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Disney, News, Politics and the Academy ...excerpted from Disney's Distorted Mirror
by Ken Sanes
What we see in Disney can now be found not merely in zoos
and theme parks but throughout contemporary culture -- in news and
television, movies, advertising, museums, politics and virtually all other
institutions and media that are trying to win and hold large audiences.
National television news, for example, is supposedly intended to give us
information about the world -- information we often need to fulfill our role
as citizens. But with its computer-generated special effects, camera work,
dramatic music and sets, and dizzying efforts to take us to distant locales,
it increasingly looks like a theme park ride. Its often exaggerated and
simplified scenes and story lines satisfy our desire to feel as if we are
participating in great events and striding the world stage. Like fictional
stories, it offers us dangers to fear, sufferers to sympathize with,
villains to hate, hypocrites to disdain, and leaders to admire, all
condensed into interesting narratives and once again made more compelling by
the belief that they are about important events and situations in actual
life.
For its part, local television news offers us a litany of
smaller scale dangers and disasters. Where more obvious forms of fiction
take us to the conclusion of a happy ending in order to turn fear into hope,
local news does so by framing its depictions with stories of communities
coming together and victims saved. And like national news, it frames the
constant and exaggerated depiction of danger with the portrayal of calm and
professional newscasters who are part of a community that is strong enough
to contain danger.
Here, too, we are given something that looks suspiciously
like a blend of fact and fiction, along with implicit claims that our
viewership is a way of fulfilling responsibilities of citizenship. And, here
too, the actual events that are shown seem increasingly to be mere vehicles
for giving us a chance to enact our own psychologies. Much of the time, what
we respond to isn't the actual situations depicted, but the artfulness of
the narrative and theater. We are deliberately led to confuse art with life,
and to confuse our emotions and fantasies for what is in the world, by those
who want to sell us candidates, products, entertainment and ideas.
Disney, in fact, comes close to admitting that this is what
it is trying to do, although it would undoubtedly deny it if the
implications of its statements were pointed out. For example, it says the
inspiration for the park is "mankind's enduring love for animals," and a
Disney "imagineer" is quoted as saying that the Tree of Life is a "symbol of
the beauty and diversity and the grandeur of our animal life on Earth," and
a "celebration of our emotions about animals and their habitats." Similarly,
in the statement quoted earlier, Disney says: "Inspiring a love of animals
and concern for their welfare is the underlying theme, both subtle and
obvious, throughout Disney’s Animal Kingdom Park." In other words, the park
is about inducing positive emotions in visitors -- emotions that are a
one-dimensional expression of our complex attitudes toward nature. It isn't
just nature that is falsified but our reactions and perceptions.
Of course, none of this is, in itself, new. Mythmakers and
storytellers, and kings and shamans, have always taken our disavowed
fantasies and converted them into artful daydreams that take on the
appearance of life, to satisfy our desires and let us act out what is on our
minds. Similarly, politicians and other manipulators of rhetoric have always
told stories full of idealized depictions of themselves and those they
represent, while offering "demonized" depictions of their opponents, to
induce a fictionalized view of the world in audiences. Even this text
creates illusions and plays on emotions, offering to provide a window onto
some aspect of the world while creating the illusion the reader is being
directly addressed in a unified and spontaneous expression of ideas, and
placing the writer and reader on the side of right, as a villain is depicted
who is worthy of their hate.
What is different now is that massively powerful new
industries of culture fabricators have made great strides in learning how to
use art and science as tools of manipulation. Collectively, they have turned
news and television, movies, advertising, museums, politics, documentaries
and most other forms of contemporary culture into variations on Disney. All
convert life into lifelike theater by seamlessly integrating physical and
sensory simulations with computers and story lines, and blending in special
effects to keep people watching. And all, to one degree or another, provide
depictions and stories that deliberately falsify their subject in order to
play to the psychology of their audience. They do what all artists do --
they improve on life, exaggerating, intensifying, and using their raw
material to create aesthetic effects. But they claim that what they offer is
a faithful depiction or that it is something authentic, as they use the new
techniques of image fabrication and simulation to make it convincing.
One antidote to this trend is to remember that
throughout history there have been philosophies that have taught us we can
make our thoughts and desires transparent, and we can also learn how to
separate our own imaginings and false perceptions from the larger world.
This is probably the message of various forms of Eastern mysticism; it was
certainly the message of Freud, and it is the message of modern science,
which tries to filter out the biases of the observer in an effort to
discover the world beyond our own projections. In each case, these
philosophies have suggested that there is a kind of liberation that comes
both from knowing ourselves and from being in contact with things as they
are, instead of constantly weaving them into the dramas that rage in our
minds.
