Henry A. Giroux
Cultural Critic and Public Intellectual
[dropcap]I[/dropcap]n spite of their differing perceptions of the architecture of the totalitarian superstate and how it exercises power and control over its residents, George Orwell and Aldous Huxley shared a fundamental conviction. They both argued that the established democracies of the West were moving quickly toward a historical moment when they would willingly relinquish the noble promises and ideals of liberal democracy and enter that menacing space where totalitarianism perverts the modern ideals of justice, freedom, and political emancipation. Both believed that Western democracies were devolving into pathological states in which politics was recognized in the interest of death over life and justice. Both were unequivocal in the shared understanding that the future of civilization was on the verge of total domination—or what Hannah Arendt called “dark times.”
While Neil Postman and other critical descendants have pitted Orwell and Huxley against each other because of their distinctively separate notions of a future dystopian society,1 I believe that the dark shadow of authoritarianism that shrouds American society like a thick veil can be lifted by re-examining Orwell’s prescient dystopian fable 1984, as well as Huxley’s Brave New World, in light of contemporary neoliberal ascendancy. Rather than pit their dystopian visions against each other, it might be more productive to see them as complementing each other, especially at a time when, to quote Antonio Gramsci, “The old world is dying and the new world struggles to be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.”2
New order of authoritarianism
Both authors provide insight into the merging of the totalitarian elements that constitute a new and more hybridized form of authoritarian control, appearing less as fiction than a threatening portent of the unfolding twenty-first century. Consumer fantasies and authoritarian control; “Big Brother” intelligence agencies and the voracious seductions of privatized pleasures; the rise of the punishing state, which criminalizes an increasing number of behaviors and invests in institutions that incarcerate and are organized principally for the production of violence; the collapse of democratic public spheres into narrow, market-driven orbits of privatization—these now constitute the new order of authoritarianism.
Orwell’s Big Brother has more recently found a new incarnation in the revelations of government lawlessness and corporate spying by whistleblowers such as Chelsea Manning, Jeremy Hammond, and Edward Snowden.3 All of these individuals revealed a government that lied about its intelligence operations, illegally spied on millions of people who were not considered terrorists or had committed no crime, and collected data from every conceivable electronic source to be stored and potentially used to squelch dissent, blackmail people, or just intimidate those who fight to make corporate and state power accountable.4 Orwell offered his readers an image of the modern state in which privacy was no longer valued as a civil virtue and a basic human right, nor perceived as a measure of the robust strength of a healthy and thriving democracy. In Orwell’s dystopia the right to privacy had come under egregious assault, but more than that, such ruthless transgressions of privacy pointed to something more sinister than the violation of individual rights. The claim to privacy, for Orwell, represented a moral and political principle by which to assess the nature, power, and severity of an emerging totalitarian state. Orwell’s warning was intended to shed light on the horrors of totalitarianism, the corruption of language, the production of a pervasive stupidity, and the endless regimes of state spying imposed on citizens in the mid-twentieth century. Orwell opened a door for all to see a “nightmarish future” in which everyday life becomes harsh, an object of state surveillance, and control—a society in which the slogan “ignorance becomes strength”—morphs into a guiding principle of mainstream media, education, and the culture of politics.
Huxley shared Orwell’s concern about ignorance as a political tool of the elite, enforced through surveillance and the banning of books, dissent, and critical thought itself. But Huxley believed that social control and the propagation of ignorance would be introduced by those in power through the political tools of pleasure and distraction. Huxley thought that this might take place through the use of drugs and genetic engineering. But the real drugs and social planning of late modernity are found in an entertainment and public pedagogy industry that trades in pleasure and idiocy—most evident in the merging of neoliberalism, celebrity culture, and the control of commanding cultural apparatuses extending from Hollywood movies and video games to mainstream television, news, and the social media.
