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[ecrea] The New (Ab)Normal - Keele University
Fri May 26 09:01:44 GMT 2017
The New (Ab)Normal:
The Cultural Politics of the New Authoritarianism
27th June, 2017
Keele University
Chancellors Building
CBA1.021
Organisers:
Dr Mark Featherstone
Sociology
Keele University
Office: 01782 734179
Mobile: +44 7450 989969
Dr Eva Giraud
Media, Communications, and Culture
Keele University
Office: 01782 734258
The New (Ab)Normal:
The Cultural Politics of the New Authoritarianism
Following the financial crash of 2008 and the subsequent tightening of
economic conditions resulting from massive bank bail outs many of the
major western liberal democracies lurched towards the right politically.
The crash created a hole in public finances that increased economic and
consequently social and cultural stresses with the result that rightist
politics based upon law, order, discipline, hard work, and the policing
of borders became more popular. In the immediate aftermath of the
catastrophe this hardening of attitudes towards others remained inside
the political mainstream and essentially took the form of a militarised
version of (neo)liberalism intolerant of weakness and vulnerability.
It is possible to argue that the political objective of this new
militarised approach to policy was two-fold. In the European context,
where the economic consensus suggested that it was necessary to balance
the books, the aim was to claw back the money spent saving the financial
system from public services deemed unproductive and too expensive. In
order to defend this turn to austerity, the second policy aim of the
hardening of the liberal agenda was to justify the move to an austere
society and an austere cultural attitude through the denigration of
others (the poor, ethnic minorities, immigrants, the disabled) who it
was claimed were a drain on squeezed, scarce, resources. While the rich,
and particularly the super-rich, remain necessary in this story, because
they are seen to grow the economy and effectively keep people in work,
various others are represented as redundant, unproductive, useless, and
exorbitant. They cost too much and can no longer be afforded. They are
the waste product of the stressed, austere, society and in this cultural
politics they are effectively dehumanised.
However, the problem with this social and cultural approach, which was
designed to maintain the integrity of (neo)liberal consensus that has
ruled since the end of the Cold War at the expense of the weakest and
most vulnerable, is that it appears to have unleashed social and
cultural forces that the mainstream seems no longer able to control.
These social and cultural forces, which seem to be based upon the
resentment of the old working classes towards a model of globalised
society they feel abandoned them long ago and the fear of the middle
classes who want to protect what they have managed to build in the good
years, are transgressive of the (neo)liberal mainstream because they are
organised around ideological coordinates that run counter to those that
support the hegemonic global social, economic, political, and cultural
order. While the hard language that speaks to those threatened by the
effects of increasing economic stress emerged from the mainstream, it
appears that it has now been taken over by populist leaders (Farage,
Trump, Le Pen) who have advanced the original austerity narrative of the
insiders in such a way that the (liberal) ‘system’ is now somehow
supportive of the other who threatens normal, ‘hard working’, people and
therefore must be replaced by a new social, economic, political, and
cultural system based upon meeting the needs of the silent majority.
But is this new narrative, which we are provocatively calling the new
(ab)normal, truly revolutionary in its attempt to over-turn the
(neo)liberal hegemon which has organised American-led processes of
globalisation since the 1980s? If this is, indeed, the case, and we have
entered a new cultural sphere of radical (ab)normality, then we wonder
what the future holds. In many respects it seems that the new turn to
the right is wholly negative, simply because its key figures have no
positive programme for change. Instead the turn to a politics of
anti-liberal (ab)normality, which have ironically come to the fore in
the home countries of neo-liberal globalisation (Britain and America),
appear to be based in little more than a violent rejection of otherness
in all forms and a valorisation of borders, boundaries, and defensive
formations. In this way the new (ab)normal, which we have seen emerge
from the rhetoric of Farage, Trump, and Le Pen, seems to be founded upon
an ideology of intolerance that recalls the Italian fascism and German
national socialism of the 1920s and 1930s. Or perhaps this is hyperbole
and there is actually very little that is new about the new situation.
Perhaps the idea of anti-liberal (ab)normality is simply about the
retrenchment of white, male, power which has effectively dominated the
west from the very beginning?
Given the possibility of the rise of these new cultural politics,
which appear to legitimate racism and sexism in the name of a kind of
anti-intellectual populism, should we now speak of a new
authoritarianism that has been more or less entirely normalised? In the
face of the potential rise of this new discourse, which we want to think
about in terms of the new (ab)normality, the objectives of this workshop
are to (1) try to make sense of the emergence of what appears to be a
new form of intolerance, which seems to have very quickly moved from the
margins into the mainstream and managed to construct itself in terms of
an apparently radical, but also entirely reasonable and pragmatic
response to the critical state of the old (neo)liberal hegemon; (2)
think about whether academics need to develop new ways to respond to
this potentially new cultural politics of violence through the use of
knowledge, evidence, theory, and pedagogy in the name of creating a
space for a more constructive, positive, inclusive cultural politics
able to shape the future for everybody; and finally (3) to develop a
proposal for a special issue of Cultural Politics, concerned with these
issues, questions, and debates.
Schedule
10am – 10.30am
Coffee
10.30am – 11.00am
Mark Featherstone (Keele University, Sociology) – Introduction: ‘The
New (Ab)Normal: Sociology in Extremis’
11.00am – 11.30am
Ronnie Lippens (Keele University, Criminology) – ‘Rothko’s Chapel in
Houston, Texas (1970): Luciferian Notes on the Age of Light’
11.30am - 12.00pm
Eva Giraud (Keele University, Media) and Sarah-Nicole Aghassi-Isfahani
(Keele University, Sociology) – ‘Has Critique run out of Memes?
Interrogating the ‘Post-Truth’ Media Landscape’
12.00pm – 1.00pm
Deborah Frizzell (Art, William Patterson University, USA) –
‘Trajectories of Aesthetics and Ethics in the Chthulucene: A Case Study
of “Outcast” Women Artists’
1.00pm – 2.00pm Lunch
2.00pm – 2.30pm
Kirsten Forkert (Media, Birmingham City University) – ‘Austerity,
Right Populism and the Public Mood’
2.30pm -3.00pm
Seb Franklin (Kings College, London) and Penny Newell (Kings College,
London) – ‘The Economics of Abnormality’
3.00pm – 4.00pm Steve Hall (Criminology, Teeside University) –
‘System Reboot: Steve Bannon’s Dream as the Restoration of the
Pseudo-Pacification Process’
4.00pm – 4.30pm
Coffee 4.30pm – 5.45pm
Doug Kellner (Education, UCLA, USA) – ‘Donald Trump, Media Spectacle,
and Authoritarian Populism’
6.00pm – 7.00pm Arthur Kroker (Political Science, University of
Victoria, Canada) – ‘Fake Futures’
Limited places are available. If you would like to attend this event,
please contact either Mark Featherstone or Eva Giraud at Keele University.
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