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As I have argued on the lists from 2003,
I think that the historic culmination of the "globalised" economy
(symbolised by the falling of the Berlin Wall in 1989) in which
everything is "open", is a species of "ghettoisation" (symbolised by
Israel's West Bank barrier), which need not be spatial or economic, but could be
social, cultural, communicative etc. The more it is technically possible to
reach into every aspect of other's lives, the more people respond by
creating new boundaries and new codes of inclusion and exclusion, so that
in truth they live increasingly in separate social worlds.
In this regard, Sean Collins has an interesting
review of a new book that's worth a read:
"In The Big Sort, journalist Bill Bishop argues that Americans are increasingly clustering into enclaves of the like-minded ? with people who share the same ways of life, beliefs and political views. In other words, the same lifestyles. This leads to a splintering of the country, as those whose lifestyles are different are likely to live in another area, which itself is likely to consist mainly of the like-minded." http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/reviewofbooks_article/5507/ This incidentally gives a new twist to the concept of "pluralism" (the subject of a new HM conference). Marxists have usually understood this term in a liberal, democratic or
postmodernist way, borrowing from bourgeois theory, to refer to an
acknowledgement of other voices and different viewpoints, or as an
organisational device to unify different leftist sects and fragmented groups, in
the afterglow of the breakup of Stalinist and Maoist monolithism. But
the radical content of the concept of pluralism nowadays really refers
to something rather different: the willingness to scale and cross the walls
defining social space among a plurality of separated groups - walls which
already keep whole communities of people in separate life-worlds and
thought-territories, which in reality may even not interact
much anymore with each other at all, because they are more or less
self-sufficient and self-reproducing.
In the Biblical book of Genesis, you can read about the spiritual crisis
which ensued after God punished men for their arrogance of building
the Tower of Babylon, by confounding the peoples with a plurality of
tongues, while they originally spoke the same
consensual language. It creates an apparently irresolvable and
endless battle (or negotiation) over whose meanings will prevail. This
could of course be read as a metaphor for a phase in the development of
human beings when meanings are rapidly transformed or redefined, or as a
phase in sexual development when people are reborn. But in modern times, it
could also be seen as a real trend of an increasingly "multipolar" and
unequal world - a situation which increasingly exists within
America itself, and which America therefore projects on the rest of the
world. The more the media project an image of cultural uniformity, the
more people retreat to their own meanings - meanings not easily accessible to
outsiders or even alien to them.
In this sense, the American imperialist thinker Zbigniew
Brzezinski struggles with the paradoxes of "the political definition
of the human being itself", which, he argues, raises worrying long-term
questions. Egalitarianism is not a concept which jells well with American
culture other than in a vague sense of fairness (equitability), but he
nevertheless senses something vital is at stake:
"The traditional linkage of political liberty and political equality - a
legal concept that is central to the functioning of a democracy - was derived
from the idea that "all men are created equal", a conviction that the process of
human creation is inherently egalitarian. But preferential human enhancement, by
selectively manipulating the elemental code that defines the parameters of human
possibility, could imperil that idea and all the political and legal constructs
based on it. What becomes of the axiom of equality when some individuals'
intellectual and moral capacities are artificially magnified far beyond those of
others? The danger is that some states may be tempted to pursue preferential
human enhancement as a national policy. In the past, a selfcentered sense of
innate superiority on the part of certain peoples provided the justification for
colonial exploitation, slavery, and in the extreme case, the monstrous racial
doctrines of the Nazis. What if such superiority, rather than being merely a
self-serving illusion, should become real? Perceptible differences in
intelligence, health, and longevity between people could challenge the very
unity of humanity that globalization is said to be advancing, and the very
democracy that America seeks to promote." (The Choice, p. 209).
That's a sort of liberal middleclass concern that class differences should
not become too great. But if he was less concerned with foreign policy and
looked more inwards at the shape of America itself, he would have to
conclude that the social distance between the oligarchy and a large
underclass is already so great, that it is becoming unbridgeable, causing a
retreat to one's own cultural territory or lifesphere. In reality, among
the emerging "gated communities" around the globe, the process he
refers to is already fully happening, powerfully assisted by the economic
leverage and monopolistic market position which "effective control over the
access to strategic resources" provides.
Jurriaan
Theres so many different worlds
So many differents suns And we have just one world But we live in different ones - Dire Straits, "Brothers in Arms".
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- Re: [OPE] Mastering Marxian Economics, (continued)
- Re: [OPE] Mastering Marxian Economics, Dave Zachariah Mon 28 Jul 2008, 16:13 GMT
- RE: [OPE] Mastering Marxian Economics, GERALD LEVY Tue 29 Jul 2008, 12:52 GMT
- Re: [OPE] Mastering Marxian Economics, Dave Zachariah Tue 29 Jul 2008, 20:01 GMT
- Re: [OPE] Mastering Marxian Economics, Gerald Levy Tue 29 Jul 2008, 20:16 GMT
- [OPE] From globalisation to ghettoisation (redux), Jurriaan Bendien Sat 26 Jul 2008, 15:38 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- RE: [OPE] From globalisation to ghettoisation (redux), GERALD LEVY Sat 26 Jul 2008, 16:20 GMT
- [OPE] From globalisation to ghettoisation (redux), Jurriaan Bendien Sun 27 Jul 2008, 13:12 GMT
- [OPE] The risk industry and the oily spirit of the financial revolution, Jurriaan Bendien Sat 26 Jul 2008, 01:15 GMT
- [OPE] Mary Ellen Carter (Sat), Gerald Levy Fri 25 Jul 2008, 22:59 GMT