Saturday, Mar 29, 2014 12:00 PM EDT
Why we fight about Colbert and Lena Dunham:
Twitter politics are all we have left
Yes, social media's culture wars can get
overheated and silly — because "real" politics is totally broken
Andrew O'Hehir
Topics:
Stephen Colbert,
Politics,
Social Media,
Race,
Racism,
Asian American,
Twitter,
Richard Cohen,
Lena Dunham,
Gilbert Gottfried,
dan snyder,
Washington Redskins,
Seth MacFarlane,
Editor's Picks,
Technology News,
Life News,
Entertainment News
Stephen Colbert (Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas)
First
of all, I don’t get to tell people not to be offended by a joke or a
tweet or some potentially revealing public gaffe, just because I think I
understood it better than they did. Personally, I think Stephen
Colbert’s biggest sin in the dubious “Sensitivity to Orientals” gag that
sparked so much Internet navel-gazing on Friday is that it’s overworked
and not very funny. It was a satirical jab directed at both Rush
Limbaugh and Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder that was highly
dependent on context; stripped of that context by the de-nuancing
machine of Twitter, it came uncomfortably close to the kind of
yahoo-flavored racist ugliness it was mocking. And, Stephen, that joke
was never worth the risk in the first place. What we have here is a
failure of comedy cost-benefit analysis.
But in this case, as in
dozens of others of public discourse gone off the rails, I don’t have
the right to instruct Asian-Americans or other commentators about
whether or not they have been injured or insulted or attacked, or
whether Colbert has something to apologize for. Let’s back up a year, to
the 2013 Oscars: From the comfort of my sofa, I thought Seth
MacFarlane’s “We Saw Your Boobs” musical number was pretty funny, and
that its satirical intention, a takedown of Hollywood sexism and the
“male gaze,” was clear enough. But the signal-to-noise ratio of
MacFarlane’s shtick turned out to be way off, and millions of viewers
received it in the opposite spirit, as a smug white dude making juvenile
and offensive jokes about women’s bodies. So in that sense I was wrong.
I’m still entitled to my private analysis, of course, but as a social
event it wasn’t “funny” at all.
That might sound like I’m adopting
a pose of excessive postmodern caution, or being the bearded dude in
Birkenstocks who goes to the feminist bookstore to pick up chicks. But
it’s more like an important lesson about life in a multivocal and
diverse public culture, a lesson that, yes, white guys with media
megaphones would do well to take seriously. Each of us needs to remember
that our own subjectivity is not a universal condition, and that it was
shaped by social and cultural forces we can’t necessarily see. Without
any perception of your own possible or actual privilege and bias, you
risk becoming the notorious Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen,
utterly convinced that you are an enlightened and reasonable person and
deeply, hilariously wrong.
That
said, I do share the feeling that “progressive” discourse on the
Internet sometimes feels too much like San Francisco in 1991, a shifting
ideological mine field of hyphenate identities, ever-evolving
nomenclature, “subject positions” and “intersectionality.” Attentiveness
to language can lead to jargon-laden nothingness; the decoder ring of
critical theory becomes an all-purpose tool for excavating hidden
racism, sexism, homophobia or other forms of thought-crime. My onetime
Salon colleague Michelle Goldberg recently (and fearlessly) went
straight at this problem in a much-discussed
Nation article
about whether online feminism has become a toxic or puritanical police
state, where those perceived as violating community rhetorical standards
are pounced upon and exposed to public shame.
But the main thing
to notice here is the same thing to notice in the efflorescence of
“politically correct” discourse, and the backlash against it, in the
‘80s and ‘90s. That thing is power, and the question of who really has
it. If you believe that feminist academics in Berkeley and Santa Cruz
did or said dumb and unreasonable things in the P.C. glory days, or if
you think that bloggers of color or LGBT commentators sometimes fly off
the handle over minor perceived ideological offenses, then fine. But
what power do those people have? The power to make others feel unfairly
picked on, or to RT something mean? Let’s compare that to the power held
by the corporate elite caste, the overlords of Wall Street and the City
of London, the national-security state and the prison-industrial
complex. Much of our contemporary political discourse — on the left, and
I believe also on the right — stems from a confusion or misapprehension
about the nature of power, and also from the fact that conventional
politics appear permanently broken.
