Preparations for the Great Leap Backwards began in October
1927. According to Wikipedia that’s when the first feature film talkie was released
- The Jazz Singer starring Al Jolson.
From this small beginning the world changed forever as a
number of social trends began to march in step.
Firstly the moving image became an important part of life
all over the developed world. Not just for entertainment, but news, information
and commentary. Although books had become much cheaper and lending libraries
were popular, the moving image gripped its audience in a way books would never
emulate.
Cinemas were built in every town, cities had lots of them.
Only a few decades later the moving image entered our homes via television. The
conquest was complete.
Secondly as the twentieth century progressed and in spite of
wars and financial disasters, the developed world began learning how to feed
and house even the poorest of its citizens.
These two factors brought out something fundamental about
ourselves, an issue we must have missed while still hypnotised by the moving
image. Something to do with how we deal with the real world – how those dealings can be
subverted by security and physical comfort.
In a way this something is merely the circus of bread
and circuses, but much more powerful, intrusive and sinister. As the moving
image and comparative prosperity took hold of our lives, intellectual curiosity
began to wane.
Today, nearly eighty years after that first talkie, we are losing
the urge to know in favour of an urge to be entertained. With it comes a
deep-seated love of show and display - a love of theatre. As if life’s edge has been dulled by comfort and prosperity,
as if a less basic need slipped into the driving seat while we were
queuing up to watch the latest blockbuster at the Odeon or switching on the box
for an evening of family entertainment.
Display has always been important to us, as it is with other
animals, but without the sharp edge of survival – well the arts of display
seem to be all we have left to push us on into our brave new world.
Perhaps we thought intellectual curiosity was enough to spur
us on in spite of our full bellies, but apparently not. Curiosity is intimately
linked with survival and we’ve dealt with survival. For now. Folk memories of
genuine poverty and real hardship are disappearing from the reach of living
memory.
The recent Scottish Referendum was pure theatre, rational argument
very much noticeable by its absence. Instead we had the unedifying sight of
political theatre and its emotional power to get those metaphorical bums on
seats. From economic summits to Prime Minister’s Questions, from elections to
great debates, it’s all theatre.
Even the mad murderers of ISIL seem to be gripped by a
grisly sense of theatre. Black uniforms, sinister headgear and black flags. All
theatre. Grim, deadly, insane and even juvenile in some respects, but still
theatre.
Science is certainly drifting towards theatre and away from
a knowledge culture. Climate change is pure theatre, always was. Take leading actors on the climate stage. Al Gore, Vivienne
Westwood, Leonardo DiCaprio, Sting, Emma Thompson...
Strewth!
But it's just theatre – nothing else, nothing deeper, nothing demanding, nothing intellectual. Forget
the science - the names topping the bill tell you all you need to know about
the show. Apart from who dunnit.
Climate impresarios rope in celebrities, fashion designers,
artists, pundits and assorted thespians with limited knowledge of the science because they
don’t need it. They have their lines off pat. It’s what they do, why they are able
strut their stuff on the climate stage without knowing anything worth passing on.
Staying with science - how about physics? Multiverse theories? They look like theatre to me. The vast drama of the cosmos, the
thrilling strangeness of untrammelled scientific conjecture, the mysterious
depths of untestable notions. Bums on seats matter, even in relatively small
and publicly supported theatres such as this.
All the world’s a stage – literally. Yet if people are to be liberally rewarded for acting a part, for learning a narrative instead of the
truth, then we cannot use the cold blue light of reason to show us the way to anywhere
worth visiting.
So lots of drama but no happy ending.
5 comments:
Have we gone back to the world as it might have been before the invention and application of printing? Only nastier?
If you haven't already seen this, you'll be able to relate to it right away;
http://www.climatechangedispatch.com/the-most-futile-march-ever.html
Demetrius - I think printing was okay, but we should probably have stopped there. Maybe the internet will change things for the better.
Mac - good link. What is it about loons? Why do they need parades?
we are losing the urge to know in favour of an urge to be entertained
Making people ripe for manipulation.
James - probably a tad overripe.
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