You've probably seen the meme that's been going around for a couple years, generally some variation on a particular idea: This generation was raised on Harry Potter and The Hunger Games, of course they're not going to stand for Trump's authoritarianism. Whatever the generational political demography may be, there is a problem with this claim. The politics of The Hunger Games (and Harry Potter, and others that I have little knowledge of) are almost studiously ambivalent on political issues.
In The Hunger Games, any political perspective beside outright totalitarianism can be projected onto Katniss and her compatriots. The world of Panem is one in which the wealthy exploit the labor of the poor by demanding unwavering patriotism and convincing oppressed peoples to distrust each other. They demand cultural and ethnic homogeneity. A reluctant hero becomes a symbol of a resistance movement, aiming to convince the population to overthrow the ruling class and establish a more equitable society, though it turns out the leader of the resistance is just as bad as the old leader. Also... The world of Panem is one in which a centralized state power enslaves rural populations by disarming them. They demand that everyone work without hope of personal advancement. A reluctant hero becomes a symbol of a militia aiming to overthrow tyranny and establish a fair society, though it turns out the leader of the militia is just as bad as the old leader. Both of these descriptions are perfectly accurate. What's more, the coding in the books and films are just as ambiguous. The denizens of the capital dress in a fashion reminiscent of European aristocracy and adopt the gilded age's condescending attitude towards the poor. (So it's a class issue! Get the guillotines! ¡Viva la revoluci籀n!) At the same time, they're effete urban elites who control the media. (See, it's a government issue! Can't let them gubmint bastards boss us around!) Katniss herself (See! A female protagonist! #Resist) is ambivalent (See! She just wants to protect her family, as any good woman would! #FamilyValues) about the political aspect of her role as spokesperson of a resistance movement, and ends up more or less opting out of having any role in the development of a new society. This is generally true of Harry Potter as well, though we tend to forget that given J. K. Rowling's frequent political statements. Harry Potter is more explicit politically, the parallels between the Death Eaters and Nazis being so evident that denying them is downright silly, but, as strange as it is for me to have to type this, outright denouncement of Naziism was less politically controversial ten years ago than it is today. A running gag in video game communities of the time held that there were five types of enemies you could kill without any controversy or guilt: Aliens, Robots, Zombies, Terrorists, and Nazis. Only moral reprobates (of which there are disconcertingly many) wouldn't side with Harry and his pals. Still, it is only the outright Nazi beliefs of the Death Eaters that qualify one as a villain in this series.
To be clear, I'm not trying to criticize YA series, but rather point out that most of the political content we see in them is projected. I really don't want to get into a long screed about the efficacy of counter-hegemony so I'll just end the post here.
Kahn's Corner
Monday, December 10, 2018
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
"Assassination Vacation" and the Reliquary of the Damned
Sarah Vowell's Assassination Vacation (2005) is part pop-history and part travelogue. Vowell sets off to visit the places associated with the Lincoln, Garfield, and McKinley assassinations, from Ford's Theater to the M羹tter Museum in Philadelphia, where you can see a piece of Charles Guiteau's brain floating in a jar. Vowell argues that the almost obsessive devotion to maintaining and visiting these sites is like a secular version of Catholic pilgrimages, that the shards of Lincoln's brain or the ominously vague "Piece of John Wilkes Booth," serve a similar function to the relics of saints. Overall, I recommend the book, as a good introduction to the aforementioned assassinations in general, and for a wealth of detail on the tangential or minor figures attached to the event. But I have some thoughts of my own regarding her claim about the relic-like nature of the artifacts of assassination, at least regarding the assassin.
While the fallen leaders and their belongings may possess the qualities of relics, we still have to wonder why there is such a draw towards the killers. With maybe the exception of Pontius Pilate, there isn't much lasting interest in individuals who kill holy figures. And yet, Charles Guiteau is nearly as famous as President Garfield, and most Americans can name only one 19th century actor: John Wilkes Booth. What makes these men so alluring, not ideologically or morally, but nevertheless drawing our attention? Why do I know more about Leon Czolgosz than every member of McKinley's cabinet?
The power of religious relics lies in their connection to the divine, while historical relics draw their power through their connection to History. Even if we know this to be ontologically untrue, we can't help but feel that an object's proximity to some great historical moment or personage imbues that object with some essence, preserving some tether across time and space. We have a sense of History as an actually existing entity. We see its motive power as "trends and forces" or "great men" or some combination thereof. In the way that, for a pilgrim, a saint represents a closer connection to the divine forces that they believe underlie our world, a historical figure has a closer connection to natural forces that we believe underlie it. One cures a leper, the other cures polio. But assassins are usually the opposite of great men, and the killing is often the only notable thing about them. They represent an unnatural disturbance of history.
