Almost all public narratives are sponsored. For centuries
life was dominated by narratives sponsored by religious and political
elites, although the word sponsored
is perhaps a little mild for those rough and ready days.
The only other narratives must have been private local
narratives conducted in the home, in the fields or the alehouse away from
censorious ears. Mostly forgotten now.
These days the situation is much the same. Virtually every public
narrative is politically or commercially sponsored although that particular dividing
line has become blurred. Sponsored religious narratives are less common
than they were. Sponsored academic narratives may or may not have political
or commercial backers, but this is a complex area.
Even Marxism soon became a sponsored narrative after the Russian
revolution. Many fell for it and quite a few wormed their way into UK governments. As working conditions improved, socialism morphed into just another
sponsored narrative. Sponsored by unions, powerful bureaucracies, charities and
well funded pressure groups. Eventually sponsored by government itself - all governments of whichever political hue.
So perhaps we who immerse ourselves in the fascinating
possibilities of unsponsored narratives are not likely to achieve much apart
from a few pinpricks. The reason is obvious enough – it’s why narratives are
sponsored in the first place - to ensure that most people only encounter them.
For example the BBC only broadcasts sponsored narratives. I’m
sure this accounts for its servile treatment of the Royal
Family and why it still broadcasts shows such as Songs of Praise. In spite of the
BBC’s left-leaning political sympathies, vague sympathy for the monarchy and the C of E are still
sponsored narratives. On the whole, republicanism and atheism are not.
For the same reason, the BBC was bound to broadcast the orthodox global warming message simply because this is so obviously the sponsored
narrative. In comparison with Big Green, climate scepticism is an unsponsored
narrative, although there are hints that energy policy debacles may yet change all
that.
UKIP too has problems with sponsored narratives. The
supposed racism of UKIP voters is clearly a sponsored narrative, as is the
fruitcake meme. UKIP will have to do something about that, most likely by
avoiding genuinely radical reform. In other words, by avoiding unsponsored
narratives and by easing its way towards more sponsored narratives. UKIP will have to become mainstream in order to become mainstream
Sponsored narratives are fact of life. We’ll never get away
from them.
4 comments:
No-one sponsors me - dammit!
David - nor me. Are we doing something wrong do you think?
talking of the BBC, I watched 'Countryfile' last night which featured the Peak District - more or less your back garden, I believe. Stunning - you're a lucky man living near there.
David - yes we are lucky. Drop in for a coffee if you are ever tempted to visit.
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