Culture in Danger? If only...
The following text is an English version of a text written in France following the strikes and actions of 'Les
intermittents du spectacle' (casualised workers in the culture industry) in June and July 2003.
Culture In Danger?
- If only...
From the endangeredphoenix.com website
THE MOVEMENT OF CULTURAL
'INTERMITTENTS'. FRANCE, 2003-4
This is a different version from the French original, dropping things that have been mentioned in the article 'Tentative impressionistic notes on the movements in France, June 2003', and adding a couple of things to inform English readers of things too well-known to be worth mentioning to French readers, and also including some more developed analysis which had to be dropped from the French version for lack of space. The slogan 'Culture In Danger' is the dominant slogan of the movement of 'intermittents'.
The 'intermittents' were basically seasonal
workers, officially out of work for large periods of the year. They
were fighting against a change in France's laws that allowed them to
draw a large percentage of their income even when they weren't officially
working (though often they were, but being paid a pittance). Most 'intermittents'
are stage hands and theatre technicians, though it includes small time
actors, musicians, etc.
"This little army threatened to
burn all the theatres if they did not close immediately, saying that
the French people had no right to enjoy themselves in the midst of public
misfortunes and that they no longer had any reason to amuse themselves.
All theatres were duly closed; moreover no actor would have the courage
to appear on the stage in the midst of the general alarm inspired by
the certain prospect of tragic events." - Professor Bellfroy, Paris,
July 12th 1789.
==========================
Last June and July (2003) the
'intermittents' launched the best practical critique of modern culture
for a long time - by shutting down festivals that have been going on
since shortly after the Second World War. As insurrectionaries discovered
over 200 years ago, truly enjoying and amusing ourselves involves also
attacking the official market-enforced and State-protected forms of
enjoyment and amusement, the representations (but not the reality) of
life. These representations are the essence of culture so it's ironic
that the 'intermittents' should dress themselves up in the same language
as the State and the market - accusing the State of putting 'culture
in danger', pre-empting the inevitable accusation the government launched
against them.
Predictably, the appeal
to 'culture' was turned against the strikers, the government accusing
them of holding culture hostage. It's a measure of the success of the
dominant ideology of 'culture', that those at the obvious sharp end
of culture - shit-paid and casualised - can somehow believe that they
can develop their struggle by appealing to the correct terminology defined
by this society that humiliates them without end. And yet, when the
intermittents went on strike, it was them that put culture, or some
aspects of it, in danger. And their inventive creativity in struggle
began to prove the fundamental poverty of everything that likes to dress
itself up as 'culture'. The attempts to stop the utterly boring
Tour de France or the grotesquely embarassing performances of the decomposed
geriatrics of rock 'n' roll - Johnny Halliday and the Rolling Stones[1]
- were far more interesting than any of these spectacles
where the spectators have to know their place (the same goes for the
successful stoppage of the Avignon festival and other festivals this
summer).
PROGRESS OF A SUBVERSIVE COMMUNICATION
The progress of a subversive
communication is far more revealing than any entertainment. For example,
in Montpellier, at the Opèra in June, 'intermittents' on strike went
into the theatre at the end of the performance and lay down all over
the stairs and foyer, forcing the spectators to step over them. They
then occupied the Opera until they were kicked out and beaten a few
hours later by the CRS. This somewhat unoriginal and masochistic action
was initiated by the CGT, who, at a General Assembly of 'intermittents'
a few hundred metres from the Opèra, had insisted that the Assembly
be exclusive solely to 'intermittents' and that it could not take any
practical decisions. But the week after, under the initiation of some
'intermittents' critical of the CGT, some open public assemblies - to
which anyone interested was welcome - were held over three evenings,
discussing tactics and ideas, and on the fourth evening they invaded
the Corum just before the show and closed it down, a subversion of the
cultural spectacle, and of its innate division between paying spectators
and paid performers, that, ironically, the 'intermittents' ideology
(or, at least some of it) claimed to defend. The Socialist mayor - Fréche[2]
- showed more awareness of the subversive nature of this creative communication
than the 'intermittents' themselves, hysterically threatening to immediately
sack them, then backing off when he realised that this was not
legal (yet) but promising to refuse to renew their contracts.