Orwell’s Big Brother of 1984 has been upgraded in the 2015 edition. As Zygmunt Bauman points out, if the older Big Brother presided over traditional enclosures such as military barracks, prisons, schools, and “countless other big and small panopticons,” the updated Big Brother is concerned with not only inclusion and the death of privacy but also the suppression of dissent and the widening of the politics of exclusion.5Keeping people out is the extended face of Big Brother, who now patrols borders, hospitals, and other public spaces in order to spot “the people who do not fit in the places they are in, banishing them from … ‘where they belong,’ or better still never allowing them to come anywhere near in the first place.”6
This is the Big Brother that pushes youthful protests out of the public spaces they attempt to occupy. This is the hypernationalistic Big Brother clinging to notions of racial purity and American exceptionalism as a driving force in creating a country that has come to resemble an open-air prison for the dispossessed. This is the Big Brother whose split personality portends the dark authoritarian universe of the 1 percent, with their control over the economy and use of paramilitarized police forces on the one hand, and on the other their retreat into gated communities manned by SWAT-like security forces. Fear and isolation constitute an updated version of Big Brother. Fear is now managed and buttressed by normalizing the neoliberal claim that it be accepted as a general condition of society, dealt with exclusively as an individual consideration, disassociated from the politics and moral panics endemic to an authoritarian society, and used to mobilize the individual’s fear of the other. In the surveillance state, fear is misplaced from the political sphere to the personal concern with the fear of surviving, of not getting ahead, of unemployment, and of the danger posed by the growing legions of alien others. As the older order dies and a new one struggles to be born, Gramsci’s vision rightly identifies a liminal space that has given rise to monsters, all too willing to kidnap, torture, and spy on law-abiding citizens while violating civil liberties.7 He is also right in suggesting that while such an interregnum offers no political guarantees, it does provide, or at least gestures toward, reimagining “what is to be done,” how it might be done, and who is going to do it.8
Orwell’s 1984 continues to serve as a brilliant and important metaphor for mapping the expansive trajectory of global surveillance, authoritarianism, and the suppression of dissent that has characterized the first decades of the new millennium. The older modes of surveillance to which Orwell pointed—including his warnings regarding the dangers of microphones and giant telescreens that watch and listen—are surprisingly limited when compared with the varied means now available for spying. Orwell would be astonished by this contemporary, refashioned Big Brother given the threat that the new surveillance state poses because of its reach, and the alleged “advance” of technologies that far outstretch anything he could have imagined, technologies that pose a much greater threat to both the personal privacy of citizens and the control exercised by sovereign power.
Individual freedom and privacy
As Marjorie Cohn has similarly indicated, “Orwell never could have imagined that the National Security Agency (NSA) would amass metadata on billions of our phone calls and 200 million of our text messages every day. Orwell could not have foreseen that our government would read the content of our emails, file transfers, and live chats from the social media we use.”9 Snowden, Cohn, and other critics are correct about the dangers of the state’s infringement of privacy rights, but their analysis should be taken further by linking the issue of citizen surveillance with the rise of “networked societies,” global flows of power, and the emergence of a totalitarian ethos that defies even state-based control.10 For Orwell, domination was state imposed and bore the heavy hand of unremitting repression and a smothering language that eviscerated any appearance of dissent, erased historical memory, and turned the truth into its opposite. For Orwell, individual freedom was at risk under the heavy hand of state terrorism.