In her book, Vowell describes the assassins as overturning the will of the electorate. The trends and forces that got the person elected and the future actions of a great man are swept aside by one brief and violent action. While our society has a prurient interest in crime and violence, the assassin is of a different class from the rest. We hold Booth and Oswald and James Earl Ray in a different class than Al Capone or Jack the Ripper. Because an assassin doesn't simply kill a person, they impress their will on history itself. Booth didn't just murder Lincoln, he switched the tracks of American history. Of course, who knows how society would be different if Capone hadn't existed, or if one of the Zodiac killer's victims would have gone on to prominence. But while we don't know how Reconstruction would have been different under Lincoln, or whether Robert Kennedy would have won the presidency in 1968, that history would be substantially different if they hadn't been killed is a certainty. For most assassin's changing history is not just an effect of their actions, but the intent. And the fact that someone, often a loser or a lunatic, can so drastically affect the world at large, can overturn the will of the electorate, is frightening, because it shows our beliefs in the logic and comprehensibility of history to be unfounded. Whereas the relics of the great figures connect us to the ebb and flow of history, the assassins' connect us to the chaos, the absurd truth that history is not a river, but countless individual incidents, and that the current we feel is just a post facto generalization, a desire to add order to something that has none.
Tuesday, August 7, 2018
On the True Origins of the Conspiracy Theorist
The common
explanation for how otherwise reasonable people end up believing in
conspiracy theories is straight-forward and easy to empathize with,
only having the fault of being completely wrong. According to common
wisdom, some people, when faced with a shocking or upsetting act of
violence (e.g. the Kennedy assassination, 9/11, any mass shooting),
are unable to accept the chaotic violence of the world and buy into a
conspiracy theory as a coping mechanism. After all, isn’t it more
comforting to pin all the blame on some shadowy organization that we
can fight? This is comforting for us non-conspiracy theorists, with
the added bonus of being subtly patronizing towards CTs (i.e. conspiracy
theorists. I don't feel like typing it a hundred times). This
explanation means that, deep down, they realize the same chaos we do,
but they’re just really bad at coping, the poor dears. That it
doesn’t make sense has been no obstacle to it becoming commonly
accepted. The argument that CTs find this conspiracy-haunted world
comforting is identical to the claim they make about those of us who
don't buy in to their grand conspiracies, that it must be nice to
live in a world where individuals are responsible for the bad things
they do, and we can trust our institutions, etc. Further, our
explanation absolutely fails to address things like, say, 9/11
truthers. 9/11 wasn't a lone wolf assassinating a president or some
freak accident. What emotional need is satisfied by shifting the
blame from Al-Qaeda to the Illuminati/New World Order/etc.? It's
much easier to fight Al-Qaeda than a shadowy secret organization that
nobody believes to exist.
The answer to how
people come to believe in conspiracy theories is pretty simple: The
same way as they come to believe in anything else. Let's take the
Kurt Cobain murder conspiracies as an example. When a person is
faced with new information, that information must be assimilated. If
that information fits in with the things you already know, it's a
smooth process. (N.B. I'm using the words "know" and
"knowledge" to mean statements that one holds to be true,
regardless of their factual accuracy.) This is why there aren't as
many conspiracy theories about the deaths of Jimi Hendrix or Amy
Winehouse. Even their fans know that they both did drugs and that
drugs can have tragic consequences. In regards to Cobain, one of the
frequent claims made by those who believe he was murdered is that he
wasn't suicidal. They know how suicidal people act, and they know
that Cobain wasn't acting that way before his death. When this
knowledge is contrasted with the knowledge that Cobain died in the
way he did, some piece of knowledge must change so the new
information can be assimilated. Maybe suicidal people act
differently than I thought they did? Alternatively, the new
information must be denied. Cobain didn't
commit suicide. A more recent theory is
that Cobain faked his death, though the prominent theory is the
Courtney Love had him killed. But how do we get from "Kurt
didn't seem suicidal" to "Courtney Love had Kurt killed?"
The steps are pretty easy to trace. If Kurt didn't commit suicide,
then he must have been murdered. One of the earliest theorists was
a public access host who got footage from a window outside the crime
scene and noticed much less blood than he would expect from a shotgun
blast to the head. The host, and those who agreed with him, knew
how much blood to expect. Also, if one accepts that Cobain was
murdered, someone else must have written the suicide note. After
all, the note doesn't look right. Which is to say, it doesn't look
the way you'd expect it to. And everyone knew Courtney Love was only
in it for the money and didn't really care about Kurt.
