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marmar

(77,080 posts)
Sun Jun 21, 2015, 12:53 PM Jun 2015

Orwell, Huxley and America’s Plunge into Authoritarianism


Legitimizing State Violence
Orwell, Huxley and America’s Plunge into Authoritarianism

by HENRY A. GIROUX


In spite of their differing perceptions of the architecture of the totalitarian superstate and how it exercised power and control over its residents, George Orwell and Aldus Huxley shared a fundamental conviction. They both argued that the established democracies of the West were moving quickly toward an historical moment when they would willingly relinquish the noble promises and ideals of liberal democracy and enter that menacing space where totalitarianism perverts the modern ideals of justice, freedom, and political emancipation. Both believed that Western democracies were devolving into pathological states in which politics was recognized in the interest of death over life and justice. Both were unequivocal in the shared understanding that the future of civilization was on the verge of total domination or what Hannah Arendt called “dark times.”

While Neil Postman and other critical descendants have pitted Orwell and Huxley against each other because of their distinctively separate notions of a future dystopian society, I believe that the dark shadow of authoritarianism that shrouds American society like a thick veil can be lifted by re-examining Orwell’s prescient dystopian fable 1984 as well as Huxley’s Brave New World in light of contemporary neoliberal ascendancy. Rather than pit their dystopian visions against each other, it might be more productive to see them as complementing each other, especially at a time when to quote Antonio Gramsci “The old world is dying and the new world struggles to be born. Now is the time of monsters.”

Both authors provide insights into the merging of the totalitarian elements that constitute a new and more hybridized form of authoritarian control, appearing less as fiction than a threatening portend of the unfolding 21st century. Consumer fantasies and authoritarian control, “Big Brother” intelligence agencies and the voracious seductions of privatized pleasures, along with the rise of the punishing state—which criminalizes an increasing number of behaviors and invests in institutions that incarcerate and are organized principally for the production of violence–and the collapse of democratic public spheres into narrow market-driven orbits of privatization–these now constitute the new order of authoritarianism.

Orwell’s “Big Brother” found more recently a new incarnation in the revelations of government lawlessness and corporate spying by whistleblowers such as Chelsea Manning, Jeremy Hammond, and Edward Snowden. All of these individuals revealed a government that lied about its intelligence operations, illegally spied on millions of people who were not considered terrorists or had committed no crime, and collected data from every conceivable electronic source to be stored and potentially used to squelch dissent, blackmail people, or just intimidate those who fight to make corporate and state power accountable. Orwell offered his readers an image of the modern state in which privacy was no longer valued as a civil virtue and a basic human right, nor perceived as a measure of the robust strength of a healthy and thriving democracy. In Orwell’s dystopia the right to privacy had come under egregious assault, but the ruthless transgressions of privacy pointed to something more sinister than the violation of individual rights. The claim to privacy, for Orwell, represented a moral and political principle by which to assess the nature, power, and severity of an emerging totalitarian state. Orwell’s warning was intended to shed light on the horrors of totalitarianism, the corruption of language, the production of a pervasive stupidity, and the endless regimes of state spying imposed on citizens in the mid-20th-century. .................(more)

http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/06/19/orwell-huxley-and-americas-plunge-into-authoritarianism/




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Orwell, Huxley and America’s Plunge into Authoritarianism (Original Post) marmar Jun 2015 OP
Thank you for posting this. Lindsay Jun 2015 #1
Thanks Marmar safeinOhio Jun 2015 #2
More William Gibson than either Huxley or Orwell Fumesucker Jun 2015 #3
Secret Government for a Stronger Democracy! Octafish Jun 2015 #4
"That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the Bluenorthwest Jun 2015 #5

safeinOhio

(32,682 posts)
2. Thanks Marmar
Sun Jun 21, 2015, 01:22 PM
Jun 2015

I'm afraid many folks don't like to read long academic papers, but this needs exposure..

Fumesucker

(45,851 posts)
3. More William Gibson than either Huxley or Orwell
Sun Jun 21, 2015, 02:14 PM
Jun 2015

Not so much an organized overarching dystopia but an almost infinite series of competing dystopias each even worse than than the last and all fighting it out absolutely nothing barred in the sub sub sub gutter.

Gibson foresaw the corporate twist for sure although to be fair it was a good bit more obvious by his time than either of the earlier authors.

Octafish

(55,745 posts)
4. Secret Government for a Stronger Democracy!
Sun Jun 21, 2015, 02:20 PM
Jun 2015

From the OP

At the same time, Orwell’s warning about “Big Brother” applies not simply to an authoritarian-surveillance state but also to commanding financial institutions and corporations who have made diverse modes of surveillance a ubiquitous feature of daily life. Corporations use the new technologies to track spending habits and collect data points from social media so as to provide us with consumer goods that match our desires, employ face recognition technologies to alert store salesperson to our credit ratings, and so it goes. Heidi Boghosian points out that if omniscient state control in Orwell’s 1984 is embodied by the two-way television sets present in each home, then in “our own modern adaptation, it is symbolized by the location-tracking cell phones we willingly carry in our pockets and the microchip-embedded clothes we wear on our bodies.”[16] In this instance, the surveillance state is one that not only listens, watches, and gathers massive amounts of information through data mining, allegedly for the purpose of identifying “security threats.” It also acculturates the public into accepting the intrusion of commercial surveillance technologies – and, perhaps more vitally, the acceptance of privatized, commodified values – into all aspects of their lives. In other words, the most dangerous repercussions of a near total loss of privacy involve more than the unwarranted collecting of information by the government: we must also be attentive to the ways in which being spied on has become not only normalized, but even enticing, as corporations up the pleasure quotient for consumers who use new digital technologies and social networks – not least of all by and for simulating experiences of community.
 

Bluenorthwest

(45,319 posts)
5. "That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the
Sun Jun 21, 2015, 02:30 PM
Jun 2015

lessons of history." Aldous Huxley

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