Report for the seminar of Revolutionary Socialism/Socialist Utopia
(Assisi, July 10, 1992)
1. “Legend” of the three wayfarers
It is far from easy to analyze in a lecture
the relations that exist or may be established between those three elements
indicated in the title. About the mutual dependence of culture and
communication only, oceans of ink have been spilled and numerous scholars on
social systems and mass communication have dealt with the topic. But, somehow,
we must take the bull by the horns.
We will attempt to move forward from an
allegorical image which, as it is the case with images used in a symbolic
explicative function, will increase its metaphoric value in the very course of
the exposition.
Let us suppose for a moment that we are
here in Assisi but one thousand years ago, on July 992. Let us imagine
ourselves on this hill while three wayfarers dressed in medieval costumes
proceed along that country path.
One of them could be a merchant, heading to some country fair for
business; or maybe the member of an artisans corporation; or a nobleman with no intentions to
seclude himself in a convent or to stay home playing the role of the second son
in line for the rest of his life and has decided to wander around the world
(that world…). Whichever of those three he might be, we can consider him at all
effects an individual
with the characteristics of his epoch and, in the last hypothesis, even a
person who would like to refrain from the obligations of family or nobility
effective in those centuries of the Italian Middle Ages. In any case, he is a
person who is conscious of his individuality and is willing to defend it.
A typical figure of those centuries
anteceding the year One thousand is walking alongside him: a wandering minor
clerk, an expert in
several arts, a student –not from university because universities simply have
not yet started to function (that of Bologna will begin officially in 1088,
less than a century after). There
are indeed other centers of reclusion and fellowship for those devoted to
studies, mostly in the religious field since the official “high” culture was
essentially theological or, in any case, submitted to the undemocratic guidance
of the Roman catholic clergy and its ramifications; that was the period’s
hegemonic culture whether it dealt with interpretation of the Scriptures in
their new translations or the movements of the stars or the echelons of animal
creation. We will thus summarily call this second figure a “student” while
considering him a most appropriate representation of middle and medieval
culture.
The third wayfarer can be no other than a minstrel, a juggler, a troubadour, a pioneer in
Occitan verse, arrived in Italy who knows why or invited by who knows who. We
can picture him with a hurdy-gurdy in his sack, or a lute or any other wind or
plucked-string instrument. The important thing is that this figure travels from
court to court, from prince to prince – from Aquisgrain to Perugia, from
Sevilla to Viterbo, from Canterbury to Paris – frequently treading upon, for
lay more than religious reasons, the same roads which pilgrims from other
countries take along the Via Francígena to the alleged Roman sepulcher of Peter
the apostle or down the Santiago de Compostela road where, in the preceding
century, a tomb had been discovered and attributed to Jacob the Major. This artist-musician- poet-traveller incarnates in reality
the “journalist” if not the epoch’s “oral journal”: he is the one who transfers
news and the new ways of poetizing, of music and culture; he does it from
village to village, from bishopric to bishopric.
We are not to think, however, that the
representation of these three figures, going together and apparently to the
same destination, is an invention of mine. In fact, we know a lot about their
convergence in the socio-historic realities of their time, whether thanks to
the chronicles of their contemporaries or to the more recent work of scholars.
But we also count on some materials –literary and musical at the same time- in
those goliardic, celebratory, erotic, moralizing and even licentious
street-and-tavern songs known as Carmina Burana.
Well, the Carmina Burana – whose musical performances usually raise a
real musicological debate and which many of you have enjoyed in the 1937 Carl
Orff’s version- offer a coherent representation in the three afore mentioned
figures. Produced in no specific social or geographic point, anonymous and
alien to the official “high” culture, these Carmina were pleasurably composed
or listened to by travellers, passing merchants, wandering priests, students
and bards: a concentrate of high and low culture, of languages noble (Latin
above all, deformed though it may be) and popular (from High German to vulgar
Italian); a knowledge of musical traditions, from Gregorian chant to the new
poetry of troubadours, with certain elements of pneumatic writing; an effective
synthesis in the popular arts field of spiritual trends and thought which could
be common to the three allegorical subjects at the starting point of our
discourse.
2. An emblematic maître-à-penser of
our times
Let us now take a one thousand year leap
and move on to the current 1992, in the same Assisi alley, and try to imagine a
contemporary trio of characters which may allow me to carry out an analogous
synthesis: three sociocultural figures emblematic enough to incarnate, more or
less definitely, certain general expressions of the individual, culture and
communication with the same denseness of the preceding trio and –why not? – the
same aesthetic beauty of the Carmina Burana’s musical translation.