In Orwell’s world individual freedom and privacy were under attack from outside forces. For Huxley, in contrast, freedom and privacy were willingly given up as part of the seductions of a soft authoritarianism, with its vast machinery of manufactured needs, desires, and identities. This new mode of persuasion seduced people into chasing commodities, and infantilized them through the mass production of easily digestible entertainment, disposable goods, and new scientific advances in which any viable sense of agency was undermined. The conditions for critical thought dissolved into the limited pleasures of instant gratification wrought through the use of technologies and consuming practices that dampened, if not obliterated, the very possibility of thinking itself. Orwell’s dark image is the stuff of government oppression, whereas Huxley’s is the stuff of distractions, diversions, and the transformation of privacy into a cheap and sensational performance for public display. Neil Postman, writing in a different time and worried about the destructive anti-intellectual influence of television, sided with Huxley and believed that repression was now on the side of entertainment and the propensity of the American public to amuse itself to death.11 His attempt to differentiate Huxley’s dystopian vision from Orwell’s is worth noting:
Orwell warns that we will be overcome by an externally imposed oppression. But in Huxley’s vision, no Big Brother is required to deprive people of their autonomy, maturity and history. As he saw it, people will come to love their oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think. What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in Brave New World Revisited, the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny “failed to take into account man’s almost infinite appetite for distractions.” In 1984, Huxley added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we hate will ruin us. Huxley feared that what we love will ruin us.12
Echoes of Huxley’s insights play out in the willingness of millions of people who voluntarily hand over personal information whether in the service of the strange sociality prompted by social media or in homage to the new surveillance state. New surveillance technologies employed by major service providers now focus on diverse consumer populations who are targeted in the collection of endless amounts of personal information as they move from one site to the next, one geopolitical region to the next, and across multiple screens and digital apparatuses. As Ariel Dorfman points out, “Social media users gladly give up their liberty and privacy, invariably for the most benevolent of platitudes and reasons,”13 all the while endlessly shopping online, updating Facebook, and texting. Indeed, surveillance technologies are now present in virtually every public and private space—such as video cameras in streets, commercial establishments, workplaces, and even schools, as well as the myriad scanners at entry points of airports, retail stores, sporting events, and so on. They function as control mechanisms that become normalized through their heightened visibility. So, too, our endless array of personal devices that chart, via GPS tracking, our every move, our every choice, our every pleasure.
At the same time, Orwell’s warning about Big Brother applies not simply to an authoritarian-surveillance state but also to commanding financial institutions and corporations that have made diverse modes of surveillance a ubiquitous feature of daily life. Corporations use the new technologies to track spending habits and to collect data points from social media so as to provide us with consumer goods that match our desires, to employ facial recognition technologies to alert store salespersons to our credit ratings, and so it goes. Heidi Boghosian points out that if omniscient state control in Orwell’s 1984 is embodied by the two-way television sets present in each home, then in “our own modern adaptation, it is symbolized by the location-tracking cell phones we willingly carry in our pockets and the microchip-embedded clothes we wear on our bodies.”14 In this instance, the surveillance state is one that not only listens, watches, and gathers massive amounts of information through data mining, allegedly for the purpose of identifying “security threats.” It also acculturates the public into accepting the intrusion of commercial surveillance technologies—and, perhaps more vitally, the acceptance of privatized, commodified values—into all aspects of their lives. In other words, the most dangerous repercussions of a near total loss of privacy involve more than the unwarranted collecting of information by the government: we must also be attentive to the ways in which being spied on has become not onlynormalized but even enticing, as corporations up the pleasure quotient for consumers who use new digital technologies and social networks—not least of all by and for simulating experiences of community.
Authoritarian-surveillance state
Many individuals, especially young people, now run from privacy and increasingly demand services in which they can share every personal facet of their lives. While Orwell’s vision touches upon this type of control, there is a notable difference that he did not foresee. According to Pete Cashmore, while Orwell’s “Thought Police tracked you without permission, some consumers are now comfortable with sharing their every move online.”15 The state and corporate cultural apparatuses now collude to socialize everyone—especially young people—into a regime of security and commodification in which their identities, values, and desires are inextricably tied to a culture of commodified addictions, self-help, therapy, and social indifference. Intelligence networks now inhabit the world of major corporations such as Disney and the Bank of America as well as the secret domains of the NSA, FBI, and fifteen other intelligence agencies. As Edward Snowden’s revelations about the PRISM program revealed, the NSA has also collected personal data from “the world’s largest Internet companies—Facebook, Yahoo!, Apple, Google—as well as extensive efforts by Microsoft to provide the agency with access to its communications platforms such as Outlook.”16 According to a senior lawyer for the NSA, the Intenet companies “were fully aware of the surveillance agency’s widespread collection of data.”17
The fact is that Orwell’s and Huxley’s ironic representations of the modern totalitarian state—along with their implied defense of a democratic ideal rooted in the right to privacy and the right to be educated in the capacity to be autonomous and critical thinkers—have been transformed and mutilated almost beyond recognition by the material and ideological registers of a worldwide neoliberal order. Just as we can envision Orwell’s and Huxley’s dystopian fables morphing over time from “realistic novels” into a “real-life documentary,” and now into a form of “reality TV,” privacy and freedom have been radically altered in an age of permanent, nonstop global exchange and circulation. That is, in the current moment, the right to privacy and freedom has been usurped by the seductions of a narcissistic culture and casino capitalism’s unending desire to turn every relationship into an act of commerce and to make all aspects of daily life subject to market forces under watchful eyes of both government and corporate regimes of surveillance. In a world devoid of care, compassion, and protection, personal privacy and freedom are no longer connected and resuscitated through its connection to public life, the common good, or a vulnerability born of the recognition of the frailty of human life. Culture loses its power as the bearer of public memory, civic literacy, and the lessons of history in a social order in which the worst excesses of capitalism are left unchecked and a consumerist ethic “makes impossible any shared recognition of common interests or goals.”18 With the rise of the punishing state along with a kind of willful amnesia taking hold of the larger culture, we see little more than a paralyzing fear and apathy in response to the increasing exposure of formerly private spheres to data mining and manipulation, while the concept of privacy itself has all but expired under a “broad set of panoptic practices.”19 With individuals more or less succumbing to this insidious cultural shift in their daily lives, there is nothing to prevent widespread collective indifference to the growth of a surveillance culture, let alone an authoritarian state.
