FROM VTR TO CYBERSPACE: Jefferson, Gramsci & the
Electronic Commons by Mark Surman (msurman@io.org)
************************************ Appendix One - WHAT IS A
HEGEMONY ANYWAYS? A "hegemony" is really nothing like a
heffalump In fact, it isn't any kind of animal at all.
Rather, it is a state of being where everything is in
harmony, at least for those with a lot of money and power.
More specifically, hegemony is taking one way of seeing
things, and convincing people that this way of seeing things
is natural, that it is "just the way things are". This "way
of seeing things" in question is almost always in the
interests of people who are rich and powerful. In other
words, ideas that support the rich and powerful usually
define the way a society sees the world. In late 20th century
North America, most of us see the world through the eyes of
consumerism. The mass happiness of mass consumption pretty
much dominates our shared conceptions of the way things are.
[SIDEBAR -- Cultural hegemony refers to those socially
constructed ways of seeing and making sense of the world
around us that predominate in a given time and place. In the
latter 20th century US the supremacy of commodity relations
has exercised a disproportionate influence over the way we
see our lives. (Goldman, pg. 2)] This idea of hegemony _ a
way of seeing power in which "the war for mens' minds" is
paramount _ will help us understand how the corporate world
has been able to disable environmentalism. But before we see
how this happened, we should take a closer look at the inner
workings of hegemony. One way to get at these inner workings
is to explore a single element of the consumerist way of
seeing the world. The private automobile _ with all of the
cultural and structural elements that support it _ is as good
an example as any. Most North Americans believe that the
private automobile is the only way to get around, and that it
is definitely the best and coolest way to get around. In this
way, it could be said that the belief system which supports
the automobile is hegemonic, it is all encompassing. Given
all of the other ways of moving about that are available _
walking, biking, bussing, boating, training _ this
overwhelming support for cars as the only way is amazing. It
is so amazing that it is hard to believe that it happened on
its own, that people just naturally love the car. In reality,
the move towards a near universal acceptance of the car as
the North American way to get around required a great deal of
work on the part of big corporations and the people who help
them sell ideas. A number of structural, legal, and cultural
shifts had to take place before North Americans would
joyously shout in unison _ "the car is the only way to get
around, and we love it!". The most significant elements
involved in driving this almost univocal shout are: suburban
road and shopping systems; the creation of a government
funded car-only infrastructure; the destruction of the
American public transit industry; the creation of Hollywood
myths around the car; the connection of our unfulfilled
desires to automobile ownership; and the linking of the car
to fundamental cultural values like freedom. Let's start with
suburban road and shopping systems. Since the 1940's, North
Americans have constructed their new cities in such a way
that people almost literally have no choice but to get around
by car. We have built suburbs where stores and houses that
are too far from each other to allow walking. We have built
shopping places surrounded by seas of pavement, making it
impossible to stroll along and window shop like we did in our
old downtowns. We have built streets so big and wide that we
fear for our children's lives if they aren't safely tucked
inside our cars. The easiest way to convince people of
something is to make sure they don't have any choices. This
is exactly what the suburbs have done as a part of their
contribution to the hegemony of car culture, and the
dominance of consumerism in general. If it is very difficult
to get around without a car, people will quickly come to the
conclusion that the car is the only way to get around. The
governments of North America gave the suburbs a good deal of
help in convincing people to buy into this only way scenario.
Although there are many other examples, the two biggest
contributions that governments made to the development of a
car centred culture were road subsidies and centralized
planning. Federal, regional and municipal governments in
North America massively subsidized _ and continue to
massively subsidize _ the road system. If they didn't do
this, most people just couldn't have afforded to drive their
cars. And that wouldn't have been very good for business,
would it? [SIDEBAR -- To find out more about the subsidizing
of car infrastructure, you should look at the articles by Sue
Zielinski , Gord Laird, Michael Replogle and Charles Komanoff
in the book Beyond the Car, by Steel Rail Press] Once people
could afford cars, planners were brought in to design spaces
that people could only get around by car (the suburbs). This
planning aspect of things represents a whole sub-belief
system contained within a profession. By directly controlling
the ways in which certain aspects of society are organized,
these professional belief systems provide essential support
for the development of broader public conceptions of the way
things are. Of course the car corporations themselves had a
big hand in the development of the car centred belief system.
They made and advertised the cars that would fill the roads.
They also made sure that there was no competition from more
economically viable and economically accessible forms of
transportation. "In 1936 General Motors, Standard Oil of
California, and Firestone Tire formed a company called
National City Lines, whose purpose was to buy up alternative
transport systems all across the US., and then close them
down. By 1956, over one hundred electric surface rail systems
in 45 cities, serving millions of people had bought up and
dismantled entirely." With no buses or trains available, it
was much easier to convince potential suburban transit users
that the car was the only way. National City Lines was a step
in this direction. All of these structural motivations
couldn't have convinced people to believe so deeply in the
car unless people really wanted the car and the suburbs.
