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[ecrea] New book - Media and the Experience of Social Change: The Arab World
Fri Oct 06 15:45:13 GMT 2017
Very pleased to announce the publication of my new book *Media and the
Experience of Social Change: The Arab World* (Rowman & Littlefield). You
can order a copy here
(https://www.rowmaninternational.com/book/media_and_the_experience_of_social_change/3-156-2a905cfc-3a37-4722-ab73-8c40375aaab2)
– and a synopsis follows.
This book investigates how we live through social change, and what role
media play in shaping that experience. These questions matter because
there is growing anxiety that the cocoon of the present that
characterises our day-to-day existence blinds us to more profound shifts
taking place around us. The idea of the present as an overwhelming
plenitude that disorientates us in the broader scheme of things is not
new: it is encapsulated by Heidegger’s concept of ‘thrownness’, and has
antecedents much further back in the history of philosophy. But the
ceaseless barrage of stimuli that confront us in today’s
hyper-consumeristic, mediated-saturated world raises significant
questions about what this enveloping stream of media does to our
understanding of longer-term social, political and economic processes.
Journalists in particular come under fire for obsessing over the
short-term and sensational, of not doing enough to understand and
communicate the unfolding of history. And the rest of us as media
audiences and publics are portrayed as superficial, fickle and
narcissistic, oriented only towards the next affective hit that media,
especially of the social variety, can deliver. When this congeals from
ways of doing things with media into a distinct way of being in the
world, the result is that media consumers are thought to treat every
calamity and triviality alike as just another spectacle to register, or
ignore, before moving on to something else. All sense of context is
lost, and with it a proper apprehension of the lives that flit briefly
across our screens.
Looked at philosophically, however, we are necessarily geared towards
experiencing the world through a reductive lens: these are the routines
and rituals that make everyday life liveable. In fact there is nothing
intrinsically wrong with failing to be bowled over by the unique import
of every event we witness. We rely on reducing everything we encounter
to categories, to shorthand and avatars. It is true that this runs the
risk of complacency, of recourse to caricature and stereotype, but it is
also a fundamental human skill that allows us to respond to most things
instinctively, underpinning an experience of daily life that is, for the
most part, seamless. And in practical terms this means that if
professionals or citizens fail to grasp in an immediate and revelatory
way the historic changes evidenced by specific events, it does not
necessarily make us ignorant or self-absorbed: it is not in itself a
moral failing. Apathy, indifference and fatalism are all real problems,
but political scientists and media analysts routinely misdiagnose and
mistreat them.
The question of how we experience change has never mattered more. The
past decade has famously been characterised as everything kicking off
everywhere: from Occupy to the Arab spring, the financial crisis to
Islamic State, the scale of tumult appears unprecedented. But, according
to many social critics, Western publics are too tightly tethered to
their hedonic treadmills to notice, or if they do it is in
inappropriate, disrespectful and self-serving ways. Seismic political
upheavals become things to tweet, the suffering of a refugee becomes a
tool for demonstrating your compassion on Facebook.
And wherever reductionism and dehumanisation are detected in the manner
in which people engage with global events, media are usually first
against the wall. Whether it is because of the commercial motives of
mainstream broadcasters or the nature of mediation itself, there is
something about the way that distant wars, disasters and uprisings are
framed that bleed them of their distinctive vitality. This book,
however, makes the case against the blanket pathologisation of media. It
argues that the only way to grasp and assess how public engage with the
stuff that matters – from events that change the course of history to
the experience by others of suffering and injustice – is
phenomenologically, methodically investigating how these events and
experiences emerge as objects of consciousness amid the rhythms and
routines of our workaday lives. Objectification has a bad name in
cultural studies, connoting the worst kinds of dehumanisation that media
do to those they depict, but for phenomenologists objectifying and being
objectified are a fundamental part of human life.
The book develops its core thesis on the basis of a meticulous empirical
analysis of a cohort of Arab journalists, first by way of a discourse
analysis of their tweets, and then through ethnographic work with 20
media practitioners in Egypt and Lebanon. The focus on professional
journalists rather than audiences is not intended to suggest that the
former are somehow ideal citizens, more finely attuned to the mechanics
of history or more perceptive when it comes to the nuances. They may
well be as a group, but the point is more about what their motivations
and principles look like in microcosm. The book shows that the everyday
lives of these individuals, dedicated to documenting momentous events
and the extremes of the human condition, are like for the rest of us a
matter of routines and logistics, reductions and affect. Even if a
journalist is covering the Syrian civil war she cannot be blown away by
everything she encounters: like in other contexts, she develops patterns
of anticipation that makes life more or less instinctively navigable.