Now, the fact that the
Internet and social media have opened the doors of the public sphere to
almost everyone, including members of long oppressed or disenfranchised
communities, is a complicated historical development. People have voices
who never had them before, in an environment that rewards volume and
outrage, and does not do well with complicated argumentation or shades
of gray. This can definitely be uncomfortable for those who had gotten
used to holding the mike, but I think you can almost draw an analogy
with affirmative action. Yes, white workers suffered a loss of relative
economic privilege, but it was global macroeconomic forces that drove
down wages, not “unqualified minority applicants.” Blaming a handful of
angry voices for the disordered nature of political discourse is a
similar error.
One of the effects of the newly democratized public
sphere, which isn’t good or bad in itself, is the intense focus on
symbolic and/or rhetorical politics. Almost no division between public
and private discourse is observed, and words — as some of those feminist
academics told us a generation ago — become understood as political
acts. Celebrities’ poorly worded or drunken tweets become political
issues. So do the clueless remarks about sex and gender made by
Republican candidates, the gender pronoun attached to Chelsea Manning
and the 70-year-old nickname of Washington’s football team.
I am
not arguing that those things are unimportant distractions from “real
politics,” or that our cultural focus on such conversations necessarily
detracts from other forms of political action. To use Marxist lingo, the
“superstructure” of ideology and the “base” of economic power are
intimately intertwined. The “Redskins” name reflects a long history of
vicious and patronizing racial stereotyping directed at Native Americans
that went virtually unquestioned until recently (and had pernicious
real-world effects). Ignorant or misogynistic comments about women and
rape made by Todd Akin, Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum and others during
the 2012 campaign reflected a deep anxiety about the social role of
women within conservative politics. The fact that most media outlets
moved rapidly from calling Chelsea Manning “him” to “her” reflected a
new awareness and sensitivity toward trans people, a major step forward
for a community still struggling to find its voice in the national
conversation.
In the contemporary media landscape, however, those virtual politics threaten to become the
only
politics. I see the intense and overheated focus on misbegotten tweets
and malformed public utterances as displaced energy, reflecting the fact
that the official political system is completely paralyzed and
meaningful social and economic change seems unachievable. As I said
earlier, this isn’t limited to the left: It’s easy to mock right-wing
hysteria over the modest market-based reforms of Obamacare (essentially a
conservative scheme in origin) or the Tea Party’s conviction that a
president whose economic policies are slightly to the right of Richard
Nixon is secretly a combination of Patrice Lumumba and Pol Pot.
But it’s
more interesting to ask why these delusions persist: Because the
symbolic politics of Obama’s presidency has driven many white
conservatives nuts, and because the radical downsizing of the federal
government they claim to want cannot be achieved.
Beltway politics
are dominated by passionate and often outrageous partisan rhetoric,
which cannot quite conceal the fact that Congress has become a useless,
paralytic institution that can’t get anything done. Power lies
elsewhere, and remains inaccessible. In a similar fashion, angry wars of
words between and among self-styled progressives on the Internet do not
entirely camouflage the relative powerlessness of everyone involved.
Getting into a comments-thread battle or a Twitter-lather about
Colbert’s bad joke or Lena Dunham’s fashion-magazine shoot or whatever
other outrage
du jour conveys a temporary feeling of
pseudo-power, much as watching MSNBC (or Fox News) crow about the idiocy
of the other side is pseudo-participation in a pseudo-democracy.
I
would even take this a step farther and argue that the symbolic
politics of the Obama presidency — the same factors that drive
right-wingers crazy — are exactly what liberals and progressives like
about it. I mean, what other explanation is there? Here we have an
administration conducting a worldwide drone war that has killed unknown
numbers of innocents, managing an ultra-secretive surveillance state
beyond Dick Cheney’s wildest dreams, paying lip service to the
existential crisis of climate change while doing nothing about it, and
protecting and nurturing exactly the same cabal of bankers who brought
us to the brink of financial apocalypse in 2008. For a candidate who ran
as the populist embodiment of hope and change to wield such
unprecedented and shrouded executive power is an irony that should keep
historians of the future busy, providing we have historians or a future.
But he personally seems like a cultured, funny, sharp-dressed guy who
has gay friends and watches “Game of Thrones,” and the semiotics of his
White House are awesome. So it’s all good.
But let’s back away
from that, to the position that the mean Republicans won’t let Obama do
anything, and so the politics of semiotic awesomeness are the best we
can get. That too is demonstrative of our dilemma.
We can’t do anything
about worsening inequality or the poisoned planet or the total defeat of
the labor movement or the broken immigration system or the
incarceration of young black men. Our country is too “divided,” we can’t
make up our minds about anything. The power to change those things,
supposedly vouchsafed to us in the Constitution, has migrated somewhere
else. But we can drive Gilbert Gottfried off Twitter for being such an
enormous asshole. Change we can believe in.
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