As to such effort my failure is complete: I
have found nothing capable of functioning as a modern equivalent to the
allegory of the three wayfarers, the Carmina, etc., nor anything concrete and
visible enough to enable me to metaphorically connect the individual’s modern
demands with the exigencies of modern culture and communication. Nor have I
been able to find any synthesis, mental production, visual, literary or sound
representation.
I have thus decided to resort to a
compromising solution and to accept the first image which, through association
of ideas, has come to mind, to then confront it with the synthetic capacity,
historicity and coherence of the previous trinity. And it is so that, whether
you like it or not, whether you believe it or not, the image that has come to
my mind is that of a great journalist of our time: Giorgio Bocca [1920-2012, note
from 2012].
I have then imagined this professional
trouble-maker of our epoch, treading upon the same country road, in July 1992.
And the first thing I have been forced to ascertain is that this is not an
individual. I mean to say
that, as long as we refer to a flesh and blood man who walks, eats, defecates
and relates to others, Bocca would be an individual like any one of us.
Nevertheless, if we refer to the journalist, the author of books and
reportages, to his thinly disguised aspiration to function as a maître-à-penser
of our wretched Italy (so
much and so justly despised by him), it becomes evident that we are no longer
facing a real individual but an image.
It is an image that has separated from the
individual and already goes its own path, made out of television appearances,
compromises and skirmishes with newspapers’ directors. An image produced,
broadcasted and amplified by the media or, if you prefer, by that sector of the
spectacular society which intends to entertain the new generations of the Left
with the myth of the partisans’ war (a myth which, deprived from class
connotations and according to Bocca’s own goals, functions very well), with a
superficial laicism or with the myth of independence as a career (an oxymoron
perfectly incarnated by Bocca inasmuch as a 100% media image built by the
current communication system). As a television character, Bocca more or less
critically relates to the television power system (which we shall discuss); as
an author of books, he relates to the editorial power system; as a journalist,
he relates, more or less critically, to the newspapers’ system and its massive
operation of falsification of the social and political reality in which we
live. As a whole, he relates to the mass communication system, a cultural
ramification of dubious dignity.
I am pleased to have chosen the figure of
one of the less corrupt and dishonest specimens in the Italian journalistic
milieu, for thus the attention will easily be guided to the objective datum,
that is to say, to the work of Great falsification collectively carried out by
the private and state disinformation system (with or without the complicity of
various Bocca or non-Bocca), independently of the will, capability or honesty
of the individual journalist. A journalist –that specific journalist we are
talking about- who has been formed in the system and that, practically
speaking, has also shown discreet qualities in the areas of communication and
culture ( as a historian, research editor, defender of certain guarantees in
the judiciary field, etc.). In short, Bocca offers to us a balanced, dignified
and middle-high image in the cultural sense of a “critical” journalistic model
at the service, anyhow, of the media-oriented requirements of the system while
apparently respectful of the liberal-democratic principles which promoted this
sort of journalism and which should, in theory, keep on sustaining it.
Had I chosen the image of a Maurizio
Costanzo –to name but an instance well known even to somebody like me who has
never had a T. V. set- we would inexorably descend to the level of low, very
low culture and would have had to immediately renounce the quest for any
symbolic quality able to work, in this second type of journalist, for our
metaphorical representation in its unity-trinity ambivalence.
Paradoxically enough, the fact of resorting
to the image of a great scientist or artist would not have worked at all
because we would have been biased towards a high or even very high cultural
side. With Bocca, we have a satisfactory middle level, a balance between the
aspiration for a middle-high culture and a commitment with an everyday reality
made out of a middle or low popular culture: we should almost talk of a
national-popular equilibrium –something Bocca certainly would not like to be
rewarded with.
I hope, then, to have made myself clear and
that we might agree on this fact: in the picture of our allegorical
representation, on that Assisi alley there is no such thing as an individual
walking but an image, however emblematic of the “public vices
and virtues” of our time.
3. It is not a unifying expression of
Culture
Culture does not walk through this image, not even a specific cultural
or subcultural dimension. Who
would dare saying that a journalist, even with such level and capacities as
Bocca’s, is able to provide today a significant or trustworthy testimony of our
cultural world?
The organization of culture, its system of
production, reproduction and diffusion has reached such levels of complexity
that not even the most encyclopedic of living intellectuals could provide a
representation of it or give a first person synthesis, neither as an individual
nor as journalistic lobby, nor as a research team, intellectual trend, etc.
