Tag: ideology
Those Who do not Move…
by Chris on Jan.23, 2012, under politics
Leave a Comment :chains, ideology, luxemburg more...News and the Same Old Same Old: Why We Must Challenge The Manufactured Consensus
by Chris on Dec.22, 2011, under economics, media, politics, society
What on earth is wrong with the people who run our TV and radio news programmes? Ideology, I suppose, is what’s ‘wrong’.
Still, it can be quite infuriating to listen to the same discredited perspective being peddled day after day on the networks. We should certainly challenge it: if we do not we cede the space to the right and the centre right without a fight. Hegemony needs to be met by contestation, even if that’s only at the level of writing or calling these programmes. It’s not enough, of course, but better than passively letting them repeat the old tired rigmarole.
Take the discussion on this morning’s BBC Radio 4 ‘Today’ programme about the role of banks etc, with Geoff Mulgan, Richard Lambert and Gillian Tett, ‘chaired’ by John Humphreys.
I was pleased that a discussion of this kind was initiated but disappointed that again we heard the same voices. This is nothing against the contributors per se, and I was impressed in particular by Gillian Tett’s remarks. But really, can’t they do better than this? The Today programme seems to think the most radical outlooks on the current financial crisis are those of (say) Martin Wolf and Will Hutton, plus Gillian Tett or Blairites like Mulgan. So that’s the FT, the Economist and the right of the Labour Party sorted (and Lambert is ex head of the CBI). Not exactly a broad swathe of opinion, is it? Unsurprisingly, the most radical of the bunch was Gillian Tett, who at least seems capable of critical thought. Hardly radical, though.
In this they fail as a news gatherer, and they tend to reinforce a supposed consensus that is actually not shared by many of us. And that is why phenomena such as the Occupy movement are so hard for them to evaluate. Why not interview David Harvey or Wolfgang Streek, for instance? both are noted academics who have recently written on the current events and who don’t share the perspective we keep hearing on ‘Today’. Vox pop outside St Paul’s won’t do: they need to include a broader tranche of informed opinion in their daily diet of comment and analysis. This has to include radical voices – and ‘radical’ here ought not to mean just ‘mildly Keynesian’.
If they did that, maybe John Humphrey’s opening remarks today about trade unions ‘ruling the roost’ until they were ‘dealt with’ would have been challenged by someone. If they don’t, they will be seen as increasingly irrelevant to the concerns of large swathes of the population. No wonder the blog and the tweet are replacing the old channels of news and information.
This ought to matter to them, so we need to say it to them, as part of the struggle to get different views heard. I don’t write this because I naively suppose that this issue of who gets airtime hasn’t come to the attention of the production team at Today, but rather that we must not let this kind of thing go by without any response. ‘Today’ still has a big audience, and that matters.
So I urge you: write or phone them. Don’t let them claim no one objected.

Post-Shame
by Chris on Jan.25, 2010, under politics
One of the duties of the modern nation-state is persuasion. Each state aims to keep its citizens convinced of the legitimacy of its rule. The state may be run chiefly for the enrichment of a few at the cost of the many, but the endurance of the state is widely thought to depend on its ability to sell its rule to the many as a common-sense truism. Or at least that was how it used to work. We may be entering a new era in the evolution of the state, one where the state approaches a state of utter shamelessness.
Antonio Gramsci, in his prison notebooks, called this persuasive activity ‘hegemony’. According to Gramsci, hegemony occludes the domination of the state and the classes whose interests it serves. One does not have to be an Italian communist of the 1920s to see the usefulness of Gramsci’s groundbreaking insight. Broadly speaking, all political actors pursue their agendas by trying to narrow other people’s imaginations in order to make desired outcomes seem commonsensical and undesired outcomes outside the ambit of reasonable thought.
It seems to me that over the past decade, in the United States, the state and a narrow circle of powerful interests—banks, energy companies, and private health insurers in particular—have simply given up trying to persuade the rest of us that their interests were our interests. Could we be moving in the twenty-first century to a state that practices domination without hegemony? Or, to put it in plain English, will the state shamelessly turn itself completely over to serving the interests of a powerful few without bothering to pretend that it’s not? And if it does, how should we respond?
Read more by Jeff Strabone here: 3quarksdaily.