So much for the hypocritical sympathy for the various strike movements
on the part of the Socialist Party, a hypocrisy so obvious it's almost
banal to point it out: as long as these movements don't challenge its
sphere of power it'll 'support' them.[3]
The trouble with the 'Culture
in Danger' slogan is that it's a slogan which neither side - neither
the bosses nor the 'intermittents' - really believes in. In expressing
themselves within the confines of this slogan, the 'intermittents' concede
to their enemies the right to define the parameters of what constitutes
reasonable debate. Above all, it's a concession to their enemies' mentality,
the traditional politician mentality, the mentality of arguing what
you don't really believe in, courting a passively approving popularity
for fear of telling the truth as you see it. Most 'intermittents'
know full well that culture isn't in danger, but they wish to appeal
to the common ground of the language of this society, the language of
lies. It's a slogan that unites exploiting bosses with exploited workers,
union bureaucrats with those they manipulate, the language of false
unity hiding basic antagonisms.
The only culture that's
worth developing and is genuinely in danger is the culture of resistance
that France has exemplified on and off for the last 200 years or more.
The contradiction is that the striking 'intermittents' are far more
part of this culture than they are of the 'culture' they claim to want
to save. Those who put out this slogan know full well that 'Culture'
in the sense of artistic representations is certainly not in danger,
though, infinitely more importantly, the means of survival of the 'intermittents'
are in danger through the government's project of reducing the length
of time they could claim earnings-related State benefits. Those justly
struggling to maintain a certain level of survival and security feel
they need to appeal to a higher authority - 'culture' - in order to
make their struggle greater than it is. But in appealing to culture
they make it less than it is; that is, they hide the real significance
of this exciting movement behind a pointless abstraction.
The 'intermittents' are now at the heart
of the fundamental contradiction of the French proletariat[4]: producing
this society yet revolting against it. This is a struggle of the more
modern proletariat against an attack on its margin of freedom and survival
by modern capital under the temporary direction of this government.
To appeal to 'culture' is to appeal to a special role in this society
and stops people recognising that these attacks are an attack not just
on their particular mode of alienated labour but part of the attacks
French capital has to make on the whole of the French working class
to make Europe competitive.
The State doesn't want culture to
disappear - on the contrary, the worse things get, the more culture
is essential for the maintenance of this mad society. What they
want is to push it more into the private sector, make it more profitable,
reduce subsidies.
THE END OF SUBSIDIES?
What will happen is the
intensified free market in culture - for example, maybe an end to State
subsidised free music festivals held throughout the country in the summer.
As a method of channelling those who consider themselves most rebellious
into 'exciting' wage labour, the subsidised cultural spectacles have
sometimes been a bit inventive, but most of that spectacular inventiveness
which comes from a fairly marginal and partly precarious means of survival
will either be repressed, not by State censorship, but by the censorship
the Economy imposes on daily communication or be more crudely co-opted
- into advertising, for instance, as it always has in the past.
One can see the use
of subsidised arts as a means of pacification in the development of
the Welfare State in the USA., brought about partly by the massive eruption
of strikes and riots during the Great Depression. The New Deal
in the 30s gave federal money to put thousands of writers, artists,
actors and musicians to work - in a Federal Theatre Project, a Federal
Writers Project, a Federal Art Project; pretty murals were painted on
public buildings, hiding the ugliness of the social relations inside
and out; plays were put on for working-class audiences who had never
seen a 'proper' play; people heard a live symphony for the
first time, etc. Giving the dangerous unwashed workers a whiff of High
Culture is such a civilising influence, don't you think? But in 1939,
with the organisation of capital more stable and less threatened by
class struggle, the New Deal reform impulse became less necessary, so
programs to subsidise the arts were eliminated. It had been useful for
the development of capital to first of all subsidise culture (just as
nowadays some states subsidise the starting up of new businesses for
the previously unemployed) and then leave these artists to sink
or swim in the market. All this has some parallels with France today.
Certainly subsidies allow
a margin of experimentation within the creation of theatrical forms
of entertainment which the 'free market' does not immediately visibly
allow because the 'free market' is based on immediate popularity - immediate
mass demand to develop immediate short-term profit. It has to appeal
to the lowest common denominator of predictable mass taste - taste which
has already been moulded and conditioned by cultural spectacles which
are immediately easy to understand, easy to consume, bland exchangeable
equivalents. The withering away of subsidies seems, according to Statist-orientated
social democratic logic, to mean the development of a solely monolithic
culture: certain desires will never get co-opted into forms of commodified
representation, because, apparently, the private sector, being concerned
only with short-term profit, won't invest in the search for such 'original'
desires. In fact, the culture industry is aware that experimentation
(within the confines of saleability) is essential for the creation of
novelties needed to pacify an increasingly jaded public. They don't
need the State to invest, through subsidies, a small amount of its surplus
in such risky experimentation; they'll do it privately[5]. Moreover,
the pressures of the Economy anyway create 'spontaneously' tens of thousands
of would-be writers and/or artists anxious to make money by putting
their uniquely subjective fantasies down on paper, canvas or whatever,
fiction which is then picked up by prowling market researchers
who then transform them into more mass market entertainment and/or advertising.