While in the transitional phases from the High to the Low Middle Ages we would
have been able to enclose in some great humanist’s personality a representative
cultural synthesis, a comprehensive expression of the best of the epoch’s
culture, it is clear in our day that there is no place for such figures,
historic and symbolic at the same time, like a Marsilio Ficino or a Da Vinci
or, later, a Giordano Bruno. And this, I insist, as a result of the complexity
and ampleness of artistic development in middle or middle-high (not to mention
high) culture, as well as of the levels of specialization required in specific
terrains whether it is mathematics, visual arts or engineering.
Beyond the system’s complexity and the inadequacy
of its representative subjects, we are not to forget either the question of
those spaces where cultural production takes place: elusive and, frequently
enough, impalpable spaces always and anyway conditioned by money, political
affiliation and the demands of a mass-level spectacular society. An issue we
are compelled to put aside however worth of deeper analysis.
4. It is not a unifying expression of
communication
Now we must ask ourselves if this
non-individual who does
not carry culture is, at least, a vehicle of communication. Being a well-known
journalist and notorious character of the world of television, the most natural
and trivial answer would seem to be the affirmative one. Gosh! How not to
recognize Bocca, or his associated (or substituting) journalistic image as a
broadcaster of messages, an amplifier of issues, a connector of different and
interrelated communicative contexts: in short, a media-based bridge between
various constitutive elements of mass communication. Well, this third element
of my threefold entity was doubtless the most insidious and liable to be taken
for granted of them all. I have had, therefor, to give it even more reflecting
time, only to arrive once more to a negative certainty: no, on the Assisi alley
etc., etc., the image of the famous journalist does not even carry along
communication, in a
comprehensive, emblematic and structurally integrated sense.
4a. He cannot carry it, then, due to an instrumental,
say material, concretion.
The medieval or proto- renaissance troubadour carried along with him those
instruments to communicate which, in general, he also owned: the voice, a
hurdy-gurdy, a lute, a drum or, in particular cases (for instance, in street
theater), also the wardrobe. If a given Bocca or present day expert in mass
communication were to carry his own professional instruments, five vans would
not be enough to contain the whole load of television paraphernalia of
microphones, amplifiers, but also rotogravures, linotypes, computers or
everyday press files classified as to date and topics (without which a
journalist would feel practically naked). [This last consideration is actually
obsolete, in the light of informatics’ development affecting systems of filing
and classification in the web, with Wikipedia, Google, etc. Note from 2012]. Nor he would certainly feel satisfied
with owning or transporting exclusively Italian newspapers’ editorial councils
or properties for also in the mass communication world there is a
multi-nationalization process of the press, editorial councils, television
stations and an international concentration of journalistic and T.V.
ownerships. Yesterday [July 9, 1992] the news read that the holders of La
Reppublica journal have
bought the 17 % of a Portuguese newspaper, just like that, as if it were the
most natural thing in the world…of the press. And many other massive property
displacements have been going on in the field of journals and big editorial
groups, at least, since the end of Second World War. And in the U. S. even
before that.
4b.
But that journalist we have chosen as an emblem cannot carry with him or
transmit communication with a minimum of perfection or representativeness, above
all, because of ideological reasons which could be, in a ultimate analysis, also
political. The cultural heritage he represents is barely a component (whether
more or less important is debatable) of the dominant cultural system. This
system is constituted by the accumulation and elaboration of information, news,
artistic manifestations, linguistic transformations etc., carried out through
centuries of bourgeois permanence in power. And it reflects, rightly or
wrongly, the multiple and profound differentiations that time and class
struggle have operated inside this social class, rigidly national before and
now in a process of increasing internationalization (even if it has not yet cut
its genetic identification with National States and Individual Country).
Not even a cultivated and “cult” journalist
such as Bocca can speak in the name of the whole social bourgeois front, much
less of the ensemble of political parties which represent it or with which the
bourgeoisie decides, eventually, to establish relationships of privilege (from
the extreme right to the so-called extreme left). Our journalist-symbol, when
he does not speak or writes simply in his own name, does it in the name of a
fraction of the bourgeois front, a fraction, to make things worse, slippery and
chameleonic, in constant transformation. Such a fraction is, in its turn,
subject as a “mother” social class to the pressures of a socio-political
mutation which no longer possesses the secular rhythms of the year 992 and of a
great part of the following millennium, but it goes on progressively acquiring
faster and more uncontrollable rhythms.