My
point here is that conspiracy theories and theorists don't start with
a full-fledged master plan. To give one more example, consider the
various Shakespeare authorship theories. Typically, people just
write them off as snobbery, but the reason is a bit more complex. It
also shows that the
types
of things we "know"
aren't
always as concrete as in the Cobain conspiracy. The lack of
contemporary documentation about Shakespeare isn't unusual, as even
many Oxfordians, Baconians, and Marlovians will acknowledge. The
real problem is that what we do have shows Shakespeare to be, well,
boring and occasionally unpleasant. As James Shapiro shows in
Contested Will, it was
not Shakespeare's class that dismayed early CTs, but the fact that
the few things we know about him show his stinginess (e.g. suing a
neighbor over a small debt),
and that he retired to his
estate in Stratford rather than continue writing
in the last six years of his life was unacceptable. Everyone knows
that the greatest literature
in the English language must have been written by an equally great
spirit. Even we who accept Shakespeare of Stratford as the author of
his plays feel this disappointment, yet it is a disappointment based
on our assumptions about the way the world works. Most of the
supporting evidence for these conspiracies are based on accepting
certain unproven premises (e.g. the sonnets are autobiographical)
which can be construed to prove nearly anything, or by
misapprehensions (e.g., there are no records that Shakespeare went to
grammar school, therefore he did not. However, there are no grammar
school records of any of Shakespeare's peers, some of whom went on to
attend Oxford). But the
reason there are conspiracies about Shakespeare at all is the belief
we have about the personal qualities of a great artist.
We
can see in the given examples how conspiracy theories arise
logically. Logically, if not reasonably. They are logical in the
sense that they take a set of given conditions (this is how suicidal
people act, this is what a great artist behaves like), and then apply
logic. If he didn't kill himself, who wrote the suicide note? If
vaccines cause autism, why are doctors saying they don't? If
these people standing outside a mass shooting aren't behaving how
survivors behave, then who are they? To
bring it back to my initial point, what's comforting about believing
that your favorite musician's killer is still at large, or that the
government is dispersing toxic chemicals from airplane jets?
Conspiracy
theories, by their nature, have a tendency to broaden their scope.
Let's say
you start with the knowledge that the US intelligence agencies are
close to omniscient and that middle eastern extremist groups are
unsophisticated, and then
came to the conclusion that 9/11 was an inside job. On the one
hand, this would need to implicate a lot of people not directly
associated. If you 'know' how a building would appear when it
collapses, and countless structural engineers say differently, then
they must be lying. On the other hand, this would tie into other
conspiracy theories already held. If you believe that there is a
Jewish plot to control the world, you'd find a way to tie 9/11 to
that.
Understanding
why people believe in conspiracy theories, and how those beliefs
develop is important. I hope it's already understood that most
conspiracy theorists are not violent or bigots. But as online
communities continue to supplant physical ones, we have to take a few
things into consideration. First, groups like Stormfront (the white
supremacist forum) have a history of trying to recruit from places
like reddit's conspiracy page, not because the groups targeted for recruitment are necessarily racist,
but because if (as the neo-nazis believe) there are shadowy Jewish
groups controlling everything, why not try to make your case to
people who already believe there is a shadowy group pulling the
strings? Second, many of the views espoused by conspiracy theorists
are socially unacceptable. (In the cases where they accuse innocent
people, entire ethnic groups, or survivors of tragedies of
unspeakable crimes, I'd say this unpopularity is justified.) Online
communities are still communities, and fulfill that need.
Communities form identities and protect themselves from perceived
threats, even if that means protecting bad behavior within a
community. Third, there is
still a general feeling that online is not real, not just in terms of
community but in terms of actions. As
such, harassment of people accused of complicity in a conspiracy has
become a serious problem,
since there are so rarely any actual consequences
for the harassers, even when
their activities are clearly illegal.
There
have always been and will always be conspiracy theories. What needs
to be discussed is not how to stop them overall, but how prevent harm
to innocent people caught up in them, whether we're talking about the
anti-semitic results of "The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion," the careers destroyed by
McCarthyism, or the harassment of bereaved parents after a school
shooting. On the part of conspiracy communities, the answer is
better self-policing, primarily in regards to preventing co-opting by
hate groups and, as a community, establishing a clear sense of
opprobium for harrassment.
On the part of broader society, we need to take online actions
seriously. Criminal harrassment and death threats must not be
consequence free simply because they are carried out online.