What we need today is a form of culture criticism that is
based on these essential truths. Its purpose will be to study all of our
representations, unraveling simulations and authentic objects, and fact and
fiction, and revealing disguised and disavowed expressions of personality,
ideology, marketing, and myth. Its role will be to help us understand
ourselves and society, despite the censorship imposed by the mind and by
those in power, and to help us cease projecting our own psychology onto
things. Most essentially, it will help us see through the pervasive
fictionalization and falsification that pervades virtually all forms of
media.
As part of this effort, it will have to take a stand against
the degradation of the search for truth, which now puts kids on thrill rides
and tells them they are getting an education and helping to change the
world. It will demand that we try to understand and teach about nature as it
is, rather than turning it into a projection of ourselves. That means it
will ask us to recognize there is little that is natural about peaceable
animal kingdoms in which disguised forms of containment create the illusion
the lion is lying down with the lamb. It will ask that we refuse to be taken
in by scenes of "humorous" insects, and that we (to use a well-known
example) stop telling stories about dolphins as enlightened beings that are
really about our own hopes and aspirations. Such a form of culture criticism
would not seek to bar us from enjoying any of these depictions. But it would
ask us to stop confusing them for the world outside us, and ask us to try to
construct stories and descriptions that are as close to what is being
described as possible.
It also won't ask us to bracket out our own fantasies and
unconscious thoughts when we try to study the world. On the contrary, by
making the stories in each of our own minds transparent, we learn to
understand the stories of popular culture, which were created by minds much
like our own. And by making the stories of popular culture transparent, we
learn to understand our own minds. Our psychodynamically-drenched fantasies
even give us information about the nonhuman world, along with models we can
use to understand it. Indeed, since it is impossible for us to think about
anything without our unconscious fears and desires going along for the ride,
undercover, we can't help but be talking about our selves when we are
avowedly talking about nature or other people. But, once again, what is
essential is that we try to tell the difference.
In helping us to know ourselves, such a form of culture
criticism can also perform another essential task -- it can reveal the way
our narratives and depictions express our deep-seated desires to become
whole as individuals and create better, more decent, societies. Here, we
discover one of the most essential insights into news, politics, Disney et
al, which is that, despite all their falsehood, they give disguised
expression to our desire for ethical transformation.
Disney's Animal Kingdom is certainly a prime example of
this, since it takes us into a myth that expresses our primal yearning to
live in an unfallen realm of nature that expresses our values, and to be
benevolent caretakers rather than destroyers. The critic Northrop Frye
believed that Western civilization has been permeated by a myth of a
universe with four levels -- heaven; a perfect unfallen realm of nature that
embodies our desires; the fallen world of nature and death we live in; and
an underworld. Disney takes us into that second, unfallen realm of nature to
play on our desires to undo our fallen state. Like many of the creations of
contemporary culture, it is in the business of immersing us in false utopias
and ersatz realms of transcendence, for its own purposes. What it offers may
be fictionalized, contrived and disguised, but it expresses our deep-seated
desires to reform the corruptions of the world.
What Disney's Animal Kingdom -- and the culture -- need,
then, is a serpent who will entice us to eat from the other tree, of the
knowledge of good and evil, and see the complexities of life, including the
complexities of the culture and ourselves. The ultimate goal will be to help
bring about the maturation of society and the self, in which we learn to
emerge from our symbiotic immersion in our own fantasies and refuse to let
society's power-brokers act as corrupt parents who would play on those
fantasies to define our world for us.
Journalists and academics who focus on exposing the
illusions of society and culture are in a unique position to help carry out
such a critique and reveal the falsification and fictionalization of our
view of the world. But it has to be said that those in academia who hold to
more extreme versions of relativism, "antifoundationalism",
post-structuralism, social constructionism and similar philosophies that
cast doubt on the existence of objective truth or our ability to know the
truth, aren't in much of a position to participate in this critique. How can
they take Disney or TV news to task for falsifying our view of the world
when they believe that "texts" are merely an endless field of possible
interpretations without any necessary correspondence to anything in the
larger world, or that we can never know the world as it is, beyond our own
distorted perceptions. For those who hold to such philosophies, Disney's
depiction of nature is as valid as Darwin's, and the hyped up view of
society offered by local news is as valid as the best efforts to understand
public events and politics by serious writers and theoreticians.
In fact, when you examine the more extreme versions of these
philosophies, it is obvious that they are part of this larger trend of
fictionalization. From news organizations that offer us overly dramatic
depictions of events, to politicians who act like all information is the raw
material for spin, to those academics who see every "text" as a
self-contained theme park full of special effects, we are surrounded by
people who would replace the search for truth with degraded forms of art and
artfulness.
What we need then is a renewed form of culture criticism
that will try to convince humanity not to become immersed in these would-be
Never-Never Lands. Unfortunately, in trying to make our case, we are up
against massively powerful industries that are learning how to turn
computers, simulation and mass communications into the most efficient and
well-disguised tools of manipulation ever devised.
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More on simulation, including
themed attractions and Disney
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© 1996-2011 Ken Sanes
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