In short, he does not transmit authentic
communication 1) because he is not speaking in the name of the bourgeoisie as a
whole nor of its decisive components; 2) because he cannot speak of those
transformations intervening in the social body in real time, neither can he
adapt his own analysis to the frenetic rhythms of social and cultural change;
3) because he must continuously confront the negative impact of that
transformation in the political field: no wonder Bocca has had the wisdom to
keep himself outside of the melee, preferring to consider himself a living
anachronism with his explicit appeal to the founding principles of Justice and
Liberty and of the Party-in-action.
We must add that he cannot even talk in the
name of an alleged socio-political opposition which is itself fragmented and
reluctant to recognize itself in the message of this or that tribune, of this
or that supposedly charismatic character, of this or that party secretary or
leftist anchorman [which is what Bertinotti is about to become, Note from
2012]. Fragmentariness,
dispersion, impossibility to sustain the change-frenzy…these are some of the
elements which contribute to provide a realist picture of the “minorityness” of
the individual intellectual’s message (whether he is a journalist, politician,
cardinal, union or university baron), no matter how talented, well-trained and
privileged in material and professional assets. To the fragmentation and
diversification of the social body (and its reproductive processes) corresponds
an analogous fragmentation-diversification of the mass communication system; we could even say that the latter is
greater thus contributing to further diversification in the social tissue.
Wandering clerics or troubadours, with their Carmina Burana, unified, rendered homogeneous and made
circulate a certain type of culture that, even if was not an expression of the
society of the period as a whole, did represent it in some of its conspicuous
sectors (from the monastery to the university, from the market to the nascent
theatre on the road to institutionalization), layers of social classes in
ascent, at times the “best” ones, under the quantitative profile of a
bourgeoisie in formation, then arising and finally dominating. (In this
respect, our allegory could move forward in time and attempt to recommence with
three different figures from the end of the XVIII century, the Enlightenment
and French Revolution onward: who knows if and how much this could work).
It would not be far-fetched to apply to
those sociocultural layers in ascent, from that past in slow transformation,
the definition of elites coined
by modern Sociology (from Mosca or Pareto on). Whether or not this retroactive
use of the term is valid, it is a fact that those “medieval” elites represented
anyhow the most active, studious, critical and modernizing part of society;
they contributed essentially to the diffusion of the best that the “mass
intelligentsia” of each epoch was able to produce, and that other elites were
prompt to disseminate geographically and socially speaking.
We would then agree that none of that can
be applied to the modern castes of journalists, scholars, politicians and
controllers of mass communication. In our time there is no longer a qualitative
correspondence to the wandering clerics, jugglers, alchemists or preachers of
long ago. Only the corrupt figures
of servile courtiers and mercenaries could match with the current partisan,
parliamentary or media castes. But the appetites and ruinous influence of the
modern courtesan castes are stronger and not comparable to those of their
medieval colleagues.
4c.
I could add a few considerations as to the fact that today there is no longer
“information”, “artistic" manifestation or cultural content impervious to
the contact of the political mainstream which, in every industrialized country,
determine the good or bad weather of the everyday parliamentary life, filling
the “blanks” between one political campaign and the other. In countries such as
Italy, France and Germany (and why not thinking also of some Latin American
countries) where the party system practically dominates the ensemble of
cultural manifestations, the opportunities for a career improvement or the
alleged professionalization of cultural operators themselves, this is but
blatant. And the influence of party systems on the diffusion of communication
represents an internal cancer, one further element of fragmentation which dooms
communication itself to an always faster trivialization in historical terms.
Out of all the everyday political blab (from newsreels to television agoras, from
show-congresses to the ever-growing homologation of partisan press) the amount
of information which becomes sediment in time and conforms a lasting message is
always smaller. Decadent debates, superficial analyses, biased hostility
towards the demands of theoretical elaboration, the shameful political
pragmatism of the “lesser evil”, the genetic assimilation of the ill-fated
theory of end justifying means (well represented in Italy by Togliattismo) make
us clearly realize that this rhythm of trivialization will not permit the
preservation of a heritage in qualitative or propositional terms favorable for
future generations and intellectual elites, political or not, to grow and
confront themselves with.