COMPARISONS WITH THE U.K.
In fact, contrary to the official ideology
put out by most 'intermittents', intensified commodification of culture
does not mean the end of its diversity: as we have experienced in the
UK, the more a varied free life is repressed, the more the free market
in culture steps in to represent the vast variety of desires for sensation
numbed by the totalitarian economy.
(This is also mirrored in the
development of theatrical forms of 'opposition', spectacular protest,
in the UK, where effective forms of opposition have been virtually non-existent
since the Poll Tax riots of 1990. There, the repression of direct anger
has meant a vast growth in completely useless, but 'original', forms
of 'opposition' - for example, the recently televised protest of a guy
who's paid peanuts by the State, crawling - significantly - on all fours
pushing a peanut along the London streets with his nose, surrounded
by endless amounts of journalists and cameramen).
The differences in cultural content
between the UK and France mirror the margin of freedom in the respective
countries (though the climate also plays a part). The UK is full of
the most crudely provocative art deliberately intended to break through
the ever thickening anaesthetised skin of the average art lover, the
average spectator. In France, where continued but limited intransigence
on the part of the proletariat means that there's generally a better
quality of living and margin of freedom to rebel, culture represents
a light-hearted rebellion more. Either this movement will be defeated
and this light-heartedness will go or creativity in the attack on normal
daily life will blossom and make culture be recognised as the closed
window onto a vicarious external life that it is. Or possibly something
else - an explosion of violent class struggle, with culture chasing
on its heals and producing 'angry' cinema, music etc.
ALL WORK PRODUCES ALIENATION
Wherever people sell their
labour, whether it seems a rebellious way of making money or not, there
is the commodity and pretending that somehow your work is different
is just one of the ways this society divides and rules. That 'intermittents'
have, up till now, accepted pitiful wages - sometimes working for 15
euros a day in the black economy in order to be re-employed at the end
of what is officially their year off - is in part due to the ideology
of creativity that their work is imbued with. The reason many
bosses have supported the strikes is not just down to the fact that
they may be forced to make up the difference in the income of the intermittents
resulting from the proposed shortening of earnings-related unemployment
pay, which subsidises the cultural black economy, but also because there's
a limit to how much the consolation of 'creativity' can compensate for
crap wages.
All work produces alienation.
Although everyone needs to find some margin of dignity in their alienated
labour, and, although, obviously, there are increasing amounts of people
who are forced, by the need for money (the only need the Economy produces),
to work producing cultural commodities, through selling their drawing
skills, their musical skills, their set-design abilities or whatever,
to have illusions that somehow your work is special merely contributes
to a hierarchical superior attitude towards other wage labourers and
stops you recognising that all this 'creativity' creates something you
are forced to submit to.
* * *
A BRIEF HISTORY OF CULTURE
Under capitalism, to say 'Culture is
not a commodity' is merely to hide reality with your desires. The fact
that one often sees this slogan above stands at trade fairs alongside
stands for various artisanal products and marginally produced cultural
commodities is enough to show up the self-contradictory nature of this
slogan. Culture is a commodity - 'the commodity that sells all the others'.
A critique of culture, so much part of the movement 35 years ago, has
been forgotten, ignored, and repressed. Despite the fact that,
post-'68, the Situationists generally fought alienation by alienated
means, it was their innovative development of a critique of culture
that contributed so much to the movement of 1968 (for example, they
recognised that, despite their intentions, most of the results of the
experiments of the Surrealists were essentially to help develop intriguing
cultural images that helped update the commodity-spectacle; see, in
particular, Vaneigem's A Cavalier History of Surrealism).
"With the
developing repression and supercession of tribal societies by class
society, religion and the art that reinforced it became linked to the
appearance of a division within the communal life where a representative
caste of priests emerged to mediate between gods and society. Art appeared
linked to the development of magic, ritual and tools as society developed
new relationships to the rest of nature. As class society developed,
the fruits of exploitation flowed to the rulers and created a class
with a surplus of leisure time and resources to produce and create in
non-essential activities - and so aesthetics developed as a specialised
practice of both production (artistic creativity) and consumption (cultural
appreciation)." (A Closed window Onto Another Life; reflections
on culture and its artistic reproduction - endangeredphoenix.com)
Culture is a product
of class society, the hierarchical division of labour. 'Culture' as
a separate sphere of 'creativity' never existed in tribal societies.