xxxxxxxThe worst fears of Huxley and Orwell merge into a dead zone of historical amnesia as more and more people embrace any and every new electronic device regardless of the risks it might pose in terms of granting corporations and governments increased access to and power over their choices and movements. Detailed personal information flows from the sphere of entertainment to the deadly serious and integrated spheres of capital accumulation and policing as they are collected and sold to business and government agencies who track the populace for either commercial purposes or for fear of a possible threat to the social order and its established institutions of power. Power now imprisons not only bodies under a regime of surveillance and a mass incarceration state but also subjectivity itself as the threat of state control is now coupled with the seductions of the new forms of passivity-inducing soma: electronic technologies, a pervasive commodified landscape, and a mind-numbing celebrity culture.
Underlying these everyday conveniences of modern life, as Boghosian documents in great detail, is the growing Orwellian partnership between the militarized state and private security companies in the United States. Each day, new evidence surfaces pointing to the emergence of a police state that has produced ever more sophisticated methods for surveillance in order to enforce a mass suppression of the most essential tools for democratic dissent: “the press, political activists, civil rights advocates and conscientious insiders who blow the whistle on corporate malfeasance and government abuse.”20 As Boghosian points out, “By claiming that anyone who questions authority or engages in undesired political speech is a potential terrorist threat, this government-corporate partnership makes a mockery of civil liberties.”21 Nowhere is this more evident than in American public schools, where youth are being taught that they are a generation of suspects, subject to the presence of armed police and security guards, drug-sniffing dogs, and an array of surveillance apparatuses that chart their every move—not to mention in some cases how they respond emotionally to certain pedagogical practices.
Whistleblowers are not only punished by the government: their lives are also turned upside down in the process by private surveillance agencies and major corporations, which now work in tandem. For instance, the Bank of America assembled fifteen to twenty bank officials and retained the law firm of Hunton and Williams in order to devise “various schemes to attack WikiLeaks and Greenwald whom they thought were about to release damaging information about the bank.”22It is worth repeating that Orwell’s vision of surveillance and the totalitarian state look mild next to the emergence of a corporate-private-state surveillance system that can tap into every conceivable mode of communication, collect endless amounts of metadata to be stored in vast intelligence storage sites around the country, and potentially use that data to repress any vestige of dissent.23
Discontents
As Huxley anticipated, any critical analysis must move beyond documenting abuses of power to addressing how contemporary neoliberal modernity has created a social order in which individuals become complicit with authoritarian practices. That is, how is the loss of freedom internalized? What and how do state- and corporate-controlled institutions, cultural apparatuses, social relations, and policies contribute to making a society’s plunge into self-generating dark times, as Huxley predicted? Put differently, what is the educative nature of a repressive politics, and how does it function to secure the consent of the American public? And, most important, how can it be challenged and under what circumstances?