I am referring to the right, center, left
and, an innovation respect the postwar period (at least since the end of the
60’), to the extreme left too. And nevertheless, while this general decadence
intensifies itself, the Defensor Pacis, by Marsilio di Padova (1275-1342) –to only quote a
great work which irritated the Church much before Erasmus and Giordano Bruno-
is still being published, read and commented, as a matter of fact, with
pleasure and profit. Other texts-symbols destined to remain in time could be
mentioned, also because they are not so many. Precisely…
4d. In the year 992, there was nothing that could be considered a symptom or
pioneering expression of the temporal damage exerted by the party system on the
growth and dissemination of an authentic mass culture and, therefore, it is not
possible to make comparisons. Only the Catholic Church –thanks to its relative
immobility throughout the centuries- has retained a role comparable to the one
it then had, but such an aspect goes beyond our reflection. And it must have
been noticed that the monk (or the friar) a noteworthy figure in the year 992,
if not during all of the Middle Ages, was not included in our happy trio in the
opening.
A deliberate choice, since the real or
symbolic figure of the friar used to exclude eventually the expression of
individuality. By definition, that expression had to dissolve in Jesus/God
(especially in the case of Franciscans) and, even if he was a preacher, he
should not preach anything new outside the convent’s walls, apart from a
variously interpreted Christological message. But we must also acknowledge that
many of those friars – since the creation of the Benedictine order, but not
only- were unconsciously contributing to the preservation of classical culture
(“high” in such sense) through their work as copyists and amanuenses. A work
which, nevertheless, they carried out as an act of self-mortification and
devotion towards the divine and with no ambition whatsoever translatable in
terms of increase or expansion of “mass communication”, inasmuch as that could
be then understood. In literary terms, that intellectual world has been
magnificently described by Umberto Eco in The name of the rose.
No. The preaching friar, or amanuensis or
heretic martyr would not have been able to join our happy trio. But that is no
reason to undermine the importance of his work within the collectiveness of the
Order or, in certain cases, of his personal testimony. Here, in Assisi, I do
not need to proceed any further with that topic, even if I would like to open a
chapter on the artistic figurations of some of the things I am pointing at.
5. Spectacular mass society
I hope that this procedure which began with
the allegorical image of the unifying trio, has been, first, agreeable for
those of you who are listening; then comprehensible and, finally, useful. My
secret ambition was that of summarizing in some phrases and symbolic images the
ultimate sense of those libraries full of volumes describing or reconstructing
the way we have passed from fundamentally oral cultures (i. e., those built
upon the transmission of the word which have continued their momentum even in
times when writings were transmitted in manual form) to typographic cultures
(the Gutenberg era, when writing started its journey reproduced by the press,
in place of words) to reach the present epoch constituted by cultures based
mainly on images (visual, film or telecast representations): an epoch, let us
say it, dominated by the spectacular transformation of any cultural
manifestation –whether it is creative, conformist, individual or collective-
into consumer goods.
I am referring, obviously, to that new mode
of dominating cultural life and the communication system which, in his 1967
book, Guy Debord defined as spectacular society. A text we consider as decisively referential as its
successive interpretations.
Video representation (such as television,
computerized elaboration, telecast communication, etc.) and the other systems
of production and broadcasting of images which scientific progress will, little
by little, make more and more economical –thus, enjoyable in real time and
available for the consumption of millions, and very soon, billions of
individuals- concentrate in themselves the control of all forms of mass
communication. That is to say that all those forms of communication which are
transferable in industrial technology gadgets are, therefore, liable to be
reproduced, commercialized and consumed by an individual, a group, an ethnic
minority, a nation… and the whole of humanity, provided that market laws could
act unhindered.
6. Cinema
You have probably noticed that, so far, I
have not named or included cinema –understood as world of filmic production- in
the criticism of the video-dependent society. Perhaps that is explained by a
personal insufficiency, or by the fact that I have not recovered from the
effects of a precocious youthful love affair with the Tenth Muse (or Seventh
Art). I still think, as a matter of fact, that such world has its own specific
characteristics of language, at the same time noble and plebeian, since its
very conception which, in any case, are not to be reduced to the spectacular
element in itself or to the video-dependence that also the cinema might have
induced in the spectator but which, in fact, it has not induced. We know today
that the video-dependence was born with television and it is there that it has
originally affirmed itself.
Cinema can be essentially considered (who
knows till when) an instrument of figurative entertainment, more and maybe better than theater may
have been so far in its various forms (from farce to the new avant-garde,
passing through sacramental representations, street theatre, etc.), and in the
same hereditary line. In spite of huge technological progress, the movies still
retain –and seem to increase “as time goes by”- its own constitutive traits and
potentialities according to periods and places as well as its validity in terms
of aesthetical enjoyment, artistic creativity, psycho-sociological inquiry,
historiographical synthesis, allegorical constructions, plain narration and so
forth, according to genre, author, paymasters and trends.