"In my tribe there are no poets. Everyone talks in poetry",
an American Indian said.[6]
Nowadays, culture
is as taboo to criticise today as religion was at the time of the French
Revolution, over 200 years ago[7]. The collapse of all Divine
unitary references of culture with the bourgeois revolution meant the
loss of a false hierarchical unity, cemented by God, in which
mass human history did not officially exist and wasn't represented in
its art. But the failure of the masses of individuals to break through
to real liberty, equality and fraternity - i.e. the failure of the masses
of individuals to creatively transform daily life - created the beginning
of the conflict between the cultural protest against this situation
and the culture that glorified it. Having failed to put the heart into
a heartless world, many began to create the art of an artless life.
The flowering of very different and opposing tendencies within culture
- culture which praised the existing New Order and innovative culture
which experimented against the dominant society (the same happened in
the sphere of philosophy and revolutionary theory) - was based on the
fundamental repression of the hopes of this revolutionary period and
the struggle to realise these hopes in changed conditions. From Blake
to the Symbolists, via Shelley and Byron, to the Dadaists and the Surrealists,
the struggle was always for a different world - a search for lost unity
- but (like with Marx and Bakunin) everywhere the results
were very different from the ones intended.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF REBELLIOUS MUSIC
One can also see this in
the history of black music. John Little, a 19th century American
ex-slave said, "They say slaves are happy because they laugh and
are merry. I myself and three or four others have received two hundred
lashes in the day and had our feet in fetters; yet at night we
would sing and dance and make others laugh at the rattling of our chains.
Happy men we must have been! We did it to keep down trouble and to keep
our hearts from being completely broken...". From the development
of the singing of slaves to blues to jazz to rock and roll one can see
the development from a protective way of keeping one's spirits up to
a marginal sub-culture outside of any money-making to a marginal culture
as a precarious means of survival to an utterly commodified form of
big business, which nowadays goes so far as doing market research even
before putting a band together. One can see elements of this in the
development of Rai music in Algeria, which was originally part
of the culture of the Algerian unemployed in the 80s, an expression
of their hatred of the State and their disdain for Islam, music that
spoke of love, alcohol and boredom, a music that was often repressed
by State censorship. But now it's so mainstream it can be part of the
French equivalent of Fame Academy - "Star Academy" (whilst
meanwhile, the French State surreptitiously supports the repression
of social movements in Algeria from which Rai developed, supported by
the silence of the same media that has made Rai utterly innocuous).
The progression from a marginal form of "self-expression"
in some ways in protest against the existing order to the commodification
of this partial self-expression is nowadays not just enormously speeded
up but, considering how far individuals are repressed and colonised
by the tastes of the spectacularised market, is already there in this
so-called "self-expression" from the age of 7. Today, people
can only imitate - by coldly, soullessly, learning formal techniques
- the qualities born out of risky experimentation and a truly rebellious
life that created the life-enhancing music of the past. Weaned
on and domest and other role models for 'correct' forms of banal 'creativity',
young people would need a massive revolution to unleash the imagination,
energy and passion needed to re-invent music as an extension of
individual playful contact "to keep our hearts from being completely
broken".
* * * * * *
To critique culture today
you get instantly categorised as ascetic; it seems to many to be as
mad as opposing good food or sex. But just as there's a difference between
Ready, Steady, Cook!, a small restaurant and eating a good meal with
friends, or between Playboy magazine, a prostitute and a tender fuck
with someone you love, so there's a difference between Mass Culture,
marginal culture and real living.
Or you get categorised as
a Nazi - after all, it was Goering who, in his only memorable quote,
said, "When I hear the word 'culture' I reach for my gun".
The Nazis, of course, weren't against culture as such - immediately
after some mass slaughter, Nazi concentration camp officers would often
quickly relax by listening to some uplifting Mozart symphony played
by a mainly Jewish orchestra. The point, unlike Goering's attitude,
is to go beyond culture, not repress it by means of the State - to realise
the radical desires it can only represent, attacking it as a specialised
activity, attacking it without the support of hierarchical violence.
