could also find a way to unleash the unruly, pluralistic, and profoundly democratic republic of arts and culture in America, it would do a great service not only to American aesthetics, but also to American democracy.

WPA see america

Alexander Dux, WPA/Federal Art Project poster, 1939.

If the puzzle of centralization and disorder, coherence and incoherence, could be solved (or weirdly, not solved but rather transformed into a puzzle whose pieces keep spinning and never fall into place), then a Department of the Arts would be a fine thing. Politics and culture could come together in a robust, multi-roomed mansion of the people, a palace of the commons, a culture in motion, where arts and policy would dance together.

Sometimes they would dance in unison, sometimes they would step on each other’s feet. Sometimes the music would be an old Appalachian fiddle tune, sometimes it would be a John Cage composition. Sometimes they would be gazing up at Thomas Hart Benton murals and sometimes at obscene Maplethorpe photographs. Sometimes they would whisper back and forth about infrastructure appropriations, sometimes they would stop and fight about abortion and the death penalty. Sometime arts and policy would leave the party happy, and sometimes they would never want to speak to each other again. But the dance would go on.

I’d like to be at that party. If my tax dollars can go to what seem to be unjust and illegal wars overseas, why can’t they go to figuring out the right way to fund the arts and culture at home?