I am not sure that this has quite sunk in yet, so I’m going to say it one more time, slowly. At the national election held in Italy last week, a party that is less than three years old gained over 8 million votes, equivalent to one quarter of all votes cast. This party didn’t pay for a single advertisement on television or in the print media. None of its members appeared on television or gave interviews to the Italian press. The party didn’t put up a single hoarding. All of the party's candidates were complete unknowns, whilst leader Beppe Grillo – who didn’t run for office – hasn’t appeared on national television since 1994.
This is not just new. This is something that wasn’t supposed to happen. Not in Italy, where the Left has spent the last twenty years blaming its inability to defeat Berlusconi on his at times near-total control of television and the press. Not in the United States, where the two presidential candidates last year spent USD1billion on television ads alone. Not in New Zealand, where political leaders are chosen on the basis of the media narrative that can be constructed around them, and must undergo extensive and seemingly unending media training as soon as they assume said leadership. Not in Australia, where the former leader of the Labor party defined viable policy as policy that could be explained on the current affairs show Today Tonight, and the supporters of the current leader make a virtue – and a shield – of the attacks she is subjected to from the conservative media. Not, I suspect, in any other country you might care to mention.
We have been taught for decades that political reality is framed through the mainstream media and by the mainstream media, a lesson often delivered in hectoring terms to the naïve idealist. Now, this. Not just the unlikely but the impossible has happened. The eight and a half million people who voted for the Five Star Movement belong to a country that nobody thought existed. A country whose reality is not defined by the press nor, more importantly, by television.
Even as I write this I realise I’m making it sound like a good thing, which perhaps it is. I happen to think the Five Star Movement is an anti-democratic and anti-progressive force, and have said so in my post-election analysis for Overland, but there are greater odds than usual that I might be wrong: we’re all scrambling to make sense of something that is quite explosive and new. However today I just want to talk about the existence of this other country: a country of over eight million people that has stopped believing in television.
When Beppe Grillo last appeared on television, in 1994, he made a joke about sounding like Howard Beale, the character played by Peter Finch and scripted by Paddy Chayefsky in the film Network. He asked his audience to warn him in case he lost control and crossed the line into mad prophet. He would then put on a clown’s red nose, to remind himself as much as the audience of who he really was. This was long before Grillo discovered blogging and the internet, a medium on which he could play Finch’s character without living a contradiction. Say ‘I’m mad as hell’ and mean it. Say ‘Turn off your television sets’ and mean it. There is in fact one little contradiction, if you look closely: that Grillo first became famous as a television comedian, in the early 80s. But at that time television reigned supreme and there really was no alternative to its hegemony. Now however you could imagine somebody like him becoming a famous entertainer without ever needing to court television. With a little more effort you could even imagine a movement similar to Five Stars growing without its charismatic (and despotic) leader.
We may be at the threshold of a new age, many times announced and yet only now finally materialising. An age in which the internet has surpassed television and print media as the primary means of framing the social and the political.
And still I realise I make it sound like a good thing, which perhaps it is. But we are not lacking for clues that it could go either way. The internet, even more than television or print, invites its users to think that it is all there is. And if the internet is all there is, then we should expect it to redefine what it means to be a person and to have a personal history; to erase class and race, purport to remove all social barriers; to define progress and equality in its own terms. (Hence the talk of digital citizenship, whereas nobody ever talked of television citizenship.) In its apotheosis, this line of thinking leads – as it has – to people planning not just to spend their life on the internet, but their afterlife as well. In the beginning was the medium, which was the message, which was the word. And that word was God, or the internet.
This particular brand of posthumanism has been foreshadowed and theorised for some time, both as the existential concern of individuals and in its social extension. Donna Haraway taught us to think of it creatively as a tool for progressive gender politics, while Katherine Hayles described in more sombre tones how information lost its body. But this is a new phase, and a giant leap from theory. This last election in Italy has given us a concrete glimpse of the potential of the internet to organise and mobilise consensus, no longer as an adjunct obeying the logic of older but still more powerful media, but rather as the single source of all discourse.