Maybe I am deluding myself as to the
autonomic nature of filmic resources but I would like, just the same, to wield
the evocative swing of certain movies (and, obviously enough, of certain
theatre) to take my criticism beyond those degenerative and invasive processes
characterizing the spectacular society and mass communication. Time will tell
how justified is my bias towards big screen creations.
7. The globalizing, or totalitarian,
invasiveness of television
Many have already written, and many more
will still write in the future, about the decline or the end, of that era known
as the “Gutenberg Galaxy”: a beautiful suggestive definition formulated with
scarce analytic capacities in a (much celebrated and quoted but, evidently, not
so often read) book by Marshall McLuhan. With this term, already accepted in
everyday language, reference is made to a process -perfectly traceable in
historic terms– of increasing inferiority of writing in relation to the iconic power, the power of images or however you
want to call it.
For the sake of being synthetic, I will say
that living as contemporaries within this process, our mind goes towards the televising
instrument (and,
inductively, towards the surrounding world), neglecting, due to imperatives of
concision, all that which, being beautiful and useful, is transmitted or born
still within the realm of the visual: from the ever enhanced technical, thus
industrial and massive reproducibility of artistic products -today also enjoyable through a massive
“fast home delivery”, however deprived of the “cultist” aura described by
Benjamin – to the communicating immediacy of a certain type of cinema we have already mentioned; from
the ever growing symbiotic integration of several arts in multimedia products
(video, poetry, cartoons, music, colors, sounds, odors, different techniques of
multi-dimensionality) to the use or reconstruction of real or presumable settings as a
scholarly back up to paleontology, archeology, historiography, etc., to
scientific and literary didactics in general.
7a. The first unmistaken characteristic of television
–which no other communication means has ever had in the past – is its global
and totalizing character: it
concentrates in itself the media-based representation (sometimes made-up,
always artificial) of the whole of our epoch, meaning everything mankind produces in
any given historic-political circumstance, in any given form (physical or
virtual). In the televising system, renouncing their respective autonomies and
with no hope of return, all precedent communication forms have coalesced.
This system has absorbed all specific forms
of writing (literary,
erotic, vulgar, poetic, political, advertising, etc.); it has appropriated, and
flattened even more, the monopoly of daily or weekly information which was
previously held by periodicals in their plurality of styles and trends: just take a look at how many
do not buy the paper anymore in the kiosks because there is the T.V. news
anyway…
Television has supplanted the traditional
functions of the publishing house, either by usurping the classical “literary
initiation rites” (why reading Salgari´s novels after watching the grotesque
cine-televising series devoted to Sandokan?); or by assuming (acquiring it in
virtual and counterfeited auctions) the literary authority to establish which
books the uncouth masses should read, which should be placed in specific market
niches even if those niches are constituted by irreducible contradictors of the
dominating culture. The psychology treatise written by a well-known footballer
could only compete in the literary-teledependent market with the manual of
soccer technique written by a famous psychiatrist. And since we have reached
this point, we have no other choice but to recite a de profundis for the creative independence of the
literary work, whether it is fiction or essay, understood in editorial terms
and admitting that a minimal authority of the creating individual can remain
intact, even if at a high cost and with a lot of effort, outside the
editorial-televising canons.
But, to ask a still more banal question:
how much reading time is devoted instead to watch T. V.? As far as I know,
there are no researches on this topic and if such confrontations were carried
out, the editorial-televising world would do anything to stop them from coming
into public light.
The world of figurative arts suffers a similarly devastating influence,
according to analogous mechanisms. Not to mention the music world, whether classical or
young-generations music (from consumer rock to mega-concerts, live raves, etc.)
7b. It would also be necessary to comment football
fanaticism – as well as
the likes in other team games- already identified with those spectacular rites
broadcasted basically through television channels. The rites of football fans
–in the stadium, at home or on the streets- manage to get millions of (mainly
male) individuals involved, nourishing their fanaticism or, in any case, the
intensification of more or less temporal states of mental disturbance. This is
going on with increasing regularity all over the country, in most towns and in
different times of the day, the fact being irrelevant that most fans will not
be able to directly attend games. I think that this phenomenon is widely known
and very little could be added about the fact of massive mental brutalization
as expressed by this sort of fanaticism, stimulated by the televising system in
all possible, open or disguised, manners.