Tuesday, October 10, 2017
Review: Mr. Holmes (2015)
Director: Bill Condon
Runtime: 104 minutes
I finally got around to watching Mr. Holmes on Netflix. The film, based on Mitch Cullin's 2005 novel A Slight Trick of the Mind, focuses on an elderly Sherlock Holmes struggling to come to terms with senility. Holmes retired from the detective business decades prior to the events of the film, and has decided to write the true account of his last case, the one that drove him from London to a quiet life of beekeeping. Unfortunately, his memory is fading, and he has trouble remembering details, though he is helped along by the housekeeper's precocious son.
I've always found Sherlock Holmes fascinating. Not the character, per se, or even the Doyle stories. I have a soft spot for metafiction and the crossover between pop culture and history (cf. my review of Dan Simmons's The Fifth Heart, where Sherlock Holmes teams up with Henry James), so this seemed right up my alley. I was underwhelmed.
Without divulging too much, the central mystery of the film (what were the details of Holmes's last case, and why did it cause him to quit for good) doesn't have a satisfactory resolution. The resolution is unambiguous, but unconvincing, for while I can understand Holmes's distress, for a man who is routinely involved with murder and espionage, this isn't nearly enough to justify his response. Meanwhile, Holmes's relationship with the housekeeper's son Roger is touching, but not something that we haven't seen a million times before, even if the acting, from both McKellan as Holmes and Milo Parker as Roger, is above average.
As a Sherlock Holmes story, it's uninteresting. As a story about aging and mortality, it's sweet but unoriginal. As a comment on the Sherlock Holmes mythos (of, as the poster says, "the man beyond the myth") it's a real letdown, as it doesn't really add anything except to point out that well-known misconceptions (e.g. the deerstalker) are misconceptions, or to ask "what if Sherlock Holmes were old?"
Rating: ★★☆☆☆
Friday, September 29, 2017
Like looking in a mirror...
Just thought I'd share a couple photos that I've taken. The first is an "American goods" store in Stratford, England.
The second is a "British goods" store from Ventura, California.
I don't have any point to make here. Our special relationship seems to be going strong (cheerio!)
Labels:
american,
british,
england,
english,
goods,
shopping,
stereotypes,
stores,
uk,
united states,
us
Wednesday, September 27, 2017
Velcro® makes a music video about why you shouldn't say "velcro"
Intellectual property law is complicated. I can't tell you how many people I've seen spend hours arguing a point about copyright, but who aren't willing to spend the five minutes it takes to learn the basic differences between copyright and trademark. An almost certainly apocryphal rumor holds that there is some employee at Xerox (or Kleenex, or Q-Tips) whose sole function is to search for uses of the brand name as a general term for the product, and send a cease-and-desist letter. This is because, to maintain a trademark, trademarks must be distinct. This is why I can't start a laptop manufacturer called "Laptops" and sue everyone. However, if a term so lapses into general usage, it runs the risk of no longer being distinct enough to be a legal trademark, which leads to often over-zealous protection of trademarks. To this end, Velcro® produced a parody(?) music video admonishing the public to not say "velcro" unless they mean "velcro®."
Personally, I take solace in knowing that at some future date a music video of actors pretending to be lawyers singing about IP law may be played in an actual court of law. God bless America.
Personally, I take solace in knowing that at some future date a music video of actors pretending to be lawyers singing about IP law may be played in an actual court of law. God bless America.
Friday, July 14, 2017
A Proposed Taxonomy of Conspiracism
Not
too long ago, I read Jesse Walker’s The United States of
Paranoia, which covers
conspiracy culture in US political history, ranging from colonial
fears of Indian insurrection to 9/11 truthers. Where Walker’s book
excelled compared to others I’ve read on the subject is his
decision to focus on paranoia as opposed to conspiracism, thereby
avoiding the pedantic delimiting of the grey area between the two.
His thesis, in simple terms, is that a) paranoid thinking has played
a non-neglible role in American history since
its beginnings and b) that despite claims by other researchers of the
subject (especially Hofstadter),
this paranoia is not only prevalent on the fringes. Walker makes a
point of refuting claims that it is only during extreme cases that
paranoia becomes rampant across the political and social spectrum
(e.g. the Satanism scares in the 1980s). While he accomplishes this,
he does so at the expense of a useful taxonomy of
paranoia/conspiracism. Walker defines five types of paranoia that
can be mixed and matched, namely the Enemy Within,
the Enemy Outside,
the Enemy Below, the Enemy Above, and the Benevolent Conspiracy.
