[IP] The fast-fading luster of the American story
Begin forwarded message:
From: Brian Randell <Brian.Randell@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: June 15, 2006 12:53:33 PM EDT
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: The fast-fading luster of the American story
Dave:
I don't know how widely read the International Herald Tribune is  
inside the USA, and whether its Op-Ed pieces are carried by other  
papers, but if they are not this Op-Ed piece from yesterday's issue,  
with its assessment of reactions to America and its contributions to  
the global information economy, might be something you would think  
suitable for IP. (I've quoted only about 25% of it.)
cheers
Brian
The fast-fading luster of the American story
Nathan Gardels and Mike Medavoy Tribune Media Services
Published: June 14, 2006
LOS ANGELES The publication of cartoon depictions of the Prophet  
Mohammed in a Danish daily earlier this year inflamed the pious and  
mobilized the militant across the Muslim world.
The American casting of Chinese actresses in "Memoirs of a Geisha"  
stirred the considerable ire of Japanese nationalists when it was  
released.
At a recent Rolling Stones concert in Shanghai, the Chinese  
government prohibited the aging rockers from singing "Let's Spend  
the Night Together."
Indonesian Muslim activists are in an uproar over the launch of a  
local version of Playboy magazine - even though there is no nudity.
These are but the latest episodes of a clash that is a result of  
the globalized media crowding cultures with incommensurate values  
into the same public square.
They suggest that, unlike past moments in history, the main  
conflict today is less about armies and territories than about the  
cultural flows of the global information economy.
The core of that system is America's media-industrial complex,  
including Hollywood entertainment. If culture is on the front line  
of global affairs, then Hollywood, as much as the Pentagon or  
Silicon Valley, has a starring role.
The reasons for Hollywood's power, which projects America's way of  
life to others as well as to ourselves, are clear.
Long before celluloid and pixels were invented, Plato understood  
that "those who tell the stories also rule." Philosophers tell us  
that images rule dreams, and dreams rule actions. And if music sets  
the mood for the multitudes, the warblings of Sinatra and Madonna  
are surely the muzak of the world order.
This vast influence of American culture in the world is what  
Harvard professor Joseph Nye has called "soft power."
Now, however, we are witnessing a mounting resistance, particularly  
from Asia and the Muslim world, to the American media's libertarian  
and secular messages.
There is also resistance to the mere fact of America's overwhelming  
cultural dominance. Josef Joffe, the publisher-editor of the German  
weekly Die Zeit, has put it directly: "Between Vietnam and Iraq,  
America's cultural presence has expanded into ubiquity, and so has  
resentment of America. Soft power does not necessarily increase the  
world's love for America. It is still power, and it still makes  
enemies."
If, as Nye has said, politics in the information age is about whose  
story wins, America's story, which has won for so long, is losing  
its universal appeal.
Fewer and fewer are buying into the American narrative. Needless to  
say, that has big implications for America's storyteller -  
Hollywood - as well.
America's soft power is losing its luster for several reasons.
Though projected through movies and music, that power has been  
based fundamentally on ideals more or less realized in practice -  
individual freedom, the rule of law, social and economic opportunity.
In foreign policy it has meant the defense of human rights, the  
just use of force against fascism and the containment of Soviet power.
Certainly the unilateral invasion and occupation of Iraq has fueled  
intense anger at America, eroding the natural sympathy after 9/11.
But perhaps more disturbing to those who once held up America as a  
model has been not only Guantánamo, the Abu Ghraib prison abuse and  
the Haditha massacre but the White House defense of torture, its  
dismissal of the key aspects of the Geneva protocols on treatment  
of prisoners of war and the government wiretapping of its own  
citizens.
The Katrina catastrophe in New Orleans not only exposed anew  
unsolved racial issues, but revealed to a shocked world the  
burgeoning inequality that has crept back into American society as  
the welfare state has withered.
The rise of the Christian right has made many, in Europe in  
particular, doubt whether a majority still shares America's  
founding commitment to the secular principles of the Enlightenment.