As to the other source of irrational
attachment, fashion
(this time a basically, though not exclusively, female phenomenon), television
exerts a similar role, by unleashing a wave of publicity and parades, even if
it can be a more varied and, at times, also aesthetically-motivated phenomenon.
7c. I would add a reference to religion – mainly catholic in Italy and elsewhere
acting according to the supremacy of one of the three big monotheistic, or
revealed, religions. In its cultist manifestations, catholic religion can be
considered as a particular and spectacular form of mass communication. While
television is proving to be, ever more, an “all-mighty” instrument for
religious propaganda and marginalization of those individuals who are
anti-religious, atheists, agnostics, freethinkers in general, but also of
followers of other religions as well as of protestant Christians, etc. The
total and unchallenged control the Vatican exerts upon the Italian televising
system as well as upon stupefied layers of the population, has become the main instrument
of clericalism in the social and cultural life of the people, the State,
institutions, childhood, scholastic life, etc., suffocating any libertarian or
autonomously thinking instance. The Vatican has played its most decisive move
in the televising field during the 50’, winning from the very start and
consolidating its victory when the clericalism started also to permeate the
ex-Left (in Italy from the late 70’ onward).
We have to keep an eye on this, because, by
controlling the televising system, the Vatican reinforces even more its
capacity to control the education system which is, anyway, totally subservient to Church
demands in various areas (didactic contents, teaching of religion, ceremonies
of chiefly religious festivities, the appointment of professors of religion,
the obsessive presence of Christological symbols, etc.). Through the televising
mechanism, such ecclesiastical mass control of conscience is reinforced and
reaches an almost monopolistic condition.
8. Where are we heading to? The
impotence of political science (fiction)
Whether we agree or not with this
distopical description of an Orwellian universe –in which the combined activity
of mass communications (mostly absorbed by the televising world, by images
produced or broadcasted through video, by the computer’s new potentialities),
tends to penetrate, in a totalitarian sense, people’s lives – we could coincide
in a corroboration: the cultural communication system is no longer liable to be
reduced or trusted to an individual, however charismatic (I think, in the first place, of
that great communicator that Francesco d’ Assisi was, in the Mediterranean
environment, that is, in the “cultural” world of the period) and not even to a
collectively structured group of individuals, such as the Jesuits or those prominent philosophical
schools which were at times capitalized by outstanding catholic personalities
(not only Franciscans) in important universities such as Oxford, Prague, Paris,
Bologna, etc. Even more, that system can no longer be reduced not even to a
political caste (such as
the fascist party eventually was) nor to a single social class no matter how integrated and homogeneous
it may be. There is no social class able to guarantee the control of a system
so diversified in its numerous ramifications and, at the same time, so openly
monopolistic in its exercising of power and in its work of commercializing and
spectacularizing any form of human activity.
We would add, to the obvious sociological
considerations about the diversification of classes, classist fronts, strata,
sectors, etc., the revolution operated by technological development in the field of mass communications or
mass media. Such a revolution has not stopped at the threshold of the totalitarian
tele-transformation of
social and cultural life, but has moved forward at an even faster pace and with
innovatory rhythms which no political, economic or scientific subject can
safely control. And the difference between technological and social control is
doomed to become greater in the future, and at an accelerated rate.
It is hard, from this perspective, not only
to answer how but even
to imagine where we are
marching on. And it will become eventually harder. Political science fiction,
literary distopies and scientific social prognoses seem to coincide in their
incapacity to foresee the arrival point of such processes and the duration of
their trajectories. We don’t know where to nor how nor when. Probably, we don’t
even know why, although at least some of us keep on wondering. We, however,
know the present or are able to know it. Or, better said, some of us can
attempt to know it.
9. The delay of conscience in
relation to technological development as applied to mass communication
We live in an epoch where no individual or
structured group of individuals –from lobbies to dominating social classes- has
anymore the chance to exert a monopolistic, real, lasting and one-sided control
upon the mass communications system. At a certain point –for some, it started
with radio, for others with television, for others still with the adoption of
the satellite system in 1973-74 and, finally, with the creation of informatics
and its adoption in communicative webs [the official constitution of the World
Wide Web (www) took place the following year, note from 2012] – the communication system has been
certified by technological development, becoming, step by step, more autonomous
than any other form of social, economic or political control.
