What lies behind the logic that
views the arts and culture sector as a frivolous expense for the State? It is well known that the culture industry, understood as an “official” realm of institutional activities,
ranks low, if not last, in the neoliberal prioritization of public spending. Culture
is viewed as a frivolity that does not bear utility for the necessary functioning
of society. This circumstance is not unique to Spain, or even Europe. Recast within
consumerist logic, the culture industries (in which I include film)
have had to survive for some time now, against the neoliberal perception that reduces
it to a static—and, paradoxically, subjective—utility, regarded valuable only
for the mere pleasure (superfluous “gains”) for a subject who “consumes” a
cultural object or event. And, again paradoxically, the culture industries have
had to survive by subscribing to the same logic, in the case of museums, cinemas, and art
fairs, among others, increasingly so through revenue generated by ticket sales--the product of which often eclipses critical thought in favor of what the public is most
willing to pay to see.
The reductive assumption of
neoliberal thought furthermore negates the collective and more crucial role of
culture for its potential to critique the complex, shifting forces (economic,
social, historical, etc.) that produce it. Stated in economic terms, the “work
of culture” lays bare a critique of its own sociopolitical and historical
circumstance—a critique which is vital to questioning our present reality and
the very possibility of imagining plural alternatives which proves a necessary
task today. To deny the “work of culture” as intellectual work is, effectually,
not only to imagine a society without cinema, literature, the arts, but without
a plurality of voices from which to critique the present circumstance. Let’s
say, in synonymous terms, it is to imagine a society in which politics goes
unreported by the news media.
However, what remains to be explained amidst the
lack of transparency about the Spanish government’s austerity measures, is what,
chillingly, already seems evident: that public spending itself—on education,
healthcare, etc.—has been consigned, along with culture, to the same category
of superfluous expenses.
From this sense of urgency, I have decided to write again on my blog (NB returning readers will note that former entries have been archived), with matters on culture, politics, and society in contemporary Spain. Many thanks for reading and, as always, comments are much welcomed.
2 comments:
brilliant Jon. The information on the austerity measures is sketchy at best in the States, and obviously just as bad in the Spanish news. Your commentary really helps.
Thank you for reminding me not only of why I study what I do, but also of why it's important (something that can get lost in conversations with my business consultant brother).
One question though...is it "responsible reasoning" or "responsible spending"?
Thanks for your comments, Diana. Much of what I'm interested in unpacking in this blog is the reasoning or thought that informs actions (i.e., austerity measures, etc.), understood in other terms as a field of activity in which theory (reasoning) and practice (in this case, spending) are inseparable. Many thanks for your keen observation on the word choice used in this entry, which brings up an important point.
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