Plato: The Cave – interpretations
by Chris on Dec.17, 2009, under philosophy, politics
Leave a Comment :cave, enlightenment, ideology, media, plato, tv more...Hmm… remember this?
by Chris on Nov.05, 2009, under culture, media
Leave a Comment :BNP, ideology, tabloids more...After the Billionaires Plundered Alabama Town, Troops Were Called in … Illegally
by Chris on Oct.28, 2009, under economics, politics
Shopping for Burkas
by Chris on Jun.25, 2009, under philosophy, politics, society
Sarko: victim of liberal ideology
Sarkozy, the President of the French Republic, says that the burka has no place in France because it represents the oppression of women. For this, liberals have applauded him for defending secular values in France.
But he has no plans to ban veils on nuns or legislate to force the Catholic church to allow women priests. This might be because there are more Catholic voters than Muslims ones in France; or that he wants to look strong on an issue where he doesn’t have to spend money. But perhaps that is too cynical.
There is another issue I’d like to raise in connection with Sarko’s pronouncement. Sarko’s view seems to be that even if a woman says she wants to wear a burka, it is still somehow not a free choice. This is because of ideology, or to be cruder, ‘brainwashing’ – the notion that the mind has been so externally affected that apparently free choices are in some sense forced. This may be true.
So: a liberal (male) politician is going to tell a woman she can’t wear what she likes because she is being told what to wear by (muslim) men. It’s hard to be sure where this approach will end: a dress code like they have in Saudi Arabia but with different rules, perhaps.
But Sarko knows what’s best for them, and wants to make them do it. This is paternalism, of course, something liberals are supposed to be against. I wish some of my liberal friends would consider this before inveighing against so-called patriarchal islamic ideology. Not liking the burka can’t be a liberal justification for banning it. Or perhaps their ‘tolerance’ for diversity means only: ‘you can be different, but not too different; if you are too different we’ll make you conform’.
An alternative might be to drop the idea that freedom is revealed by the choices people actually make. I’m quite ready to go along with this, provided it isn’t restricted to the choices made by Muslim women. How many of our choices are truly ‘free’? The main ideological driver in ‘the liberal west’ is surely capitalism – with consumerism as the classic example of the addictive lifestyle which, unlike the burka, is regularly described as an unfree state by its victims. For a ‘liberal’ to focus on sartorial choices that don’t harm others, while ignoring the real status of our abstract ’freedoms’ is to act in bad faith. Or to be the victim of ideology – which is it, M. Sarko?
Shock as ‘Guardian’ journalist invokes Hegel!
by Chris on Jun.24, 2009, under philosophy, politics, society
This is quite interesting! I just wish Mr Jeffries had taken the Hegel a little further: there’s a lot more to his philosophy of freedom than is intimated here. Still, it’s a pleasure to see anyone noticing that liberal ideas of ‘negative freedom’ are a bit inadequate, to say the least.
Brush up your Hegel, Sarko
Monsieur Président’s burka outburst suggests he can’t tell his abstract and concrete freedoms apart
Nicolas Sarkozy’s problem is that he hasn’t read enough Hegel. Let me rephrase that: one of his problems is that he hasn’t read enough Hegel. When the French president told a special session of parliament in Versailles earlier this week, “We cannot accept to have in our country women who are prisoners behind netting, cut off from all social life, deprived of identity”, he would have done better to hold his tongue, and instead reflect on that passage in the Philosophy of Right in which Hegel distinguishes between abstract and concrete freedom.
The former means the freedom to do whatever you want, which, as you know, is the basis of western civilisation and why you can choose between 23 different kinds of coffee in your local cafe, or 32 different kinds of four-inch wedges the glossies tell you look sexy this summer but in none of which you can walk comfortably. Such is the freedom of late capitalism, which seems to systematically strive to deprive us of an identity that we might construct ourselves.
For Hegel this isn’t real freedom, because our wants and desires are determined by society. By those lights, a western fashion victim is as much a sartorial prisoner as a woman in a burka.
Neither is really free. Those that must buy what someone else tells them are this season’s must-haves are as much in mental chains as those who put on head-to-toe garment with netting for the eyes because of the strictures of the society to which they belong.
By real freedom, Hegel meant not doing whatever one wants but having the freedom from societal conditioning and the fatuous whirl of desires by using reason. If you come across someone who manages to be really free in this sense in either capitalistic or strict Islamic society then send me their names so we can celebrate their escape.