The nature of repression has become more porous, employing not only brute force but also dominant modes of education, persuasion, and authority. Aided by a public pedagogy produced and circulated through a machinery of consumption and public relations tactics, a growing regime of repression works through the homogenizing forces of the market to support the widespread embrace of an authoritarian culture. Relentlessly entertained by spectacle, people not only become numb to violence and cruelty but also begin to identify with an authoritarian worldview. As David Graeber suggests, the police “become the almost obsessive objects of imaginative identification in popular culture … watching movies, or viewing TV shows that invite them to look at the world from a police point of view.”24 But it is not just the spectacle of violence that ushers individuals into a world in which brutality becomes a primary force for mediating relations as well as the ultimate source of pleasure; there is also the production of an unchecked notion of individualism that both dissolves social bonds and removes any viable notion of agency from the landscape of social responsibility and ethical consideration. Absorbed in privatized orbits of consumption, commodification, and display, Americans vicariously participate in the toxic pleasures of the authoritarian state. Violence has become the organizing force of a society driven by a noxious notion of privatization in which it becomes difficult for ideas to be lifted into the public realm. Under such circumstances, politics is eviscerated because it now supports a market-driven view of society that has turned its back on the idea that “humanity is never acquired in solitude.”25 This violence against the bonds of sociality undermines and dissolves the nature of social obligations as freedom becomes an exercise in self-development rather than social responsibility. This upending of the social and critical modes of agency mimics not just the death of the radical imagination but also a notion of banality made famous by Hannah Arendt, who argued that at the root of totalitarianism is a kind of thoughtlessness, an inability to think, and a type of outrageous indifference in which “there’s simply the reluctance ever to imagine what the other person is experiencing.”26
By integrating insights drawn from both Huxley and Orwell, it becomes necessary for any viable critical analysis to take a long view, contextualizing the contemporary moment as a new historical conjuncture in which political rule has been replaced by corporate sovereignty, consumerism becomes the only obligation of citizenship, and the only value that matters is exchange value. Precarity has replaced social protections provided by the state, just as the state cares more about building prisons and infantilizing the American public than it does about providing all of its citizens with quality educational institutions, health care, and other social rights. America is not just dancing into oblivion, as Huxley suggested; it is also being pushed into the dark recesses of an authoritarian state. Orwell wrote dystopian novels, but he believed that the sheer goodness of human nature would in the end be enough for individuals to develop modes of collective resistance that he could only imagine in the midst of the haunting specter of totalitarianism.
Huxley was more indebted to Kafka’s notion of destabilization, despair, and hopelessness. For Huxley, the subject had lost a sense of agency and had become the product of a scientifically manufactured form of idiocy and conformity. Progress had been transformed into its opposite, and science needed to be liberated from itself. Where Huxley fails, as Theodor Adorno has pointed out, is that he has no sense of resistance. According to Adorno, “The weakness of Huxley’s entire conception is that it makes all its concepts relentlessly dynamic but nevertheless arms them against the tendency to turn into their own opposites.”27 Hence, the forces of resistance are not simply underestimated but rendered impotent.The authoritarian nature of the corporate-state surveillance apparatus and security system, with its “urge to surveil, eavesdrop on, spy on, monitor, record, and save every communication of any sort on the planet,”28 can be fully understood only when its ubiquitous tentacles are connected to wider cultures of control and punishment, including security-patrolled corridors of public schools, the rise in supermax prisons, the hypermilitarization of local police forces, the justification of secret prisons and state-sanctioned torture abroad, and the increasing labeling of dissent as an act of terrorism in the United States.29 This is part of Orwell’s narrative, but it does not go far enough.
