One of the pleasures of modern language is the invention of
particularly apt, powerfully descriptive phrases such as ‘virtue signalling’. This
seems to be a recent one. According to Google Trends it first appeared as a blip in 2009 then rose from obscurity in 2015. In spite of claims by James Bartholomew it probably originated within signalling theory. Google Ngram Viewer isn’t aware of it at all.
A real stonker of a phrase, it is extraordinarily powerful as a concise term for vast swathes of unedifying human
behaviour. Yet the idea of signalling is hardly new - Strindberg saw it in art.
...for my art was
incapable of expressing a single idea; at the most it could represent the body
in a position expressing an emotion accompanying a thought—or, in other words,
express a thought at third hand. It is like signalling, meaningless to all who
cannot read the signals. I only see a red flag, but the soldier sees the word
of command: Advance!
August Strindberg – The Red Room (1879)
In which case and given that it is now so obvious that
virtue signalling is a vital aspect of human behaviour, what prevented us from
describing it in such a powerfully accessible way before? Perhaps it is because, as we
well know, forceful phrases soon become overused, lose their vigour and slip off
into the land of cliché.
Which would be handy for those who rely on virtue signalling because it cuts so deeply into the
social fabric. It exposes the manipulative mechanisms of power, the
screen behind which personal interests hide.
Celebrity culture, mainstream journalism, drama, political allegiances, the EU, the UN, major charities, environmental drama, major sporting events and international businesses all lean heavily on virtue signalling. They cannot say so or folk might expect some genuine virtues instead of being caught up in the nonsense themselves. We can’t have that can we?
Celebrity culture, mainstream journalism, drama, political allegiances, the EU, the UN, major charities, environmental drama, major sporting events and international businesses all lean heavily on virtue signalling. They cannot say so or folk might expect some genuine virtues instead of being caught up in the nonsense themselves. We can’t have that can we?
8 comments:
I'm really great at virtue signalling, being a fine chap of unimpeachable worth.
Have a look at this:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/jan/20/virtue-signalling-putdown-passed-sell-by-date
A Guardianista objecting to the term. If anyone has a vested interest in removing this dangerous phrase from the realms of public debate, it is surely him. Like a burglar lobbying to rid the world of CCTV, or fingerprinting.
The term is so beautiful and precious, that I sometimes wonder what we should do with it. Use it as often as possible, but risk blunting its wonderful honed edge? Or sparingly, so as to save it from cliche, but miss easy targets? One good reason to read widely and express oneself in writing is to create the type of written culture wherein new weapons can be forged when the old ones are past their prime.
James - yes, some of us don't have to try.
Sam - only in the Guardian, the virtue-signaller's rag of choice.
One way to preserve it would be to keep it low key, treat it almost as a technical term. Its eventual fate should be interesting.
I believe that virtue signalling should be open to all regardless of race, religion, class, gender and any personal inclinations that differ from another. So long as I reserve my inalienable right to thump anyone on the nose that I disagree with.
Demetrius - it's often an attractive option, but is thumping people on the nose a virtue?
Virtue is it's own reward.
The true grandmaster of virtue signalling is Rt Hon Mr Corbyn. I do not recall the exact details, but the Conservative chap with the shiny face once expressed commiserations to all those Israelis who suffered from bomb attacks, whereupon JC stood up and added "and also those Palestinians who suffered". Truly masterly.
Graeme - I agree, relentless virtue signalling from the sidelines is the greater part of Corbyn's political philosophy. Now he isn't on the sidelines he has problems.
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