None of us is really free in that sense. I used to think otherwise. I once wrote an article under the headline “If only we were more like the French: Call me a chippy atheist, but I’d rather see a headscarf ban than Muslim ghettoes.” I thought forcibly liberating people from their mental and sartorial shackles would make us free. I was wrong. Now I believe the creation of Muslim ghettoes is made more likely by official displays of intolerance towards what some Muslim women wear, that the social integration France overtly seeks through its policy of laïcité, or secularism, is less likely. One of the reasons for this shift is because of thinking about what Hegel means about freedom in thesociety to which I belong.
Yes, but, you might well want to say, surely women who wear burkas are more oppressed than those who treat the sartorial laws of Grazia as though they were truly the words of God (which, as you know, they are)? None of what I’ve said means that I feel anything but depressed when I see a woman in a burka, but that’s my problem, something that I can’t resolve in the way Sarkozy suggests. What’s striking in Sarkozy’s speech is that it is yet again a man who denounces women and presumes that they are cut off from social life. They may be cut off from Sarkozy’s secular French society, and that may be difficult for allegedly tolerant western liberals, but they are not cut off from all society. In fact they’re very much part of the society that many westerners despise as oppressing women.
Sarkozy’s remarks, though they’re bound to upset some of France’s five million Muslims, are consistent with French revolutionary culture and the tradition of laïcité that led, in 2004, to the banning of headscarfs in French schools. Doesn’t he realise then that his speech exemplifies an abstract freedom of expression which, in Hegelian terms, proceeds from social conditioning, not reason? It seems unlikely. For French political culture, religion is tolerable only if it keeps itself to itself. As soon as a person of faith tries to present what religion means for them in public in France, they risk being accused of fundamentalism.
Sarkozy now goes further, following revolutionary logic in not just chasing those who dress in ways he and French political culture finds intolerable out of public spaces, but pursuing those who dress in a way that is a rejection of western values even into their private worlds. He said: “The burka is not a sign of religion, it is a sign of subservience. It will not be welcome on the territory of the French republic.” Even religious justification is bad enough, run the suppressed premises of this argument, but the absence of such despicable justifications is worse.
The woman in a burka is revealed as subservient to patriarchal culture. She must be made free to choose to be more western. Sarkozy proposes, in giving his backing to the establishment ofa parliamentary commission to look at whether to ban the wearing of burkas in public, that such imposed freedom would improve her lot.
French venerate such abstract freedoms. We needn’t. They were, for Hegel, the basis of the revolution’s collapse into the Terror in which, he argued, individuals were sacrificed to the ill-conceived pursuit of abstract freedoms. Sarkozy is thus a modern-day Robespierre, proposing some women – whom he presumes to have been silenced by patriarchal society and whose voices he doesn’t want to hear –be terrorised in the name of the kind abstract freedoms France has venerated for 210 years. Let’s see if he succeeds.
Brush up your Hegel, Sarko | Stuart Jeffries | Comment is free | The Guardian.
Noam Chomsky, Sports Commentator
by Chris on Jun.19, 2009, under politics, sport
Fast Tube by Casper">Noam Chomsky on why sport is such a big feature in our society
Every day, on the hour, on the half hour, come war, hurricane, earthquake and plague, sport, more sport, endless sport. The sport will never end. But why?
Fast Tube by Casper">The football will never end!
Smash the Capitalist Matrix
by Chris on Jun.09, 2009, under philosophy, politics
There was an unhealthy period when ‘ideology’ seemed to be the word that could not be uttered. This was, I guess, partly due to the temporary waning of Marxist influence in the 80s and 90s – and the accompanying vogue for all things deconstructive and postmodern. Foucault, of course was instrumental in bringing the very useful Nietzschean concept of ‘genealogy’ to bear in texts that reconceived power: constituting bodies of knowledge, running its capillaries through institutions, relationships and ideas. Then there was Baudrillard and his epigones. There seemed no room for ‘truth’: so what use could ideology be?
And then came the new millenium, the twin towers….and the new economic crunch. And ideology is back. There’s no one reason why this happened – but its for sure that Slavoj Zizek, from The Sublime Object of Ideology (1989) on – was increasingly influential in the relaunch. Ideology can now be invoked in polite revolutionary circles and cells again (and on couches – for Zizek’s version comes with a tangy Lacanian twist) Ideology is seen again as what it always was: an indispensible concept for the left: So viva Zizek!