Neoliberal dreamworld of babbling consumers
The new authoritarian corporate-driven state deploys more subtle tactics to depoliticize public memory and promote the militarization of everyday life. Alongside efforts to defund public and higher education and to attack the welfare state, a wide-ranging assault is being waged across the culture on all spheres that encourage the public to hold power accountable. If these public institutions are destroyed, there will be few sites left in which to nurture the critical formative cultures capable of educating people to challenge the range of injustices plaguing the United States and the forces that reproduce them. One particular challenge comes from the success of neoliberal tyranny to dissolve those social bonds that entail a sense of responsibility toward others and form the basis for political consciousness. Under the new authoritarian state, perhaps the gravest threat one faces is not simply being subject to the dictates of what Quentin Skinner calls “arbitrary power,” but failing to respond with outrage when “my liberty is also being violated, and not merely by the fact that someone is reading my emails but also by the fact that someone has the power to do so should they choose.”30 The situation is dire when people seem no longer interested in contesting such power. It is precisely the poisonous spread of a broad culture of political indifference that puts at risk the fundamental principles of justice and freedom that lie at the heart of a robust democracy. The democratic imagination has been transformed into a data machine that marshals its inhabitants into the neoliberal dreamworld of babbling consumers and armies of exploitative labor whose ultimate goal is to accumulate capital and initiate individuals into the brave new surveillance/punishing state that merges Orwell’s Big Brother with Huxley’s mind-altering soma.
Nothing will change unless people begin to take seriously the subjective underpinnings of oppression in the United States and what it might require to make such issues meaningful in order to make them critical and transformative. As Charles Derber has explained, knowing “how to express possibilities and convey them authentically and persuasively seems crucially important” if any viable notion of resistance is to take place.31 The current regime of authoritarianism is reinforced through a new and pervasive sensibility in which people surrender themselves to both the capitalist system and a general belief in its call for security. It does not simply repress independent thought but constitutes new modes of thinking through a diverse set of cultural apparatuses ranging from the schools and media to the Internet. The fundamental question in resisting the transformation of the United States into a twenty-first-century authoritarian society must concern the educative nature of politics—that is, what people believe and how their individual and collective dispositions and capacities to be either willing or resistant agents are shaped.
What will American society look like in a hundred years? For Huxley, it may well mimic a nightmarish image of a world in which ignorance is a political weapon and pleasure a form of control, offering nothing more than the swindle of fulfillment, if not something more self-deluding and defeating. Orwell, more optimistically, might see a more open future and history disinclined to fulfill itself in the image of the dystopian society he so brilliantly imagined. He believed in the power of those living under such oppression to imagine otherwise, to think beyond the dictates of the authoritarian state and to offer up spirited forms of collective resistance, being willing to reclaim the reigns of political emancipation. For Huxley, there was hope in a pessimism that had exhausted itself; for Orwell optimism had to be tempered by a sense of educated hope. History is open and only time will tell who was right.
References;
[1] Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business (New York: Penguin Books, 1985, 2005). [2] I take up elsewhere, in great detail, the nature of the surveillance state and the implications that the persecution of these whistleblowers has for undermining any viable understanding of democracy. See Henry A. Giroux, “Totalitarian Paranoia in the Post-Orwellian Surveillance State,” Truthout, February 10, 2014, available at www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/21656-totalitarian-paranoia-in-the-post-orwellian-surveillance-state. [3] For an excellent description of the new surveillance state, see Glenn Greenwald, No Place to Hide (New York: Signal, 2014); and Julia Angwin, Dragnet Nation: A Quest for Privacy, Security, and Freedom in a World of Relentless Surveillance (New York: Times Books, 2014). [4] Zygmunt Bauman and David Lyon, Liquid Surveillance: A Conversation (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2013). [5] Zygmunt Bauman, Wasted Lives (London: Polity, 2004), 132–133. [6] Heidi Boghosian, Spying on Democracy: Government Surveillance, Corporate Power, and Public Resistance (San Francisco:<>City Lights Books, 2013). [7] Instructive here is Manuel Castells, Networks