For elected members of the Five Star Movement, to appear on television is a crime punishable with expulsion from the organization. This is not a merely strategic stance; it is a quasi-religious one. One medium leads to the truth. Another leads to untruth. Thus the internet becomes its own grand narrative, one capable of reassembling and restructuring the social. Its politics is one of necessity: to do the things that make the internet less constrained, more pervasive. Progress and equality will follow, filling in the grooves traced by the social networks.
Then if one day in this country a new Howard Beale should come, there may no longer be literal windows out of which to shout: ‘I’m mad as hell.’ Or: ‘Turn off your computers.’
Giovanni, fantastic post. As you say, a profoundly ambivalent moment. Much of what you have written could be the synopsis of a Philip K.Dick novel. A world where there is no outside outside. Maybe it will be 'better'.
ReplyDeleteThat's interesting about the moratorium on appearing on TV--what if they recorded an online video that got used in a news clip? Or are they not allowed to be on video at all?
ReplyDeleteI find it dismaying how little critique there is of the internet as medium among young activists. I know quite a lot of people who see it as a tool that will universally uphold social justice, as though its addictive capacity, ability to shorten attention spans and isolate people aren't things to be considered when trying to build community or counteract oppression.
With that is this conception that typing on the internet constitutes activism in totality; for example, the (largely internet-based) Wellington Young Feminists Collective made an update about the Sevens that said: "If you are harassed or made to feel unsafe by jerks, don't forget that you can post about it on Hollaback!" with a link to stories about street harassment in Wellington. It wasn't clear that this would lead to any action to stop harassment. I think this internet worship is partly due to many people taking their first baby steps of activism via Tumblr, and hence posting about intersectionality etc without much understanding of what it means, or of how to put it into practice in the physical world. I also don't think the internet is a great tool for facilitating good listening practices, since everyone can fire off words without witnessing the impact they're having on the other person (e.g. rape 'jokes'). I say that as a huge fan of lengthy internet arguments from which I've learned a hell of a lot, but still.
"That's interesting about the moratorium on appearing on TV--what if they recorded an online video that got used in a news clip? Or are they not allowed to be on video at all?"
ReplyDeleteThey use YouTube as their web TV station, and Grillo has shot a very crude ad (which is really him having a bit of a ramble) with low-on-purpose production values which would alone deserve some unpacking. However this - like the ads made by other members of the movement - is meant to circulate only on the web. I'm not sure if a regular television station has ever picked one up, or if the movement would sue them if they did.
Well this has potential.
ReplyDeleteRe M5S see the Wu Ming post here
ReplyDeletehttp://www.wumingfoundation.com/english/wumingblog/?p=1950
Yes, that's quite good isn't it?
ReplyDeleteEl grillo è buon cantore
ReplyDeleteBlank-eyed indigents leave the station
Che tiene longo verso
while Bowie, ageing, sweetly sings,
Dalle beve grillo canta
"Wh... a.. w. n..?"
Ma non fa come gli altri uccelli
Soon enough, it's all gone digital
Come li han cantato un poco,
Your dusty set, absent its viewers
Van de fatto in altro loco
gathering white noise
Sempre el grillo sta pur saldo,
leaving its imprint in lint and fright:
Quando la maggior el caldo
A rotten hulk gives up its technology
Alhor canta sol per amore
A runner surfaces, then drowns.
Immagino sia abbastanza facile sparare sentenze dall'alto del tuo baccelierato in un'altro paese, magari sei all'estero proprio perché in quello schifo di paese in cui se non hai un aggancio mafioso (mafioso nel senso più ampio del termine) non riesci nemmeno a trovare un posto da bidello indipendentemente dal numero dei tuoi master. Ora fa un favore ai tuoi interlocutori e ammetti che semplicemente ti sei basato, per i tuoi commenti, a quello che ti è arrivato come notizia dal sistema dei media del paese che per libertà di stampa sta dopo il Zimbabwe. Ma non lo farai e il perché è chiaro: perché tu rappresenti così compostamente quel sistema in disgregazione, seduto sui tuoi credo sentenziando e vaticinando come solo il meglio della cultura cattolico/democristiana ci ha insegnato così bene! Ho visto che ci sono un sacco di followers ai tuoi commenti...Grillo ha iniziato così no?
ReplyDelete