Importantly, this is not the same as compassion fatigue or
desensitisation. It is entirely possible to exist with relations of care
for and solidarity with those who are inevitably reduced to the stuff of
work in the daily run of things. Full, revelatory recognition of the
subjectivity of others and the reality of human suffering might be
lacking in some – most, even – discrete situations, but care and
solidarity can be nurtured and sustained over time in contexts that
appear repetitive and even banal. The distinctive approach taken here,
then, is not to ask these professionals about their motivating
principles with the aim of sanctifying them as noble warriors of human
rights and social justice – though they are undoubtedly passionate and
principled. The idea instead is to show how those principles as well as
their sense of history unfolding are sustained amid everyday work and
social rituals, experiences that usually look more affective than
political. What becomes clear is that the lunchbreaks, the workplace
in-jokes and teasing, and checking in on social media too – these are
not obstacles to understanding what is really going on in the work they
produce, getting in the way of registering that the events they cover
are happening to actual people. Instead they are the bedrock of such
awareness.
This all boils down to an important phenomenological intervention in how
we think about the experience of everyday life and change over time:
subjectivity is not clinched in specific, critical moments but worked at
over time, usually in humdrum ways. You are generally not called upon to
prove yourself – your politics, your humanity – in some all-or-nothing
encounter; and on the other hand nor are you interpellated or called
forth as a fully-determined subject of hegemonic structures, as others
claim. For these journalists there are real subjective stakes in how
things play out from here in their personal and professional lives as
well as in the world they inhabit and report on, and this is true more
generally as well. However constrained our agency we are all always
provisional selves with a stake in how we see ourselves and how we are
seen, as well as what impact we can have on the worlds we live in.
Journalists and activists might be in a different league when it comes
to political motivation and passion. And it is true that seen in
miniature most citizens fail to demonstrate a clear grasp of history
unfolding and solidarity with those embroiled in it as they go about the
routines that give temporal form to their days. The point is that even
if someone regularly fails to switch on the news, or to give an article
they encounter about distant suffering their full, undistracted
attention, there is nonetheless scope for substantive political
engagement amid the banalities of everyday life. As with our
professional participants, the assorted affective pulls of the
multi-mediated environments we inhabit are not only distractions, but
potentially the very thing which sustains empathy and citizenship.
Previous research has shown that a majority of people sustain some kind
of orientation towards public life; the unique contribution of this book
is that it pulls apart how this works at the level of subjectification.
This is about self-work, the incremental and often fragmented effort
that people put in to ensuring some kind of continuity and control over
how they see themselves and how they are seen by others. What can easily
be written off as narcissistic about the way people engage with the news
is in fact the key: self-work is not self-absorption but the condition
of living in time, of their being stakes in futuricity.
In practical terms this is not the same as giving media audiences a free
pass and assuming whatever they do will amount to empathy and engagement
in the long run. But it does mean rejecting the notion that the aim of
media witnessing should be to shake people out of their complacency, and
instead seeking to nurture the conditions in which something like
solidarity could solidify over time. This can be argued to be a good
thing from first principles, the kind of conditions befitting an
idealised polity, but it is simultaneously an environment experienced as
subjectively strategic as well as discontinuously, distractedly. But
that is how political principle operates: not as an inner quality
externalised, wielded in decisive encounters, but worked at and
maintained amid the hum of everyday life.
The book ends with a reframing of the journalist’s role as writer of the
first draft of history, instead casting her as guardian of historical
contingency. Rather than predicting how history will unfold, journalism
is reconceived as a constant worrying away at the edges of
intelligibility, a reminder of just how provisional our experience of
the present is, and how much is at stake – for ourselves as well as the
worlds we live in – in where things go from here.
Tim Markham is Professor of Journalism and Media at Birkbeck, University
of London. He is the author of /Media and Everyday Life: A Textbook/
(Palgrave, 2017), and /The Politics of War Reporting: Authority,
Authenticity and Morality/ (Manchester, 2012); co-author of /Media
Consumption and Public Engagement: Beyond the Presumption of Attention/
(Palgrave, 2007; 2010) and co-editor of /Conditions of Mediation:
Phenomenological Perspectives on Media/ (Peter Lang, 2017).
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