of Outrage and Hope: Social Movements in the Internet Age (Cambridge: Polity, 2012). [8] Marjorie Cohn, “Beyond Orwell’s Worst Nightmare,” Huffington Post, January 31, 2014. [9] See, for example, Manuel Castells, The Rise of the Network Society (Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 1996); and Zygmunt Bauman, Collateral Damage: Social Inequalities in a Global Age (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2011). [10] Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death, xix–xx. [11] Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death. [12] Ariel Dorfman, “Repression by Any Other Name,” Guernica, February 3, 2014. [13] Boghosian, Spying on Democracy, 32. [14] Pete Cashmore, “Why 2012, Despite Privacy Fears, Isn’t Like Orwell’s 1984,” CNN, January 23, 2012, available at www.ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-770499. [15] Greenwald, No Place to Hide, p. 108. [16] Spencer Ackerman, “US Tech Giants Knew of NSA Data Collection, Agency’s Top Lawyer Insists,” The Guardian, March 19, 2014, available at www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/19/us-tech-giants-knew-nsa-data-collection-rajesh-de. [17] Boghosian, Spying on Democracy, 22. [18] Jonathan Crary, 24/7 (London: Verso, 2013), 16. [19] Mark Karlin, “From Spying on ‘Terrorists Abroad’ to Suppressing Domestic Dissent: When We Become the Hunted,” Truthout, August 21, 2013. [20] Ibid., Boghosian, Spying on Democracy, 22–23. [21] Arun Gupta, “Barrett Brown’s Revelations Every Bit as Explosive as Edward Snowden’s,” The Guardian, June 24, 2013. [22] Bruce Schneier, “The Public-Private Surveillance Partnership,” Bloomberg, July 31, 2013. [23] David Graeber, “Dead Zones of the Imagination,” HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory 2 (2012): 119. [24] The quotation by Karl Jaspers is cited in Hannah Arendt, The Last Interview and Other Conversations (Brooklyn, NY: Melville House Publishing, 2013), 37. [25] Ibid., 48. [26] Theodor W. Adorno, “Aldous Huxley and Utopia,” Prisms (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1967), 106–107. [27] Tom Engelhardt, “Tomgram: Engelhardt, a Surveillance State Scorecard,” November 12, 2013, available at Tom Dispath.com. [28] I take up many of these issues in Henry A. Giroux, The Violence of Organized Forgetting (San Francisco: City Lights, 2014), The Twilight of the Social (Boulder, CO: Paradigm, 2012), and Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism (New York: Peter Lang, 2011). [29] Quoted in Quentin Skinner and Richard Marshall, “Liberty, Liberalism and Surveillance: A Historic Overview,” Open Democracy (July 26, 2013). Online: http://www.opendemocracy.net/ourkingdom/quentin-skinner-richard-marshall/liberty-liberalism-and-surveillance-historic-overview [30] Charles Derber, private correspondence with the author, January 29, 2014.Originally published by the Sri Lanka Guardian.
Opening Photo: Oregon Dept of Transportation SWAT team. Photo: Smallman12q.
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Pray tell, what is a public intellectual ? One is either an intellectual or not, but a ‘public intellectual’ sounds more like an advertisement for Tony Roberts or some such. In any case this kind of pessimistic thinking is too much spread among US ‘radicals’ and very like the late decaying Roman empire, more an expression of the despair of its citizens at its downfall. Huxley and Orwell lived in the twentieth century when there was the deep after-deluge malaise from the wars in Europe and a vague hope for a renaissance of public health in a New World. Both… Read more »
A “public intellectual” is someone who does not confine themselves to writing and researching primarily for other intellectuals within the boundaries of academia. It is not an advertisement, but it is a term used more and more within academia for those who choose to put their skills to work for the people rather than only operating within the “hallowed halls.”
I have commented before on the nihilism of French students and with justification because they feel betrayed from all corners. It has drawn criticism because nihilism is seen as offering no alternatives, but is that not very healthy and does it not offer the possibilities of totally new ideas ? That kind of nihilism though from a sarcastic basis is arising among US students, who buy the goods but not the indoctrination. This is a good sign and juxtaposed to the idea of Gotterdammerung for the world. That fin-de-siecle kind of despair belongs to those who cling to the idea… Read more »
Thanks, Rowan, for posting this article, and for your comment on Gui Rochat’s comment-question…. I, too, have wondered, with Gui: what is a “public intellectual”? If the term is used increasingly in “academia,” one wonders if, in those “hallowed halls,” it is used positively or pejoratively. Obviously, Mr. Giroux makes good points. Problem is, there’s a lot of verbiage for us non-public intellectuals to wade through! If he does not wish to be confined to the “hallowed halls,” why must his writing be so “academic”? Can he not juice things up a bit–without losing his professorial creds? Must every sentence… Read more »