Seized by the marketing machine, Hollywood entertainment has, with  
ever fewer exceptions, hewn to the blockbuster formula of action,  
violence, sex and special effects. A masterful drama like Orson  
Welles's "Citizen Kane" would be impossible to make in Hollywood  
today.
In a recent Gallup Poll of 8,000 women in Muslim countries, the  
overwhelming majority cited "attachment to spiritual and moral  
values" as the best aspect of their own societies while the most  
common answer to the question about what they admired least in the  
West was "moral decay, promiscuity and pornography" that pollsters  
called "the Hollywood image."
This is also the view of many parents in the United States, no  
doubt including those who swell the megachurch congregations on  
Sunday morning and then mysteriously morph into the audience for  
"Desperate Housewives" on Sunday night.
Too often Hollywood has also succumbed to a Ramboesque parochial  
populism that displays naïveté, ignorance and arrogance in its  
portrayal of the rest of the world.
In short, what once gilded the American experience in the eyes of  
much of the world now tarnishes it.
Finally, the new civilizational confidence that comes along with  
growing prosperity, notably in Asia, means audiences increasingly  
want to be entertained by their own myths and stories, not those  
from America.
The digital distribution revolution, which is shifting power from  
the producer to the consumer, will hasten this trend.
To some, of course, America's image remains appealing, even a  
magnet for migration across scorching deserts or in the holds of  
rusty cargo ships.
But to others it incites hatred, if not terrorism against the Great  
Satan; to most it is a mixed picture that elicits a bit of love and  
loathing.
Iranian or Chinese teens, as is commonly cited, may embrace  
American pop culture, but patriotically reject U.S. policies.
Movies, like politics, are a communal experience. In a democracy,  
the voting booth and the box office share the same public.
Political scientists have long understood that in modern America  
the media, including movies and pop music, constitute the "public  
square." With globalization, that is now true for the world as a  
whole.
To recapture its winning story in this new global politics of  
culture, to recover its waning soft power, America has to once  
again close the gap between its ideals and their practical  
realization at home and abroad, starting with changing our policies  
and getting out of Iraq.
And America's storytellers need - as some indeed have - to stop  
seeing the world as a crowd of "extras" with turbans, burkas,  
slanted eyes or sombreros but no depth of character or central role.
Since globalization has moved us all into the same neighborhood, a  
sense of propriety with respect to the cultural norms of others  
would seem a wise idea.
For an industry whose future relies on the global market, that is  
an economic as well as moral imperative.
The John Wayne-era assumption that America alone can write the  
script for the whole world has been forever foiled, both in  
Washington and Hollywood.
Nathan Gardels is editor of NPQ and Global Services at Tribune  
Media Services International. Mike Medavoy, chairman and chief  
executive of Phoenix Pictures, has been involved in the production  
of scores of films, including "Apocalypse Now," "Platoon" and the  
soon to be released "All The King's Men."
LOS ANGELES The publication of cartoon depictions of the Prophet  
Mohammed in a Danish daily earlier this year inflamed the pious and  
mobilized the militant across the Muslim world.
The American casting of Chinese actresses in "Memoirs of a Geisha"  
stirred the considerable ire of Japanese nationalists when it was  
released.
At a recent Rolling Stones concert in Shanghai, the Chinese  
government prohibited the aging rockers from singing "Let's Spend  
the Night Together."
Indonesian Muslim activists are in an uproar over the launch of a  
local version of Playboy magazine - even though there is no nudity.
These are but the latest episodes of a clash that is a result of  
the globalized media crowding cultures with incommensurate values  
into the same public square.
They suggest that, unlike past moments in history, the main  
conflict today is less about armies and territories than about the  
cultural flows of the global information economy.
 . . .
Full text at:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/06/14/opinion/edgardels.php
--
School of Computing Science, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon  
Tyne,
NE1 7RU, UK
EMAIL = Brian.Randell@xxxxxxxxx   PHONE = +44 191 222 7923
FAX = +44 191 222 8232  URL = http://www.cs.ncl.ac.uk/~brian.randell/
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