Or you get categorised as
a philistine - but the real philistines are today's culture vultures:
how many of them know a thing about the revolutionary search in art
up until the mid-1960s? Such ignorance of the past is essential to pass
off artworks as innovative novelties, at the same time stereotyping
those who think modern art is pretentious crap as stuck-in-the-past
fuddy-duddies.
Nowadays there's no way
of expressing anything subversively innovative within cultural forms:
it's all been done before but better, and even then it all got co-opted
into the system it tried to challenge. And since the 1960s it's clear
that culture itself is the sell-out. Even those free cultural spectacles
which have nothing to do with making money (e.g. those squirmingly pretentious
anarchist-type poetry readings, complete with atmospheric percussion,
treated with as much silent reverence as a congregation treats a church
sermon) educate people taccept their role of positive approving spectators.
No-one dares cry out:
"The Emperor has
no clothes!"
- 30th Oct., 2003
P.S. After this was written, the intermittents
were involved in several interesting activities, including disrupting
the National Assembly (France's Parliament), invading a news studio
during a live news broadcast, and several other activities. In June
2004 they threatened to close down the Cannes film festival, which was
enough to encourage hotel workers, during a very important season for
the tourist industry, to come out on a brief wildcat strike, but the
intermittents didn't really connect to these workers (whether this was
due to their illusions that they were somehow different or not, I don't
know). Some of them invaded and took over a cinema, only to be chucked
out by the cops and badly beaten up. This scared the government into
an apology for the behaviour of the CRS, something quite rare. But it
meant nothing, obviously: those arrested were sent to trial and a couple
of the cops involved were briefly suspended from duty. But the apology
had the desired effect of taking the heat out of the situation, especially
as the intermittents left it up to the CGT to organise them - they were
allowed to make a public televised statement about their case, as if
that could change things. A great opportunity to really threaten some
aspects of the movie industry was lost, as was the battle against the
change in their status. Consequently, now many intermittents have a
vastly reduced income and their fight is largely forgotten.
(Winter 2004)
======================
FOOTNOTES
[1] The connection between the repression
of the masses of individuals and their attraction to celebrities reminds
us of what Wilhelm Reich observed in his analysis of fascism and Hitler's
"charisma": what individuals repress in themselves, and/or
are forced to repress, gets channelled into a delirious admiration
for celebrities who are the specialised external 'expression' of these
repressed qualities (Reich's limitation in his analysis was to reduce
repression to sexuality, when what is repressed is not just the body
and the capacity for direct love between individuals but also critical
intellect and practical subversive social opposition, all of which dialectically
interact with one another). Nowadays, though there are still fanatical
fans, most people, in keeping with the resigned cynicism of the times,
have an unenthusiastic, take it or leave it, attitude to famous people,
expressing an indifference also to what is repressed in themselves,
especially class anger.
[2] Freche has the delirious arrogance
of someone who has been mayor of a quickly expanding city for 24 years.
His other job is a professor and, followed by cameramen, whenever he
sees a student of his in the street, he doesn't hesitate to publicly
and loudly humiliate them for their ignorance, enough to get these embarrassed
students' photos printed in the local papers.
However, even those who
criticise his megalomania praise him for his own contribution to the
civilising influence of culture - in the form of urban regeneration.
He is praised for instigating the transformation of an ever overflowing
river running through a fairly barren, semi-marsh wilderness into
an utterly boring but flood-controlled river which is virtually unrecognisable
as a river - more like some very large canal-like ultra-bland tame water
feature. And now the river runs through a vast complex of
Greek-inspired architecture that looks like a gigantic ultra-smooth
version of some old-style Hollywood blockbuster, intended to overwhelm
you into feeling even smaller, distracted and isolated than normal.
Being such a large area, it's repetitive grandiose heaviness seems almost
unending in its uniform, immutable, ice-cold permanence. Yet, at the
same time, unlike the horrible classical Greek architecture on which
it's based, it also seems tacky, it's pretensions and appearance paper-thin:
overwhelmingly heavy yet shoddily insubstantial, like the social relations
that created it.
[3] At the mass get-together in Larzac
this summer, in an exemplary action, the Socialist Party bookstall was
forced to be dismantled by the angry threats of anarchists and others.
Meanwhile, the star of the show - Jose Bove - showed how unexemplary
he is by shaking the hand of the Interior Minister, the hated Nicolas
Sarkozy.