This has been a characteristic novelty of
the current mass media which had not verified itself in previous epochs: for
instance, in the troubadour’s hurdy-gurdy or in the wandering cleric’s goose
feather the levels of existing progress in musical or writing technologies of
the times, were not reflected because those levels were already much higher.
And the identification itself of communicating media with the radio, first, and
then with television, took place decades after the elaboration of the
scientific bases for the production of such instruments. Needless to say that
the initial delay has been met and definitely left behind with the constitution
of a very close (interactive) connection between technology’s scientific
development and its practical application to the world of mass communication
(no less than in the fields of weapons, spatial research, systems of espionage,
etc.).
It used to be admitted, along with Marx,
that mankind’s development has always shown a certain delay in conscience as to
the conditions of existence. Adding, nonetheless, that the human being has been
the only representative of the animal world capable not only to accumulate knowledge
and question it from its very origins, but who also, at a given point –soon
enough in relative terms of human history- has created instruments which made
it possible to reproduce the already accumulated knowledge, with or without the
correlated presence of eventual inventors, whether during their lifetimes,
after their passing or in the course of centuries, etc.
Electricity was probably the first
technologically modern invention which allowed a strong contraction of times
between massive application of new technology and its use in the communications
field. Radio, television and cybernetics itself (whether it is called
“informatics” or with the generic term “electronics”) are off-springs of that
leap forward promoted by electricity. In the future, nevertheless, the human
hunt for innovation will assume even more ambitious forms and today we could
foresee or presume that the next qualitative and scientifically important step
will be the application of atomic physics to the world of mass
communications.
Formidable things will happen! And maybe
that will be already verifiable in the next generations, with the passing to
the new millennium. The year 2000, seen in the perspective of the growth of
mass communications, is a creepy fantasy. How to forget that in my childhood
and adolescence the mere fact of saying “two thousand” had an unmistaken
science fiction air.
Given the fact that in the last half a
century the most significant changes in people’s behavior have been introduced
by transformations in the mass media, it does not seem far-fetched to predict
that, at the threshold of 2000 and after, the application of electronics and
computer techniques to these communication media will induce the bigger and
deeper modifications in people’s everyday life. A process we are already
living.
Scientific development will have its small
share of responsibility in this transformation, while the application of
electronics, in a more massive way, to the technology of mass communications
will have the greatest responsibility in the upcoming and quite foreseeable
changes in the field of human relations. We may witness the intensification of
a phenomenon already foreseen during the Renaissance, when the
scientific-technical development began to escape the control and comprehension
of a gradually growing human community while the gap between this community and
that of humanists and scientists became deeper.
In the “avant-garde” of this breach,
philosophers occupied an outstanding space. From the early XIX century on, they
stopped having professional links with art, science or work organization,
becoming, almost all of them, university professors, that is to say, a very
precise social category. In Kant, the astronomer and scholar, both sides seem
to still retain some balance, but with the triumph of German idealism, such
transformation spread, becoming overwhelming and, in due time, irreversible:
the world of contemporary “philosophers” is already made up everywhere by a
growing cosmopolitan academic caste, substantially apart from the world of science,
certainly in operative terms, but also in theoretical ones.
This phenomenon, nevertheless, is in turn
inserted in certain degenerative processes of the spectacular society which
tend to assimilate the “philosopher”-professor to other categories of the
intellectual world. Degenerative processes responsible for the fact that the
human communities’ conscience has been losing terrain in relation to science,
even if the latter radically transformed the conditions of existence.
Religion endeavored and goes on
determinedly endeavoring to widen this breach but, obviously, there were many
other factors at play in this unstoppable and impetuous process.
That old apothegm according to which
mankind can only solve those problems it is able to pose to itself, does it
still make any sense or is it already obsolete?
I hope this reflection –even if unable to
answer the previous question- at least encourages us to pose it.
I am not a lover of quotations, maybe out
of respect for those great predecessors who, probably, knew exactly what they meant at the moment of letting certain phrases out. Nevertheless, given the origins of the organization which has invited me to talk, I would like to finish expressing the wish that we may reach, as soon as possible, a social system in which the development of technology, with its possible applications, can be used only to achieve those two ends Trotsky indicated (in Their moral and ours) as the only worthy of a truly revolutionary perspective: to increase ever more the power of control of man over nature and diminish ever more the power of control of man over other men.
These are words that very hardly our three wayfarers down the Assisi country alley would have had the chance to listen to,
but, had they listened they would have had the chance to also share them. As
far as we are concerned, however deep the breach may be between conscience and
the conditions of existence, those words should be subscribed withouthesitation.