Walker’s desire to prove
that paranoia is not only on the fringes limits the depth of what is
otherwise a fantastic overview of the subject. In the aim of
furthering his thesis, Walker created a taxonomy in which the only
valid distinction is
who is the
subject of paranoia,
but where the degree of paranoia is irrelevant. So within Walker’s
taxonomy, a man who has been investigating the banking industry for
decades and considers it completely untrustworthy, an economic
populist who distrusts centralized banking as part of a broader
political view, and a man who believes that all the banks in the
world are owned by the Rothschilds to further a Zionist new world
order, would all fall into the same category of paranoia.
Walker’s categories are insufficient.
But
speaking of conspiracy, rather than paranoia in general, how should a
taxonomy be devised? The main goal is to identify useful
distinctions. I don’t think there’s a significant distinction
between someone who believes the CIA killed Kennedy because he was
getting in their way and someone who thinks the FBI killed Kennedy
because he was getting in their way, although the belief that he was
killed because he was going to publicize the existence of reptilian
overlords would be
significantly
different. I have a tentative taxonomy
of conspiracy theories that consists of two factors: scope and
perpetrators.
Scope
can be broken down into only two categories: limited and open-ended.
Every real-world conspiracy theory (from the Tuskegee experiments to
Iran-Contra) has fallen into the former category. A limited
conspiracy is the use of conspiracy for ultimately non-conspiratorial
ends. The moon-landing being faked for the propaganda purposes would
fall under this category, because “winning the cold war” isn’t
conspiratorial. This is not to say that the ends achieved by a
limited conspiracy must be legitimate. Some flat-earthers believe
that the reason governments keep the earth’s shape a secret is so
they can use the space programs as shell companies to shuffle money
around off the books. While hiding funds may be conspiratorial in a
legal sense, it isn’t anymore conspiratorial than the claim that
“the government doesn’t always want us to know what it does with
all its money.” If, however, a flat-earther believes
that the governments of the world were hiding the shape of the planet
so they could funnel money to create a single world government to
enslave us all, then this would be an open-ended conspiracy. People
who believe that the contrails from planes are actually chemicals
designed to affect the public, tend to fall into the open-ended
category, as the purpose of the chemtrails is generally part of a
larger, more sinister ploy. Notably, most open-ended conspiracies
tend to focus on a new world order, often some form of single world
government. Whether this is run by the Illuminati, the Jews, the
Jesuits, the Reptilians, Satan, etc. depends largely on when and
where the conspiracy arises.
The
second taxonomy, perpetrators,
can be split into three
categories, which I call:
Mostly Harmless, Partisan,
and Cabal. While I’ve
named this “perpetrators,”
this is more than just a simple cui bono?
As indicated by the first category
of perpetrator, the supposed
victims of the conspiracy are taken into account. In the first
category, even according to the conspiracists, there is little actual
harm done. At most, it’s the truth that is harmed, and the
deception is itself the greatest evil involved. Who benefits is, I
believe, of secondary importance in these examples. Those who
believe that the moon landing
was faked or that evidence of
Bigfoot is being systematically hidden would fall into this category.
No one is being seriously harmed by the perpetuation of these
conspiracies. Children
aren’t being pimped out of a pizza parlor, skyscrapers aren’t
being blown up, aliens aren’t taking over the earth.
“Partisan”
would refer to cases where there is one large group that benefits at
the expense of another. While only a small number of people need be
aware of the actual conspiracy, it benefits the entire group. Some
of those who believe that the Sandy Hook shooting was a ploy to enact
gun control laws would fall into this group. Within this conspiracy,
only a small number of people would actually be complicit, but all
who advocated for gun control in its wake would benefit. Likewise
people who thought that the Bush administration was responsible for
9/11 to aid the popularity of Bush and his party, or that FDR allowed
Pearl Harbor to happen to stymie isolationists. It should be noted
that many Partisan conspiracies focus on the same events as “Cabal”
conspiracies. The main difference between the two is that in the
latter, it is only the conspirators who benefit, not everyone on
their side. (e.g. people who believe that Sandy Hook was meant to
lead to the confiscation of guns and the enslavement of all
Americans, regardless of their position on gun control, would fall
into the “Cabal” group).
I
think the best example of a Cabal conspiracy is the anti-vaxxers. In
their view, the medical industry is intentionally giving kids autism.
Most people who are pro-vaccine are not part of the conspiracy, but
as opposed to liberals who
participate in “the war on Christmas,” those who unwittingly aid
the conspirators are themselves harmed. The Cabal can also be
clandestine. As opposed to something as visible and publicly debated
as anti-vaxxers, this could be a Rothschild secretly tightening
control on the banking systems, waiting for the right time to strike.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)