Not that intellectual history is made by great men – that would be bourgeois ideology.
Looking for something?
Use the form below to search the site:
Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!
Visit our friends!
A few highly recommended friends...
- (Mis)readings
- A blog by Alex Ross, music critic of the New Yorker and author of 'The Rest is Noise'
- A Fisful of Euros
- A thousand things I want to say to you
- Acephalous
- Adam Curtis – the medium and message
- Adbusters
- ads without products
- Alternet
- And Now for Something Completely Different
- And you may find yourself
- Anglofille
- Artchive
- Backdoor Broadcasting Company
- Baudelaire and the Impressionist Revolution
- Best 5 books on everything
- Bob Dylan
- Boingboing
- Box 3, Spool 5
- Brian Leiter's Nietzsche Blog
- Broken Power Lines
- Caroline Lucas
- Ceasefire Magazine
- Ceasefire Magazine
- Channel 4 News
- Channel 4 News
- Chaospet
- Chicago Political Workshop
- Compass
- Continental Philosophy
- Cornel West
- Counterfire
- Counterpunch
- Crashingly Beautiful
- Crooked Timber of Humanity
- Daily Nietzsche
- Dandelion salad
- Dave Hill's London Blog
- David Harvey’s Website
- de Souza's Daily Digest
- Democracy Now
- Development Blog
- Dissident Voice
- Documentation
- Dossier Journal
- E Westacott
- Educated Left Foot
- Enemies of Reason
- Ernst Blog
- Eurozine
- False Economy
- Four Quartets
- Guernica: A Magazine of Art and Politics
- Haiti Watch
- Hannah Arendt International
- Home of Lacanian Ink
- I Cite
- Immanent Frame
- Infinite Thought
- International Necronautical Society
- ionarts
- Je Est Un Autre
- John Harris
- Just Theory
- Justin Erik Halidor Smith
- K-Punk
- Lacan.com – the home of Lacanian Ink
- Left Business Observer
- Left Foot Forward
- Lenin’s Tomb
- Living in Philistia
- Living in Philistia
- Logos
- London Review of Books
- Long Sunday
- LRB Blog
- M. Le Prof d’Anglais’s Website
- Mahler Blog
- Mariborchan
- Mark Steel
- Mark Thomas
- Marxists.org
- Masters of Photography
- Media lens- keeping an eye on the mediocracy
- Militant Esthetix
- Morning Star
- Mumpsimus
- Muse-ings
- Mute
- Mute
- My Left Wing
- n+1
- Naomi Klein
- New Left Project
- Nima Maleki: Politics and Critical Thought
- Noam Chomsky Website
- Not in his name
- Not My Tribe
- Notes
- Notes
- Notes For The Coming Community
- Nothing To See Here
- On An Overgrown Path
- One Good Move
- Open Source: On Hannah Arendt
- Palestinian Solidarity Campaign
- Palestinian Solidarity Campaign
- Paul Mason
- Paul Mason – Newsnight blog
- Philosophical Fortnights
- Philosophy Bites
- Philosophy's Other
- Planomenology
- Platypus
- Plugins
- Political Scrapbook
- Politics and Critical Thought
- Politics and Culture
- Principia Dialectica
- Red Notebook
- Red Pepper
- Retronaut
- RewTube
- Ron's Blog
- Rouge's Foam
- SimpleScripts
- Sit Down Man, You're A Bloody Tragedy
- Socialism and/or Barbarism
- Still Life
- Stuff White People Like
- Stumble Upon
- Suggest Ideas
- Support Forum
- Swerve Left
- Tariq Ramadan
- Tax Justice Network
- Tax Research -Richard Murphy
- Ted.com
- The Chive
- The Equality Trust
- The Flaneur
- The Flaneur (2)
- The Guardian
- The Guardian
- The MarX Files
- The Peoples Supermarket
- The Return of the Public
- The William Blake Archive
- Themes
- Things
- Think Left
- This Public Address
- Thomas Kelly’s Blog
- Trouser Press
- Unquiet Thoughts
- Vienna – City of Dreams.
- Walter Benjamin Research Syndicate
- woods lot
- WordPress Planet
- Working Notes
- XKCD
- Zizek
- Zoilus



