[4] Most people don't see themselves
as proletarians, dismissing the term as archaic, Marxist-Leninist
or whatever. Perhaps it's the ideology and practice of professionalism
that stops people admitting to the fact that they have no control over
their lives, that they are proletarians in this sense, and in the sense
that if they wish to not be utterly swept away by fate, they have
to struggle to oppose their commodification. And to go beyond the separate
categories that resignation to commodification imposes: Perhaps people
also don't like to think of themselves as proletarians nowadays because
it implies a stance of opposition they no longer feel capable of.
[5] The only likely difference is that
those experimental spectacles with a pretension to some 'radical' critique
will not be invested in; they will have to give up their illusion of
being in some way subversive, be incorporated into the acceptable cynicism
of this world, get rid of their overly worthy seriousness - and end
up like The Simpsons, which wittily combines cynical contempt for normality
with a sympathetic insight into normality's foibles and contradictions,
without the gauche pretension of appearing to show a revolutionary way
out.
[6] H.Zinn, "A People's History
of the United States".
[7] " A prisoner who cannot
see the sky from his cell window may paint on his wall a scene of birds
flying amongst clouds against a blue haze of space. Outside in the wider
society art plays a similar role; what is denied and seems unreachable,
but possible and desirable, is represented via the window of the picture
frame or TV screen. So art/culture as the representation of what is
repressed fuses with the commodity form; the very form whose domination
has fragmented this creativity from the rest of life. (And with this
fusion adverts become seen as "the cutting edge of art".)
The contradiction within
art is that it appeals to our desire for realisation of what it represents
- passion, creativity and other experience routinely denied in bourgeois
society - but it only "realises" in a fragmented, isolated
manner, separate from daily life. It is now art and the cultural spectacle,
not religion, that is "the opium of the people" and "the
heart of a heartless world"." - from "Reflections on
Culture".
[8]. On October 18th, Saturday night,
some dozens of intermittents, supported by demonstrators outside numbering
hundreds, disrupted the French equivalent of Fame Academy - 'Star Academy'
- by walking on stage with a big banner, initially held upside down,
saying 'Turn off your telly'. The compere demonstrated what he was being
paid for, other than for having the right connections. Normally boringly
bland in his mediocre reassuring nice guy manner, he put this apparently
innocuous role to the defense of the status quo by calmly saying, as
soon as the intermittents had seized the stage, "We're open to
all points of view here - let's hear what you have to say", so
showing his clever recuperator role in the middle of an unexpected situation.
Initially the intermittents seemed to want to say nothing until an apparently
reluctant spokesman came forward and said they were protesting about
the changed conditions in the benefits system for intermittents, that
the government was neglecting its responsibilities. It was a disappointing
anti-climax to what could have been a momentous event - a bit like climbing
Everest and then just sticking a flag on top of it. The gap between
the achievement and the banal way it was expressed seemed like a small-scale
version of the way proletarians in the past have seized the stage of
history only to find themselves lost for words, unable to express their
project and desires in anything other than received ideas. But
perhaps this is being a bit unfair since they probably hadn't expected
to get that far and, moreover, they had only about 15 seconds before
the audience started jeering and the compere said "We'll continue
this, but first let's go into a short commercial break, o.k.?",
after which the show was cut for 2 hours whilst the programme planners
hastily put on some cop show as a temporary replacement. This, during
the weekly prime-time slot for TV audiences - it's a top pop show; Elton
John, Sting, Diane Mynogue, Johnny Hallyday, Gilbert Bécaud have all
been on it recently. A window was broken, and three intermittents were
arrested, charged with 'violence'. In fact, TV news the next day
said that the intermittents had violently stormed the studio. Apparently
there was a big fight between security guards and intermittents. If
these excellent initiatives are to develop in the future, they'd have
a far more widespread and subversive effect if accompanied by
some radical critique, written and/or verbal. The social-democratic
terms in which this disruption was expressed is very uninspiring. Although
inevitably, such actions (like with strikes and riots) bring together
people with a vast variety of varying viewpoints, there must be
a few amongst these intermittents who have a passionate radical critique
which needs to be communicated incisively. As it was, the disruption
was a bit too insufficient considering what's at stake and considering
the disgust probably a majority of intermittents feel for Star Academy.
More like this
- The Closed Window Onto Another Life - endangeredphoenix
- The Occupation of Art and Gentrification
- 2003: Notes on the Movement in France - Struggles around pensions and education
- On the poverty of student life
- The Revolution of Modern Art and the Modern Art of Revolution (Clark, Gray, Nicholson-Smith, Radcliffe & others, 1967)