North America's cultural industries quickly stepped in to
help the want develop. From the 1940s to the 1960s, TV shows
and movie screens were filled with glorious visions of
suburban life. The suburban bliss of the Beaver Cleaver
family and the futuristic excitement of the Jetsons made the
old downtowns _ where you walked to the market and socialized
on the front porch _ look drab and boring. These programs let
people know that progress, that ever illusive commodity
lusted after by every God-fearing American, was to be found
in the car filled suburbs. And, if pulp TV and movie fiction
wasn't enough, news producers helped push "White Flight" to
the suburbs by constructing downtowns as hostile places
filled with criminals and minorities. This muddling mixture
of Hollywood fantasy and "real world" news melded together to
make the suburbs into "the place to be". Media makers not
only helped people with the psychological leap to the
suburbs, they also helped to create some powerful, down home
myths about what the car could do for your life. The American
film industry re-created the car as a provider of social and
sexual power. Hollywood-made home town America drag races
from the 1950s _ where the winner always gets the girl _ are
only the tip of the iceberg. Car advertising brought similar
messages to television. Women draped on the front of slowly
rotating automobiles drew the ever stronger connection
between cars and the ability to get women. These images of
the car as a great thing, as a way to get power and sex,
filtered quickly into real and everyday life. The rites of
passage that have developed around the car are evidence of
this. Most North American teenagers just can't wait to get
their driver's license, the official proof of adulthood. This
cultural link between the car and sexuality demonstrates how
the car centred belief system was built from the rubble of
our most valued life experiences and the mortar of our
perceived personal inadequecies. Sexuality is one of the most
vital and exciting parts of our lives. Unfortunately, the
dominant messages of our society and the day to day enforced
morality of the 1950s made a good job of quashing the sharing
and beauty of sex. If you didn't have a horrible sex life
already, the myth-makers did as much as they could to
convince you that you did. As sexuality has been broken down
into something that we don't have, or can't have, it has been
easily sold back to us in the form of cars and other consumer
objects. In other words, advertising and other forms of
popular culture have linked sexual fulfillment to the car as
a way to help us buy the car and love the car. It is
important to note that the accelerating car culture of the
1950s focused on the car only as the solution to male sexual
needs. In this way, the sexualization of the car not only
commercialized desire but also it contributed to the post-war
rebuilding of male dominance in North American society.
Finally, the car was also brought into the hegemonic
consumerist belief system by the skillful application of
words. Certain words hold immense power in a society, the
power to sway people and justify actions. In North American
society, one of these words is "freedom". Freedom has many
meanings, and many connotations. The most overarching of
these meanings play into the hands of consumerism and the
powers-that-be. In our culture, "freedom" can be used to
conjure up ideas about the right to espouse any political
beliefs you like, the ability control your own body, or the
right to protection from oppressive economic and political
forces. But more often than not, "freedom" is used to invoke
ideas about economic liberty in the marketplace _ the right
to make a buck or the right to buy the product you like, the
"free" market and the "free" press. These more dominant uses
of the word freedom act as fundamental supports to
consumerism. In the case of the car, freedom has been
strongly linked to freedom from parents, from the state, and
the freedom to chose your favourite model of car. By making
such strong links between the car and freedom, culture-makers
have helped to secure the car's position as a "must have"
product, and as a central element to our obsession with mass
consumption. All of these things _ the suburbs, government
road subsidies, the destruction of public transit in the US,
the creation of Hollywood car myths, the appropriation of our
desires, and the links between the car and central values
like freedom _ have contributed to the creation of an almost
all encompassing car loving belief system in North America.
This belief system has been so successful, and is so
pervasively connected to concepts of personal power and fun,
that few North Americans would say that they don't like cars.
In fact, they can't get enough of them. This belief system is
so pervasive that the vision of the car as the only way to
get around seems natural, "just the way things are". Massive
support for the car _ and in similar ways for consumerist
beliefs in general _ amounts to a tacit public consent to the
political and economic system that makes mass consumption
work. This natural-seemingness of a belief system and this
broad consent for a economic and political system are the
elements that make up hegemony. They indicate a situation
where the desires of the "general public" and the money
making schemes of big corporations are "in harmony". Of
course there will always be people who either don't
participate in the dominant way of doing things, or who
downright oppose it. In the case of the consumerist car
culture, there are definitely people who choose to use the
predominantly shut out modes of transportation such as
walking, biking, busing and training. There are also people
who come right out and say that cars should be gotten rid of
altogether and that we should all turn to other options.
Although these people may be acting and talking in ways that
go counter to the dominant way of seeing things _ counter to
the hegemony _ the big car corporations don't bother with
them much. Corporations are much more interested in keeping
consumerist myths rolling along than they are in talking to
people who think that the consumerist lifestyle is bunk. Big
corporations only start to worry about people who oppose them
when there is actually a threat to their ability to make a
profit. People can rant and scream and do their own thing all
they want as long as they don't interfere with profits. But
once you start tampering with profits _ by convincing enough
people that consumerism is a bad thing or by directly
standing in the way of money making operations _ you have
crossed an important threshold. This is the threshold that
stands between the powers-that-be being nice to you, and
being thrown in jail. It is at this point that the
environmentalists re-enter the story. As we saw earlier, the
spread of eco-ideas during the 1980s was seen as a threat by
those at the top of the consumerist power ladder. Large
numbers of people started to question widely held beliefs
that stood at the foundation of consumerism. Many North
Americans started to understand that using paper doesn't have
to mean clearcutting our forests and that getting around
doesn't have to mean driving a car. This was a questioning of
the dominant way of seeing the world. When the dominant ways
of seeing the world start to be questioned, the rich and
powerful start to wonder how they can keep the harmony of
hegemony. A situation like this is often called a "crisis of
hegemony". Such a crisis usually results in two actions on
the part of the powers-that-be. The first is to undermine
your opponents by making sure that the "general public" gets
real happy again, real fast. The second is to use force
against the "agitators" who won't get back in line, while
convincing everybody else in society that the "agitators"
were just a bunch of criminals anyway. In the environmental
"war for mens' minds", the rich and powerful generally choose
to use the undermining tactic first.
************************************************** For a
complete version of this paper -- including pictures, sidebar
commentary and a full bibliography -- contact Mark Surman
(msurman@io.org) This paper is COPYRIGHT MARK SURMAN (1994).
Permission is granted to duplicate, print or repost this
paper as long as it is done on a non-commercial (ie. keep it
free)and as long as the whole paper is kept intact.
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